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“A Parallel Universe” is a hilarious display of mad fun and offbeat humor.
Over one hundred cartoons, and fantastic by-lines.
Have you ever looked up at the sky, and laughed at something nobody else would? For lovers of offbeat humor such as “Being John Malkovitch”, for
people willing to delve into the unusual and explorethe wondrous humor of their imagination, all those living in this alternate universe,
here’s the book for you.
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Artist and cartoonist, Wolfgang Niesielski has created a world of mad humor and alternate realities situation of “John
Malkovitch meets Gary Larson”. Using cartoons and caricatures from another world, he leads us through a fantasy of our imagination. His style is unique, his characters retain an ugly charm, and all in all, “A Parallel Universe” is a book to experience.
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From “Gail”, sedately clamped to her camel in the desert, to the insanely hungry scenes from “pleasure and pain”. Wolfgang Niesielski bests himself in
style, technique and humor. An absolute buy.
About the book
If anything occupies our cerebral, physical and emotional energies today, it must be the daily grind in life, our work, our love-life and, of
course - animals. The Book “A Parallel Universe” approaches all these issues. Since it is a book full of wacky, offbeat cartoons it will cause even more confusion than the average, normal, middle of the road, ordinary person might be able to tolerate. Especially in the title-section of the book, which naturally is called “A Parallel Universe” also, the author/illustrator enters a world that no one should visit without a proper sanity check.
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If there ever had been a case of mental illness in the last several generation of the reader’s family perhaps it
would be advisable to skip this segment because here one is treated to a perplexing, baffling and paradox look at life, the laws of nature, and peculiar advise on retirement.
Another section, titled “It’s Not My
Job”, while equally bewildering, takes a look at how, for example, a mechanic, clearly gifted in a different profession deals with the mystifying entrails of motor vehicles. Or it shows the trials and tribulations of loyal employees of a wig factory who apparently have different ideas of downsizing. But why nocturnal critters like rats need reading lamps is never explained.
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