Stone Soup (comic strip)

Last updated
Stone Soup
Author(s) Jan Eliot
Current status/scheduleConcluded
Launch date(syndication) November 1995;28 years ago (November 1995)
End dateJuly 2020
Alternate name(s)Sister City (1990–1995)
Syndicate(s) Universal Press Syndicate/Universal Uclick/Andrews McMeel Syndication (1995–present)
Genre(s)Humor, Politics, Family

Stone Soup is an American newspaper comic strip. It was created by cartoonist Jan Eliot as Sister City, and was renamed after being syndicated by Universal Press Syndicate in 1995. The strip originally ran daily until 2015, when it switched to Sunday strips only before ending in 2020. The strip centers on a single mother named Valerie Stone, and her struggles to raise her daughters Alix and Holly.

Contents

Publication history

The comic strip was created by Jan Eliot. [1] It began as a weekly in 1990, [2] and ran for five years in the Eugene, Oregon Register-Guard under the name Sister City before being syndicated. The syndicated daily strip debuted in November 1995.

Stone Soup featured as a daily strip for 20 years [3] until October 2015, when Eliot decided she no longer wanted to draw a daily comic, to devote more time to travel, socialize and focus on other creative projects. [4] She continued to create a Sunday cartoon strip. [5]

The Stone family features a family headed by single mother Val, an uncommon contrast with the ordinary nuclear family depicted in more traditional strips. As the author explained,

When I write I am writing first and foremost for single and working parents. I often felt very isolated and "put down" because of my circumstances (I was a single working mom for 10 years). I even had a teacher tell me that their school "was a better place before all the single moms arrived". My daughters both turned out fabulously, thank you, and I think I was a good parent. [2]

It is common for strip storylines to consist of household arguments that are not resolved. Unlike many strips, the characters do age, but at a very slow rate. Val has celebrated her 38th and 39th birthdays in the strip; Alix and Holly were 9 and 12 when the strip began, and are now 10 and 13.

On 15 June 2020, Jan Eliot announced her retirement and that Stone Soup will end on 26 July 2020. [6]

Symbology

The strip was named for the folk tale about Stone Soup, with the focus that good things can be created with small contributions from many sources.

Characters

Main characters

Sisters Valerie (Val) and Joan live across the fence from each other.

Recurring characters

Val's book club

Val belongs to a book club with an assortment of characters from other strips, including Elly from For Better or For Worse , Alice from Dilbert , Rose/Vicki the biker chick from Rose Is Rose , and Connie Duncan, the mom from Zits . Cathy was mentioned, but "couldn't come till she found the right man and lost 10 pounds." The book club also threw a baby shower for Joan, which takes place in the book There's No "WE" in Crowning (published in 2007). This is a short collection that takes the reader from the first onset of Joan's pregnancy till the birth of Luci by a midwife at home. Strips featuring the book club have appeared on at least three occasions and are republished in the 2005 trade paperback collection. (See below.)

Critical reception and politics

Commemorative strip, September 11, 2011

Along with 92 other cartoon strips, Eliot was invited to commemorate 9/11 in her daily cartoon in 2011, the 10th anniversary of the attacks. [21]

Political plotline, April 2012

In general, the cartoon strip has more of a domestic, than political focus. However, in April 2012, Stone Soup had a two-week plotline which featured support for universal health care, criticism of U.S. Policy in the Middle East, and made an unflattering remark about Dick Cheney. Eliot's goal was to encourage political participation and to spark discussion and debate, regardless of anyone's ideology. Some papers such as the Daily Herald received both complaints [22] that the politicized or "biased" [23] content should be on the Opinions or Editorial page, [24] contrasted with compliments [25] that Eliot had captured how the majority of women feel about America's politicians, politics and government.

Stone Soup collections

TitlePublication DateISBNPublisher
Stone Soup1997 ISBN   0-8362289-3-6 Andrews McMeel Publishing (later republished by Four Panel Press)
You Can't Say Boobs on Sunday1999 ISBN   0-9674102-0-7 Four Panel Press
Stone Soup The Comic Strip2001 ISBN   0-9674102-1-5 Four Panel Press
Road Kill in the Closet2003 ISBN   0-9674102-3-1 Four Panel Press
Not So Picture Perfect2005 ISBN   0-9674102-5-8 Four Panel Press
Desperate Households2007 ISBN   0-7407-6429-2 Andrews McMeel Publishing
There's No "We" in Crowning!2007none Universal Press Syndicate (only available from Lulu)
Ho Ho Ho: A Stone Soup Christmas2007none Universal Press Syndicate (only available from Lulu)
This Might Not Be Pretty2008 ISBN   0-9674102-6-6 Four Panel Press
We'll Be Really Careful2011 ISBN   978-0-9674102-7-2 Four Panel Press
Brace Yourself2011 ISBN   0-9674102-8-2 Four Panel Press
It Seemed Like A Good Idea At The Time2014 ISBN   0-9674102-9-0 Four Panel Press
Privacy is for wussies2016 ISBN   9780967410241 Four Panel Press

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Comic strip</span> Short serialized comics

A comic strip is a sequence of cartoons, arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often serialized, with text in balloons and captions. Traditionally, throughout the 20th and into the 21st century, these have been published in newspapers and magazines, with daily horizontal strips printed in black-and-white in newspapers, while Sunday papers offered longer sequences in special color comics sections. With the advent of the internet, online comic strips began to appear as webcomics.

