New cartoon

Joe Biden reassures the American people.

… adding, for all the Biden-defenders (and who knew there were so many!): I had this riff in mind before Biden gave his infamous interview. The cartoon was not inspired by Biden, it was inspired by the uncertainty surrounding the flu outbreak last week — should we panic and head for the hills or ignore the thing entirely? I had the basic words, I just didn’t know who was going to be saying them until that interview, and then the whole thing came together.

But you have to admit, even if he’s essentially right, it’s pretty funny when the Vice President of the United States suggests on national television that Americans should shun airports and subways (and then his office issues a statement three hours later suggesting that he actually said the exact opposite — as Peter Sagal said on Wait, Wait this weekend, it’s as if they haven’t heard about the invention of videotape). Biden has absolutely no internal censor, and you have to love that, at least if you’re a cartoonist.

The Very Silly Mayor

As the parent of a small child, you end up reading a lot of fairly awful story books at bedtime, and as someone whose livelihood is derived from a certain facility at combining words and pictures, the lure of trying to do better was eventually too strong to resist. And I had a pretty clear idea of what I wanted to do from the start. I wanted it to be a book that would be amusing enough for adults, so that parents could stand to read it for the fiftieth evening in a row without feeling like their heads were going to explode. But at the same time, I wanted it to be a book that was genuinely for children, not one of these alleged kid’s books whose author revels in his own cleverness, winking knowingly at the adult and leaving the child almost irrelevant to the experience.

And finally — those of you with little kids will know what I’m talking about here — I wanted it to be the right length for a bedtime story. Again, there are too many children’s books whose authors seem not to understand that the point of the book is to be read at bedtime — which is to say, it’s all in the timing. You don’t want the book to be too short, but neither do you want it to drag on till midnight. There’s a sweet spot in the middle, which is what I was aiming for with this one. I know it’s a strange selling point — it’s not too long! — but as I say, you parents know exactly what I mean.

The road to publication turned out to be a bit more complicated than I expected, which is probably a story for another day. Ultimately, as I mentioned in my previous post, I landed with a small publisher, Ig, which gave me a great deal of control over the final product. It’s up to the printers now, but I’ve done everything possible to make sure this is something I can be proud of. It’s hardcover, with a dust jacket, interior wallpaper — should be a lovely package. But as I also pointed out previously, what this means is that I have much more of a personal stake in this — rather than getting most of the money I will make from it up front in an advance, as I’ve been able to in the past, most of what I’m going to earn will be after the actual sales. And my publisher — did I mention they’re small? They don’t have a skyscraper. They don’t really have an office. They’re two people working out of an apartment in Brooklyn. Which may actually be the wave of the future, as far as publishing goes — low overhead, keep it simple. But sales of this book will impact their lives, and mine, directly. So if you have a young child, or know anyone who does, please consider picking this one up. (And if you work in a bookstore — please be sure to stock it!) The publisher has done right by me, and I’d like to return the favor.

Also: I’ve put up a couple of sample pages at the Very Silly Mayor site.

New cartoon

What we talk about when we talk about torture. For the record, the description in the final panel is taken from this article by Mark Danner. Everyone currently seems fixated on waterboarding and waterboarding alone, much in the way that public discourse after the release of the Abu Ghraib photos focused on just how many — or exactly how few — bad apples were involved in that extremely isolated incident which certainly did not have larger implications and only a DFH would think otherwise.

Anyone who’s been paying attention for the past few years knows that waterboarding’s just the start of it. More than 100 detainees have died in U.S. custody, and more than 30 of those have been investigated by the military as homicides.

We don’t need no stinkin’ guvermint

Digby:

If you are a conservative you can’t believe that something like an epidemic or a pandemic could even exist or you would have to grant that the necessity for public health — a government function. Indeed, you even have to grant that a pandemic requires that people are going to be forced to behave in ways that explicitly explicitly define their own personal survival with the common good.

Rush is right to be a little bit nervous about this, though. Public health crises tend to focus the public on the usefulness of things like science, international cooperation, government coordination. You know, the sort of thing that liberals think are necessary. Something like that simply doesn’t fit into the conservative worldview. They see all problems and challenges in schoolyard terms of good guys and bad guys. This kind of challenge (like global warming) falls outside the paradigm by which they organize their world. Pandemics, like hurricanes, can’t be dealt with by using tough talk and threats. So, they are lost.