If you’re just joining us, where have you been?? This is the conclusion of a series on my demented mind. If you’re lost, try reading all the other posts first.
Bookstix IV was pretty good, it actually had some semblance of a plot. But for Bookstix V, I went all-out with the story. There were pages of text between every so many drawings. The basic gist of the story was that the aliens from Bookstix IV were actually “archaliens,” sent to scout out our planet. They killed most of the inhabitants, and now the more powerful “nualiens” had arrived. The only earthling armies left were the Americans and Arabians. And believe it or not, they actually teamed up with each other, in order to have any kind of hope against their new alien overlords. The surviving earthlings were known as “Rebyls.” The entire book followed these star wars of the worlds for independence days.
Another improvement in Bookstix V came in the artistic media. All blood was drawn with colored pencils: red for rebyls, and purple for aliens. In addition I used a drafting pencil for a lot of the background work, which had much softer lead than your standard bubble-filling #2 pencil. So without further ado, here are some pages from the book.
First up is some of that text I was talking about. This comes from the book’s introduction, and I think is probably the best writing in the whole book. I still like it, although I have a problem with the way it posits the big bang theory and the theory of evolution as competing theories trying to explain the same thing, when that isn’t at all accurate. I think most of all I like the way the drawings accent the text, and IMHO this is pretty well-written stuff here, except for the last paragraph maybe.
Moving on to battles, here we have the first one, which takes place on the Rebyl Warship. Since it was in outer space and there was no gravity, I drew this with the speech bubbles going in all directions. The explosions with the starfish-shaped light beams are from antimatter guns. If you look closely you can see quite a clear difference in the darkness of the two types of pencils I used, especially with the text where I probably used 0.5 mm lead in a mechanical pencil. I like the alien who is shooting the guy with two guns at the same time, splitting him into three parts. Awesome!
Here is the second battle, which I think was meant to be happening in parallel with the first battle. This is the aliens’ mother ship, being attacked by the rebyls. Things to note: a painful alien examination of human reproductive organs (since they seem to like to do that during abductions), and a reference the lyrics to Closer by Nine Inch Nails. I’m not sure why, I never really liked NIN all that much. Also, some jokes from the two warship pictures: both of them have someone from the opposite group wondering what kind of spaceship this is, and in both cases someone is reprogramming the ship to have a destination of hell. Because spaceships can travel there you know.
There was more of that story line that I won’t recount here. Basically we find that the aliens are seeking Iron Trinicklide (FeNi3), a substance that is plentiful in the earth’s core, but has been almost entirely depleted on the aliens’ home planet. Throughout the book the aliens fight their way to a mine in South Africa, the deepest in the world, and start blasting a hole into the earth (to get to the core). The book ends with a four page conclusion, which reveals that the aliens got the rock they wanted and left our planet in ruin. That was four pages of single-spaced text, at a time when teachers struggled to get students to write a five paragraph essay.
I tried to start Bookstix VI: Vigilante Justice, whose title page is pictured here. Unfortunately I lost interest after half-drawing a single battle. The idea was that the earth was in chaos from the events of book 5, with no police, military, or government, and now the only way to survive was to become a vigilante. I had intended to improve by using black ink (like, from a pen) for some of the detail work, and everything was to be drawn on plain white paper. You can see this on the title page actually. This was concluded at the beginning of my second semester of ninth grade, when I was fifteen. I guess I just got bored with drawing these things.
Before we go, here are some random bits of information that I either forgot to mention earlier this week, or couldn’t work into the narrative.
Most of my books were dedicated to “people in the future reading this after I die.” Hopefully that won’t be until I have grandchildren that find these drawings and say “mom what was wrong with grandpa??”
If you’re wondering, I pretyped about 90% of the material in these five posts in one sitting, last Sunday. That’s just one of many ways I maintained a quality level consistent with the The Lord Of The Rings movies.
I was originally only going to scan one drawing representative of the whole work, but I started looking through my drawings and realized there was way too much stuff worth sharing.
To give more props, Kevin was doing stick drawings first, then Keith, Garrison, Peter, and I all borrowed the idea to varying degrees over the next three years. It was definitely either Kevin or me who produced the most of these things though.
While I was scanning these things, I scanned Garrison’s entry in my eight grade yearbook. He made a post on his blog about it. Go check it out if you haven’t already.
Anyone found on the back page of a sheet of paper would be executed by a character from Mortal Kombat. I really liked fatalities.
A teacher did actually see these books once, when I let someone (I think Keith) borrow one of my books (I think the first one) to read it, and he was doing this during class and it got confiscated. Either Mrs. Mims didn’t understand what it was or she didn’t look inside it, because we got it back later without getting into any trouble.
Well that concludes this week of Kip’s drawings from when he was 12-15 years old. Let me know if you think this whole five-part series was cool or if it was way too much crap to read. If you guys like it I may do something similar in the future, if I ever come up with a topic deserving several posts. I hope you’ve enjoyed it. And hopefully you’re not too much more scared of me now than you were a week ago. Have a good Labor Day weekend!
November 18, 2:26 pm
Kip, you’ve got a real messy spam problem.
November 18, 9:43 pm
Yeah, I changed my honeypot code a bit, which turned out to just make it useless. Hopefully it is fixed now.. :-/
November 20, 7:53 pm
well indonesia is part of southeast asia so that would mean it is part of the east. southeast asia is thailand, cambodia (and the countries around those) singapore, philippines, malaysia, and indonesia and a few other countries in the area. i get this from the southeast asia games.