Kennel Club Book Club - The Megathread for all furry comic book, graphic novel and literature lunacy.

i own a physical copy of "the pervert" but i've never read it because i don't hate myself enough
am i in possession of a "collector's item" or was this furry troon comic widely printed and distributed?
It would have been a collectors item if Matt joined the 41% but lucky for you there'd a TLDR in the review - give it a read and lmk how you feel!
 
It would have been a collectors item if Matt joined the 41% but lucky for you there'd a TLDR in the review - give it a read and lmk how you feel!
Why the fuck were they selling this at a brick and mortar comic book shop next to, like, Marvel and DC comics? ? ?
I'm actually a little upset that I bought it even as a joke.
...keeping it in case Matt manages to get his stupid AGP ass killed but goddamn.
 
Why the fuck were they selling this at a brick and mortar comic book shop next to, like, Marvel and DC comics? ? ?
I'm actually a little upset that I bought it even as a joke.
...keeping it in case Matt manages to get his stupid AGP ass killed but goddamn.
He has another one called 920London about two sparkledog drug addicts (one a tranny, one a regular woman) in a failing relationship and the tranny stopped transitioning without telling his girlfriend (who thirsts after other emo guys anyways). Might say something about his mental state. Its vaguely better.
 
He has another one called 920London about two sparkledog drug addicts (one a tranny, one a regular woman) in a failing relationship and the tranny stopped transitioning without telling his girlfriend (who thirsts after other emo guys anyways). Might say something about his mental state. Its vaguely better.
That one is done specifically by Boydell without any input from Matt, and if there's interest in a summary and review I am always happy to provide my people with quality content ~
 
That one is done specifically by Boydell without any input from Matt, and if there's interest in a summary and review I am always happy to provide my people with quality content ~
Ah, that's my mistake then. Might explain why it's vaguely more tolerable and actually shows the real woman in a better light, albeit likely unintentionally.
 
Hello Kennel Club. I present to you today "Omaha" The Cat Dancer by Reed Waller, published in 1981:

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There's probably not much milk or psychoanalysis to be had here, but Omaha is cited as the first published furry* porn comic. It is the progenitor of all that was to come & is interesting in that context.

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*Omaha was not actually a furry comic, per se, in that artist Reed Waller was never a part of the yet-to-be-formed furry subculture. However, the budding sci-fi convention subculture of 'funny animal' fans, who would later be known as furries, were all over Omaha, due to their coomer tendencies. This spawned several sequels, with non-furry Kate Worley taking on the writing from the third chapter onward.

Omaha harkens back to a simpler time, where mere sex acts were enough to get off funny animal fans rather than bizarre paraphiliae. Omaha & other female characters served as great self-inserts for funny animal lovers, many of whom were homosexual men LARPing as bisexual wom– ...well, I guess not everything changes.
 
What about some classics like
Jack or
Better Days by Jay "DUNECOCK" Naylor?
Or Concession? Reminds me of discovering the bad webcomics wiki a decade or so ago and reading all about stuff like that. Older furry comics and art just seem so...honest in their horniness? Like yeah there was sex and schlock but it wasn't like today with the infinite types of degeneracy trying to one up each other.

I've considered making analyses in the style of OP's for awhile, but about kids books or other things that have been banned here and there.
 
I've considered making analyses in the style of OP's for awhile, but about kids books or other things that have been banned here and there.
If it has any characters remotely anthro you will have my undivided attention.

What books did you have in mind? I find it hard to believe kids books with anthro animals would be banned.
 
If it has any characters remotely anthro you will have my undivided attention.

What books did you have in mind? I find it hard to believe kids books with anthro animals would be banned.
Didn't they ban anthro books in China? But no, I was thinking of general controversial children's books with mostly human characters, which would fit more in the art and literature board here. As someone who works with books in a certain capacity it's something that interests me. I read Pervert from the link because I was bored, and thouroughyl enjoyed the lengthy analysis of it to ease the pain I felt afterwards (:_(

There were a lot of good kids books with anthro characters that aren't bad per se. I grew up on Redwall, Mismantle, Mouseguard, Wind in the Willows, or even Richard Scarry's art. It's a shame that growing up I've come to find that there's a lot of...not very charming antho series out there too.

Edit: I was trying to remember what the art of Pervert reminded me of and it was this little comic. However this one is much more profound and appealing compared to Pervert ;)

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Or Concession? Reminds me of discovering the bad webcomics wiki a decade or so ago and reading all about stuff like that. Older furry comics and art just seem so...honest in their horniness? Like yeah there was sex and schlock but it wasn't like today with the infinite types of degeneracy trying to one up each other.

I've considered making analyses in the style of OP's for awhile, but about kids books or other things that have been banned here and there.
I was going to say Concession as well but I thought it was way too bad and niche to get recognized...
 
