CARTOONIST AND POET: Gary Larson and Me

RonPrice

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Joined
Oct 2, 2006
Messages
21
Location
George Town Tasmania
CARTOONIST AND POET

Reading about the work of cartoonist Gary Larson and how he works I could not help compare and contrast his modus operandi and my own with respect to writing prose and poetry. Larson draws inspiration from similar sources to my own: interests, experiences and memories. He is sensitive about his readers and whether they understand his work. And so is this the case with me and my literary opus. I have one eye on my readers most of the time, but another on the world and all that is therein. Sometimes I shut one eye and open the other; at other times I open both eyes one, I like to think, to “the hallowed beauty of the Beloved.”

Both Larson and I like our work to speak for itself but, after years in classrooms explaining things to students, I am not bothered if I have to discuss my work. This, though, I rarely have to do. I’m not popular enough to have to so engage my mental powers. Larson is never comfortable analysing his cartoons. We are both painstaking about making our work unambiguous. One interesting sub-set of his work is cartoons about cartoons and, for me, poems about poetry. Ideas for his work and mine can and do come from anywhere. Being a cartoonist is a solitary life as it is being a poet, but there are fewer really successful cartoonists. Few poets and few cartoonists get rich.-Ron Price with thanks to Jackie Morrissey in The Complete Far Side: Volume One: 1980-1986, by Gary Larson, Andrews McMeel Publishing, Kansas City, 2004, pp. viii-xiii.

Yes, things that just drift into
your head, Gary, little musings
when one is alone with one’s
thoughts and I, too, jot them
down. But, unlike you, Gary,
I get lots of ideas from others,
indeed, a veritable cornucopia
of sources. But we both had our
door openers, eh Gary? Mine was
Roger White, the unofficial laureate
poet of the international Baha’i
community in the 1980s and ‘90s.

But I must most deeply thank the
internet, a world-wide-web that
got my work out-there or my words
would have remained gathering dust
in my files forever. And, finally,
like Larson’s Humour Police, his
readers, and my Poetry Police, my
readers, who hover around and let
me know in no uncertain terms that
I have crossed some invisible line
into total obscurity or obsolescence
and that I am just wasting my time.

Ron Price
14 December2007

PS. I also want to thank: (a) my son for loaning me the biggest, fattest book I’ve ever held in my hands or on my lap, The Far Side, Volume 1, and for continuing to make me laugh as he has done since he was just a little chap; and (b) my wife whose honesty, persistence and her multitude of other qualities have made her my indefatigable collaborator.
 
My literary activity, my publishing, holy king, is on the world-wide-web. It is a personal and quite industrious enterprize. When I can find the time I am engaged in creating across this global internet a tapestry of poetry and prose. At this site, readers will find one of my many journals, diaries or blogs. These various terms are used by various internet sites for a series of posts by one writer/author. The series of posts at this site is one of the many parts of this tapestry of prose and poetry I refer to above.

This literary creation, this literary industry, has been created in the early evening of my life, in the last years of my middle age(56-59) and the first years of my late adulthood(60-70), by a retired teacher and lecturer who is now 64. He attempts to endow many a theme from the social sciences and humanities, from spiritual and secular subjects, with many layers of meaning. He tries to combine a high seriousness with a light and humorous style when appropriate. This literary goal is difficult to achieve and has been a slowly evolving ambition since settling into Australian society in the 1970s after moving from Canada where I was born in 1944.-Ron Price, Tasmania:cool:
 
I have been so very pleased, after years of trying to publish in hard or soft cover with traditional publishers, to get my books on the internet. here are some examples::cool:
____________________
These three books were put on the Internet in 2002 and 2003 and contain some 2000 pages of content. In addition I have been able to put over one million words at some 2000 internet sites: forums, discussion sites, poetry sites, essay sites, et cetera. Anyone having questions or comments about this content can contact me at my email address:
ronprice9@gmail.com_________________________________________________
1. The Emergence of a Baha’i Consciousness in World Literature: The Poetry of Roger White: 400 pages. go to: http://bahai-library.org/books/white or go to:
http://juxta.com/category/ebooks/

2. Pioneering Over Four Epochs:3000 plus pages
Website: http://www.ronpriceepoch.com/

3. Pioneering Over Four Epochs: An Autobiographical Study and a Study in Autobiography: 1800 page book. Go to this link to access this book: http://www.ronpriceepoch.com/auto.html
—readers at this site will find many an ebook site to place their work. (eBookMall)

4. Search Engines: Most major engines, like Google/Yahoo or Ask Jeeves, have dozens of sub-sites with my work. Just type the words: Pioneering Over Four Epochs or Ron Price or Ron Price poetry/history, religion, et cetera into the search box.--Amen:cool:
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CIVILIZATION and NIALL FERGUSON

After studying history for 20 years in primary, secondary and post-secondary schools; after teaching it at those same levels for another 30; and after reading and writing about it for another dozen when I retired from FT work in 1999, I had an appreciation for Niall Ferguson’s Civilization: Is the West History on SBS tonight.1-Ron Price with thanks to SBSONE TV, 4 April 2012, 9:30-10:30 p.m.

Ferguson has an impressive
set of credentials & did not
really get going until I was in
my last years as a teacher &
lecturer. He admits to being a
workaholic. It’s difficult to keep
marriage & family in one piece
when you do all the things he has
done….I enjoyed this first episode
of a 6 part-series in the evening of
my life with teaching left far-behind.

You argue your case well, with all those
visuals, to a generation who knows little
history. It’s a complex field history, as all
the social sciences are; much more than
the physical sciences, I would argue. And
one can’t predict the future on the basis
of the past, sad to say…..Thanks Niall for
your presentation this evening which took
a year to get to us Downunder from Channel 4
television. I wish you well as you head into your
last years of middle age, late adulthood & old age—
if you last that long. Slow down, Niall, and enjoy the
new marriage you have just entered. Perhaps you can
learn from your own personal history: perhaps.

Ron Price
4 April 2012
 
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