You're All Just Jealous of My Jetpack

by Tom Gauld

Paper Book, 2013

Collection

Rating

½ (95 ratings; 3.9)

Publication

Montréal : Drawn & Quarterly, 2013.

Description

"Dryly hilarious, the comics in You're all just jealous of my jetpack perfectly distill cartoonist Tom Gauld's dark humour, impeccable timing, and distinctinve style, all of which have made his work a popular weekly feature in The Guardian. Unexpected pairings such as the Bront� sisters and video games cross the classic with the contemporary. Gauld gleefully pokes fun at the canon of great authors--Shakespeare, Thoreau, Dickens, and Martin Amis all fall beneath his mighty pen. The real star of the collection, though, is the idea of the novel itself and its many forms, including the difficult novel, the realist novel, the experimental novel, and the never-ending question--is the novel dead? Definitely not for Gauld. Droll literary references abound with piercing observations about human behaviour and whimsical imaginings of the future."--Provided by publisher.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

User reviews

LibraryThing member diovival
It's over? And, I have to return it to the library?? Nooooooo!

This was a fun collection of comics with literary references sprinkled throughout.
LibraryThing member albertgoldfain
A wonderfully funny collection of one-page literary comics
LibraryThing member electrascaife
A collection of Gauld's comics on mostly literary themes. It was a little hit-and-miss for me, but the hits were hilarious and I love his illustrating style.
LibraryThing member elenchus
This felt like a glimpse of something potentially great that wasn't quite realised. I like the cleverness, the blending of classic literature and pop culture, the willingness to take either literary content or the habits of literature fans as the premise for a joke, but overall the comics weren't
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as funny as hoped. I certainly did not get all the literary or cultural references, and liked that aspect of it. If I come across another Gauld collection, I'll try again.
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LibraryThing member Theriq
There were a few chuckles to be had from this collection of strips originally published in the Guardian, but some of them felt a bit dated or irrelevant, or even perplexing. I definitely had to Google a few names to figure out what some of the strips were about, which is fine, I guess, but shows me
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that some of them are trying a bit too hard or a bit too obscure to be fun for a general audience.
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LibraryThing member mykl-s
After several years since reading it, I cannot recall any details.
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