
By Shary Flenniken (Shary Flenniken)
No ISBN: (Digest PB)
This book includes Discriminatory Content produced in less enlightened times.
People – mostly climate-denying morons and stupid orange presidents – keep going on about the heatwave of 1976 like it was a biblical event. It WAS NOT as bad what we are enduring right now. Take it from someone who was there – and this time I don’t just mean me…
As I’m feeling nostalgic, thirsty, overheated and deeply in need of a well-limned laugh all at once, here’s an intriguing and enchanting self-published gem from 1977 whose theme and subject matter seems to be coming back into vogue as the days seep by…
Do you remember that sweet pretty girl you admired and daydreamed about from afar? All glowing soft focus summer afternoons and sherbet refreshers, scents of new-mown hay, tinkly bells and soaring strings? And after a lifetime you found the courage to talk to her and she swore like a trooper, cackled like a loon, pulled your hair, mocked your clothes and was all loud and boisterous and not at all serious and girly and your heart broke just a little?
Shary Flenniken’s sense of humour is like that. With her affable, underplayed, deceptively simple line drawing style (so devastating effective in the glorious Girl and her Talking Dog strip Trots and Bonnie) everything looks clean and sugary and chocolate-coated, but then you realise there’s a devastatingly sharp mind and a tungsten-tipped razor-edged scalpel sense of humour at play as you’re hit with a really spiky and heavy giant pink boxing glove…
Flenniken is a scripter/artist/editor/illustrator/screenwriter of enormous talent who contributed to and edited the funniest years of National Lampoon, has published her own books – such as the slim gem under review today – and illustrated some of the funniest books even written by other people, with titles like When a Man Loves a Walnut, Blood-Lust Chickens & Renegade Sheep and Nice Guys Sleep Alone.
She started out as an underground cartoonist in 1971 with the fabulously notorious Air Pirates Collective (the other bold cartoonists taking on Disney whilst preserving the classic heritage of past cartoon masters waving the flag for free speech and the Right to Parody and Satirise at Will being Bobby London, Dan O’Neill, Gary Hallgren and Ted Richards).

Her own drawing style is often likened to pioneering strip artists Clare Briggs (When a Feller Needs a Friend!!, Danny Dreamer, The Days of Real Sport, Mr. and Mrs, Real Folks at Home, Someone’s Always Taking the Joy Out of Life) and laconically mordant Harold Tucker Webster (Our Boyhood Ambitions, How to Torture Your Wife, Life’s Darkest Moment, How to Torture Your Husband and the legendary Caspar Milquetoast/The Timid Soul). That was all best viewed in the long-running (1971-1990) and aforementioned sardonic comedy masterpiece Trots and Bonnie which I simply must get around to one day…
In recent years Flenniken has edited Seattle Laughs: Comic Stories about Seattle, worked for DC’s Paradox Press and Mad, freelanced in Premiere, Details and The American Lawyer, all whilst winning critical acclaim for her adaptations of the works of Mark Twain, O. Henry and others.
She self-published Drought Chic in 1977, and this tiny tidal wave of crafty cartoons and satisfyingly salty asides resulted from close observation and experience of the global heat-wave (are you able to remember that Long Hot Summer of Punk in the UK?) and perennial water paucity of America’s West Coast. Here she wryly – I so want to say “dryly” – extrapolated on the stupidly standard sage advice dashed out by those in power as the USA all-too briefly saw the (fashionably faddy) sense of dabbling with water discipline… or indeed restraint of any kind.

Suggestions to the trendsetters of society riffed-on here include “share baths and showers”, “don’t flush toilets”, “import icebergs”, “replant your lawn with cactus” and “drink something else”: directives I’m fairly sure we’ll all be considering again in the days and years ahead.
Of course here in Britain we have already taken the most effective step to conserve water consumption by selling off the utility, privatising a natural resource and watching it being run down whilst being priced out of the reach of ordinary folk – and look how well that all worked out…
Still, if you’re saving a little time and money as a new member of the Great Unwashed at least you can spend your grubby free hours seeking out this wry, dry and slyly sophisticated soupcon of delightful disinformation. It also available online for free if you can still work a dry dusty keyboard and the lack of liquids hasn’t brought down all the servers. Who knew H2O was so crucial to so many types of farming?
© 1977 Shary Flenniken. All rights reserved.
Today in 1934 Polish comics legend Janusz Christa (Kajtek i Koko, Kajko i Kokosz) was born, as was writer/publisher Richard Pini (Elfquest, WaRP Graphics) in 1950 and the indescribable Bob Burder (Flaming Carrot Comics, Gumby’s Summer Fun Special, Mystery Men) in 1952, a birthday shared with comic creator Ron Fontes (Atalanta, The Legendary Underdogs, Captured by Pirates). In 1959 this date illustrator Luke McDonnell (Justice League of America, Iron Man, Suicide Squad, Dreadstar, The Phantom) arrived with cartoonist Terry LaBan (Unsupervised Existence, Cud, Edge City) coming along in 1961; writer Devin Grayson (Black Widow, Batman, The Titans, User) in 1970 and artist Jamal Igle (Supergirl, Firestorm, The Wrong Earth) in 1972.
In 2005 comics giant Jim Aparo (The Phantom, Nightshade, Phantom Stranger, The Spectre, Aquaman, Batman, The Outsiders) died, followed two years later by Argentinean comics creator Roberto “El Negro Fontanarrosa” Fontanarrosa (Inodoro Pereyra, Boogie – el aceitoso, Los Clásicos según Fontanarrosa).
