Rawhide Kid
![]() |
![]() 1967MARVEL COMICS RAWHIDE KID 61 SHOTGUN TO DEADWOOD 12 CENT COMIC G VG $0.99 Time Remaining: 14h 41m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 38 GD $10.20 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $10.20 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 68 VG+ $9.95 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $9.95 |
![]() THE RAWHIDE KID 1 VOL3 MARVEL COMICS COMICS $0.50 Time Remaining: 1d 12h 52m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 44 VG $16.05 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $16.05 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 57 FN $16.90 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $16.90 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID COMIC BOOK MARVEL 38 FEBRUARY 1964 ATTACKED BY THE RED RAVEN $5.83 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 7h 19m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 51 VG $11.30 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $11.30 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID COMIC BOOK MARVEL 62 FEB 1968 THE RETURN OF DRAKO $4.99 Time Remaining: 2d 7h 22m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 52 VG $11.30 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $11.30 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 45 GD VG $12.70 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $12.70 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID COMIC BOOK MARVEL 60 OCT 1967 MASSACRE AT MEDICINE BEND $4.99 Time Remaining: 2d 7h 26m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 57 1967 Good $5.99 Time Remaining: 11d 12h 33m Buy It Now for only: $5.99 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 56 $1.99 Time Remaining: 2d 11h 31m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 66 GD $3.15 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $3.15 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 60 VG $8.50 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $8.50 |
![]() 12 COMICS RAWHIDE KID1968 67 VF $9.85 Time Remaining: 2d 14h 16m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 71 VG+ $6.80 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 12m Buy It Now for only: $6.80 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 42 VG FN 50 Marvel 1964 No Reserve $7.35 (4 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 24m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 45 VG $14.40 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $14.40 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 98 VG $2.80 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 15m Buy It Now for only: $2.80 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 43 VG+ 45 Marvel 1964 No Reserve $7.35 (4 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 25m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 41 GD $8.20 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $8.20 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 63 FN $12.15 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $12.15 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 44 FN 60 Marvel 1965 No Reserve $7.35 (4 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 26m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 50 FN $18.05 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $18.05 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 45 VG+ 45 Origin Marvel 1965 No Reserve $15.50 (8 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 27m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 65 FN+ $16.05 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $16.05 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 67 FN+ $16.05 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $16.05 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 55 66 TWO GUN KID 78 83 84 Marvel 5 issue western lot $13.64 Time Remaining: 2d 15h 28m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 43 FN $27.55 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $27.55 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 93 1971 Marvel Comics DICK AYERS TOM SUTTON FINE condition $0.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 18h 19m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 43 VG $12.15 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $12.15 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 69 APRIL 1969 MARVEL COMIC $6.15 Time Remaining: 10d 9h 5m Buy It Now for only: $6.15 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 134 VG $0.99 Time Remaining: 2d 18h 36m |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 53 AUG 1966 MARVEL COMIC $3.89 Time Remaining: 9d 19h 12m Buy It Now for only: $3.89 |
![]() The Rawhide Kid The Sensational Seven Ron Zimmerman Trade Paperback TPB Marvel $3.99 Time Remaining: 2d 18h 42m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 55 VG+ $9.30 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $9.30 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 71 FN+ $12.15 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 12m Buy It Now for only: $12.15 |
