Frank Miller (editorial cartoonist)

Frank Andrea Miller (March 28, 1925[1] – February 17, 1983) was an American editorial cartoonist. He was a cartoonist for the Des Moines Register from 1953 to 1983.[2][3] In 1963, Miller received the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning for his notable editorial cartoon on nuclear warfare which depicts a world destroyed and one ragged figure saying to another, "I said -- we sure settled that dispute, didn't we!"[4]

Miller's Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoon, "I said—We sure settled that dispute, didn't we!"

Awards

Publications

  • Miller, Frank. Frank Miller Looks At Life, Des Moines Register, 1962.
  • Miller, Frank. Cartoons as Commentary: Three Decades at the Register, Des Moines Register, 1983.
  • Miller, Frank & Miller, Mindy. "Portraits of Alcoholism, "Plain Talk Publishing, Des Moines, 1988.
gollark: I'm not not saying that.
gollark: It's also also called "re"vision because you have to "re"think who to trust about what you have to cover.
gollark: It's also called "revision" because you "re"ally have to look hard to get "re"levant material to revise and also to guess what you need.
gollark: You could erase your memory of it, with memory eraser bees.
gollark: Yes, it's called "revision" because you "re"peatedly look at lots of new content.

References


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