Planning to Retire

Lynn Johnston Decides Not to Completely Retire 'For Better or for Worse'

By Emily Brandon

Posted: August 29, 2008

Cartoonist Lynn Johnston thought she would be retired by now. Her 29-year-old award-winning syndicated comic strip, For Better or for Worse, now appears in more than 2,000 papers around the world and has produced 46 books.

But the dissolution of a 32-year marriage recently caused Johnston, 60, to change her mind about retiring completely. "At this time in my life I thought I would be on a cruise ship to Panama or the Mediterranean, retired with my Tilley hats, my sneakers. But I'm a single lady now, and I want to keep working," she says. "Because I don't have to work 365 days of new material into a year, I can still take some time off to paint and travel." Johnston explains her reversal of earlier plans to retire on YouTube.com.

Instead, Johnston, the first woman to be named cartoonist of the year by the National Cartoonists Society, will peruse the archive of the Patterson family's 10,000 comic strips and retell their story from the beginning with updated drawings and story lines, which she calls "new-runs." "I'm a better storyteller now, and I want to improve the story line or take a piece of art and make it better. What a luxury to change, fix, and to augment. I'm such a perfectionist. I want to put my hands on it and have it tweaked here and there," she says about her new project. "I'm considering this a renewal, not a retirement."

Prequels aside, the story line of For Better or for Worse reaches its conclusion on Sunday. And Johnston gets to choose her own ending. Spoiler alert: The Washington Post, which is dropping the "new-runs" strip in the paper but will continue to carry it online, reports that in the final chapter the original Patterson kids, Michael and Elizabeth, will forever remain grown and married.

9-20-09 Why?

Your cartoon family has always given healthy laughter to our home.

Today I was concerned about the message. I didn't laugh and want to share this day's cartoon because I felt it was an intrusion into Mom"s

boundaries. Family focus should be on appreciating each other rather than poking fun at Mom's underwear. Even the dog looked ashamed !!

mary kay of MA @ Sep 20, 2009 14:24:56 PM

Format Change

From the childen's elementary school years, I've identified with so much of the Pattrson's daily life. We've paralleled now for decades, with kids, grandkids, aging parents, friends, challenges, jobs, menopause, divorce, etc.

I, too, miss the old format, but life is loss....and life goes on.

All the best.

Valerie

Valerie Raines of WA @ Apr 16, 2009 17:04:14 PM

They become like neighbors, don't they. The kids grow, succeed, fail, the parents make mistakes (and live through it), the kids get caught out and live through it, just like those

nice people next door with the three kids, the grandchildren--

and we all cherish grandpa, and remember Farley, and appreciate a cartoonist who isn't afraid of the reality of death, of honosexuality, of being betrayed, hurt, and sad.

The power of this comic strip is that it manages to balance the humor and the sadness much the way we all do. It ain't all Dagwood and Blondie out there, and this is it's strength.

Judy T of NH @ Dec 07, 2008 09:17:38 AM

Add Your Thoughts
About You

advertisement

Planning to Retire

Planning to Retire

Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be.

advertisement

advertisement

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!