Gotcha!
Our President's on the hunt for the world's #1 evil-doer—and you're going with him! Is Saddam hiding with his secret stash of WMD? Was he abducted by space aliens? Has he retired to Boca? Now you can be the first on your block to say, "I found Saddaaaam. Nah nah nah nah nah."
"If Saddam is alive, I would suggest he not POP HIS HEAD UP."—George W. Bush
Press Conference, April 16, 2003
Coming soon…
WHERE'S THAT DARNED BUDGET SURPLUS
WHERE ARE ALL THOSE ALLY FOLKS?
WHERE'S THAT NEAT LOOKING FLIGHT HELMET?
WHERE'S MY AMERICAN FLAG LAPEL PIN?
WHERE THE HECK IS NORTH KOREA?
WHERE IN TARNATION IS DICK CHENEY?
Henry Beard was one of the founding members of groundbreaking comic magazine The National Lampoon. He has also written a number of classic humor books including O.J.'s Legal Pad, French for Cats, Bored of the Rings, Latin for all Occasions, Rationalizations to Live, by and many more.
John Boswell has been a collabortor with Henry Beard for years working on a number of his bestsellers with him: O.J.'s Legal Pad, French for Cats, and The Official Exceptions to the Rules of Golf.
Ron Barrett has illustrated the children's classic, Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, which has sold over a million copies. He was also the artful forger of O.J.'s Legal Pad and Bill Gates' Personal Super Secret Private Laptop. Both Cloudy and Ron's comic, Politenessman, Champion of Charm, are now under major development as major motion pictures.
Gary Hallgren studied painting and design at Western Washington State College. In the 1970s became involved with the underground comics scene. He teamed up with Dan O' Neill, Bobby London, Ted Richards and Shary Flenniken to start Air Pirates Funnies, a comics series that parodied Disney characters. Gary Hallgren's work has appeared in numerous magazines, such as National Lampoon, Rolling Stone, Howard the Duck, Crazy,and Provincetown. He lives in New York.
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November 14, 2008:
This book is outrageous, all in style, language and contents and is written in extremely poor English.
Even Marquis de Sade - the French soldier and writer whose name is given to Sadism and who pretty much described the ideas of sexual perversions that prevailed in the eighteenth's century, would have disliked and avoided reading it.
I made a mistake and bought it.
Don't make the same mistake.
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October 09, 2003: a fun, hilarious encapsulation of the current administration's foreign policy. laughter is the best medicine when the last four years have been a bitter pill.