Thursday, November 27, 2008

Nintendo Club How Do You Get Star

Comique




These are old drawings comiquero plan. While it is not my specialty, the comic has been very rewarding in my learning and has allowed me to meet great artists and professionals.

Multiplication Chart From 1-30




This is part of a work of "concepts" for an ambitious theatrical version exorcist. Hopefully get the right producer to carry it out.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Banned From Store Lettes

Telarañas


This image is a work to which he had lost track, apologize for the low resolution, but for me it's an honor to have Will E Coyote guest on my blog.
This was done in the campaign of "Spiderman 3" and Cartoon Network with the people of Hook up animation

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Free Glory Hole Mobile

Michael Crichton. First readings. Obituary.

L to recent death of Michael Crichton, announced the news at all as the author of "Jurassic Park" has led me to remember a book I read thirty years ago "The Andromeda Strain." It was the first adult book I read, I would not accompanied by drawings or cartoon speech bubbles. Science fiction, then, was one of the first threshold literary crossed. Not by chance my scientific training has come to become something more or less like a microbiologist ... precisely the theme of "The Andromeda Strain." An attractive book that stayed in the library of my father along with the complete works of José Luis Martín Vigil or the collection of the Goncourt prize. That's nothing.

An artificial satellite back to Earth brings an element, a microorganism, based on carbon chemistry, but no nucleic acids or proteins. The microorganism, called adrómeda (original title "The Andromeda Strain" contains a pun untranslatable) kills all the people haitantes nearest the satellite drop, but two key one of the mysteries of the book. A group of researchers set off the device provided the study and prevention of such risks, although a series of unexpected events do not stop splashing the plot. All this with the top secret warning and the use of false documents. Crichton

studied medicine at Harvard. But he was passionate about literature, using various pseudonyms, he wrote numerous successful attempts until in 1969 he published "The threat" to his real name, while still a student. The book immediately became in a best-seller Crichton and made famous at twenty-seven. Crichton's stories are not only credible by the reader, it is plausible to scientists themselves, his medical career in the most prestigious in the world right permits, as well as postdoctoral fellow at the Salk Institute.

My father liked science fiction. In his library, one of the first books I read was "Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke, one of the mastodons of quality science fiction. Also recently died, Clarke had an unusual life. More unusual for a writer, but more characteristic of an inventor of science fiction, an expert on radar, RAF pilot and champion of extraterrestrial life. The novel is a pefect construction, realistic and detailed, a first contact with an alien monster, but this time harmless. "Rendezvous with Rama" was published in 1972, but I probably read it the same year as "The Andromeda Strain." Of these two books I keep in my library copy I read them decades ago. You know, fetish bibliophile.