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National Lampoon 1964 High School Yearbook By P.J. O'Rourke ( Rugged Land )
Release Date: 2005-05-31
Average Customer Rating:
List Price: $17.95
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Product Description
National Lampoons High School Yearbook:
First released in 1974 and a two-million-plus bestseller, National Lampoon’s 1964 High School Yearbook is the premier property of the most recognized brand in comedy and the perfect introduction to Rugged Land’s new National Lampoon Books imprint.
Brief Description: Welcome back, graduates of the 1964 class of C. Estes Kefauver High School in Dacron, Ohio!
They’re all back in glorious black and white with color Magic Marker– Chuck U. Farley, Maria Teresa Spermatozoa, Purdy “Psycho” Lee Spackle, Faun Laurel Rosenberg, and, of course, Dacron’s most famous son, Larry Kroger. Learn everything there is to know about Kroger’s past before he became the pop-culture legend Pinto (Tom Hulce), the virgin fraternity pledge in National Lampoon’s Animal House.
With a hilarious “Where are they now?” addendum and a brilliantly funny new introduction by P. J. O’Rourke, the 39th Reunion Edition is sure to be the talk of the baby boomers who grew up with National Lampoon and of the new generation of comedy fans spawned by the success of The Onion.
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Great blast from the past! ( jadedtom )
Ah, the good old days when 'National Lampoon' magazine was funny.
Plus, this yearbook was the origin of the Lampoon's classic movie "Animal House", with the first appearance of Larry 'Lance' Kroeger.
Lots of fun!
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Classic Lampoon but a bit cheap on the reproduction.. ( rcj67 )
I don't know why they changed the cover page by dropping in the yellow banner across the cheerleaders bare butt. The original was full on. Not that thats the big deal here, but that IS the first thing I noticed when this was released. The original was superior in quality. This repo takes a bit of eye squinting in places to see the details. And if you're anyone who was and is a Lampoon reader, you know thats what its all about. Its not a comic book. Crap, it took a month just to read (and often reread) and get through just the monthly magazines. The book releases were like making your way through a full length novel. Thats just they way you attacked a Lampoon. Almost like it was homework, but fun homework. If anymore of these reproductions come out, I hope the publishers will opt out of using a cheap copy machine and enter the digital age to re-create the final product. Lampoons were labors of love by its creators and writers. The 21st century versions should be given the same treatment.
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Brilliant Concept ( jbernat6 )
When this first came out, it was an amazing success.
First great conceit: printing the whole thing upside down. The "front cover" is the only page that faces the way it does; all the rest of the piece relates the back cover as the front, which is a beautifully done leatherette high school yearbook cover.
And then there's the content. It's all here - the clubs, the class clowns, the juvenile delinquents, the jocks, the cheerleaders. No one has ever topped the orginiality and satirical edge that the editors lovingly contributed to the piece.
I do agree that this reproduction is not as good as the original. I actually have an original and yes, it looks a lot better than this. But look past the print quality and enjoy the content. It's no less brilliant now than it was when it first came out in 1974.
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They stole my 1961 Yearbook ( rebeccastarr )
I had the original and lost it. It is a work of pure genius!
I love it.It looks so much like my yearbook. And the characters are fabulous.
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Almost as good as the old version ( jim37581 )
It is almost as good as the old one that I lost. I think I have grown up a bit (I hope) since then so some of the humor has lost a little of its edge. The printing quality on the new one was not as good as the original. On some pages it almost appeared that they had photocopied the original to make the new one. I still think maybe the best part is the list of names of all the underclassmen. To come up with those dozens of puns the writers must have stayed up late smoking lots of good stuff.
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