"In this volume, the sixth in Series IV of The Writings of Will Rogers, are found the Weekly Articles of the famed humorist and cowboy philosopher published during the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt from March 1933 to Rogers' death in August 1935. These weekly columns were carried in newspapers across the country." --Publishers description.
An updated edition of the hilarious guide to politically correct speech--in which an "airhead" is more correctly termed a "cerebro-atmospheric individual"--includes a special new section on military and corporate correct-speak....
When you provide the comic relief for the Leader of the Free World, the line between funny and weird can get a little blurry. Consider the extraordinary experiences of Mark...
In the grand satirical tradition of Swift, Rabelais, and Twain comes... "Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot, and Other Observations... a scathing--but uncompromisingly fair--look at America's largest talk show...
American Political Prints, 1766-1876: A Catalog of the Collections in the Library of Congress
A hugely important release any year, but a timely one this election year! With laser-like insight and rapier-sharp wit, the political cartoonist is alive and kicking in the 21st Century....
Al Franken, "one of our savviest satirists" (People), takes on the issues, the politicians, and the pundits in one of the most anticipated books of the year. For the...
This book, which began as a study of recent Presidential elections, until we stopped having any, evolved into (1) a basic guide to our nation's capital, as it was before...
“Not many readers will thank the author as he deserves, for he has told us more about ourselves than we perhaps wish to know,” predicted Latin America in Books of...
In late nineteenth-century America, political cartoonists Thomas Nast, Joseph Keppler, Bernhard Gillam and Grant Hamilton enjoyed a stature as political powerbrokers barely imaginable in today's world of instant information and...
"If you are one of that benighted handful of people who isn't wise to Charles Osgood's incisive and humorous look at the foibles of your fellow men, here is your...