Book details:
Art
Paperback • 126 pages • 6 in x 9 in
ISBN 978-1-7333864-4-9
Publication Date: 8/10/2020, Available Now!
About the Author:
Muriel Schneps was born in the Germantown district of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She showed talent in art as a child, and while in elementary school took classes at The Fleichers Art School in Philadelphia, and while in high school at The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. In 1972, she moved to New York, where she took classes briefly at the Art Student League of New York. Read More…
Get Used To It
Is cartooning the way to a healthier, less stressful life? Artist Muriel Scheps is convinced it just may be.
“We all have things in our lives that we find unbearable, yet can’t seem to make go away. When this happens, our friends and relatives often us give us the advice, "Get used to it." Of course, that’s much easier said than done,” Ms. Schneps says.
“When it comes to getting used to it, a cartoon can do wonders. Maybe that’s why most people who pick of a copy of The New Yorker, read the cartoons first. It’s a quick way to distance one’s self from the problems of day by laughing it all off.”
Get Used to It, a collection of Schneps’ original, light-hearted, often bizarre and flat-out funny cartoons, will be released in summer 2020 by San Francisco-based IFSF Publishing.
According to her publisher, Brooks Roddan, the book itself came about in a completely unexpected way. “I’ve known Muriel for years,” said Roddan. “I knew her as a fine artist, an accomplished painter, but didn’t know she made cartoons. One day my wife and I were visiting her, and she happened to have a stack of her drawings laying on the table. We started flipping through them, and soon we were laughing our heads off. We decided right then and there that the world needed a book of Muriel’s cartoons.”
Schneps’s cartoons are quirky collection of cartoons involving maladjusted men and women, screaming moms, annoying dog owners, prairie therapists, surreal scenes, and animals and space aliens that are totally miffed by human behavior.
“Laughing at adversity is serious business,” said Schneps. “We need all the help we can get doing it. Dancing and cartoons can chase any problem away.”