Quino 2002 - Esto No Es Todo -recopilado-.cbr Apr 2026
It is not everything. But it is enough to remind you why we need cartoonists.
The Argentine master, best known for creating the iconic Mafalda , left behind a library of work that proves his genius went far beyond that six-year-old girl who hates soup and loves the Beatles.
This 2002 collection gathers strips that weren't necessarily part of his main series runs. It feels like a "Greatest Misses" or a "B-Sides" album.
For those unfamiliar with the .cbr format, it’s essentially a digital comic book reader file. Opening this specific compilation feels like flipping through a worn sketchbook from a genius who has given up on politeness. Quino 2002 - Esto No Es Todo -Recopilado-.cbr
And he was right.
If you are a fan of philosophical humor, sharp social critique, and the power of a single drawing to dismantle hypocrisy, you don’t need an introduction to (Joaquín Salvador Lavado).
The file is circulating as a .cbr . Grab a reader (like CDisplay or YACReader), pour a coffee, and prepare to nod your head in grim agreement. It is not everything
Quino left us in 2020, but as this 2002 compilation proves: he already saw us coming.
Recently, I stumbled upon a digital copy of a rather elusive compilation:
The title translates to “This is Not Everything - Compiled.” Even in 2002, Quino was winking at us. This is not everything. As if to say, “Don’t try to box me in. The human condition is too absurd to fit in one book.” This 2002 collection gathers strips that weren't necessarily
We live in an era of information overload. We are told everything is urgent. Quino’s genius in this compilation is the opposite:
He draws people standing still while the world rushes toward disaster. He draws the tiny, absurd logic of a man arguing with a potted plant. He draws the loneliness of a person who realizes they are the only sane one in the room.
Reading this .cbr file on a tablet or laptop feels slightly wrong—Quino deserves paper—but the message comes through loud and clear.