![]() CGC 94 NM RAWHIDE KID 65 WHITE PAGES $265.00 Time Remaining: 2d 19h 29m Buy It Now for only: $295.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 44 VF $48.00 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $48.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 61 Strict VF Silver Age SHARP $21.60 Time Remaining: 2d 16h 3m Buy It Now for only: $21.60 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 117 1973 Stan Lee and Larry Lieber Jack Kirby $0.99 Time Remaining: 2d 21h 37m |
![]() MARVEL MASTERWORKS RAWHIDE KID VOL 2 VARIANT 87 55 $27.50 Time Remaining: 20d 22h 29m Buy It Now for only: $27.50 |
![]() Original RAWHIDE KID Vintage Lot of 15 Marvel Comic Books + BONUS 1965 1971 NR $27.95 Time Remaining: 3d 16h 42m Buy It Now for only: $34.95 |
![]() rawhide kid 29 gvg 30 kirby $27.00 Time Remaining: 10d 20h Buy It Now for only: $27.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 46 VG $16.05 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $16.05 |
![]() Western Team Up 1 w Rawhide Kid Dakota Kid 1973 Very Good Marvel 20 $2.49 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 3d 20h 13m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 47 VG $11.30 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $11.30 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID COMIC BOOK MARVEL 60 OCT 1967 MASSACRE AT MEDICINE BEND $4.99 Time Remaining: 4d 6h 40m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 56 VG $11.30 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 11m Buy It Now for only: $11.30 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 42 GD VG $5.15 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 10m Buy It Now for only: $5.15 |
![]() Rawhide Kid Comic 70 SILVER AGE MARVEL $0.99 Time Remaining: 4d 9h 48m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 50 1966 GD VG 30 Kid Colt crossover $5.33 Time Remaining: 10d 9h 47m Buy It Now for only: $5.33 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 108 CGC 96 ow w Larry Lieber Marvel Bronze Age Comic Western $9.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 4d 16h 52m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 84 VG $4.60 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 14m Buy It Now for only: $4.60 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 36 Marvel Comics 1963 western $17.50 Time Remaining: 13d 12h 28m Buy It Now for only: $17.50 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID s 42 47 SILVER AGE LOT OF 2 $7.00 Time Remaining: 4d 18h 22m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 45 Origin of the Rawhide Kid $59.99 Time Remaining: 26d 16h 31m Buy It Now for only: $59.99 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 17 1st Origin 1960 Atlas aka Marvel $15.50 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 4d 20h 10m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 74 Original 1955 Series $3.00 Time Remaining: 3d 15h 20m Buy It Now for only: $3.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 125 VF NM $12.45 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 16m Buy It Now for only: $12.45 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 32 1963 Atlas aka Marvel Exceptional $16.00 (4 Bids) Time Remaining: 4d 20h 14m |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 40 G Condition $10.00 Time Remaining: 24d 15h 57m Buy It Now for only: $10.00 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 3738394041424344 western 1963 $299.99 Time Remaining: 9d 18h 47m Buy It Now for only: $299.99 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 33 1963 Atlas aka Marvel $0.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 4d 20h 17m |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 73 Marvel Comics 1969 western $15.00 Time Remaining: 13d 18h 11m Buy It Now for only: $15.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid Marvel Vol 1 No 143 Jan 1978 35c F VF $5.00 Time Remaining: 4d 21h 5m Buy It Now for only: $7.00 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 67 DEC 1968 LIEBER ROTH TRIMPE $4.49 Time Remaining: 10d 8h 31m Buy It Now for only: $4.49 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 37 $18.00 Time Remaining: 24d 20h 11m Buy It Now for only: $18.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 5 VG+ Maneely Brown Super Bright $35.00 Time Remaining: 4d 22h 41m |
![]() Marvel Comics Rawhide Kid Number 117 November 1973 VG to NM $3.99 Time Remaining: 29d 9h 51m Buy It Now for only: $3.99 |
![]() Marvel comics Rawhide Kid western action 1978 collectibles hobbies $0.99 Time Remaining: 5d 2h 57m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 129 VF $9.05 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 16m Buy It Now for only: $9.05 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 98 FN $10.20 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 15m Buy It Now for only: $10.20 |
