Tillie and Mac book

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

After the newspaper comic character Tillie the Toiler and her male associate Clarence "Mac" MacDougall.

Noun[edit]

Tillie and Mac book (plural Tillie and Mac books)

  1. (slang) Synonym of Tijuana Bible (a kind of pornographic comic book)
    • 1949, Robert Mende, Spit and the Stars, page 214:
      I have another little book here better than Tillie and Mac books or the ones like it [sic]. It has a lot of exciting poses that will give you a thrill.
    • 1964, The Realist, numbers 48-70, page 18:
      Fifthly, it is argued that the Tillie and Mac books have no cultural validity or purpose and serve only to titillate and gratify gross desires and private excesses.
    • 2022, Lenny Bruce, How to Talk Dirty and Influence People:
      I had a neat haul: twelve collars and, believe it or not, seven of the farthest-out Tillie and Mac books I'd ever seen, plus one of the numbered editions of Henry Miller's Black Spring.