Tuesday, April 8, 2025

William Hamilton: Advice to a Revolutionary

An original New Yorker cartoon by William Hamilton was sold on eBay in January, fifty-four years after its publication. A family is seen seated at the dinner table:

"But, darling, many very successful young revolutionaries—our own
Thomas Jefferson among them—dressed for dinner."
William Hamilton
Original art
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 31

Hamilton handles all the details of upper class life exquisitely. 

"But, darling, many very successful young revolutionaries—our own
Thomas Jefferson among them—dressed for dinner."
William Hamilton
Original art
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 31

Verso

Verso detail

"But, darling, many very successful young revolutionaries—our own
Thomas Jefferson among them—dressed for dinner."
William Hamilton
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 31

"But, darling, many very successful young revolutionaries—our own
Thomas Jefferson among them—dressed for dinner."
William Hamilton
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 31

William Hamilton
eBay listing ended January 31, 2025


William Hamilton
eBay item description

[End of eBay listing]



"But, darling, many very successful
young revolutionaries—our own
Thomas Jefferson among them—
dressed for dinner."
William Hamilton
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 31


"But, darling, many very successful
young revolutionaries—our own
Thomas Jefferson among them—
dressed for dinner."
William Hamilton
Original art
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 31

With cartoons by Smilby and William Hamilton


Smilby, by the way, was the pen name of Francis Wilford-Smith (1927-2009). Tax day falls on April 15, but cartoons about contentious audits are good year round.
Smilby
The New Yorker, January 9, 1971, p. 30







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Monday, April 7, 2025

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #939

The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #939 appeared in the issue of April 7, 2025. A couple is seated in a restaurant. Medusa is at the next table. The woman speaks; the man does not move. My entry appears below. The drawing is by Jason Adam Katzenstein—you know, JAK.

"I should let you know I'm blind."





These captions didn't last through the first course:

"You looked, didn't you?"
"Don't move—oh, you can't."
"Did the place suddenly get quiet?"
"How's the Mexican stone soup?"



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Sunday, April 6, 2025

Olivier's Copy of Monsieur Lambert by Jean-Jacques Sempé

Author and artist Jean-Jacques Sempé figuratively raises a hand-sketched glass to a book recipient. The volume, Monsieur Lambert (1985), originally belonged to one Olivier and it has a delightful souvenir drawing.

Jean-Jacques Sempé
AbeBooks listing accessed April 6, 2025







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Tuesday, April 1, 2025

The CartoonStock Cartoon Caption Contest No. 191

In the CartoonStock Caption Contest number 191, we find Mr. Monopoly sitting in his recliner holding the television remote. His wife looks on. Rich Uncle Pennybags is speaking.

 

The rules of the monthly cash prize contest have not changed (and neither has my description of them): Five dollars buys up to three entries. Real cash prizes are $500 for first place and $100 for each of five runners up. As of this writing, I've put $180 into the first thirty-six pay-to-play contests and this thirty-seventh challenge brings my total cash outlay up to $185. Having achieved runner-up status with two previous entries, I've collected $200 from CartoonStock, so I'm still playing with the house's money, thank goodness. In fact, so few contestants enter that the odds may generally be considered favorable even for us less-gifted caption writers. My three entries are shown belowThe cartoonist is Kyle Bravo, new to the blog.


"CNBC is entertaining."
"I can't see through the Community Chest."
"No one needs more than $200."






The Judges Deliberate
Video added April 6, 2025




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