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RAYMOND PEYNET’S latest cartoons, or rather, Illustrations on the state of being in love, are collected in “She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not” (Michael Joseph). His light pen suits his whimsical humour, which often allows him to portray Cupid, or birds, as the catalyst of human emotions. In this collection he imagines first a School for Lovers: “Ah! So you don’t know that love rhymes with dove. Then I want you to pick the petals off a hundred daisies,” says the attractive schoolmistress to her bashful pupil Then the “Rendez-vous,” “A Thousand and One Hours,” “Waiting,” “Holidays... and Dreams,” and finally some wry comments on “Married Bliss.” A good gift for an engaged couple? The picture above is from the book’s dustjacket.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19710327.2.91.4

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32566, 27 March 1971, Page 10

Word Count
123

RAYMOND PEYNET’S latest cartoons, or rather, Illustrations on the state of being in love, are collected in “She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not” (Michael Joseph). His light pen suits his whimsical humour, which often allows him to portray Cupid, or birds, as the catalyst of human emotions. In this collection he imagines first a School for Lovers: “Ah! So you don’t know that love rhymes with dove. Then I want you to pick the petals off a hundred daisies,” says the attractive schoolmistress to her bashful pupil Then the “Rendez-vous,” “A Thousand and One Hours,” “Waiting,” “Holidays... and Dreams,” and finally some wry comments on “Married Bliss.” A good gift for an engaged couple? The picture above is from the book’s dustjacket. Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32566, 27 March 1971, Page 10

RAYMOND PEYNET’S latest cartoons, or rather, Illustrations on the state of being in love, are collected in “She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not” (Michael Joseph). His light pen suits his whimsical humour, which often allows him to portray Cupid, or birds, as the catalyst of human emotions. In this collection he imagines first a School for Lovers: “Ah! So you don’t know that love rhymes with dove. Then I want you to pick the petals off a hundred daisies,” says the attractive schoolmistress to her bashful pupil Then the “Rendez-vous,” “A Thousand and One Hours,” “Waiting,” “Holidays... and Dreams,” and finally some wry comments on “Married Bliss.” A good gift for an engaged couple? The picture above is from the book’s dustjacket. Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32566, 27 March 1971, Page 10