As aventuras de um cão ingénuo, um gato siamês com imensa «gatitude» e um solteirão moderno. Este poderia ser um resumo adequado da hilariante tira cómica Aqui Há Gato, nomeada Melhor Tira de Jornal de 2002 pela National Cartoonists Society.
Rob Wilco é um executivo publicitário com bom feitio que toma conta do velhaco siamês, Bucky, e do afável sharpei amarelo, Satchel. Os dois dão-se, bem, como cão e gato. Qual pai solteiro sob pressão, Rob tem de neutralizar constantemente os esquemas de Bucky e proteger Satchel, que nunca desconfia de nada, enquanto os disparates perpetrados pelos seus animais de estimação lhe boicotam quaisquer tentativas de ter namoradas. (Tente lá explicar à sua namorada por que razão o seu gato se julga um gangster rapper e o seu cão está a filmar a sua casa para a MTV...) Mordazmente cómico, Aqui Há Gato fará as delícias de todos os que alguma vez viveram num lar multiespécies.
Darby Conley is an American cartoonist best known for the popular comic strip Get Fuzzy.
Conley was born in Concord, Massachusetts in 1970, and grew up in Knoxville, Tennessee.
While in high school in 1986, he won a student cartooning competition. During his Senior Year at Doyle High School (now South-Doyle High School) in Knoxville, Conley was voted 'Most Talented' by his graduating class. He attended Amherst College, where he studied Fine Arts, drew cartoons for the student newspaper, played rugby, and was a member of an all-male, jazz-influenced a cappella group, the Zumbyes. (Fellow cartoonist alumni of Amherst include FoxTrot creator Bill Amend and the late John Cullen Murphy of Prince Valiant fame.)
Like Rob Wilco, the human protagonist in Get Fuzzy, Conley is an enthusiastic rugby union fan, playing during college and sustaining several injuries that failed to diminish his passion for the sport.
Before becoming a cartoonist, Conley held a wide array of jobs: elementary school teacher, art director for a science museum, lifeguard, and bicycle repairman. This eclectic collection of professions is reminiscent of those held by Douglas Adams, whom Conley has mentioned as a comedic influence.
Conley, an animal rights activist and vegetarian, lives in Boston.
Another title from the Get Fuzzy library, Blueprint For Disaster showed that Darby Conley could get back into his game after the disappointing volume 3 I read a couple of weeks ago.
From pop-tarts in the VCR to a feud with Fungo next door that lands everyone on the Judge Judy show, Bucky Katt proves once again if there is trouble lurking anywhere, he will find it.
And Rob and Satchel will have to deal with whatever happens next.
This was my favorite so far from my little splurge on Get Fuzzy books.
This book is hilarious! My friend Alicia asked me if I had ever heard of this comic strip and of course I had not. But I'm glad she told me about it.
Bucky is a cat who is loud mouthed, angry, stinks, lives in a closet, has one fang hanging out which is so cute, his arch nemesis is a ferret, and lives with a dog and his person.
Think of Garfield but maybe without his meds (Garfield would have to take meds if he was like Bucky)
Does anything say 'weekend' more than the funny pages? Darby Conley's Get Fuzzy is on of the funniest of the pages, and Blueprint for Disaster is a top-notch collection. I've probably read this collection four or five times all the way through, it's been in the house since I was eight. Part of how I learned to read was Sunday comic pages and collections like this one, which also fueled a love of anything sequential art. I've read plenty of paperback omnibuses like this one, most of them Gary Larson's The Far Side, Bill Waters' Calvin and Hobbs, classics like Charles Schultz's Peanuts and Fontaine Fox's Toonerville Trolley and, most beloved, Matt Groening's Life in Hell, Jim Davis's Garfield and this gem right here. From the Satchel Pooch's Dogs of the World conference, to Bucky Katt versus Fungo Squiggly on the Judge Judy show, Blueprint for Disaster is one laugh after another.
On a final note, Garfield got a movie. We need a Get Fuzzy one.
My son and I have found a new comic book series to read - we have exhausted Calvin and Hobbes and Foxtrot and even Garfield and Sonic. So, now we are moving on to even more sarcasm with Bucky, the hateful and crazy Siamese and Satchel the shar-pei lab mix along with their exasperated owner, Rob. Too cute and a great way to teach my son about world events like Judge Judy and TIVO (hah!)A great way to bond and share, highly recommend this series for young adults who know all about quirky animals.
One of my collections contains cartoons from this book, but either it doesn't contain all of them, or I have a bad memory. Either way, I'm glad I grabbed this out of the library. Is it weird that I often sympathize with Bucky? I am a cat person ...
Darb Conley is a great humorist when it comes to showing the lives of pet owners and the crazy pets they call friends. If you're into laugh out loud humor, you'll love his work and this book!
This was a re-read for me, I picked up the first book of the collected comics years ago and have been a huge fan of the cranky Bucky Katt and sweet Satchel Pooch ever since.
Son tiras sobre un hombre, su gato y su perro. No, no es Garfield. El perro es bobalicón y bienintencionado, el humano es un adorno despersonalizado y el gato es cínico y olvidadizo. No es muy cliché, pero tampoco es muy original.
El apartado gráfico es correcto. Son tiras, dibujo rápido y de fórmulas simples. Cuando tiene que dibujar alguna figura humana un poco difícil (niños, por ejemplo) no lo hace muy bien, pero son tiras, no pasa nada.
La narrativa visual es bastante mala. Muchas veces te rompe el chiste la falta de continuidad visual de la misma tira. Los guiones tampoco son muy allá, los chistes son flojos cuando son buenos e inexistentes cuando son malos.
Me imagino que tiene su público y que habrá quién le encuentre la gracia. Se lee fácil, son tiras, las tiras siempre se leen fácil. Pero me han dado ganas de saltarme las páginas de 20 en 20.
Bucky Katt is cantankerous, opinionated and determined. The interplay between his owner Rob, housemate Satchel, a dog, and Bucky is sometimes very funny, often creates a "you've got to be kidding" reaction. It is a fast book or slow, if you want to savor the cartoon strips, to read. The sketches are good. Bucky Katt is too over the top to be believed even when the strip touches on important issues.
It's not the most overtly funny comic strip collection out there, but I respect the experimentation with joke construction and understated humor. As always, I enjoy Conley's heavily-detailed-yet-cartoony art style.