July 4:
The "fussbudget" joke continues. Despite what Lucy says this is far from the last we'll be hearing of it.
July 5:
But here we have the beginning of another running gag, that of Lucy teaching her brother about the world. This time, broadly speaking, her lesson is accurate (if a bit depressing). Tomorrow however....
July 6:
It's funnier when Lucy, who as we've already established with Charlie Brown has a somewhat tenuous grasp of the world, spreads well-meaning disinformation to Linus. It's only a matter of time before this is giving Charlie Brown headaches too.
Notice the different backgrounds in each of the panels here. I think Schulz changes them up as a way of illustrating that the "camera" in each is pointing in a different direction.
July 7:
Well, yeah. They're called adults. They still exist, even if we almost never see them in the strip.
When I first saw this strip I assumed the bike had to be a Penny Farthing bicycle or something, which would make Linus' reaction more understandable. But that's not an old-timey bike, that's a reflector on its front, or at least I think that's what it is.
July 8:
For being a comic strip about children, parents are mentioned seldom, probably because mentioning them too often might bring up questions about why we never see them.
The drawing of Lucy walking away in panel three is also a rarity; usually characters either leave the scene to the side, or they just disappear between panels and leave us to figure out they left the scene. We also have another example of serif lettering in panel 3.
July 9:
Charlie Brown is committing an error in his reasoning, conflating "not liking," with "dislike." You don't dislike people you've never met, but neither can you like them.
Yeah, I'm a real hit at parties. Bleah!
To the moon!
1 hour ago