Monday, July 21, 2025

Ten Books That Influenced Me

Thanks to my friend Mark Ricketts, I heard about this meme: pick ten books that influenced you and let us all know about it. And don't spend a lot of time messing around. Just pick 'em as they pop up in your head.

My head is a large and musty place, so it took a little doing, but here goes. It's in no particular order, here are the books:

PLAIN SPEAKING by Merle Miller
Truman is one of my favorite historical figures. Ask anyone who's dropped by and seen my bookshelves. I have a shelf devoted to him.


THE ANNOTATED ALICE by Martin Gardner (and Lewis Carroll, natch!)
I used to carry this around in my backpack in high school. I was such a nerd boy.


BARNABY AND MR. O'MALLEY by Crockett Johnson
Forever grateful to Dad for passing along his copy of this great comic strip.


BATMAN FROM THE 30s TO THE 70s
The first book I bought with my own money. It was a lot! I think it was $10. I used to copy Dick Sprang's Batman a lot.


DINOSAURS AND OTHER PREHISTORIC REPTILES
My go-to dinosaur book, finally bought for me when I renewed and renewed the book from the Iowa City Public Library. I still have my copy, which I would tote to Roosevelt Elementary School for show and tell. And there's still a "Mike Lynch, Mrs. Panje, 2nd Grade" written in it. I wonder where Mrs. Panje is now?


The LITTLE TIM books by Edward Ardizzone
I love Ardizzone's work. Some of the best drawing around. A prolific illustrator back in the day. He was Great Britain's Official War Artist! Only recently I have learned he was never formally trained in illustration!


THE POGO PEEK-A-BOOK by Walt Kelly
I have all of Dad's Simon and Shuster POGO books and this one gets singled out for the "Account of the Wooful Frog" piece. Kelly is the comic strip touchstone for me. None better.


THE COMICS by Jerry Robinson
The one that hooked me. And when I visited Ger Apeldoorn, he showed me his copy and told me that that was the book that got him interested in comics and their history! That was it. Friends forever!


THE WORST JOURNEY IN THE WORLD by Apsley Cherry-Garrard
Maybe the best account of an expedition. In this case, it's Robert Scott's last Antarctic expedition. Another book recommended by Dad. It's a wowser!


SKIPPY by Percy Crosby
If there's a close second to POGO, it's SKIPPY. Highly popular in its day, and now the focus of a reprint series of books authorized by Percy Crosby's daughter, Joan Crosby Tibbetts. I got to know Joan over the email, and then we met in person at a National Cartoonists Society Reuben Awards weekend. Anyway, SKIPPY was Charles Schulz' favorite comic strip growing up and even now, decades later, it crackles with life for me.


That's ten for me. How about you?

Friday, July 18, 2025

Some Vintage Paper

 

I was at the Arundel, Maine flea market on Sunday and bought a few old postcards and a business card. All are from the turn of the last century and all feature some comic art. Above is a postcard of Alphonse and Gaston by Frederic Burr Opper. It's copyright 1906 by the American Journal Examiner. 

The two terribly polite Frenchmen Alphonse and Gaston began five years earlier, in Hearst's New York Journal. 

Wikipedia:

"Their 'After you, Alphonse.', 'No, you first, my dear Gaston!' routine ran for more than a decade. Alphonse is short; Gaston is tall. The premise is that both are extremely polite, constantly bowing and deferring to each other. Neither can ever do anything or go anywhere because each insists on letting the other precede him.

Though never a daily or even weekly feature, Alphonse and Gaston appeared on Sundays for several years. In addition to Hearst collections and licensed products, it was adapted into a stage play and several comedy shorts. In 1909, not-yet-famous director D.W. Griffith made a short (two-shot) split reel comedy for the Biograph company, featuring the characters, titled 'The French Duel.'"


Norway, Maine is a town I go to every now and then. There's a good framing/art supply shop there, the 100 Aker Wood, and I wonder if maybe W.C. Pierce was the guy who started it. What the fellow (Mr. Pierce?) is doing up a tree is kinda lost on me, but I liked the drawing a lot. 

 

Mr. Jack by James Swinnerton was a long-running (1903 - 1935) strip about an always-on-the-make tiger who always sported fine clothes and a cigarette in a holder. He's a cad and enjoys life. See him winking at you? It's credited as the first newspaper strip to feature an anthropomorphic leading character. Jack was criticized as a bad moral example for children and was moved off the funny pages into the sports section after 1904. It appeared sporadically after that as Swinnerton was focusing on his other comic strip Little Jimmy. Fantagraphics reprinted Little Jimmy in a beautiful over-sized volume this year. Go get it before it goes out of print.




Here's just something else that I have no idea what the context is. The joke being that it's not the swear word, but it sure sounds like it when you read it or say it out loud. It's a post card, but there's no description of what it is or who drew it.


Thursday, July 17, 2025

Documentary: "A Savage Art: The Life & Cartoons of Pat Oliphant"

 


Via Variety:



"Magnolia Pictures has acquired Bill Banowsky’s 'A Savage Art: The Life & Cartoons of Pat Oliphant,' a documentary about the renowned Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist who satirized presidents, popes and business leaders with his art. The film world-premiered at DC/DOX. Magnolia has U.S. rights to the film, which will release in theaters on Sept. 5. The indie studio is also debuting a new trailer ... and poster."

