Slow Ball Cartoonist takes readers on a journey to an earlier era in America when cartoonists played a pivotal role each day in enabling major daily newspapers to touch the lives of their
readers. No American cartoonist was more influential than the Chicago Tribunes John T. McCutcheonthe plainspoken Indiana native and Purdue University graduate whose charming and delightful
cartoons graced the pages of the newspaper from 1903 until his retirement in 1946.
This book chronicles McCutcheons adventure-filled life, from his birth on a rural small farm near Lafayette in 1870, to his rise as the Dean of American Cartoonists. His famous cartoon, Injun
Summer, originally published in 1907, was a celebration of autumn through childlike imagination and made an annual appearance in the Tribune each fall for decades. McCutcheon was the first
Tribune staff member to earn the coveted Pulitzer Prize for his poignant 1931 cartoon about a victim of bank failure at the height of the Great Depression. Born with an itch for adventure,
McCutcheon served as a World War I correspondent, combat artist, occasional feature writer, portrait artist, and world traveler.
While the gangly and tall McCutcheon looked the part of the down-home characters featured in his cartoons, the world-wise flavor of his work influenced public opinion while making readers
smile. Hard-hitting and even vicious attacks on public figures were common among his contemporaries; however, McCutcheons gentle humor provided a change in pace, thus prompting a colleague to
borrow a phrase from baseball and anoint him the slow ball cartoonist.
Slow Ball Cartoonist is a timeless story about a humble man who made the most of his talents and lived life to the fullest, being respectful and fair to allincluding the targets of his
cartoonists pen.