Category - Fiction / Comics & Graphic Novels
Format - Paperback
Condition - Good
Listed - 5 months ago
Views - 6
Ships From - California
Seller Description
Light foxing on book ledge and back cover Spine and pages in excellent condition Holt Rinehart and Wilson, 1973 With this second collection of Doonesbury cartoons it can be said that nihilism has been revived as a meaningful conceit. Body-surfing in on a wave of popular and critical acclaim, Zonker Harris here makes his debut as superstar B.D.'s playful antagonist. The little golden-haired freak and his touch-and-go relationship with reality are sensitively viewed in the context of his chronic encounters with Kool-Aid and model airplane glue. But Zonker is not alone. He brings with him other new faces: Professor Charles Green, the street corner guru and dispenser of hip platitudes; Boopsie, the lemonade lady with the kind face and generous hips; Arnie, the genteel and erudite bricklayer from the Ozarks; and Nichole, the sister who went into a deep coma the first time she saw the Geritol ad ("My wife -I think I'll keep her!"). As will be apparent to the author's many followers, the Doonesbury prose has never been richer than in this poignant little book. Needless to say, however, Garry Trudeau, Yale '70, still disagrees with those who feel he has a professional obligation to learn how to draw.