I love comics. Especially the
ones found in newspapers like the Moline Dispatch & Rock Island Argus. I
always start my day with the comic section. When the newspapers decided to
redesign that section and asked for reader input I didn’t delay. I made sure I
got my votes in for: Rhymes With Orange, Tundra, and Dilbert.
I went so far as to supplement
my vote with copies of 2 of my all-time favorite strips. Of course, they were
related to writing. The first panel from a Tundra strip showed a film director
instructing his crew on the importance of conflict in making a good story. This
was done while smacking a bear in the head. (Tundra features a lot of bears.) The
second panel showed the stunned bear losing his freshly-caught salmon with a
headline declaring the director would soon get what he asked for.
My second clipping was from a
Rhymes With Orange strip that had a woman trying to chosen between 2 slices of
pizza. One slice had sausage or something typical. The other had “little bits
of truth.” She, who had to be a writer at heart, chose wisely.
This love of comics brings me
to one I discovered on this last Memorial Day. It was a Rhymes With Orange that
held meaning for the writer in me and for Suzanne Dietsch, one of my Bishop
Hill friends who has made a name for herself by making Sailor’s Valentines out
of sea shells.
I took a photo, but to be in
line with the rule about only using excerpts in reviews and such, I’m only
showing the section that Suzy would like the most. The side panel holds the
title: Shell-collecting: The Sickness. Now, I haven’t seen Suzy’s new house, so
I don’t know how large her shell collection has grown. But judging by the
amazingly three-dimensional, award-winning designs she creates—it must be
impressively HUGE.
And of course, the
writer/author in me likes this image, too. Especially since a neighbor was
asking about how to go about posting a review on Amazon. While she watched, I stepped
through the process online. I had to do that because I couldn’t find the blog
post I’d written for another reader. I found it later. (“Ten Steps to Review on
Amazon,” Oct. 21, 2016.)
I like comics for a lot of
reasons: for myself, for friends, and for family. But most of all it is
discovering how those artists can find so many ways to portray the essential
elements of life and the important truths we all share.
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