Before his worldwide fame as a bestselling children's author, Theodor
Seuss Geisel was a prolific writer and cartoonist for humor magazines of
the early twentieth century. The creator of Green Eggs and Ham, The Cat
in the Hat, Horton Hears a Who, and other classics wrote and drew
comic features for publications such as Judge, Life, College Humor,
and Liberty. This entertaining compilation of items from the Doctor's
early and often overlooked career offers a captivating blend of visual
hilarity, nonsense language, and absurdist humor.
Articles and essays abounding in literary surrealism include memoirs of
spying on General Grant during the Civil War and visiting England on a
daily budget of 90 cents. Seuss investigates the origins of contract
bridge (played by Druids armed with croquet mallets), explains how to
eject a cow from your apartment, and presents charts with helpful
pointers, including How to Punish Your Offspring Scientifically. With
their humorous commentaries on people and googly-eyed animals, these
cartoon essays and fantasies offer delightful views of reality as seen
in the Seussian fun-house mirror.