|
Browse our Bookshelf Favorites store for big savings on popular fiction, nonfiction, children's books, and more. |
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images? |
1988 was the year of the Bush/Dukakis Presidential election, and true to form Breathed has Bill the Cat and Opus running for office on the Meadow ticket again - thoroughly skewering the whole political process as they do so. In another extended continuity, the gang inadvertently creates the next "designer drug" craze - "Dr. Oliver's Cat-Sweat Scalp Tonic," a miracle baldness cure that the feds soon deem illegal "due to reports of rude 'Ack'-ing side effects" - in a storyline that deftly parodies both sides of the drug-legalization issue. It's as relevant today as it was fifteen years ago. Next, the 1988 Supreme Court ruling that traditionally "male-only" clubs are unconstitutional is grist for the satirical mill, as the almost 100%-male cast of Bloom County suddenly finds themselves having to add a woman to their number... which descends into all-out panic when it's revealed that one of the animal characters is secretly female!
And in the sequence that gave this book its title, Opus discovers his mother is alive and well... and a prisoner of Mary Kay's animal-research division. Breathed has admitted this was his most personal storyline; the idea of using animals to test cosmetics, and even using animal by-products to *make* said cosmetics, needless to say is anathema to an animal lover such as him. Having already visited this theme during the "hair tonic" story, here Breathed goes after Mary Kay with both guns blazing... but it's not *all* one-sided, as a militant PETA-esque organization takes some lumps as well.
Through it all, Breathed continues to hone his craft, all but completely moving away from representational art to the sort of surreal, almost Seussian landscapes that would define the latter days of Bloom County and Outland, and continue into his childrens' books. New characters that would play a key role in these later developments, such as Ronald-Ann Smith and Milquetoast, are introduced. The "new and improved" Steve Dallas is used to poke fun at the "sensitive male" stereotype, which in its own way is almost as irritating as the "old and inferior" Steve.
Bloom County is arguably the best comic strip of the 1980s. This book is a prime example of why.