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BOOKS BY WITTYWORLD
Top Selection: THE FINEST
INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL CARTOONS
OF OUR TIME

Critical acclaims
1992 EDITION
Edited by Joe Szabo
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a
division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 10/1/1992
ISBN: 0-9631600-1-X
Cover: Threadsewn case bound (hard cover: Saddam Hussein)
Dimensions: 8 3/4" X 11 1/4" Number of pages: 176 Price: $19.95
The first in a series, this book is a unique
collection of the wittiest, most imaginative, and best drawn contemporary
political cartoons that grace the pages of the international media today.
Culled from a search of cartoons from 48 countries, the selected works represent
a diversity and superior quality unmatched in political cartoon anthologies.
The perceptions of the featured eleven Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonists
and their highly acclaimed international counterparts differ widely, and
although some may be contrary to our own viewpoints, the genius of the works
forcibly comes through allowing us to enjoy them anyway. These multiple
talented visual journalists exhibit a remarkable ability to elevate even
the layman reader to the heights of their philosophical sophistication and
superb artistic talent.
It is seldom that the reader may get to see cartoons from countries as diverse
as Bahrain, Russia, Israel, Sweden, Peru, China, France, or Australia; in
fact, before "The Finest International Political Cartoons of our Time"
there was no such book available offering a global wealth of visual satire.

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1993 EDITION
Edited by Joe Szabo
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a
division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 10/1/1993
ISBN: 0-9631600-6-8
Cover: Threadsewn case bound (hard cover: Bill Clinton)
Dimensions: 8 3/4" X 11 1/4" Number of pages: 176 Price: $19.95
Fourteen Pulitzer Prize winning editorial
cartoonists (Auth, Benson, Borgman, Conrad, Feiffer, Locher, MacNelly, Marlette,
Oliphant, Peters, Sargent, Szép, Wilkinson, and Wright), the world's
top cartoonist, as voted by international cartoonists in a recent survey
(Mikhail Zlatkovsky), and their highly acclaimed international counterparts
from 44 countries, grace the pages of the 1993 volume of The Finest International
Political Cartoons of our Time series.
The cartoons, organized into 40 categories, offer an insightful and both
visually and intellectually dramatic presentation of current politics. Thematically
consistent with the major newsworthy events of our time, these fresh cartoons
represent a comprehensive collection of superior artwork. Topics commented
upon by the cartoonists include the U.S. elections, the war in the former
Yugoslavia, pollution and deforestation, overpopulation, gay issues, the
end of communism, European unity, while many works take a look at the state
of various nations.
As its sister volumes, this impressive hardcover book is presented in an
unusually high quality format, suitable for home or office display, and
is certain to become an object of thought provoking reflection and conversation.

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1994 EDITION
Edited by Joe Szabo
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a
division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 10/1/1994
ISBN: 0-9631600-3-6
Cover: Threadsewn case bound
(hard cover: Boris Yeltzin)
Dimensions: 8 3/4" X 11 1/4" Number of pages: 176 Price: $24.95
Continuing in the tradition of the previous
volumes, this 1994 compilation further examines the world and its main concerns.
New topics, such as healthcare, gun control, religion, capital punishment,
urban environment, the media, as well as some unusually provokative metaphors
used by the world-renowned Portuguese António and Russian Zlatkovsky
provide added excitement to this volume.
Cartoons from two new countries, Costa Rica and Tatarstan, are also introduced,
and the number of American works are sharply increased. With the introduction
of cartoons by Jack Higgins and Michael Ramirez, the number of Pulitzer
Prize winniers showcased in this series has reached sixteen.
Few cartoon albums are as broadly based and diverse both stylistically and
contentwise as The Finest International Political Cartoons of our Time -
1994. The design, permitting the most visually exciting cartoons to occupy
deserving space, is a definite strength of the book.

