Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller
- October 11, 2008
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Collectible Prints are always available for all editions. Original art is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Just contact Wiley Miller for either.
Information on Non Sequitur original art:Upon availability, the original art sells for $350 for a daily edition, and $450 for a Sunday edition.
All original art, including most Sunday editions, are in black & white line art (color in newspapers is done in a separate process).
Prints are available (black and white only) for any edition of Non Sequitur for $75 each.
Most Sunday editions are available in color prints for $150 each.
All prints are on high quality, 11" x 14" cardstock, suitable for framing.
If you would like to have either a print or original personally inscribed, please include a note indicating who it is to inscribed for. Otherwise, the work will NOT be signed.
About Non Sequitur
Non Sequitur is Wiley Miller’s wry look at the absurdities of everyday life. A hit with fans of all ages, the strip is syndicated in more than 700 newspapers. Non Sequitur has received four National Cartoonists Society divisional awards, the most prestigious in cartooning. It is the only comic strip to win the coveted award in its first year of syndication and the only one to ever win in both the best comic strip and best comic panel categories.This hilarious creation is not only creative but also clever. It tackles current cultural issues such as politics, celebrities, male-female relations, materialistic desires and society’s obsession with weight. Non Sequitur will have you laughing at the controversy of everyday life.
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Comments (8) Jump to Comments Form
ejcapulet
said,
about 1 year ago
Wow, you’re not kidding!
alife said, about 1 year ago
Don’t need to pay gym membership either!Even light cans are good arm workout
swolf48110 said, about 1 year ago
Times like this are when you sit down and exercise…..patience.
DerekA said, about 1 year ago
Easy - Everyone w2alked in a direction they had not come from expecting a station closer than they passed. They discuss how far they came from their vehicle and how far from their vehicle the last station was and then they go to the closest. They fill their cans and the driver charges them each $40.00 for taking them to their cars.
overthinker.9mhz said, about 1 year ago
they look like they need the exercize anyway.
jimbo90036
said,
about 1 year ago
With gas prices spiking and home values crumbling, the American dream of commuting to work from the fringes of suburbia has become an American nightmare. Many are facing a hard choice: Paying for gas or paying the mortgage. How did it come to this? It’s not just about America’s financial crisis; it’s also about big problems with our national infrastructure. Overstressed highways and too few public transportation options are wreaking havoc on people’s lives and hitting the brakes on our already-stretched economy.
This week, NOW on PBS takes a close-up look at our inadequate transportation network and visits some people paying a high price—in both dollars and quality of life—just to get to work. Do we have the means to modernize both our infrastructure and our lifestyles? (In the 1920s the rail system out of Los Angeles was very extensive, but the oil and auto companies bought it and dismantled the whole system to accommodate their profit margins. The cost of gasoline is contributing to mortgage defaults in Exurbia outside of Los Angeles and San Diego where these residents work. In South Pasadena a family decided to get a two bedroom condo instead of a five bedroom house, a decision which turned out to be prescient. See http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/440/index.html One family in Exurbia said their mortgage is $372,000 while their home is not going for only $159,000! Many homes there are now empty. Their mortgage payment is behind now and they still have not moved!
robertolopez144 said, about 1 year ago
Brilliant!¡!Fabo!¡!
Dale Hopson
said,
about 1 year ago
Welcome to Bush’s America…