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LEWIS TRONDHEIM |
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HARUM
SCARUM
The Spiffy Adventures of McConey
Volume One |
by Lewis Trondheim |
Paperback: 48 pages
Fantagraphics Books
ISBN: 1560972882 |
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$10.95

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It is impossible
not to love the hysterical monster mystery Harum Scarum. The plot is well
thought out, and the characters--a police detective dog, a wise-cracking
reporter cat, and an innocent-bystander bunny--are utterly enjoyable. The
bunny's school pal asks him to stop by the pal's father's place and to
bring along a journalist. Imagine the surprise of the bunny and the journalist
when they find a monster in the apartment! |
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From there they
get wrapped up in police cover-ups, communist terrorists, and a mad scientist's
plan to cleanse the world. Lewis Trondheim's gift of comics storytelling
really shows through when you read a scene in which one of the characters
explains a trick or a trap, and you can go back a few panels and see the
whole thing perfectly set up, wondering all the while how you could have
missed it. And Trondheim's ability to have his character's dialogue devolve
into petty discourses about trivial matters such as the "niceties of tipping
and the exact location of the jugular vein" is a true joy. |
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LEWIS TRONDHEIM |
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The
Spiffy Adventures of McConey
THE
HOODOODAD |
by Lewis Trondheim |
Paperback: 48 pages
Fantagraphics Books
ISBN: 1560973382 |
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$10.95

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From School
Library Journal
McConey, who looks like
a well-dressed pink rabbit, is the voice of reason and sagacity among his
friends, the closest of whom is a superstitious and puerile alley cat garbed
like a retro hood. Their adventures in the series opener, Harum Scarum,
revolve around magic powders that can turn the city's population (all of
whom are animals) into self-destructing monsters. |
In The Hoodoodad,
a cursed stone is at the crux of the action. The beautifully colored drawings,
which show a terrific range of facial expressions and architectural details,
along with the anthropomorphic characters, belie the fact that McConey's
adventures really are best suited to mature readers. High school-aged boys,
especially, will enjoy the frank machismo informing many of the exploits
and the realistically foul language of Richie, the alley cat. The depictions
are never truly gruesome or carnal; even the shootouts in Harum Scarum
are no more graphic than Saturday-morning cartoons. Both books will be
popular additions to collections serving teens.
Francisca
Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA
Copyright 1999 Cahners
Business Information, Inc.
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VINNIE & the
STARDUSTERS |
"Vinnie
and the Stardusters are freakin' hilarious. This 3-song 45 gave me chuckles
galore."
--Cake
#52/53
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THE
GIRL FROM IPANEMA WANTS
TO
KILL ME |
by Vinnie & the Stardusters |
Paperback: 24 pages
Simple Sense of Superiority
ISBN: 189052901X |
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$5.00

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Put on your
3-D glasses (included) and bust a gut to the vaguely 3-D, headache-inducing
comic of an Archie spoof of the Vinnie and the Stardusters' story.
The kit includes trading cards and a 7 inch 45rpm of a spoof of Jobim's
bossa nova classic and on the flip is the Radio K hit spoof of "Que Sera
Sera" as "Quesadilla (a Tortilla with Cheez)." Already the single has gone
tin! (more than 500 copies sold) And has been included on two (count them)
compilations in Japan. |
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"An
admittedly hilarious comic book history of the band."
--Jim
"the plugger"
About the Authors
Born in the ghetto of the
South Side of Minneapolis, these three gutterpunks learned the laws of
the street. While their mission of knocking on crackhouses to sing an a
cappella version of their first hit "Huggin' not Druggin'" went sour when
the Minneapolis Police threw them in the can for trespassing.
In prison, the three "honkeys"
learned all about jailhouse rock. As soon as they got out of the big house,
bigtime record execs were dying to put their groovy hip-hop rhythms down
and out to the world. Now the Stard'sters flaunt their success with large
clocks around their necks. They may lack liberal arts, but they got that
street smarts! |
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VINNIE & the
STARDUSTERS |
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BAKE
MY PIE |
by Vinnie & the Stardusters |
Paperback: 20 pages
Simple Sense of Superiority
ISBN: 1890529036 |
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$5.00

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"The
stuff legends are made of."
--Tufts
Daily
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Archie,
Jughead and the whole gang are spoofed as Vinnie and the Stardusters in
this appropriated glow-in-the-dark comic, trading cards, and coloring book
(with only one crayon: black!) Plus: a 7" vinyl single of the Stardsters'
smash hit "Bake My Pie" (as a spoof of the Cure's "Boys Don't Cry." |
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Register
Guard, Eugene Oregon 3/28/97
"Not
just because Vinnie and the Stardusters rhyme 'preheated' with 'eat it,'
the album's best track is 'Bake My Pie."
Option
"The
most remarked upon dish, however, would have to be the mocking pseudo-cover
of the Cure's 'Boys Don't Cry' by Vinnie & the Stardusters--reimagined
as 'Bake My Pie'"
Fred
Mills, Magnet
"Parodies
wear thin unless the objet du scorn really deserves it; clearly, Robert
Smith and the Cure really, really deserve it. Too left field for Weird
Al, enter this Minneapolis jokebox, which microwaves 'Boys Don't Cry' until
it explodes like the proverbial wet poodle. Just wait'll you hear the electronica/jungle
version on the flip."
Minnesota
Daily 1/16/97
"The
funniest entry on the album is Vinnie and the Starduster's 'Bake My Pie'--a
hilarious spoof of the Cure's 'Boys Don't Cry."
Kurt
Channing, Ink Nineteen 33
"You
need to have this. This is definitely the one seven inch every collection
must have."
Raygun
"A
lip-smacking Cure parody"
About
the Authors
Vinnie
and the Stardusters is a group of farmers from Northern Minnesota. Their
mission is to inform the world of the dangers of bovine hormones, stem
the increase of farm accidents especially limb dismemberment, and to play
some downhome hoedown music! |
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