Cartoons Books
Related Subjects: Instruction and Resources Portfolios E-Cards and Cartoons
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Fetch a Big StickReview Date: 2004-07-22
Does she know my dog?Review Date: 2004-07-21
Jupiter's prose offer insight into the canine mind. Theres not a dog owner among us who won't laugh knowingly at these poems, and illustrations from the dogs point of view. Also- a writing dog... what a great idea!
If you have a pet.....you should have this book!Review Date: 2004-06-29

Used price: $78.77

Spanning generationsReview Date: 2005-05-11
As a fan of Mad magazine way back when, "The Bedside Mad" was very different from what I was used to. It didn't take me long, however, to start rolling on the floor laughing. I'd seen some of the artists' work before, notably that of Jack Davis, in the magazine; however, I'd never seen anything by Wally Wood or Bill Elder. Elder, in particular, captured my imagination: "Outer Sanctum" and "Restaurant" have *so many* puns, jokes, and funny details in the background of the drawings that it makes me chuckle now just thinking about it. Over the years I purchased more of the old Mad paperbacks, and Elder's work was always "it" for me.
Many years later, I still have my old copy of "The Bedside Mad", and have now corrupted my own two kids' minds with it! They love it as much as I did.
A classic.Review Date: 2004-12-10
Classic "MAD" parodies from the classic comic book yearsReview Date: 2004-05-08
The title "The Bedside MAD" was a take off on the various "bedside readers" that were in vogue at the time and offers the first original cover art for a "MAD" paperback, done by illustrator Kelly Freas (compare with the Norman Mingo cover for the 1973 reissue on page xii). "MAD" has switched to being a magazine in 1959, but with two exceptions the material contained here is from the comic book period when it was created, written, and edited by Harvey Kurtzman. "Outer Sanctum!" is a Kurtzman classic from "MAD" #5 that manages to do a parody of both the radio thriller "Inner Sanctum" and all of the E.C. horror comics like "Tales from the Crypt." "The Lone Stranger Rides Again!" is, as the title indicates, a second look at "The Lone Ranger" from "MAD" #8 (cf. "MAD" #3).
There are some choice examples from some of the best artists in the "MAD" gang of usual idiots. Jack Davis does "Scenes We'd....Like to See!" and "Slow Motion," as well as the classic parody of "Hah! Noon!" from "MAD" #9, and a new take on Ernest Lawrence Thayer's poem "Casey at the Bat!" ("MAD" #6). Wallace Wood does "The Cane Mutiny" from "MAD" #19 (with "Captain Kweeg"). Bill Elder chips in with art on "Medical" ("MAD" #28), "Restaurant" ("MAD" #16), and the Kurtzman written "Robinson Crusoe!" ("MAD" #13).
All of these bits predate the point in my life when I started reading and enjoying the sick humor offered by "MAD," but if your choice is going back and looking at the old stuff or trying to make your way through the new stuff, then I say turn your back on the present and look backwards, boys and girls, to when "MAD" was a comic book and not a magazine. There are so many classic bits here that when I picked up the collected E.C. library I went with the option for getting the "MAD" volumes in color. That was not a mistake.

Used price: $16.29

overwhelmingly funnyReview Date: 2008-09-13
* Hopefully this book will get great distribution as today's Beetle Bailey is woefully unfunny. Beetle should have been retired 5 to 10 years ago. Why Walker didn't is - to me - a major mystery. Young people who know who know the strip only from the last few years will not have fond memories of it as, today, it is just another forgettable strip.
Here's Hoping There's More to FollowReview Date: 2008-09-12
TEN...SHUN.Review Date: 2008-09-12
I sincerely hope to see further years published (like the Peanuts series). That would be something...2 books per year, each with 3 years compiled.


