Missing Page
July 1st, 2004
I’m upset and depressed. One of my original comic pages has turned up missing. On the walls in each of my exam room, I had a framed Air Force commendation, a super-hero calendar, and a framed page of original comic art.
Today I noticed that a Silvestri-signed X-Men page is gone.
I don’t think a patient took it, as it’s rather bulky — maybe the cleaning staff? Regardless, it’s gone. I think I’ll have to take the other pages home too.
July 1st, 2004 at 11:12 am
thats just sad that someone would take something from your office like that.
July 1st, 2004 at 11:16 am
If you have a picture of it (or a scan from the comic) and send out a “press release” to the usual suspects (I’m sure Newsarama, The Pulse, etc. would be willing to help), you might have a decent chance at finding it– or at least preventing a thief from selling it.
July 1st, 2004 at 1:16 pm
That’s exactly why my cube is decorated with disposable items only. (Images from last year’s calendar, comic strips, a calendar.) I don’t trust people enough to leave anything of real value in here.
Sorry to hear about your art.
July 1st, 2004 at 3:21 pm
I hang my art at home and have prints at work.
July 1st, 2004 at 10:55 pm
I’ve posted about your missing artwork to the comic book art collector’s list at Yahoo.
Contact Me
Subscribe:
The Best Of...
Special Topics
Archives
Categories
Arbitrarily Interesting Medical Condition
Twitter
Comic Blogs
Medical Blogs
Currently Reading
The Net:
Contents may have settled during shipping. Past results are no guarantee of future performance. No animals were harmed during the production of this product. Void where prohibited by law. All rights reserved. Not valid with other offers or specials. Professional driver on a closed track. Your financial institution may impose other fees. All models are over 18 years of age. Employees must wash hands before returning to work. Results not typical. Many suitcases look alike. 18% gratuity added to tables of six or more.
Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball.
© 2004-2008 Polite Dissent. Powered by WordPress