Dear friends,

Welcome to another surreal, and very real, month of home isolation. It’s nice to share time together online. I have been “catching up” on MUTTS and, for the first time in 25 years, have gotten ahead on my deadline. This is opening up time for starting other projects, perhaps a new children’s book or a graphic novel. I am also enjoying the fact that spring is here and nature seems to be truly benefiting from our staying in place. The world is so much quieter now. You can clearly hear birdsong all day. Yesterday I learned that 150,000 flamingos are flocking to Mumbai, India. It is a great desire of mine that we can all learn to appreciate, and take care of, the magical beauty around us.

Last month I had invited you to send me your experiences with fostering and adopting during these times. You can draw your own comic strip (templates and more information can be found here) or just write about your new best friend. You can include photos. I plan to adapt some of these in future MUTTS Shelter Stories comic strips. If you haven’t created your own adoption stories yet, please do! This is not a writing or drawing contest, but a chance for us all to have a shared experience documenting our love for animals. If you have any questions, write us at blog@mutts.com.

My good friend, author Glen David Gold, dreamed about MUTTS stories centered on the pandemic and sent them to me. He sent to me a week’s worth of MUTTS. I took the opportunity to draw two of them for him, and for you. Here are his writings, all of which give a great sense of what we are going through:

Monday: Starts tight on a deer standing on a narrow road, grazing. We pull out. It’s a wider road. Last panel, very wide shot: it’s an eight-lane highway. No cars.

Tuesday: Bird nest. Birds coming to feed their young. Last panel, pulled out: the nest is the eaves of a boarded-up bookstore.

Wednesday: Bip and Bop in their tree. Panel 1: “C’MON ‘BONK!'” Panel 2: acorn harmlessly hitting the empty street with a teeny “pink.” Panel 3, same. Panel 4: on Bip and Bop. “It’s hard to be an artist in these times.”

Thursday: Guy we’ve never seen is sitting by the curb, forlorn, tired. Mask and gloves. Cute, bouncy dog appears, nuzzling him. Guy holds onto the dog tightly, and thinks “Warm puppy.”

Friday: The guy is still holding the dog. Second: Owner’s voice, off-screen, “Wally, come!” as the dog bounds away, the guy happier, re-energized. Final panel; see a hospital he’s walking back into, and we realize he’s wearing scrubs.

Saturday one big panel: A line of people standing six feet apart and at the front of it, Fatty Snax Deli, with Butchie in mask and gloves, handing someone take-out. To the very right, Mooch and Earl. “Essential service!” “Yesh!”

Sunday: Jellyfish dancing in the water. Ever increasing complexity and design. One says “And now the big finish.” Another says “This is for our audience at home.” Small inset panel of Frank and Millie, masked, rapt with attention, watching the events on a webcam.

And here are two new, only-to-be-seen-here MUTTS strips, based on them:

 

As you are probably aware, Dr. Jane Goodall is spending her time sheltering in place at her childhood home in England. She surprised and delighted me by creating a video of her reading Me…Jane and posting it on her site:

Of course, no one could ever possibly read Me…Jane as wonderfully and personally as she, and I invite you to spend the short amount of time it takes to view it. If you have children, young or older, share the experience with them. Jane is an inspiration to everyone, and Me…Jane is a tribute to her and to her dream coming true. Her hope today of making the world better for all beings is more urgent than ever.

Thanks for being here.  Stay safe.

Patrick

Comments (20)

The panel at the top of this page, with the sun sitting on top of the water while Earl and his master are sitting on the beach, is one of my favorite Mutts strips because I am a fan of The Prisoner by Patrick McGoohan. The sun sitting on the water reminds me of “Rover,” the balloon-like security guard of “The Village,” that sometimes arose out of the water to go after a prisoner. If No. 6 had had a pet, he might not even have been interested in escaping. I am a cat person, so I would choose Mooch. Thank you.

Kathy McGhehey

Wonderful, thank you Patrick!

Denis

Love Mutts!

carole

Enjoyed that short video. What a world-wide treasure she is.

Ray Ranadall

Hearing Jane Goodall reading was absolutely delightful and I cried happy tears. Thank you Jane for this video and thank you Patrick McDonnell for writing such a sweet book, you are both treasures.

Irma

A must have book for my beloved granddaughter. I’ve followed Jane, as has my daughter who is now a high school biology teacher, and now it’s time for her little nugget Ava to learn and grow and enjoy the story of Jane, thank you!

clancarrolldarkhorsedirect

I hope this exchange will inspire
a whole new generation of Janes and Patricks and true caring

Dorothy Glenn

Listening to Jane read the book and giving little side notes was such a wonderful experience. Thank you for sharing this marvelous video..

Rosemarie Reinman

I’ll be 69 on July 3. What can I do to help change the world?

Steve Archer

We have 4 doggies currently. There’s been a succession of pet friends here. We’ve had a tortoise and an inguana which had been abandoned at a college by kids who think that these animals are disposable and will be “just fine” when released at the end of the school year. Our Ruggles (named after that admirable Charles Laughton movie);is the keeper of the house rules and has been my mainstay after I was run over. He’s had several surgeries and is a very brave and beautiful boy. He was the only survivor of a litter that was found in a garbage container. Chipper is also a beagle type, says our vet, although he and Ruggles look nothing alike. He had been returned twice over a two state area. He looked just like my childhood best friend so he had to come with us although he has a bad habit of lifting his leg when nervous. He’s very vocal and kinda needy. He just had oral surgery which resulted in the loss of a lot of teeth. Topsy is a lab mix who was sprung from the pound where she had all 4 feet on the proverbial banana peel. She had been starved and beaten and covered with mange to the point that the vet didn’t think she would live, much less survive. I named her Topsy after the little girl in Uncle Tom’s Cabin who was released from slavery to live with an adoptive family. We fed her very high calorie supplements plus therapeutic baths every day and she recovered to be able to eat a lot of woodwork and chairs ( sigh) and become my husband’s official office dog. The last doggie is Pip who is really my mom’s dog but she is now in a nursing facility. Pip was the survivor of a raided Amish breeding farm. He’s a “puggle” but not a very good representative as he has goggley eyes, an underbite, and a entitled attitude. He’s starting to kinda fit in although he can’t understand why he isn’t top dog. We’ve had so many wonderful companions. I haven’t mentioned the kitties which started with my Bunnycat who took me through my last semester of law school and two pregnancies.
I really really love your strip. When I see it it brings back all my beloved companions.
Belle Plummer

Belle Plummer