![]() Marvel Comics Kid Colt Apache Kid Rawhide Kid Book Lot Bronze Age $10.00 Time Remaining: 5d 17h 23m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 1955 88 GD VG $2.90 Time Remaining: 25d 2h 14m Buy It Now for only: $2.90 |
![]() WESTERN TEAM UP 1 Rawhide Kid NM 92 $49.99 Time Remaining: 6d 19h 11m Buy It Now for only: $60.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 17 Marvel 1960CLASSIC JACK KIRBY $650.00 Time Remaining: 20d 20h 20m Buy It Now for only: $650.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 71 Original 1955 Series $3.00 Time Remaining: 3d 15h 20m Buy It Now for only: $3.00 |
![]() 3 SGT Fury and 1 Rawhide Kid Comics $8.99 Time Remaining: 1d 18h 25m Buy It Now for only: $11.99 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 79 FN Super Bright Lieber Roth Williamson $5.00 Time Remaining: 11d 18h 51m Buy It Now for only: $5.00 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 52 Good Silver Age Western Marvel Comics 1966 $6.00 Time Remaining: 16d 19h 18m Buy It Now for only: $6.00 |
![]() Lot of 6 Comics Flash2ThorDr StrangeRawhide KidSgt Fury $9.99 Time Remaining: 1d 19h 6m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 117 1973 Good $2.99 Time Remaining: 22d 17h 52m Buy It Now for only: $2.99 |
![]() The Lone Ranger 1 2 3 4 5 Rawhide Kid 6 book lot Dynamite Entertainment Marvel $12.99 Time Remaining: 1d 19h 7m Buy It Now for only: $19.99 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 59 1967 $4.95 Time Remaining: 7d 14h 28m Buy It Now for only: $4.95 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 68 FEB 1969 LIEBER BUSCEMA ART $6.75 Time Remaining: 10d 8h 54m Buy It Now for only: $6.75 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 75 $6.99 Time Remaining: 1d 21h 49m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 35 Aug 1963 The Raven $14.99 Time Remaining: 10d 22h 27m Buy It Now for only: $14.99 |
![]() COMIC BOOK LOT TWO GUN KID 76 BILLY THE KID 122 BLAZING SIXGUNS 17 RAWHIDE KID $15.00 Time Remaining: 3d 9h 31m |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 119 VG $2.00 Time Remaining: 4d 11h 26m Buy It Now for only: $2.00 |
![]() MIGHTY MARVEL WESTERN 1 Good Rawhide Kid Colt Two Gun Giant Comics 1968 $6.00 Time Remaining: 18d 20h 35m Buy It Now for only: $6.00 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 110 VF 75 1973 $1.77 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 5d 19h 3m |
![]() Rawhide Kid 76 Original 1955 Series $2.25 Time Remaining: 3d 15h 21m Buy It Now for only: $2.25 |
![]() 2003 MAX COMICS RAWHIDE KID GAY INTEREST MARVEL THE RAWHIDE KID IS GAY FUNNY $2.99 Time Remaining: 18h 14m |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 55 Marvel Comics 1966 western $12.50 Time Remaining: 28d 21h 16m Buy It Now for only: $12.50 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 48 Good Silver Age Western Marvel Comics 1965 $6.00 Time Remaining: 18d 13h 38m Buy It Now for only: $6.00 |
![]() Rawhide Kid 57 Apr $1.00 Time Remaining: 6d 19h 18m Buy It Now for only: $2.00 |
![]() RAWHIDE KID 41 VG Condition $14.00 Time Remaining: 24d 15h 57m Buy It Now for only: $14.00 |
Rawhide Kid

Michael McGrady - Painting wide open spaces
Fred Oldfield Center hosts 21st Annual Celebration of Western & Wildlife Art Show & Auction, Oct. 8 to 10; meet guest of honor Michael McGrady, actor and painter!
"Icon" … It's a word that has lost much of its impact through overuse by our glib media. I don't mean "icon" in the sense of a religious image or, similarly, a command symbol on a computer monitor (everyone's personal shrine in the Internet Age, with direct access to the gods and demons of cyberspace: no clergy necessary). I mean it as an embodiment of a spirit and an era, a place and a time and an approach to life.
Ask Americans and observers of America what they see as this nation's most iconic figure – the embodiment of the American spirit – and I'll wager my milk money they'll say the cowboy.
To those of us who generally get no closer to a horse than watching a Clint Eastwood movie, "cowboy" in the classic sense is a broad term that includes different people who lived in the Old West of lore and legend, that rugged, untamed land west of the Mississippi from the mid-19th century to the early years of the 20th. We may use the "cowboy" loosely to mean a frontiersman, applying it to not just to ranchers and cattlemen but homesteaders and sheepherders, trappers and traders, prospectors and mountain men. All the same, it's that courage and independence amid solitude and long vistas that we revere – that unself-conscious individualism and rawhide-tough acceptance of danger and deprivation – that even nowadays inspires little kids, wearing cardboard Stetsons and plastic six-shooters from Wal-Mart, to walk with a swagger and imagine themselves riding the range.
