B. Wiseman

$0.00

Irwin the Intern by Bernard Wiseman. Published by Dell, New York. 1962. Introducing the smoothest operator in town. Irwin the Intern. Sparkling new cartoon capers by B. Wiseman.

B. Wiseman, who lives in New York City, is well known to readers of The New Yorker, Punch and Playboy as an extremely funny and timely cartoonist. He is also the author of three delightful books for children, and the marvelously funny, nautical Dell cartoon book, Boatniks.

Inimitable, Irrepressible, Irresistible. Irwin the Intern. The brand-new, blushing doctor whose sensational bedside manner turns a hospital upside-down, and creates highly contagious, highly delightful convulsions of laughter.

Sex-Ed
Dell paperbacks, 1971.
Welcome to class. Hello, boys and girls. I know it’s your first day in Sex-Ed and you’re all a bit nervous. So just relax and get acquainted. Turn to the member of the opposite sex nearest you. Tell your name. Smile, and let’s see a good warm handshake.

Now, wasn’t that fun? I said, wasn’t that fun? Boys and girls, pay attention, please. That will do. I said, that will do! That doesn’t come until next lesson…

Sex-Ed Isn’t for the Birds

It isn’t for the bees, either. Only human beings have to learn about doing what comes naturally - and how they go about it makes for the most free-wheeling cartoon fun since the snake first drew pictures of Eve. B. Wiseman, whose outrageous wit and sharp-eyed drawing has delighted millions of cartoon fans, has produced a collection of rollicking and ribald rib-ticklers that are guaranteed tp give you a very progressive education in just how funny we can be in our pursuit of everything we ever wanted to know about sex!

About the cartoonist: B. Wiseman when not pursuing his favorite sport (jogging, that is), has been a cartoonist for the New Yorker and other magazines, the author of many children’s books, and the creator of the Sir Nervous Norman for Boy’s Life magazine. His interest in sex-ed dates back to his boyhood studies in Canarsie, Brooklyn, where he was voted boy most likely to succeed at playing “doctor”. He now lives in Westport, Connecticut, with his wife and boy, a large German shepherd named Will Batsu, and a cat named George.

The Boatniks. Dell Publishing, 1961.
A loony log of naughti-cal nonsense. Paperback

A merry maritime manual that lowers the boom on Sunday sailors who take a broad-side view of yachting and steer of rollicking, ribald course through waves of laughter.

B. Wiseman’s Cartoon Countdown
Ballantine Books, 1959. Paperback
A world famous rock expert says: “I have studied ziss book carefully, and if zere is even halfway intelligent life on other planets they got us licked already.”
-Werner von Wiseman

Is Venusian civilization older than ours? Should we serve liquid fuel to minors? What happens when an Army rocket officer starts inviting girls over to his pad?

Searching questions these - but only a sample of the problems that confront man in his probing of outer space. B. Wiseman, whose New Yorker cartoons have been mainly concerned with the problems of inner space (i.e., between the ears) now turns his attention to man’s latest frontier. The result is the first book of cartoons devoted exclusively to the Conquest of Space. Let the Russians match that!

Also, at bottom is the cover of SICK magazine #62 painted by Bernard Wiseman with interior comic spreads.

Add To Cart

Irwin the Intern by Bernard Wiseman. Published by Dell, New York. 1962. Introducing the smoothest operator in town. Irwin the Intern. Sparkling new cartoon capers by B. Wiseman.

B. Wiseman, who lives in New York City, is well known to readers of The New Yorker, Punch and Playboy as an extremely funny and timely cartoonist. He is also the author of three delightful books for children, and the marvelously funny, nautical Dell cartoon book, Boatniks.

Inimitable, Irrepressible, Irresistible. Irwin the Intern. The brand-new, blushing doctor whose sensational bedside manner turns a hospital upside-down, and creates highly contagious, highly delightful convulsions of laughter.

Sex-Ed
Dell paperbacks, 1971.
Welcome to class. Hello, boys and girls. I know it’s your first day in Sex-Ed and you’re all a bit nervous. So just relax and get acquainted. Turn to the member of the opposite sex nearest you. Tell your name. Smile, and let’s see a good warm handshake.

Now, wasn’t that fun? I said, wasn’t that fun? Boys and girls, pay attention, please. That will do. I said, that will do! That doesn’t come until next lesson…

Sex-Ed Isn’t for the Birds

It isn’t for the bees, either. Only human beings have to learn about doing what comes naturally - and how they go about it makes for the most free-wheeling cartoon fun since the snake first drew pictures of Eve. B. Wiseman, whose outrageous wit and sharp-eyed drawing has delighted millions of cartoon fans, has produced a collection of rollicking and ribald rib-ticklers that are guaranteed tp give you a very progressive education in just how funny we can be in our pursuit of everything we ever wanted to know about sex!

