Full of facts and wisdom, horror and humor….Gonick’s one-two punch of pictures and words isn’t just a gimmick; it makes it much easier to remember the facts of history. If we really wanted kids (or adults!) to learn history, we’d throw away our textbooks, and teach Gonick.” — Bryan Caplan, The Library of Economics and Liberty EconLog
“With limber pen and nimble mind, Larry Gonick completes a cartoon journey that started at the dawn of time. Brisk, informative, and hilarious, The Cartoon History Of The Modern World fills us in on exactly how we got so screwed up on a global scale.” — K. Thor Jensen, author of Red Eye, Black Eye
“Like any good historian, Larry Gonick seasons his facts with a good dose of perspective, and like any good cartoonist, he mixes his drama with a good dose of humor.” — Jeffrey Brown, author of Clumsy and Funny Misshapen Body
“Gonick makes history fun for comic book nerds and comics readable for history nerds. If you’ve ever looked around this modern world and wondered how we got into this mess, it’s time to curl up with his latest book. You won’t even realize you’re learning—histo-tainment at its best.” — Alex Robinson, Eisner Award winner and author of Box Office Poison
“Lively cartooning and pretension-puncturing wit.” — Booklist
“The final installment of Gonick’s deeply funny and impeccably researched series has finally arrived... Brilliantly funny, the series finds the inherent humor in history...” — Publishers Weekly
“Funny, informative, and comprehensive, Gonick’s history concludes with this second volume. His unique wit, sense of irony, and passion for humanity’s complex story of triumphs, compromises, and disasters are as evident here as they are in his previous books... An insightful review of history.” — School Library Journal
"I first discovered your Cartoon History series when I was in fifth grade. I was hooked. My mom noticed my interest in history, and she asked if I would be interested in competing in the National History Bee. To prepare, I didn’t study. I didn’t read textbooks or historical studies. Instead, I just kept reading your books, over and over again, and I found myself leading most of the rounds. By the end of the night, I had earned a spot in the national stage of the Bee." — Freshman, Brown University
Like any good historian, Larry Gonick seasons his facts with a good dose of perspective, and like any good cartoonist, he mixes his drama with a good dose of humor.
Full of facts and wisdom, horror and humor….Gonick’s one-two punch of pictures and words isn’t just a gimmick; it makes it much easier to remember the facts of history. If we really wanted kids (or adults!) to learn history, we’d throw away our textbooks, and teach Gonick.
With limber pen and nimble mind, Larry Gonick completes a cartoon journey that started at the dawn of time. Brisk, informative, and hilarious, The Cartoon History Of The Modern World fills us in on exactly how we got so screwed up on a global scale.
Gonick makes history fun for comic book nerds and comics readable for history nerds. If you’ve ever looked around this modern world and wondered how we got into this mess, it’s time to curl up with his latest book. You won’t even realize you’re learning—histo-tainment at its best.
Lively cartooning and pretension-puncturing wit.
Lively cartooning and pretension-puncturing wit.
The final installment of Gonick's deeply funny and impeccably researched series has finally arrived, and like the rest of his Cartoon History series, the book covers a wide range of key and fascinating historical events and topics that have managed to slip through the gaps of common knowledge. The section linking the slave trade, the Haitian revolution and the Napoleonic Wars is particularly good, as are the segments on the modern history of Japan and China. Brilliantly funny, the series finds the inherent humor in history rather than pasting on irrelevant jokes. This is the most politicized book in the series, a jarring but perhaps unavoidable element, since it covers an era ending when Gonick sent the proofs to his publisher. Also, the pacing is odd and frequently rushed—it seems to need an extra hundred pages. Possibly as a result, the book has some interesting gaps. Most notably, aside from the occasional snide remark or allusion, the entire pre-Vietnam history of the United States is completely left out. While Gonick has covered these topics in depth in other books (the stand-alone Cartoon History of the United States) and perhaps tired of them, the absence is glaring. (Oct.)
With this typically wide-ranging, hilarious, and excellent volume, America's foremost exponent of educational comics finally completes his largest project, begun in 1977 with the first comic-book issue of his Cartoon History of the Universe. Perhaps because Gonick has published a separate Cartoon History of the United States, there's a strong focus on the rest of the world here. He looks in on 17th- and 18th-century Asia and Africa before digging into the complicated events of the French Revolution, the rise and fall of Napoléon, and the efforts leading to the abolition of slavery in England in 1833 (over 30 years before the United States managed it). After dealing with a variety of "isms" (socialism, anti-Semitism, electromagnetism), the modernization of Japan, and the inventions of the telegraph and the comic strip, Gonick does cover America's decisive involvement in World War II and ends with the 2003 invasion of Iraq (of which he's clearly critical). VERDICT At every step, Gonick offers comical, pomposity-skewering, and occasionally bawdy commentary, along with humorous footnotes on topics ranging from voodoo to Japanese beer. As always, highly recommended for adults.—S.R.
Gr 10 Up–Funny, informative, and comprehensive, Gonick’s history concludes with this second volume. His unique wit, sense of irony, and passion for humanity’s complex story of triumphs, compromises, and disasters are as evident here as they are in his previous books. Together or separately, his cartoon histories will serve as a valuable introduction to the major events of the past, and perhaps as an insightful review of history. In Part II, Europe and North America get more attention than the rest of the world, but Gonick makes a concerted effort to cover the most significant events and trends in Africa, Asia, and South America, while not forgetting Australia and the island nations. His treatment of the 18th-century slave trade, with its enormously challenging economic, political, and moral issues, is particularly noteworthy. Equally impressive is his rendering of the rise and fall of communism around the globe. Throughout the book, readers will find textual and visual satire, puns, and other flashes of cleverness.–Robert Saunderson, formerly at Berkeley Public Library, CA