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Jeaux Janovsky's Logs for the Creative Fire

fantagraphics:

The Life and Death of Fritz the Cat by Robert Crumb
96-page black & white 8.25” x 10.75” hardcover • $19.99ISBN: 978-1-60699-480-1
Now in Stock! See Previews / Order Now
“I   can express something [with animals] that is different from what I put   into my work about humans… I can put more nonsense, more satire and   fantasy into the animals…” — R. Crumb
Created by an   adolescent R. Crumb in the late 1950s, Fritz the Cat rose to fame —   along with his creator — during the underground comix revolution of the   1960s, and remains Crumb’s most well-known character and an   internationally recognized icon of 1960s culture.
Fritz is a   feline, freewheeling chiseler who allowed Crumb to express some of his   most acidic commentary on American culture. Tragicomedy, farce and   satire all rolled into one, The Life and Death of Fritz the Cat   chronicles the very best of Fritz’s adventures from his early days as an   idealistic college student to his ultimate fate as a jaded, burned-out   superstar, including Crumb’s infamous send-off of the character in the   wake of Ralph Bakshi’s animated feature film, an experience and  project  that completely dissatisfied Crumb.
Finally collected  in a  single volume, these Fritz stories are a funny, insightful,  authentic  record of a tumultuous period in American life, with humor  and  compassion by the most well-respected cartoonist of all time.

want. oh gawd, how i want. who wants to buy it for me?

fantagraphics:

The Life and Death of Fritz the Cat
by Robert Crumb

96-page black & white 8.25” x 10.75” hardcover • $19.99
ISBN: 978-1-60699-480-1

Now in Stock! See Previews / Order Now

“I can express something [with animals] that is different from what I put into my work about humans… I can put more nonsense, more satire and fantasy into the animals…” — R. Crumb

Created by an adolescent R. Crumb in the late 1950s, Fritz the Cat rose to fame — along with his creator — during the underground comix revolution of the 1960s, and remains Crumb’s most well-known character and an internationally recognized icon of 1960s culture.

Fritz is a feline, freewheeling chiseler who allowed Crumb to express some of his most acidic commentary on American culture. Tragicomedy, farce and satire all rolled into one, The Life and Death of Fritz the Cat chronicles the very best of Fritz’s adventures from his early days as an idealistic college student to his ultimate fate as a jaded, burned-out superstar, including Crumb’s infamous send-off of the character in the wake of Ralph Bakshi’s animated feature film, an experience and project that completely dissatisfied Crumb.

Finally collected in a single volume, these Fritz stories are a funny, insightful, authentic record of a tumultuous period in American life, with humor and compassion by the most well-respected cartoonist of all time.

want. oh gawd, how i want. who wants to buy it for me?