Jampacked with 48 of the wittiest cartoons from Matt Groening's syndicated "Life in Hell" comic strip. You also get 25 chapters of the "Childhood is Hell" maxi-series and a bunch of bonuses.
Matthew Abram Groening is an American cartoonist, television producer and writer from Portland, Oregon.
Groening is best known as the creator of The Simpsons. He is also the creator of Futurama and the author of the weekly comic strip Life in Hell. Groening distributed Life in Hell in the book corner of Licorice Pizza, a record store in which he worked.
He made his first professional cartoon sale to the avant-garde Wet magazine in 1978. The cartoon is still carried in 250 weekly newspapers.
I read this in hiding when I was in 5th grade. It doesn't seem so scandalous anymore. Just remember there is more to Matt Groening than The Simpsons- he actually used to be kind of cool! Look out for the Marlys reference: Groening and Lynda Barry are good friends.
I realized one of my favorite things are drawings with a lot of stuff going on and humorous captions pointing to little details: the Life in Hell books are full of these, and can occupy you for a while . Lynda Barry does this a lot,too. So do the Elizabeth Levy "Something Queer" books, and the Magic School Bus series. I aspire to these kinds of drawings. Somebody light a fire under my ass.
What a great bit of early Groening! Like many reviewers, I remember hiding this book in my backpack and reading it at school. There was just something about reading this in secret, it felt like it should be read in secret. I would say that I didn't get all the jokes when I was younger, but this is another book of comics that I have gone back to over and over again.
Haven't read this since I was in college in the late 80's. I remember loving it then, but it has definitely lost it's luster in the last 25 years. "Love In Hell" is definitely worth revisiting, but I think the rest can be skipped..... unless you just want to see the early workings of the mind that brought us "The Simpsons."
I really love Matt Groening's books. They have twice as much insight and heart as The Simpson's ever did. The dry wit and moving humor beat the pants off of all imitators (especially the South Park crew.)
The public library had these four books and I read them sometime in high school. I wound up buying them from the library later when they were getting rid of them.
The funniest thing about this is where I found it - sandwiched in with some books I kept from my childhood. I would have been sixteen or so when this came out and likely I got it then; it reeks of cigarette smoke, like everything else that was ever at my parents' house.
Some of the cartoons are funnier than others. I must have liked this enough the first time I read it, since I kept it all these years. Maybe it was funnier when I was closer to the ages it covers (1-12); maybe it would be funnier now if I'd had kids. For the most part, though, it was a pretty meh read.