Archive for July 9th, 2008

In which your host seeks a specific reader or two

I have a children’s book that I’ve written and drawn. Not just a proposal, I’ve got a finished package, kid-tested-and-approved, ready to go out the door. And to be clear, it’s not one of these sly, knowing books that are really aimed at adults, and view the actual children in the audience as an afterthought — it was written as a genuine kid’s book for the roughly kindergarten-aged crowd, albeit one which would amuse parents as well, or at least not cause them to weep with existential despair at the prospect of reading it aloud for the fiftieth time. On this topic, I speak from experience.

It’s important to me to see this one in bookstores, if only to show my own kid, who’s been following the process from its inception, how persistence can turn ideas into reality. My agent’s been shopping it around but it’s going slower than I’d like — I think partly because people tend to pigeonhole you, and it may be difficult for some to imagine how a verbose political cartoonist such as myself could also be a straightforward children’s book author. In other words, how can someone whose career has been devoted to mastering the interplay of words and pictures ever, you know, create a work of … words and pictures?

(Also: you’d think that having an established readership would actually be an advantage. I mean, yes, it’s a different arena, but I’m guessing that some percentage of my readers have — or at least have friends and relatives with — children. Kind of a built-in audience, you know?)

Anyway … in the off chance that someone reading this is, or knows, a children’s book editor — shoot me an email (contact info is over to the left), and I’ll pass it along to my agent. The rest of you, move along, nothing to see here.

posted by Tom Tomorrow at 9:36 AM | link
I Defend John McCain for the First and Hopefully Last Time

(UPDATE: I was completely wrong about this; see here for proof McCain literally has no idea how Social Security works. Thanks to Jason Lefkowitz for pointing this out.)

Here’s John McCain yesterday, rambling on about Social Security:

MCCAIN: Americans have got to understand that we are paying present-day retirees with the taxes paid by young workers in America today. And that’s a disgrace. It’s an absolute disgrace, and it’s got to be fixed.

Of course, Social Security has always worked by “paying present-day retirees with the taxes paid by young workers.” Thus, many people—including Dean Baker, Bob Somerby and Matthew Yglesias—are saying McCain was calling Social Security itself “a disgrace.”

However, if you read the quote in context, it’s clear McCain meant the disgrace isn’t the basic mechanism of Social Security, but that today’s young workers are paying taxes for which they may not get their promised benefits.

The rest of McCain’s Social Security bloviations are an incredible farrago of deceit you could spend the next 100 years unraveling. But on this minor point, he actually is being treated unfairly by people who’ve let the situation get the best of them, cognitively-speaking.

ALSO: I guarantee conservatives will obsess about McCain being horribly mistreated by liberals here, and it will become yet another example of how monsters perceive themselves as martyrs.

AND: This type of behavior on my part is how I keep winning.

posted by Jonathan Schwarz at 9:34 AM | link
June 2008
S M T W T F S
« May  
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930  
July 2008
S M T W T F S
 
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
August 2008
S M T W T F S
  Sep »
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  
Winters Web Works
extreme trackingSite Meter
Login