Brush With Local Greatness, Vol. 1 : Dan Piraro

Dan-Piraro

About 12 years ago I was work­ing at the Book­stop near the Inwood the­ater in Dal­las and it was my first real job out of col­lege. I was a super­vi­sor there, and one of the things we would do, and if you’ve been into any Barnes & Noble you’ll know this, was put out staff rec­om­men­da­tions. I had rec­om­mended some Bizarro comic strip books in the past, and one night while work­ing the cash reg­is­ter a woman came and paid for her books with a check that said it was from Dan and (Some­body) Piraro. Don’t remem­ber her name.

Dan Piraro was the cre­ator of the Bizarro comic strip, and I knew that the name wasn’t very com­mon, so I care­fully asked, “Is this the Dan Piraro we all know and love?” And she answered that yes it was. Dan’s wife called him over and I said how much I liked his comic and he thanked me. They left, but later I put out another staff rec­om­men­da­tion of “Best of Bizarro, Vol­ume 1″. The card that I put with the book said, “If Dan Piraro is cool he will sign these.” And he obvi­ously was cool, because he did sign them, all of them. I of course snatched one of the auto­graphed copies up. Still have it, too.

He didn’t look like the pic­ture I’ve included at the time, he looked much more eccen­tric, with long curly hair and a goa­tee. The pic­ture next to this makes him almost look Dad-like.

The next time I saw him in our store he was buy­ing a “Do Your Own Divorce in Texas” book. I hope that wasn’t con­cern­ing the woman who’d called him over to say hi to me.

UPDATE :

On April 9 of this year I got up the gump­tion and wrote Dan from the email address given off of his website –

Dan,
About 12 years ago I was work­ing at the Book­stop near the Inwood the­ater in Dal­las and knew that you occa­sion­ally came into our store. I had set out a staff rec­om­men­da­tion of your Best of Bizarro (the first one) and my card under­neath it read “If Dan Piraro is cool he will sign these.”

Suf­fice to say, you were very cool and signed all of them. I still have one, even though my wife won­ders why I keep it around.

Just wanted to say thanks for that.


– Glenn Vance

I had no idea if he would write me back…but three days later he did.

Thanks for the note, Glenn. It was awfully nice of you to thank me after so many years. Hope all is well with you and yours and that you are find­ing life to be grand and groovy. I lived in Dal­las then and live in NYC now. You still in Dal­las?
Dan

Holy moly. He was engag­ing me in con­ver­sa­tion. So I told him about my wish to get my mas­ters and PhD in His­tory and then teach. I thanked him for writ­ing me back and told him to have a good one.

And he wrote back again!

Good luck with your pro­fes­sor­ship. Sounds like a good career and one that hardly ever includes being paged in the mid­dle of the night. As long as you stay away from the co-eds. : )
d

How freak­ing cool is that?

Got something to say? Go for it!