Skip to content

Tag: tom gauld

Major Styles in Troll Bridge Architecture

major-styles-troll

Tom Gauld.

Comments closed

The Final Novel in the Series is Available in the Following Formats

final-novel

Tom Gauld

Comments closed

A Cartoon About Football by Tom Gauld

football

It’s possible this is only funny if you’re British, but hey…

Did you know that Tom has prints of his Guardian cartoons for sale?

Comments closed

The Rediscovered Classic

Rediscovered-Classic-Gauld

Tom Gauld for The New Yorker.

Comments closed

A Case for Sherlock Holmes…

221B
Tom Gauld.

Comments closed

Tom Gauld’s Fall Library

CoverStory-Fall-Library-Tom-Gauld-690-938
Tom Gauld‘s new cover for The New Yorker.

(Happy Canadian Thanksgiving!)

1 Comment

How the Literary Prize Winner is Chosen

literary-prizes-tom-gauld
Tom Gauld gets to the heart of the matter once again. (Although if Edward St. Aubyn’s recent satire Lost For Words is anything to go by, I would have expected more cock-ups, backstabbing, and adultery!)

Comments closed

Happier Times

happier-future

Tom Gauld

Comments closed

Previously Unknown Chapters of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

charlie-tom-gauld

Tom Gauld

Comments closed

Authors’ Cocktails

hard-day

I didn’t see this weekend’s Guardian, but I assume Tom‘s cartoon is in reference to Olivia Laing’s article about 20th century female writers who drank, a follow-up to her excellent book The Trip to Echo Spring, which examines the link between creativity and alcohol through the lives F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Tennessee Williams, John Berryman, John Cheever, and Raymond Carver:

Female writers haven’t been immune to the lure of the bottle, nor to getting into the kinds of trouble – the fights and arrests, the humiliating escapades, the slow poisoning of friendships and familial relations – that have dogged their male colleagues. Jean Rhys was briefly in Holloway prison for assault; Elizabeth Bishop more than once drank eau de cologne, having exhausted the possibilities of the liquor cabinet. But are their reasons for drinking different? And how about society’s responses, particularly in the lubricated, tipsy 20th century; the golden age, if one can call it that, of alcohol and the writer?

Comments closed

The Set Text

set-text

Tom Gauld.

Comments closed

Easily Influenced

easily-influencedI’ve posted Tom Gauld‘s cartoons for The Guardian pretty regularly here for the past few years (and you can read my 2011 Q & A with him here), but he’s really been on great form of late. If you still haven’t checked out his collection of cartoons, You’re All Just Jealous of My Jetpack, I highly recommend you do.

Comments closed