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David Horsey
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David Horsey is the Seattle Post-Intelligencer's nationally-recognized
editorial cartoonist and columnist. The National Press Foundation chose Horsey
as America's cartoonist of the year in 1998, honoring him with the Berryman
Award for Editorial Cartooning. His cartoons are distributed to more than 450
newspapers by North America Syndicate and his work has appeared in a wide
range of national publications.
Horsey's duties for the P-I have taken him to national political party
conventions, presidential primaries, the Olympics, Japan and Europe. In 1993,
David was one of only 25 Americans chosen to take part in the European
Community Visitorship Program in Brussels, Belgium. Horsey recently
completed a year at the Hearst Newspapers Washington Bureau where he took a
closer look at Congress, the White House and the presidential campaign for the
P-I editorial page.
Born in Evansville, Indiana, in 1951, David has lived in Seattle since 1954
and is an honors graduate of Ingraham High School. He received a B.A. in
Communications from the University of Washington in 1976 where he was editor
of the student newspaper, The Daily. He joined the staff of the Post-Intelligencer in
1979 after a three-year stint as a state capital reporter and political columnist. In
1986, as a Rotary Foundation Scholar, Horsey earned an M.A. in International
Relations from the University of Kent at Canterbury (U.K.).
The Society of Professional Journalists awarded Homey first place for
editorial cartooning in the Pacific Northwest for 1997, adding to his 12 first place
SPJ regional awards for cartooning, governmental reporting and spot news
reporting. Horsey's editorial cartoons took first place in the 1994 Best of the West
journalism competition and, in 1995, he was the first cartoonist to win the
Environmental Media Award. In 1991, he received a Global Media Award from
the Population Institute and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 1987.
Horsey has published four collections of his cartoons, Politics and Other
Perversions (1974), Horsey's Rude Awakenings (1981), Horsey's Greatest Hits of
the '8Os (1989) and The Fall of Man (1994). In 1992, he co-edited an anthology,
Cartooning AIDS Around the World. One of his cartoons, "The World According
to Ronald Reagan," was reproduced in poster form and sold thousands of copies
worldwide.
Horsey resides in Seattle with his wife, Nole Ann, and two children,
Darielle and Daniel. When not going to his daughter's cross-country races and
his son's soccer games, Horsey stays busy putting the finishing touches on his
first novel, "Beyond the Border." |