Poorly Drawn Lines by Reza Farazmand
Sunday, April 24, 2016 at 10:22AM 
Published by Plume on October 6, 2015
Poorly Drawn Lines started as an  internet comic strip. The book mixes new material with strips that were previously published on the web. Four panels per page is a typical  strip, although they range from one panel jokes to strips that spread  across two or three pages. Occasionally, a few lines of text appear on a  page without art. The whole thing can be read pretty quickly, or you  can keep it in the bathroom and read it a bit at a time.
The book is divided  into chapters covering such topics as the natural world, the future, and  big ideas. There are quite a few talking animals (birds and bears in  particular) and an occasional monster. Many of the strips deal with the  meaning of life, or death, or cheese. People (and animals) tend to be  filled with existential angst, which might explain why most of them  aren’t very nice, particularly the animals, who are usually giving  humans (and other animals) the finger.
My favorite jokes include a  chameleon that hides its emotions and a drawing of a rabbit with a bandaged foot wearing a  rabbit’s foot around its neck, captioned  “Fluffy has made his own luck.” Another favorite:  a guy who says “use  your hands in conversation to help project confidence” slaps the next  person who talks to him. Maybe you need a dark sense to humor to  appreciate the collection.
I didn’t have many LOL moments while  reading through this collection, but I did smile regularly. Smiling is  good. Any book that makes me smile is, in my judgment, a good book.
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