Mid-90's... EVERYbody was bust'n out their version
of a Post-Apocalyptic World over-run with Mutant
Bastard Tribes of Abandoned Inbreds, weren't they ?
But I didn't know this at the time... Here on the Isle of
Lost Souls off the Coast of North Carolina~! Which
kinda makes me wonder... Could the Mayans and
Egyptians build super-similar Pyramids seperate
of each others' knowledge ?
YESH~!
But that wouldn't stop Thorr Heyrdahl from
paddling across the Atlantic in a Banana shaped
boat made out of moist reeds~! And why should it ?
He was looking for Missouri, so someone could
SHOW him the way~!
DAILY EPISODES: FOUR, FIVE, AND SIX~!
Continuing from my earlier comment, I forgot to mention J. O'Barr also comes to mind when I look at your work...and even a little bit of S. Clay Wilson (in the dialogue).
ReplyDeleteThorr Heyrdahl also made the first trans-continental journey done entirely with a slip-and-slide, before a giant Kubrickian monolith fell over on him and he was replaced by a robot....little known fact.
Ah, the mammaries... I once had a strange notion that we could solve the energy crisis by devising a SLIP'N'SLIDE highway system all across this Nation of ours. More accidents would occur on White'N'Wet T-shirt Wednesdays than every Mother's Day combined.
ReplyDeleteCool stuff Jamieson, I'll add you to my links. Keep it up!
ReplyDeleteLysdexicuss: Just wonderful stuff, my friend. Simply wonderful. I read it twice. Very rich and complex, both story and art. What great detail - must be that quill nib! I loved, loved, loved the panel of the the man and women eating parasite-enriched goo. To me, the way a cartoonist draws hands are like his/her fingerprints, and I love the hands in that panel. Forward! I'll link you up ASAP! -- Mykal
ReplyDeleteThanx Guys~!
ReplyDeleteGreat work sir! your writing style is clever and entertaining. you have a true talent for this kind of thing.
ReplyDelete