Saltar navegación e ir al contenido principal
Biblioteca digital de Bogotá
Logo BibloRed
Cargando contenido
¿Qué estás buscando?
  • Escribe palabras clave como el título de un contenido, un autor o un tema que te interese.

  • Búsqueda avanzada

Seleccionar

Contenidos y Experiencias Digitales

Filtrar

Formatos de Contenido
Tipo de colección
Género
Idioma
Derechos de uso

Selecciona contenidos según las condiciones legales para su uso y distribución.

Estás filtrando por

Cargando contenido

Se encontraron 5341 resultados en recursos

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Pooch Cafe: All Dogs Naturally Know How to Swim

Pooch Cafe: All Dogs Naturally Know How to Swim

Por: Paul Gilligan | Fecha: 2013

Pooch Cafe, is creator Paul Gilligan's first syndicated strip, and this book collects the strips from its successful first year of syndication. When Poncho's beloved master Chazz marries cat lover Carmen and forces them to move in with her and her feline brood, Poncho's world is shaken to the core. Carmen's attempts to bribe Poncho with cheese cannot overcome his inexplicable but undeniable disdain for all things cat, and now that his home has become a haven for them, his only recourse is to seek refuge in the cafe, where he, Boomer, and his other canine pals pore over their top-secret plans to construct a giant catapult with which to hurl all the Earth's cats into the sun. As much as he dislikes kitties, he's equally passionate about his love for Chazz. Poncho will do just about anything to keep his position as man's best friend secure, including enduring the physical torments of Chazz's passion for biking, camping, and mountain climbing, which he can only get through with the help of classic Russian literature and a nice cup of tea. Pooch Cafe, captures the intensity of the human-dog bond in a way that will resonate with pet lovers everywhere.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Pooch Cafe: All Dogs Naturally Know How to Swim

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Close to Home: A Million Little Pieces of Close to Home

Close to Home: A Million Little Pieces of Close to Home

Por: John McPherson | Fecha: 2013

Is your face suffering from a lack of exercise? Readers rely on John McPherson's Close to Home cartoon to contort their facial muscles into an unstoppable grin each day. Not even Botox can stop you from smiling at this latest collection of Close to Home. How do you measure a cartoon's popularity? The true measure of a comic panel's popularity is how often it is posted on a refrigerator, cubicle, break room bulletin board, or office door. By that standard, Close to Home wins the comic panel popularity contest hands down. Close to Home captures the humor in all facets of life. From home to hospitals, from classrooms to courtrooms, from boardrooms to backyards--there's a Close to Home panel that hits us where we live and work and play. A Million Little Pieces of Close to Home features hilarious panels first published in newspapers in the year 2000, the year of the Y2K scare that never materialized. Of course, that's just the kind of thing you'd expect from a Close to Home world.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Close to Home: A Million Little Pieces of Close to Home

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Christmas Meltdown

Christmas Meltdown

Por: Dan Reynolds | Fecha: 2013

In Dan Reynolds's world, nerds play birthday party games like Pin The Tail on the Jackass. Women at the Maximum Insecurity Prison wonder if uniform stripes make them look fat. Tiny tater tots with their eyes all aglow find it hard to sleep at night. Reynolds draws a wild and wacky world that keeps everyone howling with laughter. In Christmas Meltdown, Reynolds pays tribute to the Yuletide season. With his offbeat humor and hilarious style, Reynolds provides a perfect gift for everyone who wants to celebrate with major doses of quirky fun and clever frivolity.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Christmas Meltdown

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Non Sequitur: Beastly Things

Non Sequitur: Beastly Things

Por: Wiley Miller | Fecha: 2013

If a cartoonist successfully captures life's humorous and ironic moments in three short panels, readers applaud. When Wiley does the same in his single-scene format, they roll on the carpet laughing. Non Sequitur not only breaks the three-panel mold, it succeeds without regular characters, standard settings, or repeat situations to fall back on. Each piece, in other words, hangs out there as Wiley's snapshot of the worlds of work, leisure, and life's many crossroads. Non Sequitur's Beastly Things, as guided by Rolf the dog, keeps readers howling, growling, and scratching for more. You will delight, for instance, in crocodiles luring fishermen with dollar bills, Randy the science lab kid who announces that his homework ate his dog, and the desert dweller who celebrates the change of season by raking needles beneath his cacti.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Non Sequitur: Beastly Things

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  The Flying McCoys: Comics for a Bold New World

The Flying McCoys: Comics for a Bold New World

Por: Glenn McCoy | Fecha: 2013

This zany strip enters the comic-collection scene with circus-like zeal. All that's missing is a parade of elephants and a clown-car escort. Gary and Glenn McCoy's delightfully absurd comic panel blends superheroes, office humor, huggable animals, and twisted relationships in a bizarre marriage of Gary Larson, the New Yorker, Conan O'Brien, and Mad Magazine. Put succinctly, the brothers McCoy present "comics for a bold new world." Creating a world where greeting cards heal hospital patients, police officers pull over children driving bumper cars, babies use the patch to quell the pacifier habit, and nudists find out what constitutes a streaker in their colony, the St. Louis area natives alternate writing and drawing duties for the daily panel. The brothers each have been nominated for multiple National Cartoonists Society awards, and Glenn has won in three categories. Gary McCoy's past as a comedian (he won HBO's Stand-Up Stand-Off contest for the St. Louis area in 1995) also shines through in the strip's offbeat humor. Their impressive freelance client list reads like a who's who in cartooning: Disney, DreamWorks, and Hyperion, to name just a few.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

