Editorial Reviews
a weekly review by Ray Tate, September 5, 1996
A usenet review from Ray Tate's Pick of the Brown Bag.Pick of the Brown Bag In this week's final pick, brave authors attempt to shed light on the Bigfoot mystery, add to the traditional folklore or play havoc with your funny-bone in Mojo Press' Big Book of Bigfoot. [sic] Mark London Williams combines forces with Phil Hester to turn Sasquatch into a full-blown super-hero who should be voiced by Kelsey Grammar. Joe Pruett of the overly grim Kilroy crowd lightens with Doug Potter for a clubhouse romp in the woods. A.A. Attanasio with John Bergin explore the motives behind Sasquatch and Bog Beast. Why do the creatures seem to haunt specific places? Find out in the unpredictable short.
Neal Barrett, Jr. partners with Bill D. Fountain, for a comical "hot Bigfoot in the city" tale and explains why the sightings appear to be dwindling. Norman Partridge introduces readers to a creature worse than Bigfoot. Batton Lash's "Wolff & Byrd" almost represent Bigfoot who remains refreshingly innocent. In William Browning Spencer's and Newt Manwich's hilarious Lovecraft satire, society, a pawn of a certain tentacled omnipotent, debauches Bigfoot, and finally, pesky "deep thoughts" cannot fail to flutter when you read about the man behind the monster in Paul O' Miles' and Dan Burr's "Song of the Yeti."
Book Description
In the Pacific Northwest lives a famous being that almost no one has seen. A monster so legendary that it is know the world over. The Indians called it Sasquatch. Asians call it Yeti. Americans call it the Bigfoot. THE BIG BIGFOOT BOOK enlightens this mystery with eight different stories from eight different authors and eight different artists.
The Big Bigfoot Book,Fernando Ramirez,Richard Klaw,Mark Nelson,Ted,A.A. Attanosio,Norman Partridge,Jr. Neal Barrett,William,John Bergin,Phil Hester,Doug Potter,Mojo Press,1885418078,Fiction - General,General
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