The Old West – that's to say, the historical West of Zane Grey and Louis L'Amour, John Wayne and John Ford – supposedly ended with World War I, a cataclysm that marked the ends of eras in many other places as well. But the American West as a physical place (a very broad and topographically varied one) and the cowboy as an archetype live on, although the modern world tries to encroach a little more each day. Usually it succeeds, but not always …
That's because there is flesh-and-blood proof that the cowboy of yesteryear still walks with us: He's Fred Oldfield, onetime placer miner, ex-prizefighter, Army veteran, longtime cattle driver, renowned painter with an extensive and devoted following.
Raised on the Yakima Reservation, Fred, now 92, is a Washington cultural institution, a beloved mentor to the young artists (most on scholarships) who study with him at the nonprofit Fred Oldfield Western Heritage & Art Center (www.FredOldfieldCenter.org), located at the Puyallup Fairgrounds (home to another Washington cultural institution, during which Fred enthusiastically pitches in every spring and fall). Honored in 2003 and 2008 by the Washington State Senate and Governors Gary Locke and Christine Gregoire, respectively – they declared his 85th and 90th birthdays "Fred Oldfield Day" – Fred is a rare individual who has done much in his 92 years and still bubbles over with creative energy. While working in Alaska in his late teens, he started painting Western scenes on bunkhouse walls and linoleum tiles; over the years he would paint whole murals depicting historic events and sweeping landscapes for businesses like the Horseshoe Café in Bellingham and the Copper Creek Inn at Mt. Rainier; and he continues to fill canvases with stirring images of the cowboy life he lived and the vast and starkly beautiful terrain in which he lived it.
Actually, "authentic" is a good adjective to describe Fred Oldfield – for his achievements, certainly, but also for the person he is. For Fred is emblematic of a time and a place and a value system that seems endangered in this 21st century, threatened by the apathy, selfishness, sloth, moral laxity and general dumbing down of our society. He brings to us a heritage of barn raisings and caring neighbors happy to lend a hand; a strong work ethic and a sense of personal integrity in which one's word is a matter of honor, an agreement sealed with a handshake a solemn promise; and a sense of duty to one's community, especially the young and disadvantaged.
This is Fred Oldfield's West, and it's one commemorated during the Celebration of Western & Wildlife Art Show & Auction that The Fred Oldfield Center hosts each year – in fact this week, from Fri. to Sun., Oct. 8 to 10, in the Expo Hall (Gold Gate) at the Puyallup Fairgrounds. Show hours are Fri., 3 to 10 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.; and Sun., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
You'll be stirred by the flair and vision with which Western themes are embraced by more than 100 extremely talented artists – painters, illustrators, sculptors, carvers, weavers, photographers and jewelers – and you'll enjoy great country music by top-flight performers. There will also be live and silent auctions, art demonstrations, one-hour "quick-draw" challenges and meet-and-greets. Admission and parking are FREE, and proceeds from the show will benefit the Experience Art Program at The Fred Oldfield Center. It's an event the whole family will love!
But that's not all: This year's guest of honor is Federal Way native Michael McGrady, a masterful professional landscape painter (view his work at McGradyFineArt.com), an intrepid hang glider and an accomplished martial artist (he's the holder of two black belts) who also happens to be a highly successful TV and film actor. (Michael stars as Detective Daniel "Sal" Salinger on the TNT police drama "Southland," played Buchalter in the action-thriller series "Day Break" and has been in a slew of other shows, from "Grey's Anatomy" and "ER" to "The Mentalist," "Bones" and "Cold Case," with repeat appearances in "CSI: Miami," "Las Vegas," "24" and "Murder, She Wrote." His extensive filmography includes roles in "Evolution," "The Thin Red Line," "The Deep End of the Ocean," "Wyatt Earp" and "The Babe," in which he played Lou Gehrig opposite John Goodman as Babe Ruth).
Michael is passionate about art and especially painting, and I had a lot of questions about this important part of his life – and Fred Oldfield's place in it. He obliged by answering them with great eloquence and wit …
AmeriCollector: How long have you been an artist?
