Schulz describes this as Woodstock’s introduction in an essay he wrote for TV Guide, published February 23, 1980
It’s a type that was more common to see in the 1950s, not so much now. Here’s a very nicely restored one: >
Almost certainly
Reminds me of the Calvin & Hobbes strips, and their conversations while sledding
Is this the first C&H daily that breaks the four-panel layout?
Gertrude Stein reference, again!
Looks like it was redrawn, but yes, very similar.
BRILLIANT
In an even earlier strip, Charlie Brown happily thinks that exchanging a few cliches is having a “real adult conversation.”
Hooray!
Schulz describes this as Woodstock’s introduction in an essay he wrote for TV Guide, published February 23, 1980