![]() ![]() So I think the whole thing might be more consistent in terms of quality. Having to turn in the whole book at once allowed me to – once I learned something new, I would see if I could apply that to the other posts I’d been working on. One thing I noticed is that every time I write something new I learn a little bit more about how to write and draw better. I really enjoyed being able to work on everything at once. Did you start out thinking of your work as a webcomic or as illustrated prose?īrosh: The process was essentially the same, but there were some differences. WIRED: Hyperbole and a Half uses a hybrid storytelling format that falls somewhere between prose and comic. Brosh talked with WIRED about all the things - or at least alot of them. The book includes fan-favorite tales like " The God of Cake," as well as all-new comics written for the book, like the story of why she has spent her entire life lying about hot sauce. This week, Simon and Schuster publishes Brosh's first print collection of her work, Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, Mayhem, and Other Things That Happened. Brosh is a seemingly inexhaustible resource of fantastic stories, which manage to find hilarity in the mundane, the absurd, and the tragic. Perhaps you know Allie Brosh from the most famous panel of her webcomic Hyperbole and Half, where a manic cartoon character holds a broom in the air and shouts "CLEAN ALL THE THINGS!" Or perhaps you've read her comics about going to a children's birthday party while heavily sedated and attempting to move with her two insane dogs on a cross-country road trip. ![]()
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