November 19, 2024

"If some nonprofit needed a T-shirt design, Ed would always draw it. So we wrapped him up..."

"... in a quilt that a friend made of old T-shirts with Ed's drawings on them and gave him a green burial."

From "A Visit to Planet Koren/A new exhibition celebrates the work of the late cartoonist Edward Koren" (The New Yorker).

This is the best disposal of a human body I have ever seen.

15 comments:

rehajm said...

…yah, provided the guy wasn’t full of zoloft or something. You don't want that stuff leeching into the water table…

Laughing Fox said...

Provided the batting of the quilt wasn't polyester.

Ann Althouse said...

Green burial seems to be legal all over the place: https://returnhome.com/what-states-allow-green-burial-or-natural-burial/

Bart Hall (Kansas, USA) said...

Cremation is the only way I'll ever have a smoking hot body again.

mikee said...

Hunter S. Thompson was cremated and his ashed fired from a howitzer, spreading him across his beloved home in Colorado. So I'd give this ceremony a 2nd best at most.

PM said...

Gentle Humorist Laid Gently to Rest

Roger Sweeny said...

Ann, you might be interested in Bernd Heinrich's Life Everlasting: The Animal Way of Death. Heinrich was a well-grounded not touchy-feely naturalist and a fine writer. His last chapter is about the animal biologists call Homo sapiens, and touches on green burial.

rehajm said...

…leaching…

tim maguire said...

This is the best disposal of a human body I have ever seen

We didn't get to see it, but this is the best disposal ever.

Wince said...

Most wives complain about their husbands being too wrapped-up in their work.

Iman said...

Best this side of a shark attack!

TML said...

That was awesome. What a great piece. What a wonderful cartoonist.

Clyde said...

ISWYDT.

Narayanan said...

sure need that to gain a few virgins in alla paradise

Narayanan said...

hitchcock has some ideas on this
The Rose Garden ...
the cab driver taking Mr. Vinton to his destination is surprised to see he has business with Miss Julia Pickering and not her sister, Miss Cordelia. Miss Cordelia, aka Mrs. Welles, has her sister under her thumb. He's even more surprised to find that Miss Julia has written a book that Mr. Vinton wants to publish. When Mr. Vinton arrives at the elderly sisters' magnolia-scented Louisiana mansion, he's the one surprised, finding that the house perfectly matches the one Miss Julia had described in her story. As a guest in the house, he finds old furniture carved with lion's heads, brass cherubs, a stone bench in a rose garden -- all things from the book. Mr. Vinton's mind becomes troubled as he wonders how much the rest of Miss Julia's murder mystery might be true.