One page jokes with multiple ways bunnies might have committed suicide by British author/artist Riley. Funny, and because they are so WRONG, they will be hilarious to many people, like Helen Keller jokes or Ethiopian hunger jokes, etc. Crossing the line is what comedy is about, most of the time, seems to me, as that film about the Greatest Joke in the World discussed and demonstrated… the one who went the farthest got the most laughs… very interesting. So suicide is NOT an okay topic to laugh about… and killing furry little cute bunnies--also not okay-- but two books of these have proven popular, and this is because they are making fun of stuff that is not okay to make fun of…Rabelais was a model for this, and Bakhtin said it was carnival that helped the lower classes laugh at the rich and powerful… satire has a political, cultural and social function… and personal, too, of course... for adolescents and perpetual adolescents everywhere. I thought it was funny, given all that, I get the joke, but it's a single joke, essentially, told countless ways, getting funnier for some m=people maybe with every unnecessary repetition… I would have loved this at 16, for sure. At 60? Not so much, but I smiled a few times. For me my interest in it became more about the nature of comedy than anything else. Is even saying this much about it taking it too seriously and revealing I am not Riley's primary audience? Probably.