Classic Mad, first published in 1960. As usual, this volume includes many satires and some good comics. I really liked "The U.S. Army Chicken Officer's field manual" (a guide for REMFs) and "A profit without Honor" (how to sell anything via marketing). Mad really had the pulse of the 50s and 60s, spoofing trends, advertising, hobbies and of course the hipsters of the day. 4 nostalgic stars!!
Hard to be sure why this book, its contents enjoyed in a magazine during childhood, was such a let down now. Perhaps it is the way the stories are reformatted for this paperback. Perhaps there are too many high word count stories, when the best humor in the book is mostly visual. Perhaps it is that I am old and cranky. Whatever the cause, this attempt to enjoy something from my youth was a huge disappointment. Little of it was funny, and amount of work required to read the too small text did not reward my proportionally in enjoyment.
Bought this as a kid and now, my Son surprised me with a copy he found in a used bookstore. Except for TV show parodies, which only those who grew up on them would remember and find humor in, most of the comedy and satire remain relevant today.
I think these were a way for MAD to republish stuff from the 50s and 60s in the 70s. So, to a young teen, a lot of the cultural references didn't (and some still don't) make sense. Still, some amusing stuff but nothing memorable.