The Age of 30
• Price : 15,000KRW
• Product Dimensions :
165x200, 200pages
• Publication Date : 2013-10-10
• ISBN : 978-89-5828-703-2
Book Information & Summary
Written and illustrated by Anggo
The funny and poor daily life of each day recorded by the author as a cartoon is also that of all of us. In this book, the daily life like a sit-com by a 30-year-old poor cartoonist is well described. She broke the piggy bank, which she saved money for African children when she made some money as a writer. She was also hiding in her office, not even going out for taking care of the nature’s call, just because she could not afford the electricity bill. She also tries herself out to test her patience due to work-out and yoga she began for the first time in her life. Her daily life, including feeling so proud of herself by teaching English to a friend who does self-study for an academic degree, and by teaching how to draw a cartoon to her brother, and feeling so good after farting, saying it felt like she was in a party, is such a pathetic and funny thing, but the genuine affection toward her family and neighbors are found in this book. The unique humor, which still works now, becomes more outstanding in the poor pieces of her daily life. Why don’t we listen to her honest and funny confession about her work, art, family, friends, and even herself in her 30s, which is a lot more different than in his 20s?
The funny and poor daily life of each day recorded by the author as a cartoon is also that of all of us. In this book, the daily life like a sit-com by a 30-year-old poor cartoonist is well described. She broke the piggy bank, which she saved money for African children when she made some money as a writer. She was also hiding in her office, not even going out for taking care of the nature’s call, just because she could not afford the electricity bill. She also tries herself out to test her patience due to work-out and yoga she began for the first time in her life. Her daily life, including feeling so proud of herself by teaching English to a friend who does self-study for an academic degree, and by teaching how to draw a cartoon to her brother, and feeling so good after farting, saying it felt like she was in a party, is such a pathetic and funny thing, but the genuine affection toward her family and neighbors are found in this book. The unique humor, which still works now, becomes more outstanding in the poor pieces of her daily life. Why don’t we listen to her honest and funny confession about her work, art, family, friends, and even herself in her 30s, which is a lot more different than in his 20s?