Does the Afterlife Have Skittles?: the 6th Candorville Collection
Darrin Bell
(Author)
Description
The 6th collection of the syndicated comic strip "Candorville" by Darrin Bell. Can Lemont make time to interview President Obama's evolving position on gay marriage and Syria's vicious dictator, even while he's suing an evil vampire for custody of their son in a court run by the vampire's own mother? Will he be derailed by nepotism, by the incompetence of his six-year-old attorney, or by the testimony of his former roommate from the insane asylum? Back home, Lemont's "One That Got Away" Facebooks him after 14 years, but her mountain of secrets threatens to spoil their second chance at love. Meanwhile, Susan's boss decides to join the War on Women, and Lemont accompanies Osama Bin Laden, Steve Jobs, Whitney Houston, and Trayvon Martin on their Final Journeys to the afterlife. And all along, two homeless street philosophers have a strange conversation while they wait by the side of a city road, for *something.* Candorville delivers biting social & political satire to daily newspapers nationwide.
Product Details
Price
$21.43
Publisher
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Publish Date
January 16, 2013
Pages
148
Dimensions
8.5 X 11.0 X 0.32 inches | 0.79 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781973750666
Earn by promoting books
Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.
Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Editorial Cartoonist Darrin Bell creates the comic strips "Candorville" and "Rudy Park," as well as political cartoons for the Washington Post Writers Group. Before that, while studying political science at UC Berkeley, he served as the Daily Californian's staff cartoonist and freelanced cartoons to the Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Oakland Tribune, and other papers. His work now appears in hundreds of papers nationwide. Darrin is the recipient of the 2016 Berryman Award for Editorial Cartooning and the 2015 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for Editorial Cartooning. He's a Los Angeles native who was the son of educators, the grandson of a World War II veteran, the great great grandson of former slaves, and the father of two small children. Aside from his cartooning, he's best known for talking about himself in the third person.