Book Description
In the funniest dog cartoon book ever, beloved New Yorker cartoonist Leo Cullum pokes gentle fun at the foibles and eccentricities of cavorting canines and their human owners. Or is it the dogs who are in charge? As his enchanted fans well know, Cullum's dogs are an eclectic and enterprising lot. They are lawyers and doctors and businessmen, and more than a few like to sit in bars and debate the predicaments of life. Whether they portray a confounded dog therapy patient searching for the reason he is barking, or an exasperated dog humoring his human owner's need to keep throwing a stick for him to fetch, the 125 laugh-out-loud cartoons in this book tell us almost as much about people as they do about dogs.
About the Author
Leo Cullum, a recently retired commercial airline pilot, has published 500 cartoons in The New Yorker since his first appearance there in 1977. His work also appears regularly in Barron's and the Harvard Business Review. Numerous anthologies have included his work, and it has been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum of Art.
Scotch and Toilet Water: A Book of Dog Cartoons FROM THE PUBLISHER
In the funniest dog cartoon book ever, beloved New Yorker cartoonist Leo Cullum pokes gentle fun at the foibles and eccentricities of cavorting canines and their human owners. Or is it the dogs who are in charge?
As his enchanted fans well know, Cullum's dogs are an eclectic and enterprising lot. They are lawyers and doctors and businessmen, and more than a few like to sit in bars and debate the predicaments of life. Whether they portray a confounded dog therapy patient searching for the reason he is barking, or an exasperated dog humoring his human owner's need to keep throwing a stick for him to fetch, the 125 laugh-out-loud cartoons in this book tell us almost as much about people as they do about dogs.
About the Author:Leo Cullum, a recently retired commercial airline pilot, has published 500 cartoons in The New Yorker since his first appearance there in 1977. His work also appears regularly in Barron's and the Harvard Business Review. Numerous anthologies have included his work, and it has been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum of Art.