Latest Comics
West of House
Seven Favorite Books Without Commentary… or at least much commentary
Just Only John by Jack Kent – A boy with an active imagination who wants more.
The Wuggie Norple Story by Daniel Pinkwater & Tomie dePaolo – It’s got a cat in it and a whistle fixer- what else could you ask for?
Big Bad Bruce by Bill Peet. My intro to Bill Peet back when I was “Mr. Bruce”
The Brave Little Toaster by Thomas Disch. It was a book before a movie!
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline It was a book before a movie too and while I completely understand how difficult it would be to hold an audiences attention for hours of watching someone play Pac Man, “Never judge a book by its movie”
Dream Park by Larry Niven & Steven Barnes. Holographic Roll Playing Game, with a murder mystery & in awesome amusement park? What’s not to love? Grab some cargo and find a copy.
Another Fine Myth (Part of the Myth Adventures Series) by Robert Lynn Aspirin. My introduction to the genre “Comic Fantasy.” Full of puns and an amazing multiverse full of demons. As I always recommend when it comes to series- start at the beginning with Skeeve & Garkin.
Epic Fail & Drawn to Be Creative

Creative Challenge 2019 aka “Resolutions?!? We don’t need no stinking resolutions!”
- We can start off with me actually becoming an adult- when there isn’t anyone alive anymore to call you that annoying childhood nickname- you realize you aren’t a child anymore. The passing of my mom changed my perspective on the world & my place in it. I’ll be dealing with those ramifications for a very long time. I spent a lot of 2018 just keeping busy to avoid thinking about it.
- The “finishing” of the school renovation (which still isn’t completely finished) has been draining both physically & emotionally. It has tried my patience and I just hope that the 2019-20 school year starts with everything finally being in place.
- Most recently, managing two robotics tournaments in the space of a month… two different robotics programs. Pushed this fiercely independent introvert way out of his comfort zone & even closer to the breaking point.
2018 Holiday Letter
New & Improved Classroom Comic Library
So, last night I participated in the monthly #educomix twitter chat which has kinda made me look at what is in my classroom graphic novel library. Please understand, for the last 2 years I have not been a classroom teacher, I have been a “special” teacher meaning I see every student in the school one day a week. I did the math and figured I see kids somewhere around 27 hours a year. I pick a handful of kids to check out one book when they leave my class. If I let everyone my entire class time would be used checking out books. Sure some books go missing, things happen. The saddest thing that has ever happened was when a student returned to my room handing back the book he had just checked out. I asked him why and he replied, “My teacher wont let me read this, it’s not at my level.” My solution- I asked him his ZPD and found him books at his level. My question is whatever happened to pleasure reading? If I stuck to books “at my level” I’d only be able to read dissertations.
When I first started teaching, 30 years ago I remember bringing in my comics as a way to teach my first graders how to sort and classify things. They thought it was cool and my collection got organized, win-win. Since then I’ve always had some kind of a graphic novel library in my classroom. The only rule was you could not only have comic books. My personal rule was to avoid comic strip compilations and focus on publishers other than Marvel & DC. That doesn’t mean I don’t have Spider-Man or Batman it just means that is a small part of my library. That can be harder than it seems. The biggest problem has been replacing books – they go out of print and no one collects all ages comics. I must thank @comiccarnival for looking out for me. I come in and there are pages from Previews with books circled and notes next to them. So teachers get to know your local comic shop. Don’t just drop by on Free Comic Book Day and ask for class sets of whatever they have left. Talk to them about the books they have, ask for suggestions- you’ll find out quickly what they think is appropriate for your kids.
Caveat Emptor: While kids are open to a lot of ideas, parents have a lot of baggage and think their child understands situations the same way they do. This is how books get banned, principals get called, bad things happen to good people. So here’s what’s in my graphic novel library- remember what I have might not work for your class.
In no particular order (s= series):
- Bone (s) – Jeff Smith
- Amulet (s) – Kazu Kibushi
- Ordinary People Change the World (s) Brad Meltzer & Chris Eliopoulos
- Science Comics (s) – various Published by First Second
- The Baby Sitter’s Club (s) – various published by Scholastic
- Mighty Jack (s) – Ben Hatke
- Zita the Space Girl( s) – Ben Hatke
- Cleopatra in Space (s) – Mike Maihack
- Leave It to Chance (s) – James Robinson & Paul Smith
- Secret Coders (s) Gene Luen Yang & Mike Holmes
- Salem Hyde (s) – Frank Cammuso
- Hilo (s) – Judd Winick
- Giants Beware – Jorge Aguirre and Rafael Rosado
- Dragons Beware – Jorge Aguirre and Rafael Rosado
- Monsters Beware – Jorge Aguirre and Rafael Rosado
- G Man (s) – Chris Giarrusso
- Red’s Planet (s) – Eddie Pittman
- Super Dinosaur (s) – Robert Kirkman & Jason Howard
- Smash (s) – Chris A. Bolton and Kyle Bolton
- Little Guardians (s) – Ed Cho & Lee Cherolis
- Dreamland Chronicles (s) – Scott Christian Sava
- Star Drop (s) – Mark Oakley
- Smile – Raina Telgemeier
- Sisters – Raina Telgemeier
- Ghosts – Raina Telgemeier
- Drama – Raina Telgemeier
- El Deafo – CeCe Bell
- Solution Squad – Jim McClain
- Reading with Pictures – Various
- Time Shifters – Chris Grine
- All’s Faire in Middle School – Victoria Jamieson
- Roller Girls – Victoria Jamieson
- Pigs Might Fly – Nick Abadzis and Jerel Dye
- The Adventures of Superhero Girl – Faith Hicks
- Mouse Guard (s) – David Petersen
- Jellaby (s) – Kean Soo
- Spidey – Robbie Thompson & Nick Bradshaw
- Camp Midnight – Steven Seagle and Jason Katzenstein
- Anna’s Ghost – Vera Brosgol
- Making Friends – Kristen Gudsnuk
- The Courageous Princess (s) – Rod Espinosa
- Howtoons: Tools of Mass Construction – Nick Dragotta & Saul Griffith
- Howtoons (Re)Ignition – Fred Van Lente & Tom Fowler
- Kid Beowulf (s) – Alexis E. Fajardo
- Animal Crackers – Scott Christian Sava & Mike Holmes
- Herobear & the Kid – Mike Kunkel
- Sunny Side Up – Jennifer Holm & Matt Holm
- Power Pack Vol.1 – Marc Sumerak & Gurihiru
- Tiny Titans (s) – Art Baltazar & Franco Aureliani
- Teen Titans Go (s) – various
- Lunch Lady (s) – Jarrett J. Krosoczka
- Leon Protector of the Playground – Jamar Nichols
- Buzz Boy – John Gallagher
- RoBoy Red – Rich Faber & John Gallagher
- New Brighton Archeological Society (s) – Mark Andrew Smith & Andrew Weldon
- Little Tails (s) – Frederic Brremaud & various
- Cowboy -Chris Eliopoulos
- Phoebe and her Unicorn (s) – Dana Simpson
- Making Scents – Arthur Yorinks and Braden Lamb
- Cosmic Commandos – Chris Eliopoulos
- Monster Mayhem – Chris Eliopoulos
- Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales (s) – Nathan Hale
- Comic Squad – Jennifer Holm & Matthew Holm
- Albert the Alien (s) – Trevor Mueller and Gabriel Bautista
- Star Scouts (s) – Mike Lawrence
- Space Battle Lunchtime – Natalie Riess
- Suee and the Shadow – Ginger Ly & Molly Park
- Mr. Wolf’s Class (s) – Aron Nels Steinke
- Geeky Fab 5 (s)- Liz Lareau and Lucy Lareau
- Billy Batson & the Magic of Shazam (s)- various
- Sheets – Brenna Thummler
- DC Secret Society (s) – Derek Fridolfs and Dustin Nguyen
- Nameless City (s) – Faith Hicks
- The Princess Who Saved Herself –Jonathan Coulton and Greg Pak
- Amelia Rules – Jimmy Gownley
- The Dumbest Idea Ever – Jimmy Gownley
- Dream Jumper (s) – Greg Grunberg and Lucas Turnbloom
- Kitten Construction Company – John Patrick Green
- Crafty Cat (s) – Charise Mericle Harper
- Regal Academy (s) – various
- Dare Detectives (s) – Ben Caldwell
- City on the Other Side – Mairghread Scott and Robin Robinson
- Cucumber Quest (s) – Gigi D.G.
- The Creepy Case Files of Marco Maloo – Drew Weing
- Catsronauts (s) – Drew Brockington
- Supergirl: Cosmic Adventures in 8th Grade – Landry Walker and Eric Jones
- Quirk’s Quest (s) – Robert Christie and Deborah Lang
- March Gran Prix (s) – Kean Soo
- Binky the Space Cat – Ashley Spires
We’re Going on an Adventure!