<i>Dilbert</i> American comic strip

Dilbert is an American comic strip written and illustrated by Scott Adams, first published on April 16, 1989. It is known for its satirical office humor about a white-collar, micromanaged office with engineer Dilbert as the title character. It has led to dozens of books, an animated television series, a video game, and hundreds of themed merchandise items. Dilbert Future and The Joy of Work are among the best-selling books in the series. In 1997, Adams received the National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award and the Newspaper Comic Strip Award for his work. Dilbert appears online and as of 2013 was published daily in 2,000 newspapers in 65 countries and 25 languages.

<i>Prince Valiant</i> 1937 comic strip by Hal Foster

Prince Valiant in the Days of King Arthur, often simply called Prince Valiant, is an American comic strip created by Hal Foster in 1937. It is an epic adventure that has told a continuous story during its entire history, and the full stretch of that story now totals more than 4000 Sunday strips. The strip appears weekly in more than 300 American newspapers, according to its distributor, King Features Syndicate.

<i>Terry and the Pirates</i> Comic strip

Terry and the Pirates is an action-adventure comic strip created by cartoonist Milton Caniff, which originally ran from October 22, 1934, to February 25, 1973. Captain Joseph Patterson, editor for the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate, had admired Caniff's work on the children's adventure strip Dickie Dare and hired him to create the new adventure strip, providing Caniff with the title and locale. The Dragon Lady leads the evil pirates; conflict with the pirates was diminished in priority when World War II started.

<i>The Family Circus</i> Comic strip

The Family Circus is a syndicated comic strip created by cartoonist Bil Keane and, since Keane's death in 2011, is written, inked and rendered (colored) by his son Jeff Keane. The strip generally uses a single captioned panel with a round border, hence the original name of the series, which was changed following objections from the magazine Family Circle. The series debuted on February 29, 1960 and has been in continuous production ever since. According to publisher King Features Syndicate, it is the most widely syndicated cartoon panel in the world, appearing in 1,500 newspapers. Compilations of Family Circus comic strips have sold more than 13 million copies worldwide.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Howard the Duck</span> Marvel Comics character

Howard the Duck is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Steve Gerber and artist Val Mayerik. Howard the Duck first appeared in Adventure into Fear #19 and several subsequent series have chronicled the misadventures of the ill-tempered anthropomorphic animal trapped on a human-dominated Earth. Echoing this, the most common tagline of his comics reads 'Trapped In a World He Never Made!'.

<i>PvP</i> (webcomic) Video game webcomic

PvP, also known as Player vs Player, was a longrunning video game webcomic, written and drawn by Scott Kurtz. It was launched on May 4, 1998. The webcomic follows the events at a fictional video game magazine company, featuring many running gags and references with a focus on nerd culture. Dylan Meconis was added as a co-writer in 2013.

Funky Winkerbean was an American comic strip by Tom Batiuk. Distributed by North America Syndicate, a division of King Features Syndicate, it appeared in more than 400 newspapers worldwide.

<i>Nancy</i> (comic strip) American comic strip launched in 1938

Nancy is an American comic strip, originally written and drawn by Ernie Bushmiller and distributed by United Feature Syndicate and Andrews McMeel Syndication. Its origins lie in Fritzi Ritz, a strip Bushmiller inherited from its creator Larry Whittington in 1925. After Fritzi's niece Nancy was introduced in 1933, Fritzi Ritz evolved to focus more and more on Nancy instead of Fritzi. The new strip took the old one's daily slot, while Fritzi Ritz continued as a Sunday, with Nancy taking the Sunday slot previously filled by Bushmiller's Phil Fumble strip beginning on October 30, 1938.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dik Browne</span> American cartoonist (1917–1989)

Richard Arthur Allan Browne was an American cartoonist, best known for writing and drawing Hägar the Horrible and Hi and Lois.

The comic strip switcheroo was a massive practical joke in which several comic strip writers and artists (cartoonists), without the foreknowledge of their editors, traded strips for a day on April Fools' Day 1997. The Switcheroo was masterminded by comic strip creators Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott, creators of the Baby Blues daily newspaper comic strip.

Day by Day is an American political webcomic by Chris Muir. The humor usually centers on four principal characters who had initially been presented as co-workers at an unspecified firm until the firm went out of business on December 25, 2007. Romantic relationships among the principals resulted in marriages and children, with one of the couples opening a small bar in the unnamed Texas Rio Grande Valley ranchland in which the strip is now principally set. These characters, their friends, and their families remain the strip's focus. The strip has a conservative libertarian viewpoint, and often makes reference to political weblogs. It was a Yahoo! Pick in the "Comics and Animation" category in 2004.

