Tag: Taylor Smith
January 15th, 2014 – #DailyInks #15 – Pasco Pete!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.18, 2014, under Cartooning, Swampy's Florida
Leave a Comment :art, book, Books, cartoon, Cartooning, child, childrens book illustration, childrens illustration, draw, drawing, Florida, Florida art, florida caricature, Florida cartoon, florida event, Florida History!, illustration, Jacob Smith, orlando, orlando caricature, orlando entertainment, orlando event, orlando fun, Rob Smith Jr, sketch, sketching, swamp, Swampys Florida, Taylor Smith more...January 14th, 2014 – #DailyInks #14 – Turtle Valentine!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.15, 2014, under Cartooning, Swampy's Florida
Leave a Comment :art, book, Books, cartoon, Cartooning, child, childrens book illustration, childrens illustration, draw, drawing, Florida, Florida art, florida caricature, Florida cartoon, florida event, illustration, Jacob Smith, Rob Smith Jr, sketch, sketching, swamp, Swampys Florida, Taylor Smith more...January 13th, 2014 – #DailyInks #13 – Gator Valentine!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.14, 2014, under Cartooning
This is one of the drawings being proposed for a set of Swampy’s Florida Valentine cards. I’ll post the color version as it comes along.
January 12th, 2014 – #DailyInks #12 – Flamingo Valentine!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.12, 2014, under Cartooning, What's New?
This is one of the drawings being proposed for a set of Swampy’s Florida Valentine cards. I’ll post the color version as it comes along.
January 11th, 2014 – #DailyInks #11 – Swampy’s Florida Cartoon!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.11, 2014, under Cartooning
I inked this on the 11th and colored on the 12. Thought I’d include the finished cartoon.
Here’s the link to the Swampy’s Florida cartoon post: ow.ly/svLEQ</a>
January 9th, 2014 – Book: ‘Murder is My Business’ by Brett Halliday.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.10, 2014, under Books
Murder Is My Business by Brett Halliday
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I love to start the year with a Michael Shayne mystery. I’ve already read most of the series in the early 2000s. I didn’t get to many that didn’t take place in Florida and the ones being pumped out by ghost writers post-Dave Dresser or 1960. I did have this as already read as I mixed this title up with another in the series. Just to note: I hadn’t read this before and somehow have two now marked here.
This was a great Shayne novel. This one taking place in Texas. As usual Dresser knows his terrain and locations seem real as well as the characters. The mystery is very good with many layers involved. The reader is kept guessing until the end, though this one has a key clue flipped at a little too opportune time. Still a very good mystery well worth the time – If you can find it.
Bottom line: I recommend this book.
January 8th, 2013 – #DailyInks #8 – Raccoon
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.08, 2014, under Cartooning
As i signed a couple sets of Swampy’s Florida books for the Silver River Museum to sell, I added a critter or two along the way. You can get your copies by going by or contacting the Silver River Museum. Click here to learn more. Here’s a happy raccoon. I have no idea what he’s so happy about. That’s what psychiatrists are for.
January 7th, 2013 – #DailyInks #7 – Turtle
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.07, 2014, under Cartooning, Swampy's Florida
As i signed a couple sets of Swampy’s Florida books for the Silver River Museum to sell, I added a critter or two along the way. You can get your copies by going by or contacting the Silver River Museum. Click here to learn more. Here’s a turtle resting along the waters of the Silver River.
January 6th, 2013 – #DailyInks #6 – Birthday Girl
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.06, 2014, under Cartooning
This is a part of the birthday card I made for my dear friend Lucile Fair’s 106th birthday in two weeks. If you are nearby or crossing my path in the next two weeks, it’d be great if you would sign her card. Please send me a message and let me know if you would like to sign her card.
January 5th, 2013 – #5 – When frogs become mermaids..,
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.06, 2014, under Cartooning, What's New?
This is the painting my father got for his birthday this year. Each year the painting involves a frog and some other subject matter. This year it’s frogs and Weeki Wachee mermaids..
The Weeki Wachee mermaids are legendary in Florida. It all goes back to over fifty years ago when young ladies donned some hand made fins to promote Weeki Wachee Springs, a tourist attraction featuring the natural springs that flow out to supply the Weeki Wachee River. The ladies used an underwater breathing apparatus developed by, inventor, Newt Perry, to be able to perform swimming routines underwater that visitors could watch in a specially made theater.
The theater is still there today as are the mermaids. The park is now part of the Florida Park system and visitors still travel there today to watch mermaids dance and swim :
January 5th, 2013 – Book: ‘Jack Lemmon’ by Michael Freedland.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jan.06, 2014, under Books
Jack Lemmon by Michael Freedland
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Michael Freedland does what so many authors do that create a series with a similar theme. Much like a snow ball gets larger as it rolls down a mountain, as Freedland interviews the various celebrities for the various biographies he produces he picks up other stories and quotes involving other celebrities. He obviously stores the snippets of others lives. Then when he feels he has enough to construct another biography, he flings open the filing cabinets, digs out the gathered information and constructs a book.
There’s nothing wrong with what he does. Most all authors do this when creating a series. However, most work to take earlier research notes, string it together and fill in the gaps to create the whole story in whatever the subject is.
Freedland leaves wide gaps in Lemmon’s story. The book at times leaps from one point in Lemmon’s life to another. The inconsistency is a bit irritating. For instance very little is written about Jack Lemmon’s filming of ‘Some Like It Hot’ but plenty is filled out about ‘Save the Tiger’. There is also the lacking hindsight issue. Freedland expands the Lemmon story as it reaches his book’s publication date. The earlier history is far less complete.
Despite all this criticism, I like the end result because, though there is much lacking, what is there is well written, presented and obviously celebrity stories and quotes would be lost to time if Freedland hadn’t bothered to gather them over time and present them in this volume.
So, if you want a thorough Jack Lemmon biography, this isn’t it. If you want an over view packed with nifty stories of Lemmon’s life, track this now out of print book down.
Bottom line: I recommend it.