Remembering the drought, Ace says he was 21 years old before he saw a fat cow. This may explain the lean animals and the hungry look on the faces of Jake and Zeb, his favorite Cowpokes characters. The characters are earthy people and those who know something of ranching and farming will recognize it as authentic, since Reid knows what he's drawing about. You've seen Ace Reid's COWPOKES in roadside cafes, feed and hardware stores, veterinarian offices, drug stores and small town meeting places. To appreciate the impact, one has to travel to the little towns from Texas to Alberta, Canada and from California to Florida. That's where COWPOKES is most loved, where COWPOKES depicts the patterns of everyday life, where COWPOKES is a jumpstart for lively discussion, or where COWPOKES is passed around finally to be hung in some prominent location. What is it about COWPOKES cartoons that gives it such an enormous following? COWPOKES makes people laugh at themselves and laugh at difficult times. COWPOKES combines the artist and storyteller with a twist of cowboy humor to portray a classic story of western life. COWPOKES cartoons evoke responses such as "I know that fella", "That happened last week", or "Ain't that the truth!" The major characters Jake and Zeb, with Maw, Wilbur, the Horsetrader, and Banker Tuffernal, find themselves in hilarious situations involving politics, ranching, banking, real estate, tourists, and horse trading.
COWPOKES has been imitated, but no one in the field of western art has managed to duplicate the magic. The genius of COWPOKES is that COWPOKES manages to take the sting out of hardship to make people laugh. Today COWPOKES, with its special brand of humor, is just as fresh and true as it was when it first appeared. There will continue to be many imitators, but there will only be one COWPOKES cartoon. LOOK FOR MANY MORE TO COME!
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