Jan Eliot is an American cartoonist.

<i>Krazy Kat</i> American comic strip by George Herriman which ran from 1913 to 1944

Krazy Kat is an American newspaper comic strip, created by cartoonist George Herriman, which ran from 1913 to 1944. It first appeared in the New York Evening Journal, whose owner, William Randolph Hearst, was a major booster for the strip throughout its run. The characters had been introduced previously in a side strip with Herriman's earlier creation, The Dingbat Family. The phrase "Krazy Kat" originated there, said by the mouse by way of describing the cat. Set in a dreamlike portrayal of Herriman's vacation home of Coconino County, Arizona, KrazyKat's mixture of offbeat surrealism, innocent playfulness and poetic, idiosyncratic language has made it a favorite of comics aficionados and art critics for more than 80 years.

<i>Our Boarding House</i> 1921–1984 American comic strip

Our Boarding House is an American single-panel cartoon and comic strip created by Gene Ahern on October 3, 1921 and syndicated by Newspaper Enterprise Association. Set in a boarding house run by the sensible Mrs. Hoople, it drew humor from the interactions of her grandiose, tall-tale-telling husband, the self-styled Major Hoople, with the rooming-house denizens and his various friends and cronies.

<i>Ink Pen</i> American comic strip by Phil Dunlap

Ink Pen is an American daily comic strip by Phil Dunlap which was syndicated by Universal Press Syndicate/Universal Uclick from 2005 to 2012.

<i>Ella Cinders</i> American comic strip

Ella Cinders is an American syndicated comic strip created by writer Bill Conselman and artist Charles Plumb. Distributed for most of its run by United Feature Syndicate, the daily version was launched June 1, 1925, and a Sunday page followed two years later. It was discontinued on December 2, 1961. Chris Crusty ran above Ella Cinders as a topper strip from July 5, 1931 to July 6, 1941.

<i>Fritzi Ritz</i> American comic strip

Fritzi Ritz is an American comic strip created in 1922 by Larry Whittington. In 1925, the strip was taken over by Ernie Bushmiller and, in 1938, the daily strip evolved into the popular Nancy. The Sunday edition of the strip, begun by Bushmiller in 1929, continued until 1967.

<i>What a Guy!</i> American comic strip by Bill and Bunny Hoest

What a Guy! is an American comic strip created by Bill Hoest and Bunny Hoest, the team responsible for The Lockhorns and Agatha Crumm. It began in March 1987, just over a year before Hoest's death in 1988.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wally Bishop</span> American cartoonist (1905–1982)

Wallace Bond Bishop, better known as Wally Bishop, was an American cartoonist who drew his syndicated Muggs and Skeeter comic strip for 47 years.

References

  1. Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 367. ISBN   9780472117567.
  2. 1 2 3 Washington Post chat transcript, October 24, 2003, retrieved on July 8, 2007.
  3. "'Stone Soup' producer ends weekday comic strip after 20 years". Daily Herald. 23 September 2015. p. 12.
  4. Hutzell, Rick (8 November 2015). "Readers are noticing changes on the comics page Editor's desk". The Capital (Annapolis). p. A12.
  5. "Comic relief - Lifestyle - the Register Guard - Eugene, OR". Archived from the original on 2018-07-04. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  6. "Jan Eliot Retires, Stone Soup Ends". 15 June 2020.
  7. "Stone Soup by Jan Eliot for December 08, 2010". GoComics. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  8. Hanson, Merridee (14 December 2014). "Guess who's coming to breakfast?". The Columbian. p. D1.
  9. "Cartoonist spreads Mother City love". Cape Argus. 4 July 2014. p. 15.
  10. 1 2 The ages of Joan and Max, accessed June 14, 2010
  11. Daily strip, October 14, 2015.
  12. Road Kill in the Closet, pp 6-7, 188.
  13. "He's 16..." June 28, 2011 via GoComics.
  14. Road Kill in the Closet, pp 5-22.
  15. Desperate Households
  16. "Ending 'Stone Soup'". LNP (Lancaster New Era). 9 October 2015. p. A2.
  17. Stone Soup comic strip December 24–26, 2014
  18. Stone Soup comic strip June 18 (year?) https://www.gocomics.com/stone-soup-classics/2021/04/19
  19. "Stone Soup Classics by Jan Eliot for April 19, 2021". GoComics. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  20. You Can't Say Boobs On Sunday, p 78.
  21. Pierce, Scott D. (7 September 2011). "Sunday funnies get serious about 9/11". The Salt Lake Tribune.
  22. Slusher, Jim (17 May 2012). "Sometimes, 'the funnies' aren't just about fun". Daily Herald . p. 18.
  23. Bailey, Mark (25 April 2012). "Cartoon theme is too political". Daily Herald . p. 16.
  24. Shackelford, Bob (26 April 2012). "All fun, no politics on comics page". Daily Herald . p. 16.
  25. Talbot, Gail (3 May 2012). "'Stone Soup' should get political". Daily Herald . p. 16.