Tag: Rob Smith Jr
October 5th, 2013 – Book: ‘Lions of Lucerne’ by Brad Thor.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Oct.05, 2013, under Books
The Lions Of Lucerne by Brad Thor
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a really great first book with lavish setting descriptions that are not over board. The characters are very well written. The story is well balanced with action, drama and humor. Dialogue is very good. It’s easy to see how Thor and the publishers continue this series.
This is the fourth book I’ve read in the series. This one is also my favorite. The other three are good, but I never got all that excited about actively following the series. I think I will get on to another Scot Harvath book soon.
Bottom line: I recommend the ‘Lions of Lucerne’.
October 2nd, 2013 – Watercolor Caricature Process
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Oct.02, 2013, under Caricatures, What's New?
Above is the prepped versionĀ in the process getting the watercolor painting below finished. Above I’ve penciled the caricature incorporating the image of the person’s head and a large amount of information about her to assemble a really personal drawing of who she is.
Adding the ink that won’t run with the watercolor, I prep the art and then add the watercolor.
This artwork was done from start to finish with the client at Beefy king in Orlando, Florida
September 28th, 2013 – Silver Springs State Park Party
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.28, 2013, under Friends, Swampy's Florida
Above Dr. Bob Knight, Lisa Saupp and Natalie Lyons save Swampy from the bite of the saber-tooth tiger!
Had a lot of fun tonight at a party celebrating Silver Springs becoming part of the Florida State Park system. The event was held at the Silver River Museum with famed photographer Clyde Butcher headlining the event. Clyde featured a slideshow and film of his recent photography work out west and in the past week around the Silver River.
Otherwise, for me, the room was filled with many, many friends. Most of my fellow members of the Marion County Historical Commission were there. As were Marion County Commissioner David Moore and his wife, designer and fellow Florida buff Rick Kilby, new vice-manager of Silver River State Park Nicky Aiken, the Ocala Star-Banner photographer who snapped pictures of me a couple days ago, a whole variety of folks from the Springs Alliance and the Springs Festival committees.
It was a great celebration with great food – Especially the grits bar! Looking forward to the “soft” opening of Silver River State Park this coming Tuesday.
September 23rd, 2013 – Inked Barn Dance Illustration!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.22, 2013, under Illusration
Here’s the final inked art from the pencils seen below. You can see I altered a few things here and there I went from pencils to inks. The client also made a few requests involving the lady in the illustration. This is a private commission.
September 22nd, 2013 – Merry Christmas!…in September…
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.22, 2013, under What's New?, What\'s New?
Found Christmas in September in K-Mart yesterday. Saw they started this last week. They have more shelves set up with lights. ornaments and the like out. I’m sure there is more to come.
September 19th, 2013: Book – ‘Melbourne A Century of Memories’
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.19, 2013, under Books
Melbourne A Century of Memories by Melbourne Chamber of Commerce
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is a wonderful selection of columns telling of the history of Melbourne and surrounding area. Lots of great first hand stories and tales and Florida history. All involve interviews with Florida natives and other very long term residences. The writing is very good and photographs illustrate all of the entries.
The unfortunate part is that this book is out of print and very hard to find. Also should be noted is that the book came out in 1980 and the columns were written throughout the 1970s. So, the history time frame is prior to the ’70s.
Bottom line: I highly recommend this book for the Florida history lover or those that like to read about people’s lives.
September 14th, 2013 – Pencil art
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.15, 2013, under Illusration
Here is the pencil rough for an illustration I’m developing for a client. I’ll try to show the progress of the art was I work on it.
September 10th, 2013 – Book: ‘Gold Coast’ by Elmore Leonard.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.10, 2013, under Books
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This is part of my Swampy’s Florida book collection.
Not sure why I had trouble connecting with this book. It does occur to me that I’ve had trouble connecting with characters in past Elmore Leonard books in the past. It was particularly difficult with this book. It could be that I’ve recently been reading books with very well drawn characters. These are well defined, but in the typical Leonard caricature that I struggled with. I should add there is one character that has a few levels that appear along the way.
This is a 1980 book that set a tenor that got expanded further by Carl Hiassen and Tim Dorsey, amongst others. The wacky Florida mystery stories really began with Leonard and this is one of the first. The story sops up the south Florida lifestyle of the rich and famous and adds the contemporary dark characters with gusto. The story is good and this book is well written. Many today are likely to be dissatisfied with the ending but, as occurs in Leonard novels past the characters, the story has a unique ending.
