Point of view Any history book has a
point of view, and Larry Gonick's might best be described as "
humanist", but it is not written in the style of a didactic
textbook. Instead, Gonick fleshes out history into a long yarn, injecting characterization into historical personages, continually reporting gory anecdotes, and focusing on quirky details—all backed up by research—to enliven his subject. He reports both the greatness of human achievement and acknowledges humanity's savagery. of
Alexander the Great and
Gonick's use of black ink. In addition to being a chronological history,
The Cartoon History helps readers understand historical
cause and effect—how the past relates to the present. It explains the motivations behind human beings'
discoveries,
inventions, explorations, wars, triumphs, and mistakes. Gonick's editorial aim seeks to do justice to every point of view.
Humor Gonick consistently uses elements of satire to find the most humor in every situation. For example, one
cartoon panel depicts the
barbarism of a group of
Huns who had elephants herded off a cliff for their
sadistic enjoyment. One Hun exclaims with an oafish grin, "My emotions are valid!"—juxtaposing the Hun's brutal barbarism with an
anachronistic,
post-modern view of his own cruelty [3]. Also noteworthy is Gonick's use of
caricature. For example, he depicts the weaselly
Robert Guiscard, the 11th-century
Norman adventurer, as an
anthropomorphic weasel, an
allusion to Guiscard's name and cunning nature, and depicts
Babur, the 16th-century founder of the
Mughal Empire with
buckteeth (an allusion to the theory that the conqueror's name means "
beaver"). == Unorthodox citations ==