It's a Stupid Game; It'll Never Amount to Anything: The Golf Cartoons of Joseph Farris
By (Author) Joseph Farris
Skyhorse Publishing
Skyhorse Publishing
1st September 2015
United States
General
Fiction
Golf
796.35202027
Hardback
144
Width 254mm, Height 216mm, Spine 18mm
946g
In his illustrious career as a cartoonist for theNew Yorkerand other publications, Joseph Farris has created dozens of hilarious cartoons about "the best game in the world at which to be bad."
A.A. Milne had it right, and Farris's cartoons get to the heart of the game's wonderful contradiction: over the course of eighteen holes, golf has the capacity to bring great joy and drive you crazy.
Farris treats us to the sight of a blissfully happily newlywed with "Just Married" emblazoned on the back of his golf cart; of an archaeologist who discovers a hieroglyph featuring an annoyed-looking pharaoh breaking a golf club over his knee; and a TV-watching husband who rebuffs his naked wife's amorous advances in no uncertain terms: "Not now, I'm watching Tiger Woods."
It's been said that real golfers don't cry. That may or may not be true. Joseph Farris's cartoons are sure to make any golfer laugh.
Joseph Farris (1924-2015) was a contract artist for the New Yorker for many years where he contributed many cartoons and covers. His work also appeared in such national and international publications such as the New York Times, Barrons, Newsweek, Time, Harvard Business Review, Playboy, Penthouse, Ladies Home Journal, Saturday Evening Post, Readers Digest, Good Housekeeping, Punch and many other publications.