Track to Track: MINI Takes The States 2016

MINIons Take The States t-minus 7 days
- Pants (jeans, and pants with zip off legs)
- Shorts (maybe, I always get myself into trouble with sunburns so I’ll flip a coin at the last minute)
- Shirts (MINI related- this is one of the only times you can get away with a MINI shirt every day) any in particular? I’ve got a few on my short list, and at least one required.
- Maybe a shirt with a collar.
- Meds, toiletries, underwear, socks
- Two pairs of shoes – In my experience feet start to rebel when you wear the same shoes for too long,
- Electronics chargers (for iDevices and batteries)
- An iPad
- My sketchbook or a Bristol pad or both
- Drawing stuff – pencils, erasers, pens
- Glasses cleaning cloth
- iPhone with Waze and MTTS apps
- FRS radio with headset set to 7:21
- 30 oz. Yeti knockoff cup
- Snacks – trail mix, beef jerky, that kind of stuff.
- Sunglasses
- Sunscreen SPF 50
- My Tilley and a ball cap.
- Windshield cleaning wipes
- Tire pressure gauge (in the glovebox -always)
- An umbrella
- A towel
- A blanket
- A waterproof jacket or pullover
- Various cleaning supplies (Microfiber towels, Griot’s Speedshine) most of this stuff is already there.

- Shirts, one for every day (yes, he has enough for even longer trips)
- Socks
- Two pair of shoes
- Book bag filled with buttons – no he doesn’t have a specific button like he had in 2014. With the whole “premium” rebranding he wasn’t sure whether the background would be black or white so he decided not to this time around. So he has some of his monkey buttons.
- A hat or two