 

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

File Sharing Site WeTransfer Wants All Rights

 

The file sharing site WeTransfer has updated its terms to grant them all rights to all the material that you upload. Do not use WeTransfer to move large files (like I do with hi res cartoons when sending to an editor). This content becomes theirs in perpetuity for them to do with as they wish forever.

 WeTransfer has since clarified their position after backlash, but this is still a hard no for me.

My thanks to Anthony Taylor for the news.

One comment from his post:

"Let's hope the USPS doesn't get wind of this. 'If your nana ships a birthday card through us we're entitled to the five dollars she sent with it.'"

I'm really dismayed. I am sure there are alternatives out there but I have not tried them. 

 

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

The Garden As of July 15

 



The garden as of July 15th. Everything is growing so fast.

 













 

Monday, July 14, 2025

Baltimore Sun Dismisses KAL

 

 

Via DailyCartoonist:

After 31 years (1988-2006, 2012-2025) Kevin (KAL) Kallaugher has been let go by The Baltimore Sun.

From KAL:

I am disappointed to announce that after 31 years of award-winning cartoons in The Baltimore Sun, I was abruptly dismissed from the paper on Friday.

It was just a matter of time.

In February of 2024, David Smith, the conservative owner of the Sinclair Broadcasting group purchased the struggling paper. As my politics do not align with the new owners, I assumed my days were numbered.

Especially as, in years prior, I had drawn some blistering cartoons in The Sun about Sinclair Broadcasting and its owner…

Kevin KAL Kallaugher

Read KAL’s full report and relevant cartoons at his KAL Draws the Line Substack.

KAL’s last ed-op cartoon for The Baltimore Sun for June 21, 2025 (dated June 22, 2025 here)

July 2, 2025 Update:

Baltimore Brew headline about KAL’s dismmissal

The Baltimore Brew carries the story and talks to KAL about being released:

Kallaugher, whose biting cartoons have been skewering Donald Trump and the MAGA movement, among other targets over a decades-long career, figures the real reason for his dismissal is his politics.

Kallaugher described a meeting he was asked to attend last December at Sinclair headquarters in Hunt Valley at which Smith discussed his plan to hire a local-topics-only cartoonist.

“He says, ‘The problem is the paper’s got this ultra-liberal cartoonist,’ and then I realized, he didn’t know he was talking to me,” Kallaugher recalled, chuckling.

Kallaugher declined to restrict his weekly cartoon to local matters (“We’re living in the most pivotal time in American history in a century. I’m not gonna sit that out”) and figured, since then, that his days were numbered.

Responding after publication, Sun publisher and editor-in-chief Trif Alatzas sent the following statement:

“We appreciate KAL’s work on The Sun’s pages during these many years. At this time we have decided to allocate our freelance budget to other areas. We will continue to highlight national and international topics through the work of syndicated editorial cartoonists.”

When The Sun shone on and welcomed KAL in 1988

KAL’s first editorial cartoon for The Baltimore Sun – December 4, 1988
The Baltimore Sun welcomes KAL – December 4, 1988
KAL as cover feature for Sun Magazine – December 4, 1988
Sun Magazine feature stories about KAL and Sun’s history of editorial cartoonists – December 4, 1988



Friday, July 11, 2025

From the Dick Buchanan Files: Summer Gag Cartoons 1949 - 1954

Dick Buchanan has very kindly delved into his trove of vintage gag cartoons to come up with a rare color selection on the theme of summer. Thank you very much for these long-unseen single panel gems, Dick!

---


SUMMER CARTOONS



In GLORIOUS COLOR



1949 - 1954



Summer is here! It’s time for going to the beach, amusement parks, boating, swimming, gardening and baseball.  And it’s hot.  Since it’s never too hot to laugh we have reached into the Cartoon Clip File and hauled out some summer cartoons for the amusement of one and all. These cartoons are in full color—clipped mostly from the pages of Collier’s. Here are examples of some nifty summer themed drawings by some of the leading mid-century cartoonists . . .





1.  VIRGIL PARTCH.  Collier’s July 1, 1950





2.  DON TOBIN. Collier’s July 9, 1949.



3.  DICK CAVALLI.  Collier’s August 20, 1954.



4.  GLENN BERNHARDT. Collier’s July 1, 1950.



5.  TED KEY. The Saturday Evening Post July 30, 1949.


6.  KATE OSANN. Collier’s July 9, 1949.



7.  BARNEY TOBEY. Collier’s August 12, 1950.



8.  GUSTAV LUNDBERG. Collier’s July 2, 1949.



9.  KIRK STILES. Collier’s July 18, 1953.


10.  FRITZ WILKINSON.  Collier’s September 10, 1949.




11.  KATE OSANN. Collier’s July 2, 1949.



12.  BARNEY TOBEY. Collier’s August 19, 1950



13.  MARY GIBSON. Collier’s July 21, 1951.



14.  TED KEY. The Saturday Evening Post July 19, 1950.


15. HANK KETCHAM. Collier’s July 1, 1950.  

 

-- Edited from a June 27, 2018 blog entry.