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What's So Funny?: A Cartoonist's Memoir

What's So Funny?: A Cartoonist's Memoir

by David Sipress

Mariner Books ·2022 ·336 pages
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About This Book

"David Sipress's engaging, illuminating, and hilarious memoir will perhaps clarify what dark forces are at work when it comes to becoming a cartoonist rather than a podiatrist, a billionaire tech mogul, or someone who is deeply into collecting owl figurines. And if it doesn't, you will love it anyway."— Roz Chast From a longtime New Yorker staff cartoonist, an evocative family memoir, a love letter to New York City, and a delightful exploration of the origins of creativity—richly interleaved with the author's witty, beloved cartoons. David Sipress, a dreamer and obsessive drawer living with his Upper West Side family in the age of JFK and Sputnik, goes hazy when it comes to the ceaselessly imparted lessons-on-life from his meticulous father and the angsty expectations of his migraine-prone mother. With wry and brilliantly observed prose, Sipress paints his hapless place in the family, from the time he is tricked by his unreliable older sister into rocketing his pet turtle out his twelfth-floor bedroom window to the moment he walks away from a Harvard PhD program in Russian history to begin his life as a professional cartoonist. Sipress's cartoons appear in the story with spot-on precision, inducing delightful Aha! moments in answer to the perennial question aimed at Where do you get your ideas?


Reviews

"New Yorker cartoonist Sipress...draws on his gift for evoking the predicaments of human nature to tell beguiling stories about his life and career ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"An intimate and engaging memoir by an artist who understands that personal thoughts and feelings often lead to remarkable ideas."

Megan Duffy· Library Journal Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Chast's book was a graphic memoir, told using her art; in Sipress's book, his cartoons act more as punctuation marks to the narrative, written in prose that is also economical and amiable (and occasionally devastating)."

Alexandra Jacobs· The New York Times Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"This addictive, witty, David Sedaris–esque story is a hoot."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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