OK, so in the book this comic actually comes a toward the beginning and starts off the the storyline with Prester and Rickets. For the purposes of posting things on this website, I’ve mostly been splitting up the two storylines, but in the book they’re intercut. I like it the way it is in the book, but I figured it would be less confusing on the website to separate them somewhat, since you’re not reading all the comics together, and this way it’ll seem a little less disjointed and you can probably get a better idea of how the storylines are supposed to flow. So, for the next few weeks I’m going to be posting comics mostly about the adventures of Rickets and Prester.
Anyway, I like what the rabbit says here. Why WOULD God make twinky boys so hot if he didn’t want me to like ‘em, anyway?





Can’t argue with that logic. But of course, hot and not always varied throughout the ages. People thought a fat woman was hot in the renaissance period. Then anorexic ones. Then back to fat ones. Then men ended up being much more sexier to each other. And women ended up reproducing by synthesizing sperm cells from bone marrow tissue. Men turned into highly erotic artificial sex machines. And organic women turned very frigid and cold, love making becoming virtually non-existent. And thus a paradox was born!
That’s a pretty fascinating rundown of the history of sex, there :P
The summary of Church in the comic where Prester talks about tone-deaf white people and coffee and gossip after is based pretty much on what Church was like for me as a young person in a Southern California Lutheran Church, specifically.