About the cartoonist: B. Wiseman when not pursuing his favorite sport (jogging, that is), has been a cartoonist for the New Yorker and other magazines, the author of many children’s books, and the creator of the Sir Nervous Norman for Boy’s Life magazine. His interest in sex-ed dates back to his boyhood studies in Canarsie, Brooklyn, where he was voted boy most likely to succeed at playing “doctor”. He now lives in Westport, Connecticut, with his wife and boy, a large German shepherd named Will Batsu, and a cat named George.

The Boatniks. Dell Publishing, 1961.
A loony log of naughti-cal nonsense. Paperback

A merry maritime manual that lowers the boom on Sunday sailors who take a broad-side view of yachting and steer of rollicking, ribald course through waves of laughter.

B. Wiseman’s Cartoon Countdown
Ballantine Books, 1959. Paperback
A world famous rock expert says: “I have studied ziss book carefully, and if zere is even halfway intelligent life on other planets they got us licked already.”
-Werner von Wiseman

Is Venusian civilization older than ours? Should we serve liquid fuel to minors? What happens when an Army rocket officer starts inviting girls over to his pad?

Searching questions these - but only a sample of the problems that confront man in his probing of outer space. B. Wiseman, whose New Yorker cartoons have been mainly concerned with the problems of inner space (i.e., between the ears) now turns his attention to man’s latest frontier. The result is the first book of cartoons devoted exclusively to the Conquest of Space. Let the Russians match that!

Also, at bottom is the cover of SICK magazine #62 painted by Bernard Wiseman with interior comic spreads.

Irwin the Intern by Bernard Wiseman. Published by Dell, New York. 1962. Introducing the smoothest operator in town. Irwin the Intern. Sparkling new cartoon capers by B. Wiseman.

B. Wiseman, who lives in New York City, is well known to readers of The New Yorker, Punch and Playboy as an extremely funny and timely cartoonist. He is also the author of three delightful books for children, and the marvelously funny, nautical Dell cartoon book, Boatniks.

Inimitable, Irrepressible, Irresistible. Irwin the Intern. The brand-new, blushing doctor whose sensational bedside manner turns a hospital upside-down, and creates highly contagious, highly delightful convulsions of laughter.

Sex-Ed
Dell paperbacks, 1971.
Welcome to class. Hello, boys and girls. I know it’s your first day in Sex-Ed and you’re all a bit nervous. So just relax and get acquainted. Turn to the member of the opposite sex nearest you. Tell your name. Smile, and let’s see a good warm handshake.

Now, wasn’t that fun? I said, wasn’t that fun? Boys and girls, pay attention, please. That will do. I said, that will do! That doesn’t come until next lesson…

Sex-Ed Isn’t for the Birds

It isn’t for the bees, either. Only human beings have to learn about doing what comes naturally - and how they go about it makes for the most free-wheeling cartoon fun since the snake first drew pictures of Eve. B. Wiseman, whose outrageous wit and sharp-eyed drawing has delighted millions of cartoon fans, has produced a collection of rollicking and ribald rib-ticklers that are guaranteed tp give you a very progressive education in just how funny we can be in our pursuit of everything we ever wanted to know about sex!

About the cartoonist: B. Wiseman when not pursuing his favorite sport (jogging, that is), has been a cartoonist for the New Yorker and other magazines, the author of many children’s books, and the creator of the Sir Nervous Norman for Boy’s Life magazine. His interest in sex-ed dates back to his boyhood studies in Canarsie, Brooklyn, where he was voted boy most likely to succeed at playing “doctor”. He now lives in Westport, Connecticut, with his wife and boy, a large German shepherd named Will Batsu, and a cat named George.

The Boatniks. Dell Publishing, 1961.
A loony log of naughti-cal nonsense. Paperback

A merry maritime manual that lowers the boom on Sunday sailors who take a broad-side view of yachting and steer of rollicking, ribald course through waves of laughter.

B. Wiseman’s Cartoon Countdown
Ballantine Books, 1959. Paperback
A world famous rock expert says: “I have studied ziss book carefully, and if zere is even halfway intelligent life on other planets they got us licked already.”
-Werner von Wiseman

Is Venusian civilization older than ours? Should we serve liquid fuel to minors? What happens when an Army rocket officer starts inviting girls over to his pad?

Searching questions these - but only a sample of the problems that confront man in his probing of outer space. B. Wiseman, whose New Yorker cartoons have been mainly concerned with the problems of inner space (i.e., between the ears) now turns his attention to man’s latest frontier. The result is the first book of cartoons devoted exclusively to the Conquest of Space. Let the Russians match that!

Also, at bottom is the cover of SICK magazine #62 painted by Bernard Wiseman with interior comic spreads.