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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Laura Onstot
Concerns run deeper than the name of the Mariners playground.
Allan Parmelee has a low batting average, but a few big hits.
For guys who party too hard on land, Alaskan fishing boats can provide a useful refuge. But not always.
Part of our summer series on urban picnicking.
A wrongful-termination suit at Sears: Blame the Internet--or homophobia?
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A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
By Robb Walsh
Comixtravaganza
The final panel of a monthlong examination
Published on January 23, 2008
Garfield punting Odie out of his favorite sleeping spot? Hilarious (or at least harmless). Gail leading her gang of hookers in a massacre of crooked cops in the back alleys of Old Town? Horrifying. The chubby lasagna-loving tabby and the citizens of Frank Millers hell-on-earth Sin City have almost nothing in common except the way their stories are told. Illustrations, not heavy dialogue or overwrought description, define the comic, a genre thats skittered from political subversion to youthful entertainment to shocking representations of our guiltiest, guiltiest secrets and fantasies. The Seattle Public Library devoted January to comics and wraps it all up today with Comixtravaganza. It starts this afternoon with David Lasky, co-creator of the Seattle-Zeitgeist-capturing Urban Hipster, helping you create your own comic. Thats followed by a discussion of why the medium is so darn awesome, with Ellen Forneyillustrator of Sherman Alexies Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indianchatting about the life of a cartoonist. Youve always been able to get in touch with your inner dork at the library, but today you can really revel in it. Seattle Public Library, 1000 Fourth Ave., 386-4636, www.spl.org. Free. 2 p.m. LAURA ONSTOT
Sat., Jan. 26, 2008