Imagined humor experienced and expressed by numerous species, including sea creatures and selected members of the insect community, as seen through the eyes of internationally known cartoonist, Scott Wood. Please read and enjoy it. Your dog and cat may enjoy it as well. Ask them.
raison d'etre you ask why why this and i reply for the love of words and worlds for the joy of thought(s) and the free flight in sharing and for the emotions evoked to feel to touch to taste to see to hear to soar to add my life's journey to yours...to love
Charles Erskine Scott Wood was an Oregon military officer, translator of Chief Joseph's surrender speech, lawyer, Portland civic leader and supporter of libertarian and anarchist causes. This book provides an introduction to his libertarian philosophy, including reprints of hard-to-find writings.
I'm helplessly lost in a desolate land called my mind. While being pursued by the Henchman called memories trying to bury me under the sands of time. If you are looking for traditional poetry, then Teardrops on my Pillow is not for you. If you want to maintain a naïve veil to what the less fortunate have to experience throughout their lives, then this book of poetry is not for you. If you want to read poetry that explores the harsh realities that this world has to offer, then you will be interested in what Scott Wood has to say. This book is a wild roller coaster ride of raw emotion—from love and happiness, heartache and pain, abuse, thoughts of murder and suicide, and betrayal, and the darkest sides of human nature. Bad things happen to good people, and Scott Wood is living testament to that. So if you're feeling like you're all alone and no one understands, this poetry will encourage you and show you that you're not the only one that suffers from heartache.
Scott Wood has far too much fun drawing and coloring his witty, whimsical cartoons. When someone suggested letting other people join in he responded with a selection of personal favorites from his latest book, "The Animal Kingdom." They have been left in black and white outline, so the reader can color using their medium of. Have fun!
Drawing Flies is a collection of wildly imaginative (and often trenchant) cartoon panels by Scott Wood that have been published in newspapers, independent weeklies, and monthly publications. The cartoons are complemented by half a dozen pages of miscellaneous drawings, a sort of sketchbook slipped in amongst the gags. The collection is introduced by M. Dickey Drysdale, publisher and editor of The Herald of Randolph, Vermont.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.