The Flying McCoys: Comics for a Bold New World

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  The Elderberries

The Elderberries

Por: Phil Frank | Fecha: 2013

As more than a third of our nation's population strolls into senior citizenry, cartoonists Phil Frank and Joe Troise present The Elderberries--a heartwarming strip that follows the lives of five aging friends who reside at Elderpark, the "good place to park your elder." The residents of Elderpark include Dusty, the General, the Professor, Boone, and Evelyn, along with Miss Overdunne, who manages the property for the corporate bean counters at Jujitsu Heavy Industries (based in Hong Kong). Covert field trips, practical jokes, and dueling games of poker and word play keep this spirited group of elders one step ahead of ailments and the anarchy of aging. This is the first Elderberries book collection.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

The Elderberries

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Deranged Stalker's Journal to Pop Culture Shock Therapy

Deranged Stalker's Journal to Pop Culture Shock Therapy

Por: Doug Bratton | Fecha: 2013

Ah, what would popular culture be without characters such as Lindsay Lohan and Mel Gibson, along with the pop culture--centrific media that covers them? For starters, Doug Bratton's The Deranged Stalker's Journal of Pop Culture Shock Therapy might not exist, and, well, that would be very sad indeed. Inside The Deranged Stalker's Journal of Pop Culture Shock Therapy, Bratton skewers pop culture icons ranging from Sesame Street's Bert and Ernie to Harry Potter. Fashioned as a mock-style journal whose author is just a little bit unstable, The Deranged Stalker's Journal of Pop Culture Shock Therapy lambasts the best--and worst--of popular culture, one cartoon panel at a time. From recent news headlines to celeb-inspired mockumentaries, Bratton offers a humorously skewed view of fame, popular culture, and American Idol-worship. So if you are one of the millions of people who often wonders what it would be like if a psychopath and his imaginary friend kept a journal of a funny-yet-obscure comic that will most likely never appear in your newspaper, this is certainly the book to read!
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Deranged Stalker's Journal to Pop Culture Shock Therapy

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Close to Home: Everything I Need to Know I Learned on Jerry Springer

Close to Home: Everything I Need to Know I Learned on Jerry Springer

Por: John McPherson | Fecha: 2013

Where there is stress, there is humor." --John McPherson * Close to Home, syndicated by Universal uClick, lampoons the best of popular culture one controversy at a time. Everything I Need to Know I Learned on Jerry Springer: A Close to Home Collection is a Close to Home collection. Creator John McPherson's sardonic wit creates an innocent hullabaloo with the Center for Nursing Advocacy and earns the accolades of Leavenworth Federal Detention Center's inmate #19108045. * McPherson's mastery is elevating the mundane to the magnificent. Scenes of societal sloth, coworker conundrums, dysfunctional discord, and medical malpractice become achingly funny when sketched by his pen.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Close to Home: Everything I Need to Know I Learned on Jerry Springer

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Boondocks: Fresh for '01  You Suckas

Boondocks: Fresh for '01 You Suckas

Por: Aaron McGruder | Fecha: 2013

The Boondocks is a rich, multilayered comic strip that offers a frank yet often funny look at race in America. It starts with a simple premise: Two young boys, Riley and Huey, move from innercity Chicago to live with their grandfather. The tension increases, however, because the two boys are African-Americans now compelled to adapt to a white suburban world. They must take all they've learned in the "hood and apply it to life in the 'burbs. Superbly illustrated, The Boondocks has stirred controversy, attracted widespread media coverage, and won readers who've applauded McGruder's unapologetic and humorous approach to race.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Boondocks: Fresh for '01 You Suckas

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

  • Exclusivo BibloRed
Imagen de apoyo de  Argyle Sweater: Puns of Steel

Argyle Sweater: Puns of Steel

Por: Scott Hilburn | Fecha: 2013

With more than 1 million greeting cards sold, Scott Hilburn's The Argyle Sweater dresses up the funny page with an argyle-wearing assortment of cavemen, bears, moths, and pompadour-styled humans, along with an occasional evil scientist. Boasting a readership ranging from the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times to the Calgary Herald, The Argyle Sweater fuses Hilburn's visceral talent and bold pen stroke. What results is a cerebrally astute cartoon panel that comments on popular culture, human nature, and society in a clever and spontaneous way.
Fuente: Comics Plus Formatos de contenido: Cómics
  • Temas:
  • Otros
  • Humor

Compartir este contenido

Argyle Sweater: Puns of Steel

Copia el enlace o compártelo en redes sociales

Selecciona las Colecciones en las que vas a añadir el contenido

Para consultar los contenidos añadidos busca la opción Tus colecciones en el menú principal o en Mi perfil.

Mis colecciones

Cargando colecciones

¿Deseas limpiar los términos de la búsqueda avanzada?

Vas a limpiar los términos que has aplicado hasta el momento para poder rehacer tu búsqueda.

Selecciona las Colecciones en las que vas a añadir el contenido

Para consultar los contenidos añadidos busca la opción Tus colecciones en el menú principal o en Mi perfil.

Mis colecciones

Cargando colecciones