A loon drawing I made when my daughter and I were coloring . . . you can read the first three pages of my story about how the raven and the loon got their colors over here.
Author: Grant Thomas
from upcoming Dodo Comics no. 4: detail of a drawing of a Yupik mask
from upcoming Dodo Comics no. 4: detail of a drawing of a Yupik mask . . . you can read the first three pages of this story over here.
Desk Shot – March 6, 2014
Desk Shot
Sketch Book pages with thumbnails for upcoming Dodo Comics story
Man vs. Nature or Man vs. Self?
Santiago hasn’t caught a fish in 84 days. ¬†He sets out alone and soon hooks a large marlin who drags the boat out to sea.
I wasn’t sure if Hemingway could keep me interested in two days at sea for 120 pages, but he did. ¬†At first, I thought this would be the traditional theme of Man Vs. Nature, but it ebbed and flowed with a lot of internal monologue and sometimes the fish was secondary to inner conflict of the fisherman.
I am not sure if I am stretching things to see a Christ-figure in the man.  He injures his hands and at one point Hemingway mentions he gives an involuntary noise like a noise one would make as a nail pierces his hand.  He spends two nights at sea which could be a parallel to the two night Christ spends in the grave.  At the end of the fishing trip, the man sleeps on his bed with his arms stretched out.
If I am way off base, let me know in the comments.
Long ago, before any animals had color or markings…
Friday Desk Shot
Brideshead Revisited-Beautifully Crafted But Not Convincing
It looks like I missed last week’s update on my 2014 Reading Challenge, but no worries, I’ve been keeping up.
During the past two weeks, I have continued to press on in my reading of the Sacrament of the Present Moment, but have had no new insights on the book.¬†I also finished Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited and began reading a book for some Continuing Education I have been working on for my teaching profession.
While, I found Brideshead Revisited to be beautifully crafted, I only enjoyed the first 2/3 of the book.  As an American, it was hard to gasp the class differences that play such a heavy role in the story and by the end none of the characters seemed redeemable.  To me, Waugh seems nostalgic for the aristocracy, but he did not convince me of why I should care that this era was coming to a close.  The Lords and Ladies described in the book seem like spoiled trustifarians, done in by their own excesses.
Next up is Ernest Hemingway’s¬†Old Man and the Sea,¬†which looks to be¬†Moby Dick set in Cuba.