
Cityscapes
More architecturally ludicrous skylines. from 'The Fell Hound of Adversity': Lenny looked out at the city skyline ghostly pale in the haze of the autumn sky. He wiped blood from his lips, deciding that perhaps he could have made better choices. #sketch

More Sketches
Here's a concept for the I.R.S. building, trying to get the sense of bureaucratic menace, although it may have turned out a bit too much like a church. #sketch

Building Decoration
Here's a building sketch that I was considering using for a side page decoration. Maybe we'll get a special edition release of The Fell Hound of Adversity with illustrations at some point in a more industrious future. #sketch

Kitchens
Everyone's favorite dishwasher hard at work in the kitchens. Notice the expert use of that fourth-grade expanding squares trick to try and twist the perspective. Good stuff. #sketch

Comics
This is a bit of an action sequence I knocked together in comic form, trying to put the mundane task of chopping vegetables into a more dynamic perspective. Nothing of consequence, just having some fun with the pencils and pens. #sketch

Cover Ideas
Here's an early rough cover concept for The Fell Hound of Adversity. Trying for a bit of pulp/comic book feel. #sketch

Sketches
Here's some sketches done early on when kicking around some ideas for the story that became The Fell Hound of Adversity. Readers may note that in the actual book, there is a purposeful vagueness in regards to detail. It came about that I decided I didn't much care for the actual details of place and people, outside of certain attributes that helped along the story. In my own experience, I prefer a certain lack of precision in the narrative, to allow the reader to fill in the