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Help the Great Easter Bunny get her chocolate power back!An egg-cellent search-and-find book with over 680 thingsto spot.
A collection of comic strips from 2000 to 2021. First there was Atomic Grove, then The Dunlop Chronicles, followed by Pork n' Beansie, and finally Swamp Donkeys... comic strips couldn't possibly get any worse!
Acclaimed French cartoonists Lewis Trondheim and Nicolas Kéramidas present a mind-bending Duckburg graphic novel!
The final five years of oversized Peanuts Sunday newspaper strips in vintage color, as they've never been collected!
A box set collecting the 17th and 18th volumes of The Complete Peanuts in a handsome slipcase, with intros by Leonard Maltin and Patton Oswalt!
The newest Baby Blues scrapbook includes every comic strip from 2021, showcasing the relatable antics of family life with 9-year-old Zoe, 7-year-old Hammie, and 2-year-old Wren in a unique comic strip experience that will appeal to parents (and grandparents!) everywhere. Featuring the combined talents of writer Jerry Scott and illustrator Rick Kirkman, Baby Blues is one of the most popular family comic strips of the past three decades. Appearing in newspapers across the country, Baby Blues chronicles the cuteness, sibling squabbles, sleepless nights, and daily comedy of the MacPherson family. The latest scrapbook includes an entire year's worth of Baby Blues comics by the award-winning duo, who draw on their own personal experiences in capturing the joys and complexities of modern family life in hilarious comic-strip form.
"Originally published in 1957 by Rhinehart and Co. Incorporated New York & Toronto."--Title page verso.
"Sixteen-year-old Jeremy Duncan is a high school freshman and an aspiring musician. He daydreams about the day when his band, Goat Cheese Pizza, records their first monster hit single, and they all pile into his van for their cross-country, sold-out concert tour. Between naps, study hall, and band practice, Jeremy still manages to find time to be the star of the ... comic strip Zits"--
Elfez, a musician and entertainer on the North Pole, without proper Elf documents, is the ultimate outsider. He's from Mexico. He wants to bring a dash of Acapulco and a teaspoon of Las Vegas to the North Pole. Santa and the other Elves are outraged, frankly. And then suddenly...a dash of Acapulco and a teaspoon of Las Vegas were just what Christmas needed.
For the anxiously overscheduled homebody and introvert in all of us, an undated monthly (un)planner featuring a dozen never-been-seen-before cartoons from the delightfully unconventional Beth Evans.Beth Evans' disarming wit and inviting cartoons have helped fans manage their own expectations and the expectations of others, and encouraged them to be gentle with themselves if (and inevitably when) they fall short. Now, the wise and understanding artist is back to cheer us on every day with this undated week-at-a-glance diary. But I Can't Wait to Cancel This isn't like other yearly datebooks. It's an anti-planner?a place everyone can use to keep track of plans and goals, and to recalibrate if everything isn't done exactly on schedule. I Can't Wait to Cancel This includes 12 month sections that can be started anytime?just circle the appropriate month listed at the top of the section page?each illustrated with a never-been-seen-before cartoon, as well as 4 week-long spreads broken down into 7 day slots. It also features a portfolio pocket on the inside back cover, an elastic closure, and best of all, original cover art created by Beth that compliments her previous book I Really Didn't Think This Through as well as her journal, I Guess I'll Write It Down.
This story is inspired by the true adventure of a little mockingbird who flew into our lives, teaching us that even the smallest moments can remind us how extraordinary life truly is. From the bird's perspective, this tale unfolds as he recalls the day everything changed.'It was one of those scorching afternoons, the air thick and still. I was happily watching the little fish darting around in the pond of a house with a bright red door. They moved so freely, shimmering in the sunlight, and I couldn't help but lean in a little too close. Suddenly, I lost my balance and tumbled from the edge of my nest. The ground rushed up to meet me, but I instinctively flapped my tiny wings and wiggled my little legs to slow my fall. That's when I found her-my friend, my rescuer. With warmth and laughter, she scooped me up, and our unexpected journey began...'
