The New Yorker Magazine Book of Mom Cartoons
By (Author) The New Yorker Magazine
By (author) The New Yorker Magazine
By (author) The w Magazine
Andrews McMeel Publishing
Andrews McMeel Publishing
3rd April 2008
United States
General
Non Fiction
Humour
Relationships and families: advice, topics and issues
Parenting, parenthood: advice, topics and issues
Funny cartoons and comic strips
741.5
Paperback
112
Width 201mm, Height 216mm, Spine 8mm
218g
Tastier than chocolate, longer lasting than a bouquet of flowers, and guaranteed to be just her size, The Book of Moms features 100 hilarious New Yorker cartoons about motherhood from cartoon greats like Roz Chast, Danny Shanahan, Leo Cullum, and 43 more.
"Know that for every exuberant 'I love you' from a three-year-old, you're bound to get a, as they say, developmentally appropriate 'I hate you' from a thirteen-year-old. The trick is to embrace the one and let go of the other. . . . Laughter helps." --Cartoonist Barbara Smaller, introduction to the Book of Moms
Perfect for Mother's Day, new moms, and sharp daughters-in-law, enjoy these 100 sarcastically pitch-perfect cartoons culled from The New Yorker archives to celebrate Mom's unique motherly mom-ness. Now, you dont even need to subscribe to get in on the jokes.
More The New Yorker Magazine Book of Mom Cartoons
Since 1925, The New Yorker has cultivated the creme de la creme of cartooning elite, a vanguard of sketching artists with astute wit and clever perceptions of life and living. Inside this special collection, foremost New Yorker cartoonists such as Charles Barsotti, Robert Mankoff, and Barbara Smaller offer up 100 black-and-white single-panel cartoons in tribute to a diverse array of moms, ranging from football and CEO moms to tattooed and jack-in-the-box moms.
A witty introduction by New Yorker cartoonist Barbara Smaller opens this homage to parenting by calling attention to a few of her favorite strips within the collection, including:
* Roz Chast's "Bad Mom cards, where Lucy, Gloria, and others are guilty, guilty, guilty of such crimes as not making Play-Doh from scratch or serving orange soda."
* Sam Gross's cartoon depicting a "primordial ooze rising out of a test tube . . . inquiring hopefully of the scientist, 'Are you my mommy'"
Although its reviews and events listings often focus on cultural life within New York City, "The New Yorker" boasts an international audience and is well-known for its commentaries on popular culture and eccentric Americana; its attention to modern fiction and poetry by the inclusion of short stories, literary reviews, and original poems; its rigorous fact-checking and copyediting; its journalistic regard for world politics and social issues; and its famous single-panel cartoons sprinkled throughout each edition.