Czytaj książkę: «Cyanide and Happiness: Ice Cream and Sadness»
Dedicated to Biff Belvin
We’d also like to thank Chase Suddarth for his animation wizardry, Zach Weiner for being a great booth buddy and having a sillier last name than Matt, our two fans in Congo, our one fan in Antarctica, Matt’s mom for letting us say she was dead in the last book (the dead can’t say no!) and of course our wonderful fans, for keeping it so damn classy. You’re kinda the best.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Foreword
Comics
The New Ones
Interactivities
About the Comics
About the Authors
Copyright
About the Publisher
Foreword
Dear Reader,
Midway through the decade-we-still-don’t-have-a-name-for, people thought ‘webcomics’ were all strips focused on video games, influenced mainly by anime and pixel art. Yet one of the most popular webcomics didn’t fit that description at all, and most of my comics friends seemed to have barely heard of it. It was beloved not by comic nerds, but by real, normal people sharing comics on their eye-wateringly ugly MySpace pages. And they shared them because they were funny.
Good jokes, told well, are why Cyanide & Happiness is so popular. For a comic that packs in an awful lot of blood, stick figure nudity, abortions, and sheer contrariness, it is–at its heart–funny. The best of their strips aren’t simply the ones that are the most outrageous, they’re the ones that most perfectly subvert your expectations, which is what a joke should do. Sometimes that means giving you an unexpected ending to the “sitting in a tree” childhood rhyme, and sometimes it means giving you polio. But whatever the content, there’s always a joke at the end.
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