Saturday, April 11, 2026

In the Wastelands












Once again, AI supplies legs for a legless dragon (a Wyrm) in the Wasteland. Some of these are more curated than others.

Friday, April 10, 2026

Some Wubble-Yous and a Zed












I decided to start from the bottom of the list today and so we have wolves, witches, wizards, woses, and wogglebugs, and last of all Zeb and Me. Unless you make a strict point of it, the AI seems to think all dragonlike creatures have four legs, and witches and hags tend to be smoothed out into pleasant old ladies, which makes me speculate about company policy. Most of my prompts have to be negative: No Music, No Magic Effects unless specified, No Talking unless specified. Most of the animation generation direction, if left on its own, reminds me of the Harold Zoid school of production.


'Warnie': Into the Archive


Inkling, Historian, Soldier, and Brother: A Life of Warren Hamilton Lewis by Don King

The first full biography of Warren Lewis, brother and secretary of C. S. Lewis (2023, 435 Pages)

Detailing the life of Warren Hamilton Lewis, author Don W. King gives us new insights into the life and mind of Warren’s famous brother, C. S. Lewis, and also demonstrates how Warren’s experiences provide an illuminating window into the events, personalities, and culture of 20th-century England. Inkling, Historian, Soldier, and Brother will appeal to those interested in C. S. Lewis and British social and cultural history.

As a career soldier, Warren served in France during the nightmare of World War I and was later posted to Sierra Leone and Shanghai. On his retirement from the army, he became an active member of the household at the Kilns, the residence outside Oxford that he co-owned with his brother and Mrs. Janie Moore, and he played an important role in the relationship between his brother and Joy Davidman, the woman who became C. S. Lewis’s wife. A talented writer and accomplished amateur historian, Warren also researched and wrote seven books on 17th-century French history.

Inkling, Historian, Soldier, and Brother examines Warren Lewis’s role as an original member of the Oxford Inklings—that now famous group of novelists, thinkers, clergy, poets, essayists, medical men, scholars, and friends who met regularly to drink beer; discuss books, ideas, history, and writers; and share pieces of their own writing for feedback from the group.

Drawing from Warren Lewis’s unpublished diaries, his letters, the memoir he wrote about his family, and other primary materials, this biography is an engaging story of a fascinating life, period of history, and of the warm and loving relationship between Warren and his brother, which lasted throughout their lives. – Amazon.

I ordered it on April 4th, and it arrived on the 9th; I had not expected it until the 14th. It is the first new book I’ve bought since February 21st, so that’s a sort of record for me lately. The first time I became aware of it on Amazon, it was $50; but it finally came down enough for me not to feel guilty about ordering it: $24.87. It is in pristine condition, but being from a university press it is in teeny-tiny, eye-straining typeset. I opened it to discover that it had been signed by the author, Don King (no, not the one who might first spring to mind), and so joins my little collection of autographed copies. Just the name, no inscription.

Warnie has always interested me as being what you might call an ‘ordinary’ adjunct to the Inklings circle, though as this biography points out, that might only be in comparison to such titans as C. S. and Tolkien. Quite extraordinary in his own right, a published author in a time when merely being ‘Jack’s’ brother would have cut very little ice. Though of course it is mainly the Inkling connection that draws me to his biography now.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

The Bone Pile















Sorry, no animations today - yet. I'm having some difficulties with my service. Also, I went bed at 11 PM last night, and got up at 1 AM; I haven't been able to sleep since, though I've gone cross-eyed with the need for it. Maybe posting this heap of dry bones will help me relax, one more daily chore checked off. Cue the Ray Harryhausen music.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Rated R for Rip-Roaring












For Mom must be my oldest surviving drawing; it's from grade school and shellaqued on cardboard stock, which probably accounts for its survival. Alchemy is also pretty old, from middle school; a proposed illustration for a book report. 'Ooda thought what we could do with 'em fifty years later?


Nine Short Films in Search of a Venue










The first, Brockhouse, is a remake of the first animation I ever tried, I think, and Weary Gandalf a remake of what could well be the second. Both from my own drawings. Master Belmok's muzzle somewhat degenerates into a huge nose.