More Scripture Scribbles: Cartoons From The Choir Loft Dillman sings in his church choir and sketches cartoons about the day’s sermon. His scripture scribbles, which are conceptualized and drawn in a span of about 15 minutes, add a humorous twist and perhaps a bit more appreciation to th
TITLE | : | More Scripture Scribbles: Cartoons From The Choir Loft |
AUTHOR | : | |
RATING | : | 4.66 (779 Votes) |
ASIN | : | B0187GJ6FS |
FORMAT TYPE | : | - |
PAGES | : | 0 Pages |
PUBLISH | : | 2015-11-18 |
GENRE | : |
Phillip Dillman is a man of faith, music and cartoons.
More Scripture Scribbles: Cartoons from the Choir Loft is Phillip Dillman’s second book. The first book of cartoons clearly tickled the funny bone in people of all faiths. His drawings might at times be irreverent, but they always demonstrate that Dillman is above all a man of faith. Dillman sings in his church choir and sketches cartoons about the day’s sermon. His scripture scribbles, which are conceptualized and drawn in a span of about 15 minutes, add a humorous twist and perhaps a bit more appreciation to the traditional Bible stories.
EDITORIAL :
About the Author
Phil Dillman was born and raised in Homewood, Illinois. His parents went to church regularly at First Presbyterian Church of Homewood, with Phil and his sister, Laura, regularly attending Sunday School. Phil remembers some of the drawings he did during that time, one being an erupting volcano. This was inspired by the topic of creation. He was thrilled when the drawings done by the kids in the class were projected onto the wall of the sanctuary during a church service later in the year. There, as big as life, was his image of a volcano spewing and streaming molten lava down its sides. That was cool!
Nearly forty years later, Phil sings in the choir and finds inspiration for his drawings in the scripture lessons or the sermons. Many of the drawings are humorous (at least to Phil) while some are a bit more serious. Some of the references are obvious while so
REVIEW :
Overall, then, this is a fascinating and well-researched book.
Where Owen stumbles, however, is his occasional (but thankfully sparse) tendency to use the examples of a few bad eggs to paint a tawdry picture of all of New York's nightlife. The list of recommendations continue with study features of the face, use the name in the conversation, talk about the name, and if these commonalities wasn’t enough, like Parker, Kevin suggests imagining the person whose name you want to remember giving you $1,000,000 next week…not tomorrow or next month, but next week.
These are some of the similarities my mind kept associating as I was reading. Trust me, all this book will do is lighten your wallet and raise your blood pressure.. Own it!! This is all you need. This product came with some tears and what I would consider excessive markings/writing/highlighting; howev
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