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The New Yorker Book of Cartoons book cover 1
The New Yorker Book of Cartoons book cover 2
The New Yorker Book of Cartoons book cover 3
The New Yorker Book of Cartoons
Series · 12
books · 1990-2007

Books in series

The New Yorker Book of Dog Cartoons book cover
#1

The New Yorker Book of Dog Cartoons

1992

Here's the dog's life as seen through the eyes and imaginations of, among others, Charles Addams, Edward Koren, Saul Steinberg, and the dog's all-time best friend, James Thurber. 101 cartoons in all from The New Yorker over the past 65 years.
The New Yorker Book of Mom Cartoons book cover
#2

The New Yorker Book of Mom Cartoons

2007

"Know that for every exuberant 'I love you' from a three-year-old, you're bound to get a, as they say, developmentally appropriate 'I hate you' from a thirteen-year-old. The trick is to embrace the one and let go of the other... Laughter helps." —Cartoonist Barbara Smaller, introduction to the Book of MomsPerfect for Mother's Day, 100 sarcastically pitch-perfect cartoons culled from The New Yorker archives to celebrate Mom's unique motherly mom-ness. Since 1925, The New Yorker has cultivated the creme de la creme of cartooning elite, a vanguard of sketching artists with astute wit and clever perceptions of life and living. Inside this special collection, such New Yorker cartooning greats as Charles Barsotti, Robert Mankoff, and Barbara Smaller offer up 100 black-and-white single-panel cartoons in tribute to a diverse array of moms, ranging from football and CEO moms to tattooed and jack-in-the-box moms. A witty introduction by New Yorker cartoonist Barbara Smaller opens this homage by calling attention to a few of her favorite cartoons within the collection, Roz Chast's "Bad Mom cards, where Lucy, Gloria, and others are guilty, guilty, guilty of such crimes as not making Play-Doh from scratch or serving orange soda." Sam Gross' cartoon depicting a "primordial ooze rising out of a test tube . . . inquiring hopefully of the scientist, 'Are you my mommy?'"
The New Yorker Book of Lawyer Cartoons book cover
#3

The New Yorker Book of Lawyer Cartoons

1993

Critically acclaimed cartoonists including Addams, Steig, Arno, Shanahan, and Leo Cullum take pot shots at the legal profession in a collection of eighty-five cartoons from the pages of The New Yorker.
The New Yorker Book of Cat Cartoons book cover
#4

The New Yorker Book of Cat Cartoons

1990

Here are the funniest and most feline cats ever assembled in 101 cartoons, the cream of the cream, from sixty-five years of the New Yorker.
The New Yorker Book of All-New Cat Cartoons book cover
#5

The New Yorker Book of All-New Cat Cartoons

1997

Cats again? You can never have too many . . . Drawn from the hundreds of cartoons published in The New Yorker in the seven years since The New Yorker Book of Cat Cartoons—as well as from fabulous older cats—this new collection is as hilarious and irresistible as the first. The cartoons provide a cat's-eye view of the world and the important things in food, sleep, love and affection, adventure, food, good friends and doggy enemies, back rubs, and food. We see the essence of the feline world captured with verve, humor, and warmth by classic New Yorker artists such as Ed Koren, George Booth, William Steig, Saul Steinberg, Lee Lorenz, Robert Mankoff, Mick Stevens, Danny Shanahan, and Bruce Eric Kaplan. Purrfectly divine!
The New Yorker Book of Christmas Cartoons book cover
#6

The New Yorker Book of Christmas Cartoons

2004

Stay organized with humor and style with The New Yorker Desk Diary 2010 Desk Calendar . Each weekly spread features a three-month quick-glance overview, ample room for notes, and is punctuated by a classic New Yorker cartoon specially selected from their extensive archives, The full-color About Town section features important travel related numbers as well as popular New York restaurants, nightclubs, theaters, and hotels. An expanded address section leaves ample room for key contacts, friends, and family, and a reinforced pocket lets you store notes, receipts, and grocery lists. The durable leather-finish cover and generous 7 1/4" x 10" size make this the ideal executive diary for home or office.
The New Yorker Book of Literary Cartoons book cover
#7

The New Yorker Book of Literary Cartoons

2000

Here is a cornucopia of 104 dead-on drawings and eye-opening ruminations on all things bookish, writerly, and readerly, courtesy of The New Yorker's renowned stable of cartoonists, including Charles Barsotti, Roz Chast, Ed Koren, J.B. Handelsman, Jack Ziegler, and Victoria Roberts. In the bestselling tradition of such classics as The New Yorker Book of Lawyer Cartoons and The New Yorker Book of Cat Cartoons, this collection of literary laughs is manna straight from bookworm heaven.
The New Yorker Book of Doctor Cartoons book cover
#8

The New Yorker Book of Doctor Cartoons

1993

85 cartoons
New Yorker Book of Business Cartoons book cover
#10

New Yorker Book of Business Cartoons

1998

Spanning the years from 1938 to 1998, this delightful collection of cartoons about business features the cartoons of many of America's favorite cartoonists, including George Booth, Roz Chast, Bruce Eric Kaplan, Edward Koren, Gahan Wilson, and more. Robert Mankoff, cartoon editor of The New Yorker, selected the cartoons from the magazine's archives and David Remnick, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and editor of The New Yorker, starts things off with a wonderful introduction.
The New Yorker Book of Workplace Cartoons book cover
#12

