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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: PAUL SAMPLEPublisher: Laughing Gnome Books Imprint: Laughing Gnome Books Dimensions: Width: 24.00cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 32.00cm ISBN: 9781916187900ISBN 10: 1916187900 Pages: 176 Publication Date: 25 November 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAll of us riders know an Ogri and a Malcolm... Times and attitudes have changed, but the 'Stuff Everything, I've always got my bike' thing has often rescued me from the doldrums of grown-up life. - Kerry on the Internet; They're all brilliant. So much detail. You can look over just one cartoon several times and pick up detail you've previously missed! - Kev on Facebook; There's always a laugh to be found, especially in the finely observed subplots, and a lifting of the spirits to be found in the observations on human, animal and inanimate psyche, no matter whether you're bright or down, drunk or hungover, or somewhere in between. - Teo on the Internet Author InformationPerhaps best known in the book trade as the cover illustrator of Tom Sharpe's 'Wilt' novels, Paul Sample has enjoyed a long and successful career producing commercial illustrations for clients including Smirnoff vodka, BBC radio, and Dunlop tyres. His private love of motorcycles, however, found expression in the 'Ogri' cartoon strips, which appeared in print, almost unbroken, for over forty years. Ogri ran every month from 1972: first in 'Bike' magazine, then in 'Back Street Heroes'. He even enjoyed a short stint in the motoring pages of 'The Telegraph'. The motorcycling superhero finally retired in 2013, but with 450 numbered strips and numerous single-panel illustrations, his legend lives on. Paul's life's work now complete, Laughing Gnome is proud to have collected and curated this culturally important series. Ogri started as a drawing in one of my sketchbooks when I was at art college in 1966, the year I began riding motorcycles, having bought one to get about, rather than use the bus. Then Ogri developed into a strip cartoon from my riding experience and lack of expertise in keeping the rubber bits of the bike on the tarmac. Bike magazine liked the stories, and Ogri started appearing in the publication in 1972. I never thought Ogri would last so long. By the way, the dog, Kickstart, was real. He used to ride on my petrol tank, race me back home from the pub, and was a generally disreputable character. Great fun as an inspiration on life. - Paul Sample Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |