FREE shipping for orders of 8 or more items, and multi-item orders over $100! 
Brand New, Unread/Uncirculated, Near Mint Condition. Comes sealed in acid-free bag with backing board. Ships between cardboard in a padded flat mailer (all made from 100% post-consumer recycled materials) by a one-man/single father indie shop. COMBINED SHIPPING DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE!

Animal Kindness by Mike Freiheit (a.k.a. Monkey Chef, Vol. 2, but it's a stand alone story; so you don't need Volume 1)

7" x 9.5", 44 pages. Full-color risograph print cover with black and white interior art. Saddle-stitched.

From August 2010 until May 2011, Mike Freiheit lived and worked at a primate sanctuary called International Primate Rescue, just north of Pretoria, South Africa. He was the chef....

Mike cooked dinner for the humans every night, and chopped and prepared food for all of the monkeys each day. This is the first volume of many, and it includes four short stories about his time spent at the sanctuary.

In this second volume of Monkey Chef we delve further into the lives of the people and monkeys at the primate sanctuary, focusing on Michael, a Zimbabwean refugee with a troubled past, and the daily duties of a Monkey Chef. Fully stand alone story!! (i.e. you don't need Vol. 1).



excerpts from Four Color Apocalypse's excellent review of the 2020 horror release, "WOODS" (which I also have for sale):
"The “city slicker” couple at the center of cartoonist Mike Freiheit’s new graphic novel, Woods, moved to a remote cabin hoping to find that better world after the election of a certain unnamed right-wing demagogue helped engender a complete mental breakdown in one of them, but they soon discovered that going “off the grid” looks a lot easier on YouTube videos than it actually is in real life.As far as horror yarns go, then, this is as topical as they come — and as eminently relatable. You get where these people are coming from because you know these people — you may even be these people. Their desires, motivations, aims, and problems all hit home. Their struggles are our struggles, their quiet triumphs and less-than-quiet tragedies not so much “ripped from the headlines” as ripped from the stories that will never make the headlines. Two people who want nothing more than to outrun an encroaching darkness from which there never really was any escape...

And while we’re on the subject of darkness — Freiheit saturates his images with black tones that evoke Lars Von Trier’s Antichrist and accentuates them with graphite-smudge grays that bring to mind criminally underappreciated UK cartoonist Carol Swain. This feels like a terrifying story, but even more importantly looks like one — and it represents a quantum leap outside his comfort zone for a guy who’s best known for poignantly self-deprecating autobio work. Much as I loved Monkey Chef — and love it I surely did — this is a beast of an entirely different sort, and demonstrates a visual and narrative versatility that frankly wasn’t even hinted at in the past. if you think you know what to expect from a Mike Freiheit comic, think again — and then think yet again after that." -Ryan Carrey