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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book!
Very helpful book on the basics of creating comics. I needed a book that would take me from square one and show me the ropes. This did all that and more. I would definitely recommend this book!
Published on April 20 2004 by C. Bremmer

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2.0 out of 5 stars Bleh
I wanted this book to be good. I really did. It had what I was looking for, info on the most important aspect of cartooning: the writing.But, unless you intend to create cliche, unoriginal cartoons, this book is not for you. Because that's all it does. It explains in detail the most common cartoon character stereotypes and how you should use them. it tells you what is...
Published on Jan 5 2003 by Comicstripper


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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book!, April 20 2004
By 
C. Bremmer - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
Very helpful book on the basics of creating comics. I needed a book that would take me from square one and show me the ropes. This did all that and more. I would definitely recommend this book!
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2.0 out of 5 stars Bleh, Jan 5 2003
By 
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
I wanted this book to be good. I really did. It had what I was looking for, info on the most important aspect of cartooning: the writing.But, unless you intend to create cliche, unoriginal cartoons, this book is not for you. Because that's all it does. It explains in detail the most common cartoon character stereotypes and how you should use them. it tells you what is normally done and tells you to do the same. cartooning is not about following paths that have already been followed. i enjoyed The Naked Cartoonist by Robert Mankoff, cartoon editor for the New Yorker. It explains the creative process in general.
Here's my advice: don't listen to advice from cartoonists who aren't even successful themselves. they clearly don't know what they're talking about.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great book but not what I was looking for., Dec 5 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
Well this book has it all. How to draw and come up with characters, how to layout out for comic panals. What and What not to do writing strips and doing the comic layout, etc. I'de say you have it all here. I was just hoping it would give more on writing scripts, but I guess there realy is no help guid it's just skill.
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5.0 out of 5 stars one of Hart's more in-depth books, July 6 2001
By 
John MacLeod "observer" (Guelph, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
Christopher Hart's name appears on a number of beginner's how-to books, but he's not just a beginner's author, as this book demonstrates. This is one of the better, and more advanced, cartooning books out there. While it does go over yer usual "stick-man" first steps briefly, most of it is devoted to addressing stuff like panel layout, strip breakdowns, consistency of character design, timing in humor writing, marketing your work, etc. In every case, Hart speaks from experience: apparently he has written stand-up and TV comedy professionally, as well as doing animation, comic books, strips, and piloting the space shuttle. [I'm just guessing at that last one, but don't be surprised... ]

Anyhoo, if you've advanced in your cartoons to the point where you're considering getting into the pool of publication, this book is a good resource for polishing and fine-tuning what you can do.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Much better than most catrooning books, April 12 2001
By 
"thehomeland-org" (Wichita Falls, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain is a great resource for aspiring cartoonists, one, because as one reviewer said, it doesn't insult you about your ability. The book helps you learn about creating your own characters, laying out panel strips, making single-panel strips, tricks of the trade, what poses and looks are funnier for characters, help with joke writing, learning more about dialouge, text balloons, shading, techniques, how to get your work noticed and sold, how to protect your ideas, and a ton bit more. He even discusses hard and soft punch lines, good and bad setups, dimensions to draw the copy, what tools to use, different kinds of panels, drama vs. comedy, wide and close views, shadows, connected and double balloons, tips on submitting to publishers and syndicators, rating your own gags, meeting deadlines, handling writer's block, building character name recognition, and cartooning resources to both submit to and get more information on. An all-around great book for the beginner cartoonist and the serious cartoonist with a career in mind.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Finally, a good cartooning book!, Dec 20 2000
By 
Cranky Reviewer (SEYMOUR, WI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
Most cartooning books are, quite frankly, crap. There are a very few exceptions, This book is one of them! Hart covers many aspects of cartooning, from coming up with jokes, to character design, to design tips. If you are learning to cartoon, or just want a few pointers from an expert, this is the book to read! Another excellent one is How To Draw Comics the Marvel Way. These two books should be on every cartoonist's shelf
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5.0 out of 5 stars A great nuts-and-bolts book about cartooning, Dec 12 2000
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
If you're confident in your drawing abilities, but have little knowledge about the specifics of putting together a comic strip, this is the best book I've seen. When I decided to dabble in comic strips, I didn't care about how to draw them; I was more curious about character views, composition, what makes a scene funny, ballon placement, and timing. This book covers all that and more.

If your interested in the mechanics of what makes a comic funny, this book is a must-get. Those who know how to draw will get great advice on what makes a character look funny. If you don't know how to draw comics then get a different book that covers that topic...then buy this book.

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5.0 out of 5 stars definitely not a waste of money, Aug 23 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
i just bought this book about an hour ago (offline). i really really wanted to buy it coz it looked very nice and informative. plus, it looked like i could get a lot of nice referrences for my drawings. it was expensive though, and being an ordinary high school student who receives a measly allowance every week, it seemed like a waste to spend all of my week's allowance on this book. i still bought it though, compulsive buyer that i am (hehe). as soon as i did, i started to regret it coz i thought that i might've spent too much.

as soon as i got home though, i started reading it and now i think that buying the book was the right thing to do-- i love it! now i don't regret that i bought it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent how-to book, Jun 5 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
I found this book to be an excellent resource for aspiring cartoonists. Most other cartooning books I've looked at seem to say "Cartooning is a terrible career! You'll never make money!" or "Give up hope now! If you can't draw like me, you'll never succeed!" But Chris Hart's book is the exact opposite -- very informative, easy-to-follow, and overall very helpful. He also tells you where to put emphasis when designing a strip and developing characters. And most importantly, he gives tips on how to come up with ideas (funny ones), not just how to draw. Hart doesn't make you feel like his way is the only way, as other cartooning books do -- this book leaves aspiring cartoonists with a lot of hope!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Wicked, May 27 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Drawing on the Funny Side of the Brain: How to Come Up with Jokes for Cartoons and Comic Strips (Paperback)
This is the coolest drawing book ever! It helped me draw so now everybody has it! I think this book is the most up to based drawing book ever with things you would want to draw not those books that the pictures suck.
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