![]() ![]() ![]() For instance, one is about two lizardy looking animals (also it’s perhaps the only two-page spread that isn’t set up like shit) professing their feelings and deciding what to do next. ![]() There’s a rhythm to a lot of them in which a typical gag is set up, but then it’s twist is the hyperdetailed facts of a particular animal being explained to counter the gag or set up the punchline. There are a good handful of gags and jokes that were enjoyable. It makes it awkward and difficult to enjoy. ![]() The size and layout of this book does the material no favors. I found that every time I turned the book to read a page like that, it was not only humorless but also really annoying as it broke up my rhythm of reading. There are also times in which you’ll need to turn the book and a page sideways… why they didn’t go with a two-page spread or even skip the page altogether will remain a mystery to me. There were numerous times in which I felt like an old person refusing to put on their glasses to read something, but the problem was A) I did have glasses on and B) much like when an old person finally caves and puts them on, they discover that it wasn’t worth the effort. What I instantly realized was that the size of the book was much too small for Mosco’s work. It is essentially a collection of webcomics from creator Rosemary Mosco some of which I had read on my various journeys on the internet. Instantly from the cover, I was intrigued by this book it would be short lived once I dived into it. ![]()
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