Quali altri modi avranno inventato i coniglietti per suicidarsi? Teneri, cinici, irresistibili. Chi ha apprezzato il primo libro dei coniglietti suicidi si è immediatamente innamorato della loro macabra fantasia, dell'espressione impassibile con cui affrontano il proprio destino, della capacità di sorprenderci, spiazzarci, farci ridere a ogni nuova vignetta. I coniglietti tornano a suicidarsi in libreria coi loro metodi sempre più ingegnosi, bizzarri, surreali: impiccati alla Coppa dei Campioni, ghigliottinati da un lettore dvd, schiacciati dalla statua di Saddam, oppure semplicemente mimetizzati in mezzo ai birilli del bowling.
Andy Riley is a cartoonist and scriptwriter from Britain. He drew a weekly strip cartoon for The Observer Magazine called Roasted, which is also collected in hardback edition. So far his books have sold around one and a half million copies and have been published in eighteen countries, producing calendar, greetings card and poster spin-offs. Lucky Heather is his self-published mini-comic. His comedy scriptwriting is done in partnership with Kevin Cecil. They have won two BAFTAS, for the sitcom Black Books in 2005 and the animated special Robbie The Reindeer in 2000. They created and wrote the sitcoms The Great Outdoors and Hyperdrive for the BBC, and Slacker Cats for the ABC Family Channel. Other television writing credits include Little Britain, The Armando Iannucci Shows, Come Fly With Me, Trigger Happy TV, So Graham Norton, Smack The Pony, The Armstrong and Miller Show, Bob and Margaret, Spitting Image, Harry and Paul, Katy Brand’s Big Ass Show, Alexei Sayle’s Merry Go Round, Man Stroke Woman and Big Train. Their Radio 4 panel game, The 99p Challenge, won a Sony silver award. As well as writing comedy, they are experienced writers of feature-length animation: their credits include Gnomeo and Juliet (released February 2011) and The Pirates! (in production at Aardman). They did an uncredited rewrite of Tim Burton’s The Corpse Bride. Andy is originally from Aylesbury but now lives in London. He used to be the stage dancer for The Pod, Julian Barratt’s comedy techno band which was the forerunner of The Mighty Boosh. His hobbies include urban canoeing. Despite rival claims on the internet, Andy Riley is the true originator of the tradition of cross-dressing at the Towersey folk festival.
I got it! Another doses of where-are-your-meds-freak kind of humor. This is just as good as its predecessor, The Book of Bunny Suicides, which I reviewed here. (Although, I found this one a bit creepier.) These bunnies imagined some really weird ways of taking their own lives. Weird and exhausting ways.
And complicated. Sometimes, even more complicated than life itself.
And disturbing. This must be painful as hell. I will never look at grated cheese the same way again.
One can't help but to wonder what happened to those little and troubled souls that they felt life was just too much. And here I am, laughing at their creative ways of killing themselves. I feel horrible. I'm smiling AND I feel horrible.
Dec 11, 13 * Also on my blog. ** Photo credit: Andy Riley.
My students love these books because there is no writing, just pictures. They like to look through them and try to figure out what the author was trying to say.
شاید کمتر کسی برای خندوندن مخاطب سراغ ایده ی مرگ و خودکشی بره طبیعتن نباید اصلن خنده دار باشه ولی وقتی ماجراهای یه خرگوش کوچولویی رو دنبال می کنید که برای کندن از این دنیا این همه راه های مبتکرانه و پیچیده رو امتحان می کنه خنده به لب هاتون می یاد خوندن که نه ! ولی تماشا کردن این مجموعه ی سه جلدی خالی از لطف نیست ....
فارغ از خشونت خیلی دردناک و زیاد برخی از طرح ها، برای من هیچ کدوم به اندازه ی اونایی که ارجاع داشتن به فیلم های دکتر استرنج لاو، ارباب حلقه ها و ترمیناتور جذاب نبود.
ارجاعات این شماره به فیلم ها و کتاب ها بیشتر شده بود (ترمیناتور، هری پاتر، دو ارجاع به ارباب حلقه ها، بیگانه، گیوم تل) قبلی فقط به جنگ ستارگان و پیشتازان فضا ارجاع داشت، تا جایی که یادم مونده.
What i learned from this book. Well, i learned that the reason we think of bunnies as stupid - as in "dumb bunnies" - is that the all the bright ones are dead at their own ingenious hands. These are the mute, cunning, inexplicable - & i would say passionless except of course they are passionately devoted to elaborate departure - offspring of Gorey & MacGyver.
Sometimes the world is just too much... and when that happens you just have to pour pepper into the flaming vagina in the sky, or order a copy of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix and wait under the mail-slot for delivery, or tell the Terminator you are Sarah Conner, or roll yourself up into a ball to be used as a trebuchet... at least that's how these plucky, inventive little bunnies handle themselves when at the end of their rope.
Warning: do not read this book for the first time with your best friend in a B&N cafe near exam time unless you want all the studious little learners to glare at you incessantly because you're giggling too loud :)
Oh, these are so funny. I’m such a stickler for reading books in order that I’m glad that I read the first one and then this one, even though it really doesn’t matter with these books. I wish there was some sort of daily comic I could get of Andy Riley’s suicidal bunnies.
My favorites were Learn to Juggle in 6 Minutes, the Olympics one, the DVD tray and mismatch Sarah Connor and lemmings were great too. Oh, and after the 3rd viewing trying to figure it out, I finally got the Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire one (yes, this is an old book) and it’s very, very funny as well.
You have to have a warped and black sense of humor to enjoy these, and I do.
How gruesome! This was so tragically funny, and I loved the movie references such as The Lord of The Rings! The illustrations are too cute, which makes it even more sadistic! I should read the first one. xD
4,5/5. A little less funny, very little, then the original Bunny Suicides, some cartoons remind me of old one, and some are repetitive in this book itself. It is still funny an absurd. Start with the original and if you like it and still want more then this one does the job well!
Idk if it even counts as a book, but I loved it. I mean... it's horrible. The author must either be a masochist or have seriously bad taste in humour, but I loved it.
In this deep, meaningful, and poignant piece of literature you will find rabbits doing away with themselves in a variety of twisted and amusing ways. You will never view leporine suicide the same after this groundbreak series opens your eyes.
Ok, what to write about this little treasure? The more I think about it, the more I realise how ingenious and wonderful these mini-stories are. I don't know though, if Andy Riley meant this to be taken so seriously. It's also just super funny and makes all my laughing nerves tickle. And it's super clever too. And deep. And actually quite complex. Wow, so hard to decide!
Those bunnies really want to die... There's a fair bit of creativity in this collection, although a few rely on the same gags over and over (a lot of slicing and dicing, and death by power tools). But some are very creative; there are a couple full on Rube Goldberg devices, and one has to admire the sheer dedication they apply to their demises. It's mostly wordless, and takes maybe 15 minutes to go through, but it did elicit one or two chuckles, and a profound sense of guilt at finding humor in the deaths. It's not a complex concept and the artwork has a simplistic charm to it, and a couple are like Where's Waldos of death-craving rabbits. There are much worse ways to spend your time.