What about some classics like
Jack or
Better Days by Jay "DUNECOCK" Naylor?
“Jack”. Now there’s a webcomic I haven’t thought of in a long time, it used to be my favorite little dumpster-fire to check up on from time to time.

Dave’s thread has a lot of info on it, if you care to look.
 
Nothing new, furries can't write for shit. In the very rare case that some story/comic vaguely has a plot and proper dialog, you can be sure that it's for tranny propaganda or otherwise bullshit SJW rhetorics.

My brain just self-censors speech bubbles in furry comics these days when I'm having a wank
Everyone mentioned on this thread is better at creative writing than Ethan Oliver Ralph, owner and editor of theralphretort.com. Host of the #Killstream and recorded Chris Chan's arrest.
The Bedfellows original comic run
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Borba's Zootopia comics reading when
Ask and you shall receive:
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I Will Survive​

By William Borba​

On our Lord's day March 17th of 2017, William Borba, a Zootopia sperg from Brazil decided to try his hand at tackling a rather controversial issue. For those of you in the scene at the time, you've seen this meme'd to hell and back and for the uninitiated - buckle up. In Borba's own words on the DeviantArt Page for the cover:
"Now, as a change, we have a real dramatic story. There is no room for laughter in this one."
For the record, I share the same opinion as our dear sneeder, Nool:
(Additionally, a TLDR for this comic can be found in the below clip from 00:10 - 00:23)

I include this here to show you IDGAF about the whole debate - I know some of you niggers seethe on either side of the argument but this thread is about horrible furry comics, not politics. This furry comic just happens to be about a highly politicized topic, of course.
Archive of the full comic can be found here.

This black and white comic starts with the protagonist Judy Hopps, from the (now widely forgotten by the furry fandom) Disney Animation, "Zootopia". Judy is clearly in the bathroom and has just placed a pregnancy test on the counter, waiting for the results to show. "Sweet Cheese...!" she exclaims, as the test reads positive. Judy then goes to a room containing one Nick Wilde (also from Zootopia) only to try to rouse him from his slumber with the most stone-cold face I have ever seen on an anthro rabbit:
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Nick, in predictable character tells Judy sleepily that they're off duty and even though she has something important to say, to just text him. Judy has enough and shakes the drowsiness out of him while calling him by his full name, Nicholas. Nick remarks that she only calls him by his full name when he's in danger, she confirms that in fact he is.
In a cleverly sarcastic character that only Jason Bateman encapsulated, Nick asks Judy if he can take a shower before she ruins the rest of his day - which she allows:
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After finishing up his shower, Judy makes no haste in breaking the new to Nick - she is pregnant.
Nick's heart skips a beat - maybe she is just fucking with him? He tries to play it off as a joke but Judy's face does not lie and he realized that it is for real.

Right now to the uninitiated, it is already very telling that Judy sees her pregnancy as a negative. Having seen Zootopia, Judy so far has been out of character - she is not confident nor has the "I can overcome this" attitude she is very well known for in the source material. Granted looking at this from an XY perspective I will admit I cannot possibly fathom what it would be like to be in her shoes in this scenario - but more on how it would affect her life later.

Now, how does Nick react to this sudden news, as life changing as it is?
He embraces her - "This is the happiest day of my life!"
Judy, as he is celebrating tells him to stop, that she wants to be put down. Nick, concerned with her attitude fears he hurt her accidentally in his embrace. "No Nick, you didn't. But this is isn't the problem" Judy tells him. At first, Nick believes the problem she is referring to is interbreeding which isn't what she meant. Admitting he does not understand, she tells him not to make it worse for them. When asking for clarification, Judy answers Nick she does not want this child. Nick's reaction is swift and dramatic, just as much as Judy has been:
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I will say some of this dialogue is confusing, to say the least. Judy's choice of words in "I don't want this child" is rather particular. Now this isn't the first point where the wording is either very particular or off, so it could just be an issue of translation since I am going out on a whim to assume the creator's first language is not English. But on the off chance this was purposeful - maybe it could be the fact that this child was unexpected? Further in the story we will get our clarification.

Nick, demanding Judy explain herself wants to know why she doesn't want "our" baby. Judy tells him there is no baby yet - she's just in the first month of pregnancy (assuming the first trimester). Nick, upset that she appears to have already made up her mind on her own that it might also be the last month further presses for her to explain herself. Judy, wanting to talk like adults about the matter starts by saying she didn't believe he could get her pregnant. Judy goes on how no predator and prey species have ever been able to interbreed, so she believed that no contraceptives were necessary. Then, contradictory to what she said earlier - she is afraid that their child might be some kind of freak. On top of the interbreeding fears Judy tops it off by saying she fears that since she is dwarfed by the likes of Nick, the baby might be too big for her body to handle, nobody knows the repercussions of such a situation and it scares her.
Arrogantly, Nick believes the issue is she doesn't want to have any children with him. The discussion then shifts to Judy apologizing for not having this conversation earlier with him, but she is also worried as to how this would affect her career.