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REVIEW Top Selection: The Finest International Political
Cartoons of our Time. Edited by
Joe Szabo. WittyWorld Books, P.O. Box 1458, North Wales, PA 19454. 1992.
166pp. ISBN 0-9631600-1-X. $19.95.
Cartoons of impact that
transcends time
This review, by Dennis Wepman,
appeared in the Washington, D.C. based Capitol Comics
Editorial cartoons are by their nature an ephemeral
art form; they speak to their times and, like the people they pillory or
praise and themes they address, they have their brief hour upon the stage
and then become obscure footnotes to history. Future generations, God willing,
may find AIDS and the hostage crisis as remote as we find the Tweed Ring
and Teapot Dome.
But among the spate of visual comments on current
events, a few have an impact which transcends time and earns them a permanent
place in the archives. Some by reason of their graphic artistry or originality
and some for the universality of their themes find their way into the literature
and history of their eras. Of the many collections which appear yearly,
most are memorials to particular artists with their own followings or deal
with specific topics in the news, and these have their place for the specialist.
Few are as broadly based and diverse in both style and content as Joe Szabo's
Top Selection, an assemblage which spans the world and examines most of
its major concerns.
What sets this elegantly produced volume apart
from other collections of editorial cartoons, besides its usually handsome
format and the high quality of its reproduction, is the extraordinary range
of the viewpoint it reflects. True to the claim of its title, this is truly
an international selection, its 124 artists representing 48 countries around
the would. Most of the familiar cartoonists of America and Western Europe
are here, and many who deserve to be better known, and it's good to have
them in permanent form; but what is unique to this book is the opportunity
it provides to see work from artists we would never see otherwise from Latin
America, Africa, and the Near and Far East. The results are sometimes obscure--Oriental
and Eastern European political cartoons are often rather surrealist illustrations
than the visual puns we are used in the United States--but the pictorial
commentaries in Top Selection are uniformly compelling and give us not only
a rich sampler of visual ingenuity but a unique insight into foreign viewpoints
on world affairs.
The editor, himself a cartoonist from Hungary and
the publisher of an international cartoon magazine which specializes in
work from lesser-known sources, has brought together material from countries
as far-flung as Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, and Estonia, Israel, Kuwait, and Iran,
China, Japan, and Singapore, Honduras, El Salvador, and Peru. Although there
are 22 American artists here (11 of them Pulitzer Prize winners), the bulk
of the material is from places whose voices are seldom heard in this country.
Organized by themes and indexed by national source, Szabo's volume provides
a synoptic survey of world opinion, enabling us to see how citizens of the
former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia see their situations, to compare Israeli
and Arab views of the peace talks between their nations, and to glimpse
how the Philippines react to the dangers of pollution. Not surprisingly,
the Gulf War, the collapse of the Communist world, and the problems of the
Middle East receive the largest amount of space, but nearly thirty other
topics, timely and timeless, get their share. Cartoons range in size from
half a page to full two-page spreads, and each is clearly identified by
artist and country.
Top Selection: The Finest International Political
Cartoons of Our Time is an important addition to the literature of its medium.
What constitutes "the finest" is a personal call, but the editor
has given us a richly varied assortment which is not likely to be surpassed.
If it maintains the high graphic and intellectual standard of its initial
offering, Top Selection is sure to become the definitive series in the field. |
REVIEW Was It Worth It? - A collection of International Cartoons about Columbus and his
Trip to America. Edited by Michael Ricci and Joseph George Szabo (WittyWorld
Books, North Wales, Pennsylvania, PA 19454, USA. 1992. 166pp. ISBN 0-9631600-0-1.
$12.95.
Columbus sails on a sea
of laughter
This review, by Larry Feign,
appeared in the South China Morning
Post in Hong Kong
When Columbus discovered the United States 500
years ago, he was greeted by Mickey Mouse and his tribe of Walkman-wearing,
Coca-Cola guzzling Indians...that is, after he slogged through the industrial
waste on the beach on his way through Immigration and Customs Control.
At least, that's the general consensus in this
collection of cartoons from around the world commemorating the 500th anniversary
of Columbus's "discovery." Jointly edited by a native born American
and Hungarian-immigrant cartoonist Joseph Szabo, the book showcases the
work of 88 cartoonists from every continent, including six former Soviet
republics (Though few from Asia).
Columbus is variably shown as a pizza delivery
boy, daydreaming about "discovering" Marilyn Monroe, and disappointed
that his European PAL video camera is incompatible with the American NTSC
system.
Several cartoons make the perhaps-not-politically-correct
assertion that it wasn't only the natives who suffered because of European
colonialism. A Russian cartoon eloquently shows Columbus and an Indian trading
a bottle of liquor for a tobacco pipe. By the last panel, both are lying
dead on the ground.
Although Columbus never actually set foot on North
America, cartoon after cartoon shows Columbus arriving in the USA, complete
with Statue of Liberty and traffic jams, choking with pollution and overdevelopment.
and rampant with glitzy advertising and superficial pop culture. Wait, isn't
that backwards? After all, wasn't it Columbus himself who got the ball rolling
for all that mess?
Here, in fact, is what makes this book much more
delightful than a simple collection of cartoons about a man whom a few people
are interested anymore. Beneath the surface, this is also a book about the
world's love/hate affair with the USA.
Western European cartoonists draw a largely negative,
cynical caricature of America. A Swiss cartoon who's Columbus sailing west,
shouting "Westward Ho!" until he reaches a polluted, traffic-choked
shore. He reverses direction, shouting "Eastward Ho"!
North American cartoonists predictably flagellate
themselves with guilt over the plight of the Indians. Latin Americans, providing
by far the best artwork in the book, give us cluttered, zany mini-murals
blaming the Europeans for the mess. Others use Columbus to comment on the
new wave of Japanese "economic colonizers" of America.
Ironically, all the positive images of the USA
came from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. A Croatian cartoonist
draws various races and nationalities leaping into the USA and emerging
as Superman. And an Armenian shows Columbus's ship containing a poor Soviet
immigrant beckoning to the Statue of Liberty.
Introducing the book are reproductions of many
of the first woodblock illustrations of Columbus's voyage, from as early
as 1493. Even back then the Spaniards were drawn as cruel and barbarous
invaders. Though not by Spaniards.
The cartoons overall vary from laugh-out-loud funny
gags to dramatic graphic images (the Statue of Liberty grasping the severed
head of an Indian), to the just plain silly. The only complaint about this
book, is that too many cartoons contain similar gags, the one about Columbus
going through Immigration being the most repetitious. Perhaps the editors
allowed this in order to have as many countries represented as possible.
The artwork is for the most part excellent, with
a wide diversity of styles ranging from the fashionably simple to highly-polished
humorous illustration. Printed on high-quality coated art paper, including
25 pages in full color, it is an attractive book. If you either admire or
despise Columbus, and love or hate America, you'll find this collection
fascinating, thought-provoking and funny. |
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CARTOONOMETER
Taking the Pulse of the World's Cartoonists
Authors: Joe Szabo and John
A. Lent
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 5/1/1994
ISBN: 0-9631600-6-0
Cover: Perfect bound
Dimensions: 8 1/2" X 11"
Number of pages: 124
Price: $27.95
Why do cartoonists do what they
do? What do they wish to accomplish? How much money do they make? What is
their philosophy? Who are the best in comics, political and gag cartoons,
caricatures, animation, and humorous illustration ? The answers to these
and numerous other questions are given in Cartoonometer, a pioneering effort
by two editors of WittyWorld International Cartoon Magazine. Both
Joe Szabo and John A. Lent have long been involved in serving, showcasing,
promoting, and scutinizing comic art. Their undertaking to map this most
influential, entertaining, and even educational profession was a herculean
task that brought both anticipated and surprizing results. Enhancing the
book, which is based on information collected from 249 cartoonists from
47 countries, are textual profiles of world famous cartoonists and scores
of illustrations involving various genres. Some of the artwork is in full
color. One can read the minds and/or enjoy the brilliant works of many American
celebrities such as Chris Browne (Hägar the Horrible), Jim
Davis (Garfield), Gary Larson (Far Side), David Levine (New York
Review of Books), Frank Miller (comic book artist), Pat Oliphant
(editorial cartoonist), Charles Schulz (Peanuts), Bill Watterson
(Calvin and Hobbes), as well as international figures including the legendary
Quino of Argentina, Moebius, Serre, and Topor
from France, the late "Japanese Disney" Tezuka, and the
cartoonist voted overall best, Mikhail Zlatkovsky of Russia. |