The New Yorker Book of Workplace Cartoons

2004

Ideal for advanced undergraduate students of history
The New Yorker Book of Money Cartoons book cover
#14

The New Yorker Book of Money Cartoons

1999

If money makes the world go 'round, also wreak havoc with our personal worlds, spinning them up and down, topsy turvy, even out of orbit? Money can make us feel happy, sad, elated, stressed, crazed, and a whole host of other emotions. Now, thanks to the brilliant cartoonists of The New Yorker, money can also make us giggle, chuckle, chortle, snicker, and laugh out loud. And, we can better understand why money does all of the above. This delightful collection about money in our everyday lives features 110 classic cartoons from the cartoonists of The New Yorker—artists like Charles Addams, George Booth, Roz Chast, Peter Arno, and Gahan Wilson. The wit within its pages will tickle (and often inform) everyone in all walks of life. Christopher Buckley adds to the merriment with an introductory essay in his own inimitable and hilarious style.
The New Yorker Book of Teacher Cartoons book cover
#16

The New Yorker Book of Teacher Cartoons

2006

School is a mixture of joy, terror, work, excitement, boredom, anxiety, fun, and bedlam day after day, year after year. If this is true for students, it is exponentially true for teachers-those hearty souls who have taken on the education of the youth of the world. This wonderful collection of the best and funniest cartoons published over the last eighty years in The New Yorker takes a wry look into the classroom-at the students, at their blindly devoted but demanding parents, and, especially, at the teachers who negotiate the delicate balance between those forces every day. With 118 cartoons, this is a perfect gift for teachers and a treasure of laughs for all!

Authors

Syd Hoff
Syd Hoff
Author · 47 books

Whether you’re seven or seventy, the chances are you’ve probably come in contact with one of his many books (150 plus), or cartoons that have appeared in over 200 magazines in the course of his lifetime, including Laugh it Off which was syndicated for 20 years. His comic strip Tuffy, about a little girl who did funny things, was declared essential for national morale during WWII by William Randolph Hearst. Syd has worked in diverse genres. He had the distinct honor of working with Alfred Hitchcock and Ellery Queen as a contributor of short fiction writing. He was awarded national advertising commissions for large companies such as Chevrolet, Maxwell House Coffee and others. He had his own TV show (Tales of Hoff on CBS), traveled the world as entertainment on cruise ships and entertained children and teachers in schools and libraries across the country.

The New Yorker
The New Yorker
Author · 18 books
The New Yorker is an American magazine of reportage, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry published by Condé Nast Publications. Starting as a weekly in the mid-1920s, the magazine is now published forty-seven times per year, with five of these issues covering two-week spans.
Charles Barsotti
Author · 4 books
Charles Branum Barsotti was an American cartoonist who drew cartoons for major magazine publications including The New Yorker.
Chon Day
Chon Day
Author · 1 book

Chauncey Addison Day (Chon was a college nickname) was born in Chatham, New Jersey, USA, and attended Lehigh University in 1926, where he drew for the college's humour magazine, 'The Burr'. However, he left after just one year and later enrolled in 1929 at New York City's Art Students League. There he studied under Boardman Robinson, George Bridgman and John Sloan. It was in that same year, 1929, that his cartoons were first published in national magazines. His gentle monk Sebastian was born in the unclerical atmosphere of Toots Shor's restaurant in New York when Day was lunching with Gurney Williams, humour Editor of 'Look' magazine. Thereafter he appeared regularly in the pages of 'Look'. He also produced cartoons for such as 'The New Yorker'. the 'Saturday Evening Post' and other internationally famous magazines. When he died in 2000 he had been the 'Saturday Evening Post's' longest running cartoonist for more than half a century. He received the National Cartoonists Society Gag Cartoon Award for 1956, 1962 and 1970, plus their Special Features Award for Brother Sebastian in 1969. Instead of working in New York, Day chose to live in Westerly, Rhode Island where he conducted most of his business by mail. He stated that he moved there 'to get away from commuters'. During the summer months he would devote his time to sailing, fishing and clam digging and he worked mostly at night, after the house had stopped pulsating from the activities of his three sons. He once said, 'The natives in town think I'm a bum, or on a night shift somewhere, or a bookie.' He explained to them that he was retired and added, off the record, 'That's as good as anything, I guess, after 25 years of cartooning.' He died in 2000.

Jack Ziegler
Author · 2 books
Jack Ziegler served worked as a cartoonist for the New Yorker Magazine for over forty years.
Roz Chast
Roz Chast
Author · 13 books

Rosalind "Roz" Chast is an American cartoonist and a staff cartoonist for The New Yorker. She grew up in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, the only child of an assistant principal and a high school teacher. Her earliest cartoons were published in Christopher Street and The Village Voice. In 1978 The New Yorker accepted one of her cartoons and has since published more than 800. She also publishes cartoons in Scientific American and the Harvard Business Review. Chast is a graduate of Midwood High School in Brooklyn. She first attended Kirkland College (which later merged with Hamilton College) and then studied at the Rhode Island School of Design and received a BFA in painting in 1977. She also holds honorary doctorates from Pratt Institute and Dartmouth College, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is represented by the Danese/Corey gallery in Chelsea, New York City.

James Stevenson
Author · 76 books
Librarian Note: There is more than one author with this name in the Goodreads databse.
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