Michael: I have been an artist ever since I can remember. I started out hiding under my sheets at night with a flashlight and pencil and paper drawing dinosaurs and race cars. I was supposed to be sleeping (LOL). I have always been a doodler and often sketch on napkins, bit of paper, whatever is handy at the moment.
I have been painting for a little over 20 years, although I have been either drawing or sculpting for much longer. I started out sculpting soapstone in my late teens and Carrara marble not too many years after.
I never dreamed that one day I would be a selling professional artist. I recently had a solo show at one of the galleries that represent my work and sold eight painting within the first two weeks.
AC: What do you most enjoy about painting?
Michael: What I enjoy most is the solitude and the freedom to get lost in thought … lost in the world of the subject. The dance between right-brain and left-brain activity is like massaging the brain. When I paint, I often listen to different types of music from classical to Led Zeppelin to help transport me emotionally into the painting I happen to be working on. I've been accused of being a romantic and I suppose I am guilty of that: Give me my paints, a blank canvas, a glass of good wine and I am in heaven. Riding my Harley with my wife on the back does the same thing (LOL).
AC: Many actors, including the late Tony Curtis (who passed away last week), have derived great satisfaction through painting. Is there a connection between performing and painting?
Michael: Tony Curtis, Tony Bennett and Gene Hackman are all great artists. There are several actors that paint. All of the arts are interchangeable as far as I experience them. I write, I play guitar and sing, sculpt and even dance Salsa with my wife, and the language is all the same: movement, line, composition, positive space, negative space, rests, melody, shape, etc. Primarily it all comes from the ability to let go and think less with the mind and feel more with the heart. It sounds corny but it's the truth.
I have yet to meet an artist that bored me. Most are widely and deeply read and have a real appetite for new experiences. And all have a passion for life. I love to spend hours talking with other artists. I have a friend, Tim Willocks, who lives in the countryside of Ireland. He is an amazing novelist. He was a psychiatrist specializing in addiction and suicide. He practiced and studied at Oxford. He has written some incredible novels, his latest "The Religion." He and I can get together with a bottle of good whiskey and talk for hours about everything under the sun, and yet, when I walk away, I am invigorated, rested and inspired. Small talk drains all of my energy and always leaves me wanting.
AC: Your landscapes are fantastic: beautifully executed and full of real atmosphere. Do you paint from life or imagination – or both?
Michael: I paint from both life and imagination. Usually I use what is in front of me as a reference point – a launch pad, if you will. Once I can grasp the "thing" that caught my attention in the first place, I then go about getting it down as quickly as possible in terms of color, form, edges, etc. Then I embellish as my instincts direct me.
AC: Do you have any favorite subject matter? Do you think growing up in the Northwest has had an influence on you?
Michael: Growing up in the Pacific Northwest has certainly influenced me. I gravitate toward landscapes because, let's face it, nowhere on earth is there such diverse beauty than the Pacific Northwest. I tend toward autumn colors. Autumn is my favorite time of year: the umbers, rusts, ochers, browns, yellows and reds against bold blue greens, yellow greens and deep blues … I also like the feel of autumn: the cool crisp air, the sweet smell of maple leaves crushed beneath my feet and the smell of pine. That mix of fragrances has always been able to enchant me.
AC: What painters do you admire?
Michael: I admire the works of Joaquín Sarolla, Richard Schmid, John Singer Sergeant, Anders Zorn, Jean-Léon Gérôme, Jeremy Lipking, G. Harvey and my friend and recent mentor, Fred Oldfield.
AC: How long have you known of Fred Oldfield and his work? Has he had an influence on you?
Michael: I saw that ol' rattlesnake Fred Oldfield on television a couple of years ago while recuperating from the flu. I was lying on the couch and he came on our local PBS station. I was amazed and shocked at what could be done with a knife. I recorded the episode and as soon as I got better I turned Fred back on and painted along with him. I was so satisfied by the experience and the results that I have been painting with knives ever since. I owe Mr. Oldfield a serious debt of gratitude: He opened up a world of art that I did not know existed. I now modify my own knives by shaping them and filing them to suit me.
