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Take Our Cat, Please: A Get Fuzzy Collection (Get Fuzzy (Graphic Novel))

Take Our Cat, Please: A Get Fuzzy Collection (Get Fuzzy (Graphic Novel))

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Author: Darby Conley
Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $10.99
Buy New: $5.97
You Save: $5.02 (46%)



New (35) Used (12) from $5.26

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
Sales Rank: 3299

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 128
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 8.5 x 0.4

ISBN: 0740770950
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780740770951
ASIN: 0740770950

Publication Date: May 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: 100% Brand New! - Ships Today! Identical to Amazon's book in every way. Flawless! Not a cheap Remainder or Book Club Copy! *We recommend Expedited Shipping option for much faster mail delivery

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"The humor is a wickedly authentic blend of young-professional-bachelor shtick and pets-from-hell high jinks. . . . And, perhaps best of all, the strip keeps getting better." --Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

Get Fuzzy was named Best Comic Strip of the Year in 2002 by the National Cartoonists Society.

Satchel, the Shar-pei-Lab mix in the Get Fuzzy family who actually believes what TV commercials say, and his owner-housemate Rob Wilco, a single, somewhat befuddled, Red Sox-best-sellers obsessed ad exec, endure the scourge of their daily existence, Bucky Katt. Whether baiting the ferret down the hall for battle, gorging on rubber bands (and the ensuing gastric consequences), or joining the gun repair club, Bucky continuously tests the patience and endurance of his hapless mates.

Three Get Fuzzy books, Bucky Katt's Big Book of Fun, Blueprint for Disaster, and Say Cheesy, have been New York Times best-sellers.


Customer Reviews:   Read 6 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Laff your tail off   September 23, 2008
I read this book before bed, two to four pages a night. It clears away all the stray thoughts and stress leftover from the day. Sometimes, I laugh so hard I have to wipe away tears. The Ouiji board telling the cat to hit the dog in the "pie-hole" had me in stitches. Fell right to sleep. Doesn't get any better.


4 out of 5 stars Funny Pets   August 27, 2008
This is another great collection, it plays on the running humor, dog good, cat evil.


5 out of 5 stars Get Fuzzy - Get Laughing!   August 23, 2008
Darby Conley is so talented that it's really hard to imagine a world without talking pets. Satchel, the Canadian-born Lab-Sharpei mix is so mixed up that anything that Bucky doesn't hit him with point-blank just goes completely over his head. Rob is the poor sap who's stuck with these two complete idiots as pets/room mates. If he's not cleaning up choked-up hairballs mixed with rubberbands, he's taking Satchel to the vet to patch up wounds received from Bucky, who is the most vile; evil pet anyone could own, yet he could litter - aly be the cat next door, or in the box with the sign reading "Free Kittens". Why Bucky hasn't been left on the side of the road yet is beyond me, but had he been, Get Fuzzy wouldn't be as funny.


5 out of 5 stars get fuzzy review   August 20, 2008
I seen this comic in the paper a couple of times and never really got into it. Decided to give the book a try and was extremely impressed. The illistrations are great and coupled with the humor work perfectly together. It's a comic for the 21st century. No worn out punch lines, no predictiable message. I would strongly suggest this book to anyone who loves comics and loves to laugh.


2 out of 5 stars From fantastic to mediocre   August 9, 2008
Let me get this out from the start...I have been buying the Get Fuzzy books since number one came out. Saw it at a bookstore, wondered what it was and just started reading it. Loved it the minute I did. So, I have been following this dysfunctional family for the past 7 years, enjoying it immensely while turning other people on to it (it was not running in our newspapers at the time). What has now turned me off to the strip are 2 factors: 1.) The mean attitude given to Bucky and 2.) the artwork.

in the early days, Bucky was just a dumb cat with a lot of attitude. This made for some hilarious situations. He made Satch make him soccer balls, made stink bug cookies, had his own cable show, wrecked the house making "art", attacked and got owned by a ferret, chimp and chicken. I read and re-read these all the time. But starting with Scrum Bums to Movie Contract, Buck has been given a cruel streak with Satchel. Numerous times he implied he wanted to off or get rid or Satchel (which he has done in the past but just not so seriously). His physical attacks on Satchel have also increased. I was just reading online the strips from the past week (8/4/08-8/8/08) in which Bucky sets up an office supply shop and tries to sell Satchel a "3 punch hole" (complete with punches to Satchel) and "punch-it notes" (again hitting Satchel even though he didn't want it). This kind of needless and cheap violence to try to get laughs is both unfunny and sad.

My second point is the artwork. Again, back with the first half of the books (especially books one and two), Bucky looked just liked a siamese cat, Satchel looked just like a wrinkle-dog mix. Slowly, their distinct features were evened out (I guess to make them easier to draw?) and have now become shallow images of their former selves. Now, I know this kind of thing very well. I have collections of Bloom County, Calvin and Hobbes, Sherman's Lagoon, Zits, Foxtrot, etc. ALL of them start out crude and become more defined. Seeing Opus now in his own strip is seeing an abomination compared to his Bloom County heyday. Again, which is why I did not buy the Outland and Opus books. But the sad and ironic part of this is that Bucky Katt now looks nothing like a cat, more like a monkey! They very thing in the whole world that he wants to eat most off all is what he has evolved to. Oh the irony.

Anyways, sorry for the tirade. This book is funny at times, sad at times and overall just ok. It will be the final Get Fuzzy book I will buy.




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