I came across this page on Webupon called "Websites kids will love but grownups will adore" (see the title for the link).
The first animation I check out was a recording of a boy named David Adair put to flash animation called "David's New Snail"

The story is about Davis and his pet Tom.

Yes, Tom is a snail. David and Tom take a trip but shorty after Tom dies.

Poor Tom! It is great to hear David tell the story in his own words.

Although sad about poor Tom, David is excited to get a new snail at the snail store.
Thanks to David and his Dad. I loved this little story for its true to life story of a boy and his snail. I loved that the story is also told in Davids own words. Just don't tell David to get of of town.
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David's New Sail reminded me of another animated short I saw on HBO when I was a kid. It is a story by Faith and John Hubley about their two little girls, Emily and Georgia Hubley, and the adventures the girls have while playing. It was also made from recordings of the girls.
Cockaboody tool a little effort to find on Youtube because I could not remember the name or the story. Released in 1973 or 1974 Cockaboody won several film festival awards including Golden Gate Award for Best of Festival at the San Francisco Film Festival as well as the Golden Eagle award at C.I.N.E. in Washington, D.C.
Together Faith and John Hubley made 21 different short films. The Hubleys won Oscars for their shorts: "Moonbird", "The Hole" and "Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass Double Feature". In 1977, shortly after Cockaboody's success John Hubley died during open heart surgey. Faith went on in her animation career to complete 24 other short films. Faith Hubley received honors from the Cannes, Venice, London, and San Francisco film festivals. She won fourteen CINE Golden Eagle awards, and received honorary doctorates from the University of Chicago, Columbia College, and Hofstra University. Her 1981 animated film "Enter Life" can be seen at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, as part of the Early Life exhibit. In 1995, the National Gallery of Art presented a retrospective program of her works.
Faith Hubley died in 2001, aged 77, in Connecticut, of cancer.
It's weird the things you learn while surfing on the Internet and reminiscing of lost days from your youth.
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