Today in Chicago
Friday
01.09.09
Light Snow
29ºF
Your Messages and MailPersonals and MatchmakerJobs and CareersDance Music 24/7ShopProfiles
Login:       Password:    
View cart | Checkout


Will Wikle 
12/17/2008

Luke Eberl 
11/13/2008

Val Emmich 
11/12/2008

Joey Arias 
10/29/2008

Cindy Guidry 
10/22/2008

Bart Yates 
10/15/2008

Kathy Griffin 
10/15/2008

More Interviews

Books Music DVD Movies
  Search type

Keyword

Inventory

 

   
You have no items in your shopping cart




Doonesbury Dossier: The Reagan Years
Henry Holt & Co (P)
$12.95



The Portable Doonesbury
Andrews McMeel Publishing
$12.95



Doonesbury Deluxe: Selected Glances Askance
Henry Holt & Co (P)
$16.95



Heckuva Job, Bushie!: A Doonesbury Book
Andrews McMeel Publishing
$19.95



Recycled Doonesbury
Andrews McMeel Publishing
$12.95



Flashbacks: Twenty-Five Years of Doonesbury
Andrews and McMeel
$18.95


  
Doonesbury Chronicles
by Garry B. Trudeau

List Price: $12.95
Unavailable for
purchase at this time

Paperback
Publisher: Henry Holt & Company

17 Doonesbury Publications: But the Pension Fund Was Just Sitting There, But This War Had Such Promise, As the Kid Goes for Broke, Speaking of Inalienable Rights Amy, Guilty Guilty Guilty , What Do We Have for the Witnesses Johnnie, The President Is a Lot Smarter Than You Think, We're Not Out of the Woods Yet, Joanie, An Expecially Tricky People, You're Never Too Old for Nuts and Berries, Just a French Major From the Bronx, Any Grooming Hints for Your Fans, Rollie, Stalking the Perfect Tan, Wouldn't a Gremlin Have Been More Sensible, A Tad Overweight but Violet Eyes to Die For.


Customer Reviews:
 
A nostalgic look back to trying times through the Doonesbury lens
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
The early seventies was a time when the American involvement in the war in Southeast Asia was winding down and Watergate was spiraling, not winding upward. Recent events and attitudes in the United States have demonstrated that the collective American memory of that time has largely been lost. The administration of George W. Bush has run roughshod over many areas of civil liberties and the truth in a manner that Dick Nixon could only have dreamed of.
This collection of cartoons from the Doonesbury strip of the early seventies is a journey back to that era and presents the events in a way that only a quality cartoonist can. From these captions, you can see the rapid demise of the Nixon administration, the early days of the Ford presidency and the first stages of the feminist movement where women are applying for positions in graduate professional schools.
If you lack the basic knowledge of the events of that time, these cartoons will not make much sense to you. The humor is there, but without the historical context, it is almost impossible to grasp. I remember those times and I loved the look back through the Doonesbury lens.


From the dustjacket flap.......
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
In 1975, for the first time in the history of journalism awards, the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning went to a comic strip: Garry Trudeau's nationally syndicated Doonesbury.

"It is not only the best comic strip, but the best satire that's come along in a long time." -- Art Buchwald

Carried today by over 350 North American newspapers, Doonesbury's unique blend of social-political satire, cartoon humor, and comic-strip continuity has won a following both improbably diverse and fanatically devoted. In Washington, where Doonesbury is required reading, requests for original strips have come from White House aides, senators, congressmen, and -- remarkably -- most of the major Watergate conspirators whose maladventures gave the strip grist for some of its most celebrated moments.

"There are only three major vehicles to keep us informed as to what is going on in Washington: the electronic media, the print media, and Doonesbury, not necessarily in that order." -- President Gerald Ford

So loyal has been this following that on occasions when Doonesbury was suddenly notable for its absence from a paper following a satirical thrust that had somehow offended editors' notions of comic strip propriety, readers have always managed to protest it back onto the page.

The Doonesbury Chronicles marks the first hardcover appearance of Michael J. Doonesbury and cohorts, and is their first collection to include Sunday color pages. In all, 572 strips are presented, as selected by Garry Trudeau and encompassing the full Doonesbury canon, from its cozy campus origins at the frazzled end of the sixties through the stumbling first half of the seventies. Conducting us along the way is a motley though always redeemable cast that includes a student radical turned disc jockey, an immaculately dense but nonetheless charismatic quarterback, a nature freak who has nightmares about Mark Spitz, and a runaway housewife who ends up as a Berkeley law student by way of the Walden Commune Day-Care Center. For those hooked on Trudeau, as well as those still somehow deprived, for giving or hoarding, The Doonesbury Chronicles is a rich and Recession-proof treasure of a book.




Login | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Media Assets | Webmasters / RSS | Advertise

Sponsorship or Partnerships | Contact the Editor | Email the President | Press Inquiries | Contact Us

Serving Boystown and Gay Chicago since 1995
© Copyright 1995-2009 All rights reserved. Info on this site is strictly for entertainment purposes.