
I’ve looked out for Bristow since the mid-1970s when I was a fresh-faced articled clerk in a firm of accountants in Birmingham. Mr Bristow, buying clerk (19th in line for Chief Buyer), was a kindred spirit. Running since 1961, the Frank Dickens-created strip was a fixture in the Birmingham Mail at the time. Though I lost track of Bristow in later life and Dickens died in 2016, happily Facebook still remembers him with a daily insert.
Surely the master of the one-paner, Gary Larson. His offbeat takes on somehow familiar situations ran for 15 years. There was a hiatus from 1995 when it appeared the great man had done with cartooning, happily to re-emerge with new work in early 2020.
Probably the British favourite during the 1960s, the stereotype of a British (un)working man has been running since 1957. Reg Smythe was the creator, the flame carried by others since Smyth’s death in 1998.

Dilbert, created by Scott Adams in 1989, is very much an American product taking aim at the absurdities of corporate life. I love it but it never seems to appear or have gained traction this side of the Pond.

Peanuts, very much a product of American culture yet instantly recognisable here in GB. Charles M Schulz wrote and illustrated the strip from 1950 to his death in 2000 and it’s remarkable for not only its longevity but its continued popularity and striking of chords.
So what’s your favourite? Have I outraged you by missing an obvious strip out (like I am by the continuing absence of Rory Gallagher from any list of great guitarists when he’s in the top few)? Has the day of the comic strip gone, overtaken by new and more cutting edge humour? What say you?
I enjoyed this, Roy. My father has always loved to read the comics. It’s difficult for me to pick a favorite.
LikeLike
Hi Jill, I’d have guessed you’d be a Peanuts gal, and maybe Top Cat on the TV 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Peanuts, Gary Larson, Family Circle…I enjoy all of them.😉
LikeLike
Roy, lovely to read you about your personal favourites. It is amazing how Charles M Schulz illustrated Peanuts for forty years and it’s always spot on! At university, a friend introduced me to Calvin and Hobbes and it’s still a firm favourite with me! I’ve got lots of the books and tried to brainwash my son into liking them – no luck alas!
LikeLike
Hi Annika, Calvin & Hobbes didn’t really cross the Atlantic very well I don’t think, just as Bristow would never play in the US.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I had soft spot for Larson cards and Andy Capp is great! Snoopy is a modern and timeless little guy!
LikeLike
Hi Angela. I’m surprised Andy Capp is still going really, his world has gone.
LikeLike
Now that is a switch in topic for you, Roy! Interesting. I definitely liked Calvin and Hobbs, but Charles Schultz’s work is as timeless as A.A. Milne and his illustrations. I’ll go with Snoopy and pals.
LikeLike
One vote for Peanuts 🙂 More fun than the US election this. I think Calvin & Hobbes was syndicated in the UK but never gained much traction.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Anything is better than the US election, Roy!
LikeLike
I do love Peanuts, Schultz captures the human condition so perfectly, and I remember Andy Capp from my childhood days, but I don’t buy The Daily Mirror so never see him now.
LikeLike
Another vote for Peanuts. I don’t think I’ll start buying the Mirror to read Andy Capp either ER 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s so hard to choose but if I had to pick a favorite, it would probably be Peanuts. I also love The Far Side, though, and also Get Fuzzy and Calvin and Hobbes. I had never heard of Bristow but I’ll see if I can find more of those.
LikeLike
Peanuts is the clear winner. Lisa I doubt Bristow strikes a chord among many in our modern day but he has great sentimental value.
LikeLike
I used to look forward to the comic insert that came with the Saturday newspaper when I was in grade school. All of these you mentioned were in it. But my true favourite was Archie. I had (still have actually; I retrieved them when my dad passed before we sold the house) over 100 single and double-length Archie comic books.
LikeLike
Vote for Archie, though I’ve never heard of that one. Doubt it ever crossed the Atlantic though the ‘Sabrina the Teenage Witch’ spin-off rings a bell.
LikeLike
I don’t think I really had a favourite, but we used to also read ‘The Broons’ and ‘Oor Willie’ and used to often end up with an annual of them for Christmas.
LikeLike
Ah, Scottish characters. Was that in Scotland or did those strips reach down across the border?
LikeLike
Not in Scotland no, they reached us in the NE of England.
LikeLike
Gary Larson is genius. I’m glad he’s back!
LikeLike
Genius all right, so simple but so effective.
LikeLike