That tail’s going to keep coming back.
It’s been raining like that out here. I have to tell my friends on the east side of the Olympic Mountains, “All your cool are belong to us.”
That tail’s going to keep coming back.
It’s been raining like that out here. I have to tell my friends on the east side of the Olympic Mountains, “All your cool are belong to us.”
I like how I drew the wet coat-tail, there. I never notice my art when I’m drawing it; I’m always in a struggle, experimenting every moment.
Sometimes I see how much more fun it must be to just do a set traditional style….
This is me coming back to my home after the army. We don’t have to make these things up.
Now it’s time for the naughty wedding double entendres.
Gift is thinking like a soldier. To his mind, soldiers shouldn’t have families. Passing on the family line isn’t their job. Their real job involves the possibility of a very short life span, not enough for true fatherhood.
The captain is just winding the sergeant up. He knows the man can’t help what his men do off-duty, at least not in this capacity.
Kirschen knows the army really well. But he’s really just a kid. He thinks he’s a man of the world about sex, but he only knows the male side. The female side scares him silly.
At home he would be yelling, “MAMA!”
Sergeant Kirschen is a good-enough surrogate. It’s why the German military calls a first sergeant, “die Kompagniemutter.”
One of my favorite panels; the lines and hearts expanding outwards from the letter, like it’s the center of the universe.
Another reminder why one should never squall, “I’m not a Feminist!” Especially if you are a female and you can read.
Stinz really isn’t doing the future of his people any favors here. They could end up like the Ghurkas.
©2011-2012 Donna Barr | Powered by WordPress with ComicPress | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑

Twitter
Facebook
DonnaBarr.com