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Thursday, December 29, 2011

A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future


A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future


CHEAP,Discount,Buy,Sale,Bestsellers,Good,For,REVIEW, A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future,Wholesale,Promotions,Shopping,Shipping,A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future,BestSelling,Off,Savings,Gifts,Cool,Hot,Top,Sellers,Overview,Specifications,Feature,on sale,A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future






A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future Overview


Artist and writer, Jack Gunter, illustrates the history of everything from the beginning of the universe to the distant future in a full color picture book narrated by a flying pig. When two young pigs visit the History of the World Museum they are invited inside to a vast gallery that uses sixty-five of Gunter's famed, whimsical egg tempera paintings to tell the story of the rise and fall of the human race from a pig's point of view. Often funny and insightful, the old curator's observations provide a fascinating platform from which to view the foibles of mankind's stewardship of the planet.
Gunter, whose artwork once shared a museum exhibition room with N.C., Jamie and Andrew Wyeth, and has published four novels plus an illustrated science textbook, uses both his artwork and his writing to tell this semi-accurate, cautionary tale of the history of planet Earth and some of it odd inhabitants. It's a fun read for both adults and children.



A Pictorial History of the Pacific Northwest Including the Future Specifications


Artist and writer, Jack Gunter, illustrates the history of everything from the beginning of the universe to the distant future in a full color picture book narrated by a flying pig. When two young pigs visit the History of the World Museum they are invited inside to a vast gallery that uses sixty-five of Gunter's famed, whimsical egg tempera paintings to tell the story of the rise and fall of the human race from a pig's point of view. Often funny and insightful, the old curator's observations provide a fascinating platform from which to view the foibles of mankind's stewardship of the planet.
Gunter, whose artwork once shared a museum exhibition room with N.C., Jamie and Andrew Wyeth, and has published four novels plus an illustrated science textbook, uses both his artwork and his writing to tell this semi-accurate, cautionary tale of the history of planet Earth and some of it odd inhabitants. It's a fun read for both adults and children.