Home » Lost Forest » Did the plumber sell Cherry a gold-plated water heater?

Did the plumber sell Cherry a gold-plated water heater?

Here we begin a week of post-assignment family time. The family time segment has always been part of the strip (as far as I can determine), but Jules Rivera likes to expand on this period, injecting more than her predecessors did. In the old days after Mark came home from an assignment, the family would eat, then Mark and Cherry would sit in the living room or on the front porch and chat about how dangerous Mark’s assignments were. Then Mark would get a phone call and he’d be off on another trip. That process hasn’t changed all that much, except Rivera likes to flesh out this time with “everyday problems” and activities to add more dimensionality..

Anyway, there’s a nice duck landing by the Trail cabin. Not sure when this lake (or river?) showed up again. And is that a side door? We know that the front door is centered, with a porch. And we recently discovered that the back door has a stairway leading down an incline, suggesting the cabin is on some kind of promontory. Maybe this is a separate, adjunct building housing their shower and bathroom facilities. Rivera has a transactional approach to the strip, such that if the Trail cabin or its property needs to look a certain way, it will. I don’t know if it’s because Rivera doesn’t care or if she just needs the changes to fit the current storyline.

I leave Mark’s dialog in panel 2 (“I feel at ease after a good shower.”) for you to comment on, if you feel inspired or coerced by your own sense of values.

Art Dept. Panel 1 is a nicely designed and illustrated composition. However, I’m puzzled by the design of  panel 2. Rivera employs her standard panel arc compositional device. However, we can see that both sides of the arc are not drawn along the same curve and will not connect. This is unusual for Rivera, who has drawn this device hundreds of times. I don’t recall another case with this kind of looseness. Then consider the figure of Mark. At first, I thought the head was too big. But I covered up the arms, so the body and head don’t look too out of proportion. I think it must be the arms are too small for the torso. Rivera can usually handle foreshortening much better than this, even though she can be inconsistent. We know that Rivera deliberately distorts figures, though her motivation is not always obvious. However, these two quirks do not line up with her eclectic (or crude, if you wish) style. Was she in a hurry? Had a bad day? Did she let one of her fellow artist friends ghost-draw the panel? I dunno, but it is visually jarring.

4 thoughts on “Did the plumber sell Cherry a gold-plated water heater?

  1. I must say, the mallard in panel 1 may be here best panel, in what, 5 years? Let’s hope we see ole Mark heading back to the woods. Campfires, bears, just plain old northwoods wildlife. We’ll see!

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    • Always nice to hear from Mark the Contrarian Commenter! But I agree, it would be nice to see Trail deal with an “old fashioned” story at least once a year. Just turns out that the last Trail to do this was Rusty!

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    • I agree the first panel is very well done. As an old Trailhead, it harkens back to a more naturally focused strip, even if the duck is just clip art. Sadly, Jules will probably give us more internet grifters, doofuses, wacos than bears, poachers and black hats in the months ahead.

      But I am still following the strip…largely to enjoy George’s commentary.

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  2. Mark originally went to the AI conference to make money to pay for the water heater. Bill Ellis, more or less, stiffed him. I doubt Mark’s blog is profitable. Better enjoy the water heater while you can, folks. The installers aren’t going to be too happy when the bill’s past due.

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