Oliphant looks back on W.
If you want a viscerally gripping and hilarious summary of the eight years of W, there is probably no better place to look than Pat Oliphant's cartoon collection, "Leadership". Designed as the catalog for a traveling exhibition of Oliphant's drawings, it came out some months ago, but I only recently sat down with a copy. It's terrific and reminded me why Oliphant has been the premier political cartoonist in the US for over 40 years.

The satire is biting, and the drawing is distinctive, forceful and innovative. Among the nicest features of the collection is the inclusion of preliminary sketches for certain cartoons, so the reader can appreciate the development of Oliphant's thinking and drawing. The book also has photos of some of the cartoonist's Daumier-like sculptures of political figures. I've seen them in person, and the photos don't do them justice. Andrews McMeel is the publisher; P.J. O'Rourke wrote the funny intro. (And to see the passions that Oliphant can stir, check out this earlier post where Pat draws Palin.)
related links
- Peter Kuper
- This Modern World
- Ted Rall Online
- Daily Cartoonist
- Just Seeds
- Huck/Konopacki Labor Cartoons
- Richard's Poor Almanac
- Drawn!
- Editorial Cartoonists
- Daryl Cagle's blog
- Journalista! The Comics Journal Weblog
- Cult Case
- Panels and Pixels
- Drawn & Quarterly
- Adbusters
- Comic Riffs
- Thought Balloonists
- New Yorker Cartoon Lounge
- Mike Lynch Cartoons
- Cartoonists With Attitude
- Eye On Comics
- The Comics Reporter
- Stripper's Guide
- Zippy the Pinhead







