Nicole Hollander

Her daily comic strip Sylvia was syndicated to newspapers nationally by Tribune Media Services.

[9] Hollander has donated the archive of her work to the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at Ohio State University.

The gallery's simultaneous ten-year retrospective exhibit of Hollander's work was titled It's Enough to Make a Cat Laugh.

A second show, Plastic Surgery or a Real Good Haircut, opened in 2008 at Chicago's Live Bait Theatre.

In these performances, she described her experiences as an aging woman dealing with physical vanity, sexual desire and an overlong birthday-party guest list.

[15][16] In 2013, the Lillstreet Gallery replicated Hollander's living room for an exhibit they called "Will You Step Into My Parlour?

With Skip Morrow and Ron Wolin, Hollander edited Drawn Together: Relationships Lampooned, Harpooned, & Cartooned (Crown, 1983) for the Cartoonists Guild.

Her work was included in the satirical pro-choice comic book Choices (Angry Isis Press, 1990) alongside such fellow contributors as Howard Cruse, Jules Feiffer, Bill Griffith, Cathy Guisewite, Bill Koeb, Lee Marrs, Nina Paley and Garry Trudeau.

"[20] Cartoonist and memoirist Alison Bechdel describes We Ate Wonder Bread as "a superhero origin story," noting that the title character of Sylvia "certainly possesses powers far beyond those of mere mortals" and tracing Hollander's humor to "the raucous banter of .

Hollander's work has formed the basis for several theatrical musicals, including Female Problems and Sylvia's Real Good Advice, winner of a Joseph Jefferson Award in 1991.

Example of Sylvia cartoon strip
Nicole Hollander's Sylvia from The Whole Enchilada (1982)