Product Description
History books are often sprinkled with editorial cartoons to illuminate the issues of a period of time. This is a history book of sorts, but with a twist. It is a view of the past tweny-five years through the eyes of an editorial cartoonist, with text used to illuminate the cartoons. It begins in Vietnam and the waning years of the Nixon administration, the launching point of a thousand cartoon careers, and ends in the current war in Iraq. This book looks at many issues (the economy, military, spendings, race relations, religion and culture) which have remained issues over the last 25 years and seven presidents; they simply increase and decrease over time. One of the lessons drawn from this effort is that nothing ever gets resolved, as the big questions keep coming back in one form or another, making for interesting reading.
From the Author
It is no accident that some of the most enduring symbols of American politics came from cartoonists, the Republican elephant and Democratic donkey being the best known. Surely the symbols of the next era are being drawn today--and prescient reader might even find some hints of them in these pages.
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John C. Green, Director, Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics
As a humor columnist, I also work in the whoopee-cushion sector of journalism. So over the years, I've come to know many cartoonists, and one of my favorites, as both a professional and a guy, is Chip Bok. I met him in the early 1980's in Miami, where both he and I worked for the
Miami Herald's wonderful (and, alas, now defunct) Sunday magazine,
Tropic. For awhile, Chip drew terrific illustrations for my column, but before long his talent took him to the
Akron Beacon Journal, for whom he has been turning out wonderful work ever since.
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Dave Barry, Humorist