Not really since his work is so unreadable that he triggers double vision whenever I look at it.
His abuse of speech balloons never ceases to amaze and horrify. So amateurishly incompetent.
This time we're treated to lettering in pencil and two colors of ink for no reason I can figure out. As usual, words, and even parts of words, are in bold for no reason I can figure out. (
Tonight?) Words run out of the balloons and even out of the frames, for no reason I can figure out. And when they stay where they belong, it's often the result of bizarre (i.e., incorrect) hyphenation. (Ce-iling? Sal-mon?)
Even amateur cartoonist don't have balloon tails pointing to characters' armpits, thighs, crotches and asses.
His torture of the lowly apostrophe continues with no relief in sight for the poor reader. How exactly does the use of an apostrophe change the pronunciation of
drawers when it is rendered as
draw'rs? What missing letter or letters does the apostrophe replace in
meet'cha? What missing letter or letters does the apostrophe replace in
'else when it is used to mean
otherwise, which is one of the primary definitions of
else, as in, "Study, else you will fail"? And he never uses the two apostrophes that are needed when
'n' is used to represent
and. He ain't even the Bad Boy of Third-Grade Punctuation.
He also can't keep himself from thinking that
jiggabeaux is really clever (and not racist at all). His idea that U.S. territories were under the authority of military governors who were elected to their posts reveals an astonishing -- but no longer surprising -- ignorance of U.S. history.
The idea that Sweet was given a degree in English as the academic equivalent of a participation trophy is steadily gaining traction with me.