WAS IT WORTH IT?
A Collection of International Cartoons
about Columbus and his Trip to America
Edited by: Joe Szabo and Michael
Ricci
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 10/1/1992
ISBN: 0-9631600-0-1
Cover: Soft and hard cover
Price: $12.95 ($15.95)
Dimensions: 8 1/2" X 8 1/2"
Number of pages: 112
Many notable American and international
cartoonists are taking a wry look at Christopher Columbus' trip ito America
in Was It Worth It?, a compilation of cartoons from 38 countries. The editors,
Michael Ricci and Joseph George Szabo of WittyWorld International Cartoon
Magazine made their selections from nearly one thousand submissions.
The 112-page book includes 26 color works and features such distinguished
American cartoonists as Jim "Berry's World" Berry, Dan "Bizarro"
Piraro and Bill "Zippy" Griffith. Internationally acclaimed artists
include the hilarious Jean-Loic Belhomme (France), the insightful Marco
De Angelis (Italy), and top Russian cartoonist Sergey Tunin. The collection
has a seven page introduction by John A. Lent, Ph.D. managing editor of
WittyWorld. His historical overview includes interesting facts about Columbus
as well as rare, sometimes cartoon-like woodcuts first published as early
as 1493.
From the sublime to the ridiculous, this eclectic collection is sure to
entertain as well as provoke thought. |