Why do anvils fall from the sky?And backseat drivers make us cry?What do these old jokes mean?The answers are in American Cornball, a hysterical illustrated survey of things that used to make us laugh. From hiccups and henpecked husbands to outhouses and old maids, Christopher Miller revisits nearly 200 comic staples, their (often unseemly) origins, why they were funny then, and why they're not so funny now. The result is a grand tour of the era between vaudeville and TV?a world of black and white, highborn and lowbrow, witty and wacky, the awkward and the sublime. Complete with more than 200 period illustrations, American Cornball is a masterwork of cultural excavation . . . and a genuine laff riot.
In this kid-friendly repackaging of Carl Barks's seminal comics, the Duck family seeks Viking treasure.
Countdown to laughter. . .Bart Simpson will send you over the moon with high-octane hilarity as he leads the Springfield Elementary team to the state eating competition, does his best not to embarrass Marge on Mother's Day, learns a Kwik-E life lesson from Apu, gets a little bedtime assistance from Maggie, bonds with Grampa over a junky jalopy, and foils Mr. Burns' plan to sidestep Springfield's child labor laws. Then, Lisa gets some surprising competition as she squares off against Bart in a contest to win a prized pony, teenagers Homer and Barney encounter zombies, and much, much more! It's a supersonic, supercharged, Bart Simpson shebang!
Here's where the fun begins: awesome 1980s and 1990s comics based on the classic Disney Afternoon TV cartoons!
Come and join Bucket Boy and the whole Twistwood gang as they live their lives in the forest. Travel through a magical land and meet an enchanting cast of smart, snarky, and sweet characters from the popular webcomic, Twistwood Tales.
A New Yorker Best Book of 2022The long awaited first collection by Will McPhail, with over 150 cartoons, including his New Yorker classics and new gems.With his shrewd eye for mundane absurdities and hysterically astute drawings of animals, Will McPhail is the New Yorker's most distinctive cartoonist. His cartoons delight in the everyday anxieties of modern life, skewer contemporary politics, and cut to the core of the most bizarre human behaviors.Now, in McPhail's first collection, new cartoons mix with old favorites: mischievous mice and opportunistic pigeons offer portals into McPhail's crackling curiosity, while Lady No-Kids' adventures continue with high-flying glee. With chapters ranging from the contemporary to the universal, and a classic black and white interior that evokes the timelessness of the craft, Love & Vermin proves why Will McPhail is one of the most cherished cartoonists of his generation.
"Includes cartoons from Yukon ho! and Weirdos from another planet!"
At the time of his death, Charles Addams was working on this project, a cookbook with never-before-seen artwork and never before tasted and very macabre recipes—published here for the first time, along with some classic Addams cartoons about food and cooking.Food and eating were a couple of Charles Addams's favorite subjects. Hungry cannibals, witches gathering around a cauldron, or a king over his blackbird pie often populated his celebrated cartoons. And, of course, Morticia of the "Addams Family" was an avid cook, adding a touch of eye of newt or popping over to the neighbors for a cup of cyanide. So it should come as no wonder that in the 1960s Charles Addams was dabbling with a "cookbook" idea. Addams discovered and compiled some bizarre recipes from antiquated and out-of-the-way sources. These recipes have very Addams-like names, such as "Mushrooms Fester" or "Hearts Stuffed," and serve as a perfect complement to his drawings. Chas Addams™ Half-Baked Cookbook is a collection of his work on the world of food and eating, featuring many Addams drawings that have never been seen before, as well as some of his all-time classics.
The all-inclusive chronicle of events beginning with the day Hobbes sprang into Calvin's tuna-fish trap and their friendship was forged forever.
This unusual work of pen-and-ink drawings amusingly lampoons those old, young and middle-aged men who visit the area recreational center (ARC) in Columbia, Missouri, and of necessity use the locker room to change clothes and shower. But it no doubt could apply to any recreational facility. The author is one of such (old) characters. This book depicts some of the behind-the-scenes rhetoric of what those noble beings say and think who come to work-out (exercise) in hopes to shed some flab, tighten-up sagging muscles and generally improve their constitutions.
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