Dewey and his fellow librarians confront the FBI, psychic fairs, poetry slams, crashed hard drives, identity theft, and of course each other. This book features introduction by librarian, the author,... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Not a book to be read once only, but I put it on the coffee table to enjoy often or for friends to enjoy in small segments. This book is as great as the first three with its laugh-out-loud strips to pithy and humorous comments exposing the vulgarities of American marketing, management and mayham. I am also the proud owner of Unshelved's Library swat-team jacket. It is a great conversation starter and very comfortable. Also it makes a great gift, along with the book.
This Book Is Freaking Awesome!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I'm a big Unshelved fan. No, I'm not a librarian. I'm a cartoonist. In fact I'm an award winning illustrator. I mention this because I want you to grock that my opinion matters more than others in so much that I understand the fine art of cartooning from the professional's viewpoint. But, enough about me, lets talk about what a treasured treat you will find in Unshelved. A natural simplistic style is a technique of allowing the viewer to identify with the characters. This is because we are all very simple at heart. But, unlike us, the characters in Unshelled are never tongue-tied. Their wit pours on scathing abuse with a gentle yet fair hand. We see in their retorts and quips the daily venting of the spleen we all go through to prevent us from indulging in road rage. In closing get and read this book, it prevents road rage. And it just might make you want to get to know your librarian.
funny stuff
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I've been reading Unshelved online for a while, and I must say that the strips look a lot nicer in print than they do on the computer screen. Bill and Gene are clever, funny guys, and the jokes work even for non-librarians (like me). Strips range from the library end of the spectrum -- privacy issues and the Patriot Act, a haiku poetry slam -- to the general workplace end -- a hard drive crash, employees going ape over donuts. Plus you get material that's not on the website, like the "how we make Unshelved" comic -- it looks quickly drawn but the dialogue between the Bill and Gene characters just ring true. All in all, it's a funny book, and now whenever I visit my local library I look around with a whole new perspective.
Write on!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I am a librarian and have been reading Unshelved via my email for several years now. I bought this book from the authors at an American Library Association meeting. Their cartoon strip is almost always right on the mark when it comes to how things really are in a library, and covers a lot of the situtations we deal with daily. Some of their panels make me laugh out loud and all are at least worth a chuckle. For librarians, this is a must have. For non-librarians - well, now you can see what we say about you behind your backs.
the strange world of public libraries
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
The second book of comics about the Mallville Public Library is just as funny and true as the first. If you want to try before you buy, you can read their entire archive online at http://www.overduemedia.com or buy a 'Read Responsibly' t-shirt.
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