I’m chalking up my dissatisfaction with the characters with reading recent strong character driven novels and so the bottom line is: I recommend it.
September 8th, 2013 – University of North Florida Swampy’s Florida Photo!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.08, 2013, under Caricatures, Swampy's Florida, What's New?
Here’s a large group of University of North Florida students with little stuffed Swampy of Swampy’s Florida. I was there to entertain with caricatures and I’ll post later about those.
September 4th, 2013 – Book: ‘Breakdown’ by “William Johnstone”.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.04, 2013, under Books
Breakdown by William W. Johnstone
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
I figured with the unending sea of novels coming from, what I call, the Johnstone Clan of writers, eventually, one would be a dud. Here it is.
I’ve read about ten of the various series and stand alones. 2011’s ‘Home Invasion’ is one of my favorite books in recent times. So, I am quite a fan and have about thirty more Johnstones to be read – though, I’m aiming to read them in order. I’ve got lots more to add to the stacks.
This one has the first problem of being extremely poorly constructed. It is very hard to catch on at the beginning as the two main characters are thrust at us with little background except that they both are on diametrically opposed sides of the political realm. The writer presents each character with the political viewpoints and expects us to buy the relationship due to their sexual relationship. To buy that would mean to accept two people who inwardly dislike each other or two very shallow souls. As the book continues, shallow fits neither. The book is hampered by the main characters being very unbelievable.
To me most all of the characters are unbelievable and points out how different this book is from the typical Johnstone book that paints vivid images of the characters involved.
A story structure issue that was badly mishandled was setting. This book purports to span the United States. But, only a handful of locations are used. In that this story is about taking over the country, you’d think the action would be more widespread. Other locations are mentioned, but the main characters fly back and forth to the same place. (Side thought is that if a country is being taken over by whoever, someone would be sure to have landing strips monitored and closed. There are a ton of these details that are overlooked.)
Another setting issue involves characters finding each other as if they were wearing GPS units that are never mentioned. How these characters go out into a large wooded area and happen to find one person they are looking for so quickly is beyond believable.
The story is just a mess. All about various groups taking over America, all dissatisfied with government and how the country is being run. This story fantasizes that Americans have the wherewithal to walk away from their TVs, booze and other entertainment and fight each other for ideas I don’t believe most Americans understand much at all – which would be why certain politicians are in office that could manipulate them to usurp the population with controls, to begin with. If people are willingly putting people in power to take away freedom, why would the population fight the people they elected???
To me, the book reads as science fiction without the science.
This book is also hard to swallow in that it preceded the tragic day of September 11th, 2001. Seeing that Americans seemed to have set aside patriotism for materialism since then, shows the unlikelihood of this story idea ever happening. I’d say it’s impossible.
AS can be the case with the impossible story, the ending to this book is more than predictable. There are few surprises throughout except the ongoing poor story construction.
OK, how can this book be justified at all? It seems to me the attempt is to create a parable of political philosophies. Not well created, but I think that is the attempt. The book is riddled with lengthy treaties of political viewpoints – all conservative – that really don’t advance the story, but advances the political viewpoints of the writer(s)involved. There’s an effort to get a lefty viewpoint in by way of a main character, but that is mostly dismissed by way of a conservative view point. Being a conservative myself, that would be fine, but the idea is to present a non-fiction story that is readable, not a book like ‘Breakdown’.
This would have worked far better if confined to a small city, much like the later written ‘Home Invasion’. Maybe that’s why ‘Home Invasion’ came about, to produce a more coherent book about a take over of an area. It’s obvious, at the end, that this was to be the start of another Johnstone series. I guess sales or realization that this didn’t work, stopped that.
Considering the hyper sensitivities of many of today’s young and the effort of censorship of ideas that aren’t “politically correct”, I even more strongly discourage them reading this book. The lack of understanding of diverse political ideologies will lose the sensitive who will want to childishly label parts of this book racist and written in “hate”.
Bottom line: I do not recommend this book.
August 28th, 2013 – New Swampy’s Florida print: Sea Turtle Christmas Surprise.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Aug.28, 2013, under Illusration, Swampy's Florida
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