Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
After 25 years Madam & Eve is still going strong. The duo is back with more hilarious cartoons reflecting on another year of the crazy rollercoaster that is daily life and politics in South Africa.
This year we are in for a treat: After 25 years, Madam & Eve is still going strong and are back with more hilarious cartoons looking back at another year of the crazy rollercoaster that is daily life and politics in South Africa. Madam & Eve cartoons appear regularly in the Mail & Guardian, The Star, The Saturday Star, Herald, Mercury, Witness, Daily Dispatch, Cape Times, Pretoria News, Diamond Fields Advertiser, Die Volksblad, EC Today, Kokstad Advertiser and The Namibian.
'n Pragtige perd, Oreo, is te koop en Tania het reeds haar hart op hom verloor. Maar die tyd is besig om uit te loop en dit lyk asof die neus-in-die-lug nuwe meisie, Shardonnay, 'n aanbod op Oreo gaan maak nog voordat Tania genoeg geld kan bymekaarskraap. Haar ma kan haar nie help nie, want die laaste ding wat hulle nou kan bekostig is 'n perd. Intussen verdwyn die professor se onderbroeke nog steeds, Tiek en sy apie is weer met hulle ou streke besig en Tobias is dolverlief en desperaat om Shardonnay se aandag te trek. Sal Tania ooit vir Oreo in die gimkana kan ry? Nog 'n dolle avontuur in die Toerien-huishouding, met tonne dieredrama, humor en nooit 'n oomblik van verveling nie!
Based on South Africa's beloved comic strip, this special volume features Madam & Eve's favorite grandmother, Mother Anderson, as she shares her thoughts on surviving life's twists and turns with a little help from her old friend, gin and tonic. Cantankerous yet warm and witty, Mother Anderson is depicted watching television and fighting with both Eve, her daughter's maid, and the mielie lady-who frequently wakes the combative granny from her naps while selling ears of corn on the street. Entertaining and politically aware, this book provides a cynical and lighthearted perspective on life in South Africa.
|
You may like...
|