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  1. Culture
1 February 2013updated 03 Feb 2013 12:26pm

If you like Garfield, you won’t like this

Review: Richard Short's Klaus.

By Alex Hern

Klaus
Richard Short
Nobrow, 68pp, £15

Richard Short’s Klaus the cat is lazy, prone to cod philosophising, and has four-panel “adventures” with dubious continuity between episodes. But if you dive in expecting something like an even more generic version of Garfield, the blandest of the US gag strips, you’re in for a nasty surprise.

While Klaus owes a clear debt to the US comic strip form, it takes their broad structure and then subverts it, creating something altogether weirder. The strip is not unlike Greg Stekelman’s Sad Jokes (sample joke: A man walks into a pub. He is an alcoholic whose drink problem is destroying his family.), in being syntactically similar, even identical, to something comforting and familiar, while aiming for an utterly different meaning.

If there’s one strip in particular which Klaus is aimed at, it’s Charles Schultz’s Peanuts. The art — simple black-and-white linework — is similar, and certain visual cues give it away, none more so than Klaus lying on his back on a mound of earth. And Peanuts is less hard to subvert than you might think if your memories of the strip remain tinted with nostalgia. Charlie Brown’s existential despair, and the meanderings the strip occasionally fell into in its later years, could have been lifted wholesale and put in Klaus.

Other links are just as evident, though. The Garfield connection shines through — there’s only so much variation on the lazy cat theme, and all the variation in the world won’t sever that link — as does the weirdness of Tove Jansson’s Moomin strips. Short draws his cats, Klaus and Otto, as standard cartoon animals, but things take a turn for the strange at his portrayal of other species. Birds have hands, a dog wears glasses, and weirdest of all are the rats, who are drawn as six-inch high naked people with tails. One particularly bizarre strip (and choosing the oddest ones here is not an easy challenge) involves Otto seeing the rats just a bit too well rendered: their lithe, naked bodies cavorting in the grass for the first two panels (tails still fully present), before switching to the regular viewpoint and showing them running away from his leering eyes. The punchline, delivered by Otto as the last of the rats throws an acorn at him: “Sometimes I’m just overcome by the strength of my visual perception”.

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The next strip, incidentally, features two moles discussing the fact that a cloud looks like a cloud — “In moles, imagination is governed by reason!” — before “forest spirit” walks behind them into a hole in a tree, and lays in wait, “to feast upon the bounty of unwary travellers”. The spirit has Otto’s body and a homunculus’ face. He is never seen again.

My favourite strip — one of the few with a real conclusion, and one which could, with swapped characters, pass unnoticed in a Peanuts anthology — involves Klaus being repeatedly told he’s doing “that condescending look”, eventually gazing into a pond and concluding that he must have “condescending features”.

Occasionally a string of strips will develop into a proto-storyline, as happens when Klaus hatches an egg or Otto gets taken to court for pushing a rat over with a stick. While they serve to make the book more coherent, though, it’s clear they aren’t where Short’s heart is. The stories generally skip beats, make no sense, and end abruptly.

You may have noticed I’ve been focusing on Short’s influences, on my highs and lows, on the weird strips and the strange turns, and not saying anything, really, about the quality of the actual book. And that’s because I honestly don’t know. I want to hate it: it makes no sense. Nothing happens. The characters wander around, exchanging words, and then the strip ends. Lather rinse repeat. And yet there’s something so charming about the whole thing that I can’t bring myself to do so.

The best shortcut might be this: Take a few Peanuts strips. Cut out the last panel, shuffle, and stick them back in in a random order. If the resulting non-sequiturs and aborted jokes leave you feeling bored and uninspired, steer clear of Klaus. But if you still find the greatness of Schultz’s creation shines through, if form alone can give you enjoyment, then maybe Klaus might be for you after all.

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