A link to a relief thread for abortion sperging will be provided at the end of this post. On this topic - Any heterosexual couple that is serious about a long term relationship should have had this conversation as soon as things get serious. The ball has been dropped on both sides - as both assumed this was impossible and/or were too shortsighted about the consequences of the act of unprotected sex.

Moving on, the argument intensifies after Judy goes on a tirade about how it not only would affect her career but also her standing as a symbol of hope for smaller animals who wanted to accomplish the impossible much like she did, to make the world a better place. Judy sees this as the end of all she has accomplished career-wise. Nick scorns her, telling her he thought he knew her better than putting her career above all. Nick sees this as an excuse to kill their baby, and results in some of the most famous pages of the comic:
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I know it says pages 13-15 but the slap page is counted as 14 & 15 for some reason.
Judy, after slapping Nick for his snide comment profusely apologizes while Nick simply removes himself from her presence. Nick quietly begins to pack his things, putting his clothes into a backpack as Judy begs for forgiveness - she needs him now more than ever and tells him she still loves him. As Nick begins to pack a picture of his mother, a tear falls upon the picture frame. Breaking the silence, Nick asks Judy what the world would be like if her mother had aborted her - Judy tells him she knows what he is trying to do only for Nick to continue going on about how if Judy were not born, the world would be as bleak as it was before he knew her, with him predicting he would still be on the streets living a meaningless life.

This is a bit of a loaded question in the way that, say if a key member of the Manhattan Project was not born or died previous to their involvement - would we still have nuclear weapons? The answer I believe is yes - this related Nick's loaded question that if person X never existed, event Y would never have happened. While unlikely, if person X never existed, event Y still may have occurred, as there is always a non-zero chance a person Z would take the place and actions of the hypothetically non-existent person X.
This is of course just to poke a hole in the argument, but it is one that many have about many situations outside abortion. This just highlights the coming fatalism Nick possesses.

Speaking of fatalism, Nick goes on about how "there are people who make a difference in the world" and that Judy is one of them and praises her accomplishments from the source material. Nick admits to his mindset, "To me, things like these could never ever have happened without you." Nick, much like in the iconic "The Creation of Adam" by Michelangelo reaches out to Judy, only for her to not meet his reach, "I've made up my mind." Her body, her rules. Is there any chance she might change her mind? "No." "Neither will I". Nick takes his leave:
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As Judy pleads for Nick not to leave, wanting to talk it over more than what has already been said. When asked by Nick with his backed turned to her why she didn't just secretly abort it and instead broke it to him, she answers it was done out of honesty. In a rather odd twist of thought, Nick tells Judy it would have been better for her, for their sake, that she had kept it in the dark about her premeditated sin.

A rather odd and sudden change in character for Nick who was taking a hard pro-life stance on the matter. This line of question and answer makes it seem that because she involved him in the process, he had no choice but to leave. It appears he would have much preferred to live in blissful ignorance about what could have been, about was was going to be done. Usually people of Nick's portrayed mindset want no abortion to happen at all - this shift of "I would prefer not to have known / as long as I am not involved" is rather confusing and contradictory to his stance of it being a sin outright. Now it appears to him it is a sin of knowledge and association:
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With everything needing to been said have been said, Nick surrenders his keys and walks out, "I will survive". Judy doubles down on his leaving, telling him if he walks out he will not need to come back anymore - one which she wins on. Nick is gone, and the comic ends with the final pages remarking about how even "everlasting love" may eventually come to an end:
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With that, this comic is a rollercoaster and contortion of opinions and thoughts, with Judy flip-flopping on the fear of inbreeding to Nick oddly preferring that Judy would have aborted their child in secret instead of knowing in addition to fatalistic viewpoints - I find it to be very confusing as to if this is supposed to be pro-life, pro-choice or just a clusterfuck of a situation.

I await your thoughts as to the goal you think the author was going for as far as making the reader feel and as promised, please direct all sperging on the topic of abortion unrelated to the comic in The Abortion Containment Thread, courtesy of the Deep Thoughts board.

My final rating: :politisperg:
 
Good overview of the zootopia comic, I didn't know Borba was Brazilian which honestly makes the follow up comics were Nick goes bagck begging Judy for a 2nd chance only to reveal he has been NTR'd by a female fox, as well as the next comic were he John F. Kennedy's Judy except not really because the bullet was a berry make more sense... Actually scratch that last part about making more sense, I am still confused on what was Borba's point or if he was just taking the piss.
 
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