http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/02/20/index.php How does one go about convincing the creator of classical mechanics, the co-inventor of calculus, and the master of the Royal Mint, to team up with a skipping enlightened monarch and his talking hat on a mission to stop […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
Archive for New Comic
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/02/22/index.php Back in the day, official personal interactions made no sense, and we were better off for it. In today’s episode, Newton and Voltaire square off according to the best rules of 18th century wit and decorum. The results are […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/02/27/index.php Hunting down Dali isn’t easy, especially if everybody around you talks in impenetrable Jazz Age patter that, we’re guessing, didn’t make much sense back then either. It’s Newton. It’s Frederick. It’s Sinclair Lewis’s worst dream, full of sound and […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/01/index.php Query: What did the 1930s have entirely too much of? Response: Stock Market Widows? Bemused Reply: Yes, but what else? Yet Another Response: Crazed farmers living in the depths of misery and financial ruin? PRECISELY! Newton and Frederick continue […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/06/index.php Today on FtG, Frederick and Newton walk into a trap only to be saved by, you guessed it, the raw power of Euclidean Geometry. But will it be enough? And if not, what then? It’s the week when things […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/08/index.php Frederick and Newton are surrounded by Dali’s gators. Neither fluting nor Euclidean Geometry can save them. But, where axioms fail, poetry may yet triumph. Action! Larffs! Stanzas! Two new characters! Life gets no better than this.
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/13/index.php Leonhard Euler. Emily Dickinson. If there’s a problem that mathematical analysis and poems about loneliness can’t solve, maybe it’s not worth solving. In today’s episode: – Newton does not react entirely well to the presence of a rival mathematician. […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/15/index.php There is a part of every Prussian’s heart that can only be warmed by the sound of two pfennigs clinking against each other in a wool pocket. While Frederick expounds on mercantile fantasy lore, Euler gets business down and […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/20/index.php Dali needs the Hale Mirror, the largest reflecting surface 1935 had to offer, to bring his dreaded Libido Gate into existence. Frederick and Newton will stop at nothing, short of things requiring exertion, to foil him. It’s a battle […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…
http://www.ftg-comic.com/2007/03/22/index.php A man who took animal husbandry perhaps too far. The spectral remains of a former presidential candidate. Powerful both… but will they be enough to get Frederick and Newton out of The Big House? It’s the 1935 American penal […] ↓ Read the rest of this entry…