fandrawings and "What I'd like to See"

Katie Sullivan vazali at yahoo.com
Sun Oct 12 19:37:27 CEST 2003


Marco, re: his "Mathematician Donald" fandrawing:
> Well, it is "officially" (er, until Disney finds out, of
> course) the logo 
> for the cover of my notes written for my students at the
> university!

Ah, great minds think alike!  ;-D  (Even though I was the only
person in my entire high school who even knew who Don Rosa and
Cark Barks ARE :-p I still loved having that on my notebook! 
^_^


> From: Larry Giver <lgiver at pacbell.net>
> Marco Barlotti's shirt by Don Rosa brought up the topic of
> math
> and the ducks.  Of course, they use math often:

I also smile every time I read Rosa's "Last Lords of El Dorado,"
when HD&L are doing complicated calculations about how to save
Donald from hanging on the broken rope bridge.  When I first
read that story I was taking a physics class wherein we
calculated gravity and other related concepts, and although I
generally suck at math I was able to tell that these were
genuine calculations the boys were making, not just random
numbers scribbled down to "look like math" for the sake of the
story.  Of course, coming from an author with an engineering
degree, this didn't surprise me TOO much.  ;)


> From: "Madame Jennifer Inantaz" <madame82 at hotmail.com>
.
> I guess I'm making a big hoopla about Kori Korhonen because
> he's the first 
> person, besides Carl Barks and Don Rosa, that seems to care
> for the three 
> duck children. 

I have a running joke with an online friend who helps me edit
and proofread my stories.  "Children are not props!"  It's an
easy mistake to forget that children are in a scene to do
something other than just stand there and look cute.  LOL!  So I
always watch out for that in my writing.  If children are in the
scene, they're going to react to things and have influence on
the action just like another other person would.  I've always
admired the treatment of Huey, Dewey and Louie in the comics
because most of the time they *aren't* treated like "props."  In
the Barks adventures the three nephews are just as much a part
of the expedition as the adult ducks. :)



> From: "Madame Jennifer Inantaz" <madame82 at hotmail.com>
> I know I would like to see more Marco Rota, Romano Scarpa, and
> that Kori Korhonen dude too!

>From what I've seen on the Internet recently, I like Marco
Rota's style.  I'd like to see more from him.  Scarpa, too,
especially Brigitta and/or Paparetta Ye-Ye stories.  I'm always
interested in female characters.

> And Katie got me to thinking about alternate Goldies done by
> artists other 
> than Rosa, and how much I'd like to get those stories. 6_6

Me too me too me too!  *waves frantically* 

;-D


> I would like to know if I'm the only one that would like to
> see some stories 
> containing John Rockerduck.

No, I'd be interested in that, too!


> I'd just like to collect everyone's two cents (I'll be rich by
> no time, 
> bwahahahaha!).

Hey, I found four pennies on the floor at the mall the other
day, and thought about how happy Scrooge would be for me.  But
I'll share!  Maybe...  ;)

Olaf the Blue wrote:
> Enough about mice. Speaking ducks, I want to see more of
> Scrooge's brother 
> Gedeone and cousin Douglas. Especially Gedeone.

I know nothing about Douglas, and as far as I know the "Secrets"
story in the last Gladstone issue is the only story with
Scrooge's half-brother that I've read.  I'd be interested to
know more about the character, since my gut-reaction as a
Barks/Rosa fan is to ignore his existance, but yet I find myself
interested in spite of myself. (Sort of like how I try my
darndest not to like Brigitta stories because she's competition
for Goldie, yet enjoy them anyway.)  ;)



Katie Sullivan
http://www.sullivanet.com/

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