Synopses & Reviews
Syndicated by United Feature Syndicate,
Get Fuzzy appears in 250 newspapers, from the
Los Angeles Times to the
Detroit Free Press to the
Philadelphia Enquirer. Darby Conley's first book,
This Dog Is Not a Toy, sold more than 115,000 copies; his second book,
Fuzzy Logic, more than 85,000.When he was a child, Darby Conley used to wonder what his beloved pooch was thinking. That curiosity led to his creation of the hilarious strip
Get Fuzzy in 1999, which has rapidly become one of the most popular cartoons in newspaper syndication. Showcasing the relationship between Bucky, a temperamental cat with an attitude; the sweet and sensitive dog Satchel; and their mild-mannered human companion, Rob Wilco,
Get Fuzzy has cornered the market on anthropomorphic antics.
Anyone who finds animals both amazing and amusing will find this new Get Fuzzy collection one of the most bitingly funny books ever printed.
Synopsis
Syndicated by United Feature Syndicate,
Get Fuzzy appears in 250 newspapers, from the
Los Angeles Times to the
Detroit Free Press to the
Philadelphia Enquirer. Darby Conley's first book,
This Dog Is Not a Toy, sold more than 115,000 copies; his second book,
Fuzzy Logic, more than 85,000.When he was a child, Darby Conley used to wonder what his beloved pooch was thinking. That curiosity led to his creation of the hilarious strip
Get Fuzzy in 1999, which has rapidly become one of the most popular cartoons in newspaper syndication. Showcasing the relationship between Bucky, a temperamental cat with an attitude; the sweet and sensitive dog Satchel; and their mild-mannered human companion, Rob Wilco,
Get Fuzzy has cornered the market on anthropomorphic antics.
Anyone who finds animals both amazing and amusing will find this new Get Fuzzy collection one of the most bitingly funny books ever printed.
About the Author
Get Fuzzy creator Darby Conley is an illustrator and former elementary school teacher who was born in Concord, Mass., but grew up in Knoxville, Tenn. He attended Amherst College where he drew cartoons for the daily newspaper, the Amherst Student, and earned a fine arts degree in 1994. For the next two years, Darby taught second and fourth grades at an elementary school in Northampton, Mass. From 1996 to 1998 he served as art director for a children's museum in Massachusetts, where he currently lives.