Have your IDs ready and your intolerance for dirty pictures and controversial ideas checked at the door for it’s time to step into the head of Mr. Fish, where filthy ideas meet deep insights and something like inspiring woe, discouraging indifference and gleeful nihilism are born!
After interviewing notorious brainiacs such as Art Spiegelman and Noam Chomsky and spending many months pouring over every kind of art, beginning with 40,000 year old cave paintings and ending with the most contemporary scribblings, Fish has written a book that explores the significance and insignificance of art as commentary. Find out what is right and wrong with the profession of political cartooning. Discover the truth about why our visual language is so much more adept than our verbal language at explaining and understanding the existential stuff and nonsense that elates and burdens us everyday. Have you ever wondered this: If Yoko Ono sat silently in the middle of a crowded auditorium in her underpants and everybody was there to see it, would she make any sense whatsoever? Or: What is a bogey ball and does it really need to be made out of real snot to be impactful?
Mr. Fish answers all these questions and more in his brand new eBook, WARNING: Graphic Content, now available for pre-order at a crazy-ass discounted price on Amazon. Dig it. (And feel free to contact the author regarding speaking events and signings: mrfish@clowncrack.com)
Did you draw any dicks in this new book? Dammit man, publish it as a physical object – I’m not reading no goddamn e-book.
Same question as Glenn.
Call me old-fashioned. I am old at 53. But as a life-time lover of books, real books, my feeling is that what a real book lends our human senses, all 12 of them, eBooks lack by being basically the “reading dead.”
They’re barely alive and have no pulse, much like Dick Cheney.
But of course, I’ve already downloaded my copy because of my love of Fish. Count yourself lucky, Mr.
Same as Linda.
I’m only a few pages into my first ebook, reading it on my PC.
Laughed too hard, spilled my tea, then broke my chair leaning back after the cleanup.
Buy it, but by all means, heed the WARNING and first secure the furniture. This book kicks.
Any chance of a hard copy, maybe a print-on-demand version, becoming available?