Look out! Little Lulu: Working Girl is here.
November 12, 2019
Please welcome Little Lulu: Working Girl, out today! This anthology compilation of Little Lulu comics from across the years brings out the rebellious deviant in all, filled to the brim with witty humor and goofy gags.
With a profound introduction by Margaret Atwood, Little Lulu: Working Girl is no cartoon without cultural significance. Lulu is a short, feisty rule breaker with curly hair who loves to cause a ruckus and get up to all sorts of shenanigans. She does what she wants and doesn’t let anything bring her down! Created in 1935 by Marjorie Henderson Buell, and later re-interpreted with illustrations by Stanley, Little Lulu was very progressive for its time, and served great representative importance as a young comic icon.
Often adventuring with her best friend Tubby, Lulu is definitely the brains behind their operations, and always finds a smart way out of sticky situations, often through some sort of scheme or misdemeanor.
In the first strip of Little Lulu: Working Girl, Lulu is unhappily forced into an angel costume for a costume party. As a means of protest, to protect her reputation, and also simply for the fun of it, Lulu steals Tubby’s beard from his costume and becomes a bearded angel! The shenanigans that follow are nothing short of a riot.
In the final few pages of Little Lulu: Working Girl, we are treated to some full-page renditions of covers from the old comic books, as well as a charming slice of Lulu history written by Frank M. Young. If you’re missing a little rebellion from your life, or if you can’t get enough of it, Little Lulu will do just the trick! Available today in store.
Little Lulu
John Stanley
THE FIRST VOLUME OF A FULL-COLOR REPRINT SERIES, FEATURING AN INTRODUCTION FROM MARGARET ATWOOD! Lulu Moppet is an outspoken and brazen young girl who...
More Info