VINTAGE HUMOR!Review Date: 2001-03-16
Beetle Bailey, the central character is the world's laziest, most lovable soldier in creation. He devises one funny scheme after anothe to test Sarge's mettle, lead his fellow enlisted men into hilarious stunts and in general, turns Camp Swampy into a comedy club. (Check out the part when Sarge raids the showers. That part will leave you laughing for a long time).
Yes, this book is such a worthwhile treat to have. Hop into your Government Issue Jeep and head on over to Camp Swampy!
Definately not the gentle riders!!Review Date: 1999-03-17
Earlier StripsReview Date: 1999-12-28

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Below The BeltwayReview Date: 2001-03-22
Below the Beltway: A Hilarious Look At Political Favs!Review Date: 2000-09-03
hawaiian shirts and shaving creamReview Date: 2000-12-05

Used price: $16.21
Collectible price: $25.95

The Best of Bizarro is awesomeReview Date: 2000-06-18
He blows the makeup off the face of lifeReview Date: 2008-05-31
Stream of conciousness at it's best!Review Date: 2000-08-07

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HilariousReview Date: 2008-05-23
Outrageous and correctReview Date: 2007-08-25
Not what I received.Review Date: 2007-01-24

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great for kidsReview Date: 2008-09-18
Excellent!Review Date: 2008-07-23
How to Draw the Best of Nickelodeon is great!Review Date: 2007-01-09

Used price: $29.29

Great deal of material Review Date: 2008-03-04
While a great deal of scholarly research has been done on Carl Bark's Uncle Scrooge character, this is one of the first editions done on the Casper and Richie Rich characters. In fact Mr. Christopher Barat makes some interesting comparisons to the comic book adventures of Casper and Richie with Disney's richest duck. He also does a great job summarazing and analysing many of the Richie Rich and Casper stories while looking for originality and other creative highlights in these hundreds of stories, which can get very maudlin after a while.
Something that caught my attention is when Richie Rich, who has always been faithful to his girlfriend, Gloria, has a unique encounter with the antagonist Mayda Munny in a dream sequence. Hmm. . . Maybe Richie is a bit more complicated than we thought. Anyway,it took Mr. Baret to draw this to my attention.
I also have to give Mr. Baret credit for using the word, "discombulate." Hey! Anybody who can use a word like that is all right in my book.
The text amply has interviews with the surviving Harvey company personal,episode guides to various Richie Rich tv programs, histories on Sad Sack (a favorite of mine), and volunteered art from a variety of people.
If there is a second edition, it would be nice to include an episode guide to the ninties Casper series, (which is up on the website) and a few other odds and ends. Another possible article could be on the best Richie and Casper stories that might have had a "bittersweet" feel to them. I also thought there was something poignant with Casper and Wendy's relationship due to the fact that Casper was ultimately a ghost while longing to be human. Wendy, however, was still a human girl, though a sorceress, which must have made things difficult for the two of them at times.
And on a totally trivial note, I'd also love to hear a bit more the short-lived, "Fruitman" comic from the sixites?
While this book might not be for everyone. It's essential to comic book historians who need to know there was more to to the industry that just superheroes and Disney. Invaluable alone for the Sad Sack material.
Sincerely,
James Smith III
carolyn@dia.net
Possibly the greatest book ever written!?!Review Date: 2006-11-07
Look for the Big HReview Date: 2007-01-22
At first I felt a bit ripped off since, had one been a long time subscriber, one would already have all these issues. But then I thought, "Why go to the trouble to rewrite the whole book from the fanzines rather than just reprinting them? Obviously Mark had the same idea. Great minds think alike, and so do we.
This is the best sort of browsing book, jammed with about a zillion pictures as well as Harvey trivia approached from every angle. Who knew Jerry Lewis did Sad Sack movies? Where did my favorite Harvey comic star, Hot Stuff, come from? What's the relation of the Famous/ Paramount cartoons to the comics?
I myself eagerly await each issue of a Little Lulu fanzine called The Hollywood EcLLectern, and I can't think of anything better than if all those issues were bound together in a book. What a happy thought that Mark Arnold has been there and done that with the big H comics, and even better that I can kick back with this enthralling volume and another H (Hefeweisen) and delve into the Harvey Fun Times.

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Collectible price: $10.00

great inside humor on Gates and MicrosoftReview Date: 1998-11-28
Hilarious!Review Date: 1999-08-30
Really funny!!!!!Review Date: 1998-11-06
Related Subjects: Instruction and Resources Portfolios E-Cards and Cartoons
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I know that doesn't sound very erudite, but it's true.
Stacy Lloyd's illustrations of her friend Jupiter are extremely eye-catching and fun. I, for one, am looking forward to the comic strip that one of the syndicates would pick up in a hurry. This book is definitely worth a look