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Stuff
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 336

Stuff

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010-09-30
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  • Publisher: Random House

A few months after two of his parents had died, Martin Rowson had a dream about the house he grew up in which was crammed with tons and tons of stuff, both physical and emotional. In this book Rowson delves into all that 'stuff'; weaving together dreams, family anecdotes and gossip, jokes, advice, history, smells, sounds and sights of the past. The result is a funny, thought-provoking and ultimately moving meditation on families, life, love, disease and the existentialist horrors of clearing out the attic.

Plague Songs
  • Language: en

Plague Songs

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021
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  • Publisher: Unknown

In May 2020 the award-winning cartoonist Martin Rowson set himself the challenge of writing a Lockdown Diary in verse. The result is Plague Songs, a unique cycle of furious, bleakly comic and often offensive poems about COVID-19, fiercely inventive and desperately funny. Rowson, who recovered from the virus at the start of the year ('sweating in freezing fits, embalmed in bed/ In sulphurous miasmata, my joints like broken walnuts, / With hogtied eyeballs and less energy than dissipating smoke') records in manic verse the long lockdown Summer of 2020 - coughs and sneezes, lockdown-haircuts, funerals and furloughs, hangovers and hauntings, track and trace, when Death and Pestilence were playing on the swings, or visiting the elderly in their Care Homes. Plague Songs is also book about living in Banarnia - a nightmarish world of jingoism and xenophobia, hierarchy and inequality, government incompetence, Boris Johnson's world-beating wet dreams, and the deadly twin viruses of stupidity and selfishness. What rhymes with COVID except bovid? Is Matt Hancock the Tory Party's answer to Fred West? Does every shroud have a silver lining?

Coalition Book
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 192

Coalition Book

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-09
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Since 2010, Martin Rowson has been documenting the highs and lows - mainly the lows - of the Tory-Lib Dem coalition. This book collects Rowson's best, most brutally funny, cartoons from a period that began with a 'big, open, comprehensive offer' to Nick Clegg, continued on through riots, phone-hacking, double-dip recession, and endless debates on Europe, and will end (perhaps) with the general election in 2015. Accompanied by witty explanatory text, 'The Coalition Book' takes a biting satirical look at Cameron and Clegg's first - and perhaps last - five years in charge.

Snatches
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 340

Snatches

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2006
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  • Publisher: Vintage

From the appearance of the human race in Africa, four million years ago, to our ultimate destiny beyond the stars, Martin Rowson's first novel takes us to Mexico under the Aztecs, the Inquisition in Rome, the secrets of the Internet, the bogs of Irish nationalism, introduces an alcoholic werewolf and his dog, educates us in literary and management theory, glimpses 9/11, journalism, warfare, time travel, the Arts and Crafts Movement, Global Warming, personal therapy and focuses on Hell. Retelling the stories of the worst decisions the human race has ever made - and featuring a cast that includes St Simeon Stylites, Hernando Cortes, Adolf Hitler, Evelyn Waugh, Sigmund Freud, Josef Stalin and Candide in Las Vegas, and with supporting roles from Henry Kissinger, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, Pol Pot and Osama Bin Laden (as well as Superman and a talking sturgeon), Snatches is a brilliantly picaresque, funny and ultimately worrying exploration of love, art, politics, history and just how bloody awful it is to be here.

Fuck
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 142

Fuck

Award-winning cartoonist Martin Rowson tells the story of Earth, from the Big Bang and the emergence of life to 9/11 and beyond to the End of the World.

Nestor Makhno--anarchy's Cossack
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 438

Nestor Makhno--anarchy's Cossack

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2004
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  • Publisher: AK Press

The phenomenal life of Ukrainian peasant Nestor Makhno (1888-1934) provides the framework for this breakneck account of the downfall of the tsarist empire and the civil war that convulsed and bloodied Russia between 1917 and 1921. Mahkno and his people were fighting for a society "without masters or slaves, with neither rich nor poor." They acted towards that idea by establishing "free soviets." Unlike the soviets drained of all significance by the dictatorship of a one-party State, the "free soviets" became the grassroots organs of a direct democracy - a living embodiment of the free society - until they were betrayed, and smashed, by the Red Army. Delving into a vast array of documentation to which few other historians have had access, this study illuminates a revolution that started out with the rosiest of prospects but ended up utterly confounded. More than just the incredible exploits of a guerilla revolutionary par excellence, Skirda weaves the tale of a people, and the organizations and practices of anarchism, literally fighting for their lives.

Giving Offence
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 76

Giving Offence

  • Categories: Art

Tolerated in Britain for over 300 years--and ubiquitous throughout the world for much longer--visual satire gives offence in the quickest way and in its purest form. Cartoons have long since established themselves as a legitimate part of the general political discourse. As a cartoonist, it is Rowson's job to give offence. But the flip side of giving offence is, of course, giving comfort to the opponents or victims of the offended. In Giving Offence, Rowson explains how and why cartoons work, why they matter and why the reactions of the offended are often an even blunter political weapon than the cartoons themselves. In collaboration with Index on Censorship.

Gulliver's Travels
  • Language: en

Gulliver's Travels

From the inimitable Martin Rowson, a modern illustrated retelling of Swift's classic, Gulliver's Travels.

Scenes from the Lives of the Great Socialists
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 76

Scenes from the Lives of the Great Socialists

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1983
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

A Sentimental Journey Illustrated
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 178

A Sentimental Journey Illustrated

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020-12-17
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  • Publisher: Unknown

A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy is a novel by Laurence Sterne, written and first published in 1768, as Sterne was facing death. In 1765, Sterne travelled through France and Italy as far south as Naples, and after returning determined to describe his travels from a sentimental point of view. The novel can be seen as an epilogue to the possibly unfinished work The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, and also as an answer to Tobias Smollett's decidedly unsentimental Travels Through France and Italy. Sterne had met Smollett during his travels in Europe, and strongly objected to his spleen, acerbity and quarrelsomeness. He modeled the character of Smelfungus on him.