JUST KICKING
(and kidding)
International Soccer Cartoons
Edited by: Joe Szabo
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 6/1/1994
ISBN: 0-9631600-7-9
Cover: Perfect bound
Dimensions: 7" X 9"
Number of pages: 96
Price: $13.95
Just Kicking (and Kidding) takes a humorous
look at the world's most popular sport by many of the world's most popular
cartoonists. Naturally, most of the cartoons came from countries where soccer
is overwhelmingly beloved, and where the sport is rooted in deep tradition.
Understandably soccer superpowers such as Brazil, Germany, England, Italy,
Mexico, and Colombia are among them, but readers can find cartoons from
as far as China or Uruguay representing a wide range of countries. A truly
diverse and entertaining collection, the book is sure to score many smiles
and outright laughs. Just Kicking (and Kidding) is very funny, and is recommended
to anybody who enjoys either playing or watching this most popular of all
sports. |

WITTYWORLD'S ILLUSTRATED DIRECTORY
of International Cartoon Festivals,
Competitions, and Awards
Author: Joe Szabo
Publisher: WittyWorld Books, a division of WittyWorld Publications
Publication date: 7/1/1994
ISBN: 0-9631600-8-7
Cover: Saddle stitch
Dimensions: 5 3/8" X 8 1/2"
Number of pages: 60
Price: $17.95
If you ever had the desire to
know who is eligible for entering the Pulitzer Prize, where could one win
$20,000 with a single cartoon, or when the deadline is for a particular
cartoon festival, you will want to have this directory, the only publication
in the world that has all these and much more answers for you. WittyWorld
has tracked down 127 cartoon festivals and awards in 37 countries. They
are listed alphabetically and cross-referenced with seventy-four entries
in a section about detailed information on active festivals, competitions,
and awards. The festivals are categorized by the genres in which they offer
their awards. They are caricatures, comics, general gag cartoons, humorous
illustration, editorial/political cartoons, three dimensional, and sports
cartoons. Since some festivals do, some do not return the entries to the
participants, WittyWorld has made an effort to learn the practice of each
competition in regard to returning artwork, providing a very useful information
for cartoonists. This unique and practical directory is handsomely produced
with 69 illustrations, and is designed to help both established and budding
cartoonists to obtain the recognition, exposure, and acclaim their works
deserve. |
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