Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for April 25, 2014

  1. Idano
    Ida No  almost 10 years ago

    I can think of quite a few books that fit that description.

     •  Reply
  2. 11 06 126
    Varnes  almost 10 years ago

    OK, we can narrow it down to a rural school, if she is the only problem they have to deal with….

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    watmiwori  almost 10 years ago

    “Most opinions are wrong: any that don’t agree with mine….”

    Mrs Himmelscheisser is not impressed,

     •  Reply
  4. Img033
    drjinx  almost 10 years ago

    Non Catholic school. She gets a chance to think about it. Sooner or later, by random chance, she will find intelligence and wisdom,

     •  Reply
  5. Avatar 3
    pcolli  almost 10 years ago

    At college, we were asked to write a critique of a certain work of fiction (which shall remain nameless). I gave my honest opinion that it seemed to be a self indulgent piece of historical romanticism that bore no resemblence to the real lives of people of that class in that particular time. (And so on)..I didn’t get marked as the author was the favourite of the lecturer. [Stupid, short, large woman with long blonde hair prone to wearing floppy hats and shapeless dresses.]

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    vwdualnomand  almost 10 years ago

    those reviewers of movies, restaurants, and video games must get death threats quite a bit. some reviews are spot on that place/movie/vg is horrible. other times, people would disagree.

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    zellman  almost 10 years ago

    Who told Danae that there was no such thing as a wrong opinion? There are billions of wrong opinions.

     •  Reply
  8. Img033
    drjinx  almost 10 years ago

    So, there is no wrong opinion, there is no right opinion. Who gives the right to judge ????

     •  Reply
  9. Camera1 016
    keenanthelibrarian  almost 10 years ago

    Poor Danae. What she’s missing out on. But why should she be punished? Surely the teacher should be able to handle her problem. Always intrigued me – we are always told it’s our fault if we don’t get it, and yet it’s often the teacher’s rotten teaching that’s at fault.

     •  Reply
  10. Lounge a bof
    sbchamp  almost 10 years ago

    Not so, Danae. This haz FUBAR stamped all over it

     •  Reply
  11. Me 2015
    puddlesplatt  almost 10 years ago

    what realy matters, is your opinion!

     •  Reply
  12. 71 blk
    trimguy  almost 10 years ago

    I like how GoComics has circumvented my pop-up blocker and sticks a stupid video in the middle of he page, blocking the comic.

     •  Reply
  13. Calvin and hobbes
    DBjorn  almost 10 years ago

    “…and Punishment Emporium”

    I want THAT on my office door!

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    dabugger  almost 10 years ago

    The long road to learning. For one little girl, experience is rough when avoiding the work.

     •  Reply
  15. Monty avatar
    steverinoCT  almost 10 years ago

    My cousin married a cop who was proud of the fact that he had only read one book in his life; a collection of sports-figure biographies for a report in HS..I cannot fathom that; I was one of those kids that borrowed their parent’s library card to check stuff out of the adult (as in, “grown-up”, you pervs) section.

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    Argy.Bargy2  almost 10 years ago

    The name on the door in the last frame is terrific….

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    hippogriff  almost 10 years ago

    steverino: One of the greater moments of my life was when I found out I was permitted outside the children’s department. The universe opened.

     •  Reply
  18. Avatar92
    David Rickard Premium Member almost 10 years ago

    To paraphrase Umberto Eco: there’s no absolute right analysis of a novel, but there are wrong analyses.And that, Danae, was a wrong analysis.

     •  Reply
  19. Image
    peter0423  almost 10 years ago

    @drjinxReading your contributions is like a flashback to the Sixties (and I’m old enough to have been there!) — the ranting of a drug-addled radical-wannabe, for whom grammar, arithmetic, self-control, and objective reality in general are all an authoritarian conspiracy against “free expression”. Sigh…I thought you guys had all grown up and moved on.

     •  Reply
  20. Image
    peter0423  almost 10 years ago

    (Apologies for the duplicated post…GoComics hiccuped on me, or something.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    strictures  almost 10 years ago

    I did a similar book report in HS on some boring book we had to read.I don’t remember the book, but everything we were forced to read in HS was garbage.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    Jessica_D  almost 10 years ago

    It wasn’t the opinion, Danae, it was the presentation. Two more tweets with supporting examples might have been enough.

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    wrwallaceii  almost 10 years ago

    For a college level American Lit class I had to read Upton Sinclair’s ‘The Jungle’. I couldn’t get past the slaughter house scenes and stopped reading. Well we had a (blue book) quiz on it and I wrote my impressions based on what I had read and then explained that the gory descriptions in the meat plant upset me enough that I never finished the book. I turned it in figuring that was an ‘F’ and left the room. I actually got a ‘C’ on it. The prof noted that what I wrote proved I had tried to read it and was accurate as far as I got…

     •  Reply
  24. 11 06 126
    Varnes  almost 10 years ago

    Kim and puddleglum, any good teacher would give an A to those papers….Showing good understanding of the material, explaining points that you want to make in a clear, concise way, even in disagreement, is exactly what teachers should be looking for….A teacher usually loves being challenged on an idea…That’s where the rubber meets the road. First, it shows they’re paying attention, listening and thinking…We really like that…Second, it forces the teacher to think about it differently, and explain it different way. That can only help the teacher get better at presenting the subject….(Learn to teach. Teach to learn.) Third, when a teacher is being questioned, the whole class takes notice…(rooting for the student!) and then you have an attentive audience…..If you play to the other students in the discussion that results, you have a rare opportunity to imprint the understanding of the subject on their brains…. Win Win…

     •  Reply
  25. Birthcontrol
    Dtroutma  almost 10 years ago

    I can sympathize with Danae a bit on this one, had a disagreement with a college professor on our interpretation of the Book of Job from the bible. She gave me an “F”, on attendance, even though I had straight "A"s up to that point on all her tests, papers. Maybe have something to do with why I question “bible thumpers” on their “open mindedness”.

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    westny77  almost 10 years ago

    Sorry babe you need to do the book report not do an editorial.

     •  Reply
  27. 1175703 628288277203175 166978261 n
    Caddy57  almost 10 years ago

    Book reports are useless…..to any person beyond school age but , to a teacher, they show organizational skills. Also whether or not you actually did the work or not…..this seems to be Danae’s weak point….WORK.

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    hippogriff  almost 10 years ago

    wrwallaceii: Sinclair famously complained, “I tried to touch their hearts; instead I hit their stomachs.” It did force the enactment of the Pure Food and Drug Act, which the capitalists have been trying to water down ever since.

     •  Reply
  29. Siberian tigers 22
    Hunter7  almost 10 years ago

    I seem to recall in both high school and college, the more I disliked a required reading, the higher the grade I obtained for the required report. .For some reason, teachers and profs always gushed and fawned over what I believed to be the most disagreeable novels.

    Lord Jim, Tess of the d’Urbervilles, I Never Promised You a Rose Garden. Rather have to struggle through physics than read those novels.

     •  Reply
  30. Dragon
    Asharah  almost 10 years ago

    I can think of a few mandatory reading assignments that made me feel exactly like Danae. Seriously, “The Song Of Bernadaette” took like 10 chapters to get to the first vision. How much boring filler can you pad a book with?

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Non Sequitur