In a recent episode of Corner Gas (recent to the U.S., that is), Hank Yarbo, the Canadian sitcom's chatty doofus, launched his own web log as a forum for his less-than-deep ruminations on topics like who would win in a fight between werewolves and robots. The rest of the show's characters encouraged Hank in his bloggish endeavor since it's easier to ignore something on the Internet than it is some guy standing two feet away from you. No one actually read "Hank Talkin'" ("I spell talkin' with no 'g' - that shows I have attitude!"), of course. But perhaps if he was a world-famous cartoonist like Scott Adams, they would have. After all, the creator of "Dilbert" has enough of an online readership that he was able to convince Portfolio/Penguin to publish a 350-plus page hardback devoted to his old postings.
Stick to Drawing Comics, Monkey Brain! is a set of 150-plus pieces that originally appeared on Adams Typepad blog (and have since, as the book's dustcover advises us, been removed from the archives). A free-floatin' collection of musin's - Adams doesn't drop the "g" but he could have - on whatever tickles his active brain cells, the book moves from quippy considerations of politics & religion to whale watching & the disadvantages of x-ray vision. Theoretically, Stick represents the pick of the postings, though as with any collection of miscellaneous writings, not every piece is a winner. Still, fans of Adams' corporate humor should find enough here to be amused.
Reflecting the piecemeal nature of blog posting, the collection doesn't always cohere as well as it could. Early in, for instance, Adams introduces a cheerfully inconvenient acronym (for "But Of Course There Are Obvious Exceptions") only to drop it after just a few uses. A later piece on the nature of the universe appears out of order since it refers to concepts that get introduced several posts later. Read too many of these in one sitting, and the writer's voice can grow overly familiar, so that some of his comic devices (the willfully grotesque comparisons, for instance) lose their zing. Placing many of the book's best one-liners in an appendix only compounds the problem








Article comments