Pearls Hogs the Road

A Pearls Before Swine Treasury

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Pub Date Apr 25 2017 | Archive Date May 05 2017

Description

Move over! Pearls Before Swine is back and badder than ever in the new treasury collection Pearls Hogs the Road.
 


The Pearls gang returns with characteristically misanthropic humor (but with more leather): no self-aggrandizing is too flagrant for Rat, no subject is too erudite for Goat, and no sensory input is too basic for Pig.
 
All topics are fair game for Stephan Pastis and his brass-knuckle punch lines. Comic strip censors, apathetic baristas, and IRS employees are all strongly advised to laugh or get out of the way.

Pearls Hogs the Road also features three comic strips illustrated by the legendary Bill Watterson of Calvin and Hobbes, who ended a 19-year hiatus from the comics page to collaborate with Pastis.
 
 
Move over! Pearls Before Swine is back and badder than ever in the new treasury collection Pearls Hogs the Road.
 


The Pearls gang returns with characteristically misanthropic humor (but with more...

A Note From the Publisher

We regret that this electronic galley is not available for Kindle viewing. The finished book will be available in print and ebook formats.

We regret that this electronic galley is not available for Kindle viewing. The finished book will be available in print and ebook formats.


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781449483661
PRICE $18.99 (USD)
PAGES 264

Average rating from 9 members


Featured Reviews

I loved all of Pastis's commentary! Pearls Before Swine is my favorite comic strip.

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Great, as always. Pearls is a pearl on the comics page and this collection shines like all the rest.

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It’s a Pearls Before Swine collection. Nuff said; I’m there.
Starts with a cool intro to say that Bill Watterson (Calvin and Hobbes) wrote three of the strips. But as to the comics themselves, all I can tell you is that if you love puns, this is your jam. Even if they make you groan, it’s still a good time.
So what makes this different than reading them in the newspaper or online? Besides having them all in one place and not having to click? Author commentary! It’s just as funny, like throwing your kid in the water to test out the theory that nurse sharks are the most harmless breed. And of course there’s an “except for you, reader” line in there.
Some of the best:
Close up of a lemming, his widdow hands curled into fists. . .
Sweater-neckers; yes, totally agree.
Elizabeth Hurley and Ron Cey in the same strip? Wow. . . even included the mustache. (On Cey, not the lovely still-crush-worthy Ms. Hurley.)
“Please don’t criticize my wheelhouse.” Been there.
Abraham Lincoln tweets!
“To infinity and bed, bath, and beyond!”
“Everything happens for a raisin.”
“Bombast cable!”
Definitely agree on the oyster thing. Eerie how sometimes Pastis and I are in telepathic communication. . . not to mention we’re about the same age and grew up in the same area. We probably met as kids.
End with a special extra: Pearls Without Rat. And then Pig. And Goat. And others. It’s surreal and funny in a completely different way.
Public Service Announcement (more of a warning): on the back cover—or last page if digital—do not look at the tramp stamp! For your own sanity!

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Stephan Pastis has done it again. He managed to compile 18 moths of material, jammed it between two covers, and wrote "clever" remarks under various of the strips. But this volume does have a rare treasure included as three strips are drawn by Bill Watterson (Calvin and Hobbes)! If you like Pearls Before Swines, you are likely to enjoy this treasury. if you are not yet a fan, read this volume and you may become one.

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<i>*I received this book from the publisher and Netgalley in return for a fair review.*</i>


This is a Treasury instead of a Collection which means that it contains two of the smaller 'collections'. Which two? hmms. Not sure. I do know that it contains "18 months' worth of <i>Pearls</i> strips." because the introduction says so. That tidbit plus the part wherein three of the comic strips were "drawn by <i>Calvin and Hobbes</i> creator Bill Watterson, who, in 2014, ended a 19-year hiatus fromt eh comics page to draw three <i>Pearls Before Swine</i> strips."So, if nothing else, this Treasury contains that important bit of comics - three Waterson drawn comic strips. - And then I read the introduction. And it was hilarious. All about attempting to contact Bill Watterson, workign with him, etc. And then the introduction indicated where I could find the Watterson strips so obviously . . . I finished reaing the introduction. But once that was done, I hurriedly turned to those pages and gazed upon them (okay, I wrote that I did. Now I'll go gaze upon them; and so I read those three strips, and they were brilliant). And then I read the rest of the book. The end. Yay screamed . . . um . . . something screaming.

That was a neat hook to use, to pull myself into and through writing something, anything. Otherwise . . . what exactly do I write? 'The comic strips were good, they were funny - when the were, occasionally flat, enjoyable experience' - seems the safest without me going line by line and writing a 900 page treastise on Stephan Pastis's comic book. Because that's what I tend to do when I review comic books I pick up from Netgalley - ramble in a text box while reading. Occasionally inserting things like '*giggles* - you had to be there'. Fun, right? So - glad I had a hook to sink into the fish shaped . . . um . . . I need another word than hook, I already used it. mmphs.

Well, there is obviously something else I could mention - there are little wiggly lines underneath the comic strips - they form letters/words/sentences - Pastis has left thoughts on his comic strips. I do not recall if I've seen his thoughts before in such a manner. This is what I get for reading collections instead of treasuries, I assume. And there are some rather hilarious bits in those sentences (as, for example: "Whenever I'm unsure about something in the strip, I check Wikipedia, because whoever does the page for Pearls knows more about the strip than I do."). Occasionally I found myself laughing loudly - and realize that it wasn't because of the comic but because of the words under it. And then I'll giggle a few times, later, and realize it was because of the comic and not the words (see, this is what I was saying earlier, this is kind of boring. I stop now).

Rating: 4.44

April 8 2017

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