To be invited to this event as the guest artist is more than just an honor: It is a humbling experience and one that will go down in my mind as a milestone. Fred's daughter Joella has been a refreshing and welcome influence in our lives. Her loving, sweet and genuine nature has inspired both my wife and me to seek out more friends like her.
I am eager to get up there this week and meet Fred. I have talked with him on the phone and it was like I was talking to the grandfather I never had. We immediately hit it off and began talking about art and the Pacific Northwest. We have stayed in touch ever since.
About the Author
David Chesanow grew up in East Islip, Long Island. After sparing humanity by bombing out of the premed program at Johns Hopkins University, he majored in history (his real passion, not science) and somehow barely managed to get his B.A. in 1978. He moved to Manhattan, briefly attended Columbia University's School of Advanced International Affairs and worked odd jobs before being hired as a copy editor at Dell Publishing Company, enabling him to draw a salary while indulging his love of books.
Despite having a great apartment in SoHo, David pursued his dream of moving to Japan in 1985, where he taught English in Tochigi Prefecture and Hokkaido (the northernmost of the five main islands) and developed a lifelong hatred of snow. In 1999, he moved back to the U.S. with his wife and three sons and settled in the South Puget Sound area of Washington State, reestablishing himself as a freelance copy editor for New York book publishers while also embarking on an exciting new career as a starving writer
David is interested in a wide range of pop-cultural subjects, from doo-wop to roadside Americana to tattooing. An inveterate collector on a perpetually limited budget, he tries to limit himself to vintage boxing memorabilia, unusual autograph letters and off-beat illustration; sometimes he's successful. He approaches collecting as student of history – i.e., as a means to preserve and build on our body of knowledge of a subject – and not as the mindless accumulation of "stuff." He especially promotes collecting as a great educational pursuit for kids, believing you can still have a lot of fun and learn a lot while doing it on the cheap.
HELP!! My dog won't stop his bad behaviors. Any ideas??
My dog is a mixed breed(black lab,akita and rott.) and he has a few bad behaviors that I can't seem to break. The first is he wont play gently with my kids(6 and3), he usually ends up nipping at them. The second is he's a digger. I have tried numerous ways to break this habit and he still continues. And lastly he shreds everything. If I give him a rawhide it's gone the same night I give it to him, shoes, hats, and underwear stand no chance next to him, and when he's finished with his toys he goes and finds one of my childrens. He used to jump our fence the only thing that helped with that was getting an Invisible Fence. Do I have a dog that can't be trained to act properly or are there other things that I can try?? Please Help!!!!
EXERCISE,EXERCISE and more EXERCISE is your answer.
You can't get a dog and expect to train him to be a robot doing only what you want or what's expected of him and nothing more. he has wants and needs and feelings not that unlike your own.
Your dog has alot of energy and he's bored. With no outlet he's destroying things,jumping fences to give himself what you've sorely neglected { exercise and mental stimulation} and he's a little too over stimulated to play with your kids in a gentle manner. He can't help it. No matter how much training a dog gets you cannot train their basic needs out of them.
Get him on a regular daily exercise schedule. Go outside and either take him for a walk or an off leash run in the park or a brisk play session in the yard all lasting 30-45 minutes at least 3 times a day.
Buy him a treat ball and fill it with a different food than what you normally give him. I feed Canidae but put Beneful in the treat balls. It's a treat after all. Give him a kong toy stuffed with peanut butter. Get him a soccer ball and some sqeaky tennis bals to play with outside and buy him some stuffed animals that make more than one sound when he plays with them. And don't just hand him a toy and go on about your buisness. PLAY WITH IT TOO. Get your scent on it and keep it there and he'll go for it rather than your shoes.
He's really not that much different than having another child underfoot. You have got to keep him occupied and entertained to keep him out of mischief is all.
The Rawhide Kid ft. Rootbeer - Wake Up - LIVE @ Hurley's 4/17/2010




































































































