Goodnight Grandpa: the 7th Candorville Collection

Goodnight Grandpa: the 7th Candorville Collection

by Darrin Bell
Goodnight Grandpa: the 7th Candorville Collection

Goodnight Grandpa: the 7th Candorville Collection

by Darrin Bell

Paperback

$21.70 
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Overview

The 7th collection of the syndicated comic strip "Candorville" by Darrin Bell. Lemont's written a memoir, but when Susan gets to the part where Lemont explains how he and the demon La Llorona accidentally caused the end of the world, Susan questions his sanity. Also, can couple's counseling fix Lemont's dysfunctional relationship with his television? After discovering she was Phil Anders' "other woman," will Susan give the jerk a second chance. or will she find true love thanks to the sure-fire Date-a-Dude.com profile Lemont writes for her? When Susan runs afoul of the cops in Arizona, can she talk them out of deporting her to Mexico? Plus, Lemont's political blog explodes, but can he win the war at home where it's his need for a good night's sleep vs. his baby boy's pathological need to jump on the bed all night long? And lastly, Lemont accompanies a 94-year-old World War II veteran on his final journey.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781973811251
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 04/28/2015
Series: Candorville , #7
Pages: 182
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 0.39(d)

About the Author

Editorial Cartoonist Darrin Bell creates the comic strips "Candorville" and "Rudy Park," as well as political cartoons for the Washington Post Writers Group. Before that, while studying political science at UC Berkeley, he served as the Daily Californian's staff cartoonist and freelanced cartoons to the Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Oakland Tribune, and other papers. His work now appears in hundreds of papers nationwide.

Darrin is the recipient of the 2016 Berryman Award for Editorial Cartooning and the 2015 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for Editorial Cartooning.

He's a Los Angeles native who was the son of educators, the grandson of a World War II veteran, the great great grandson of former slaves, and the father of two small children. Aside from his cartooning, he's best known for talking about himself in the third person.
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