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Goats The Corndog Imperative

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Book Two of The Infinite Pendergast Cycle

God is dead. Reality isn’t real. And the end of the multiverse is coming! Nobody knew any of this stuff at the beginning–least of all Jon and Phillip, two of the drunker inhabitants of our own particularly ignorant level of existence. Then again, it was these bickering cyber-geeks who flew to the center of the galaxy where they met–and ate–God Himself . . . which may just have kick-started the apocalypse. A new collection of strips from the acclaimed webcomic, The Corndog Imperative is a unique cosmic comedy of errors, pocket universes, and monkeys with typewriters.

168 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 2009

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About the author

Jonathan Rosenberg

40 books90 followers
Jonathan Rosenberg was born on November 27th, 1973.Most of his childhood memories were erased in a freakish blimp accident. Rosenberg’s interests include sleep, sarcasm and cheesesteaks.

Rosenberg has been drawing comics and posting them on the internet since 1997, starting with seminal webcomic Goats (goats.com). He is also the creator of teen sensation megaGAMERZ 3L33T (megagamerz.com) and the inventor
of the squirrel.

Today Rosenberg lives with his wife and children in Westchester, NY. There is a small window in his office where he can watch the sky. You can see more of Rosenberg’s work at amultiverse.com.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Lexi  Swanson.
75 reviews15 followers
August 10, 2018
I had high hopes for this based on the forward but honestly I cannot continue. The characters are boring and I dont find the humour to be funny :P This may be someones cup of tea but it certainly isnt mine.
Profile Image for Josh Dubois.
22 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2010
After a few dark reads: a man going deaf, blind, and insane in a rubbish-filled Manhattan brownstone, a sterility apocalypse, and the murderous madness of Judge Holden, I needed a comic book.

Goats isn't the best comic I've read, but it kept me turning pages. Part of that is because it's 100% devoid of meaningful plot, and thus requires very little brainpower. I always like fiction in which God is found to be mortal and killed: in the previous volume of Goats, God was killed, turned into a pork chop, and eaten by one of the protagonists. In lieu of a deity, the Goats multiverse is run by a series of computer programmers and a managing editor.

Even though it wasn't the world's very best comic, I will probably track down Volume I: Infinite Typewriters, to read about God being fried and eaten with a side of applesauce.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews