If you're referring to the new Cerebus with the Hemingway story, I've read it - and I enjoyed it more than any of the other recent Cerebus stories. It is uproariously funny in places, which is odd since it deals with the last years of Hemingway's life (which makes for incredibly depressing source material).
Cerebus has come up on two different threads, so I'll plug it briefly as it's unlike any other comic. It started off years ago as a bad parody of Conan the Barbarian but, against all odds, it turned into one of the most literary continuous narratives put into print in the last several decades. It has included the best comic-book stories in the realms of politics (High Society), religion (Church and State), romance (Jaka's Story), gender (Women and Guys), and philosophy (Minds and Flight). It is also very funny, with spot-on parodies of the Marx brothers, superhero comics, and numerous other pop culture icons (e.g. a character combining Elric and Foghorn Leghorn). Three storylines have dealt specifically with literature, analyzing the life and works of Oscar Wilde, Ernest Hemingway, and F Scott Fitzgerald. On top of it all, the narrative is very personal and autobiographical, revealing an author with very unique (and often upsetting) views on the issues he deals with.
The Cerebus corpus is immense, well over 5,000 pages, but it is one of the most satisfying evolving stories to come out of the world of modern comics. A couple good primers on the subject (requested by Tage):
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Union/5145/CEREBUS.html http://www.raintaxi.com/online/2000winter/cerebus.shtmlI would argue that Cerebus shouldn't really be grouped with the typical furry fodder because a) it predates almost all of the modern furry trends, b) the book contains absolutely no sexy animals, and c) the subject matter is wholly different from what usually attracts the furry crowd. Having said that, though, I have to admit that Cerebus did have some links with furry culture in its past, as the writer supported indie furry comix like Omaha the Cat Dancer when the nascent genre was first coming into its own.