The Voodoo Mad #Q6245
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeThis 1973 paperback from New American Library collects a selection of satirical horror and supernatural-themed parodies originally published in Mad Magazine, featuring the magazine's signature blend of comic strips, movie spoofs, and cartoon gags. The volume showcases the work of Mad's usual contributors, lampooning voodoo, monsters, and classic fright films with the publication's trademark irreverent humor. It's one of several themed Mad collections released in the 1970s, offering readers a concentrated dose of the magazine's take on the macabre.
In "How to Be a MAD Non-Conformist," Paul Laikin and artist Bob Clarke deliver a sharp, satirical take on rebellion through a series of mock ads for absurdly named groups like Alcoholics Unanimous and the Committee To Encourage Juvenile Delinquency. Cover by Kelly Freas captures the issue’s playful, subversive spirit with a striking, tongue-in-cheek illustration that perfectly matches the tone of the parody.
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Follows a script from the original author through various rewrites, showing how all the meaning and creativity is gradually watered down.
Plot details indexed by the Grand Comics Database (CC BY-SA).
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