Product Details
Bob the Angry Flower: Dog Killer

Bob the Angry Flower: Dog Killer
By Stephen Notley

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Product Description

Combining politics, surrealism, and pop-culture hilarity, Bob the Angry Flower is an edgy, trenchantly political, and achingly funny comic-strip character. Whether he's building killer robots, running for Pope, or getting creamed at 20 Questions, Bob is locked, loaded, and ready to destroy the earth—unless there's something good on TV. This collection of syndicated comic classics, the first to be published in the United States, is unpredictable, original, and wholly outrageous—perfect for disaffected teenagers, jaded grown-ups, disgruntled geeks, and Peter Pans of all ages.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #720037 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-05-31
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 152 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Bob is a flower, an angry flower. Joined by Stumpy the branch, the forlorn Love-Bot and a host of targets strip-mined from politics and popular culture, he's out to let everyone know that angry can be zany, if not exactly funny. The setup is surreal comedy gold, promising just enough Bloom County and Zippy the Pinhead to make for a great underground comic. Unfortunately, Bob (who stars in a weekly print and Web comic) has already sold out, and much of the book seems to have been hastily assembled. Occasional strips, such as Bob asking God for a sign of His existence or Bob's near-death experience, show the character's potential, but overall Notley may be more concerned with achieving wackiness than tightly constructed jokes or trenchant observations. A 28-page Pure Action insert feels like little more than filler to round out the book's page count. Notley's art is inconsistent, ranging from clean and tight to rushed and sloppy. Not polished enough for prime time, but not angry enough for the underground, Bob sort of languishes in the middle. This collection will likely appeal to existing fans, without drawing in many new ones. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Notley's syndicated Bob the Angry Flower exemplifies the new science-fiction comics. Instead of rocketing around the galaxies, it generally stays on terra firma and lets the aliens come to it. It features robots, especially the lugubrious author's alter ego, Lovebot, and, getting brainy for a change, quantum phenomena, as when Bob, instead of just chopping a "spunky crippled kid" up with an ax, whacks him with a "quantum waveform decollapser" that renders the annoying child into innumerable, identical, possible spunky crippled kids. Trenchant references are made to highbrow fantasy (Kafka) and sf (Brave New World), but Notley is obviously most inspired by 1950s "sci-fi" flickers and their progeny of giant reptile/bug/thing attack yarns (though the big critter that most excites him is the already-big-enough bear; see the long, wordless story in the center of the book, "Pure Action"). And he's incensed by the Bush administration. Bob is pretty transparently another Notley alter ego----the main one--yet he also seems an ambulatory bud from The Little Shop of Horrors' Audrey. Energetically drawn, top-drawer madness. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"Intensely funny. I've been laughing like a supervillain for days." —Joss Whedon, creator, Buffy the Vampire Slayer


"Cartooning at its finest." —Flak Magazine


"Stephen Notley germinates the page with his comic seed, impregnating the unsuspecting reader with writhing fetuses of laughter."  —Keith Knight, The K Chronicles


"Bob the Angry Flower experiences all emotions at exaggerated levels. He's sort of like your id with an unlimited budget."  —Michael Swanwick, author, Bones of the Earth and Cigar-Box Faust


"Amazingly funny, totally off-beat, and like nothing else I've ever read."  —iComics


"Bob the Angry Flower eludes genre...Notley's approach to sequential art is incomparable."  —The Goreletter


"Quirky, funny, and just a bit too true." —Bookloons


"The long-awaited Dog Killer...is a whole new chance to revel in Notley's fevered, nihilistic madness"  —The Onion


Customer Reviews

Best comic strip out there!5
A local alternative newspaper picked up Bob the Angry Flower a year ago and I got hooked. The concept and character is just amusing before the strip even starts. This book has some of my favorite strips so far including:

Your Oppressors
Battlecruiser Omega
Buy Everything Day
Wholly Communion

This book also includes annotations on each strip from the author.

My only complaint is the book's printing paper could be of higher quality.

Flower Power for a new generation5
Almost no topic is taboo for cartoonist Stephen Notley and his alter-ego (and also possibly his id), Bob the Angry Flower. If you've ever found yourself rooting for a movie villain, you will identify with Bob's schadenfreude style of humor. If you've ever been frightened by a scary movie, you will find a soothing balm in Bob's transformation of horror movie premises into palliative ridicule. Though not all material is appropriate for all ages (Bob really does mercifully, yet gruesomely, kill a terminally ill dog), Bob should be required reading for a new generation of budding teenage anti-establishmentarians.

Fantastic Flower5
I completely disagree with the last reviewer, Donald W. Stein. Well, except for his adoration of Bob. My favorite strips were:

Destroy the Apostrophy (a Bob classic)
Kerry Wins!
Cookie Mines
World Without Meat

And the paper quality didn't bother me at all. Nice to have all of Stephen Notley's cartoons from the last couple of years all in one place.

This is a must purchase for any selfrespecting Bob fan! And a good introduction for everybody else.