A comic that lists what your beliefs say about you for the following subjects: luck, Santa, science, magic, stock market, peace, god, and government.
This is a comic based on the saying, “If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck then it is a duck.” But with the colorful North American painted turtle. It is based on when I told someone about the photographs I took of them, including the one I used to make this illustration.
Sometimes the best way to define something is by describing what it is not. This comic uses that idea to define: darkness, quiet, vacuum, chaos, and politics.
This is a science geek's version of the famous saying (paraphrased) that the best way to know someone is to walk a mile in their shoes. It uses the parsec rather than the mile because it is extremely long.
The early bird gets the worm is a common saying about hard work. This comic has fun with that.
Kids love asking lots of questions, especially if they think they are being annoying. This comic shows what would happen if you actually answered them.
Cataclysms, especially caused by asteroid impacts, are among my favorite comic topics. I also enjoy the idea that the only survivors would be cockroaches. This cockroach expresses what it was hoping for rather than an impact.
Counting sheep jumping a fence is supposed to help you fall asleep. Nothing of the sort works for me. But what interested me for this comic was: what would sheep think of to fall asleep?
Another comic on popular motivational posters. This is my take on the saying about grabbing life by the horns before asking what to do then.
User manuals, when they are included, are among the most ignored things in the world. This comic is about that fact. It posits that had Germany spread their top secret messages in user manuals rather than using radio transmissions of messages encoded by the Enigma machine they probably would never have been found by the Allies.