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- Willis Plummer reviews my Chapbook “Everybody’s Gotta Suffer (Even Jesus and Rich People)…”
- Review: “lol.thx texas i will never love again.” by Willis Plummer
- I’ll ship anyone a chapbook I made “Everybody Suffers (Even Jesus and Rich People)…” if you message me your address. It has 3 stories and a couple poems and artwork stolen from Mark Gonzales (he inspired me to make the zine and I’m sure he’d ‘be down’ with the borrow). Its a limited 1st edition of 25 copies.
- Does anyone even read this? Surviving or striving
- Book Review: The Recognitions by William Gaddis
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- “the shits who keep the world ongoing: A Tale of Revenge” by Emma Reed Jones
- “Three Scenes from My Life this Past Month” by David Alexander Craig
- “Lucy Dreaming” by Emma Reed Jones
- “I Dream of Being Warm Again” by Emma Reed Jones
- “The Market” by Alena Hopkins
- “On Seth Siegel’s ‘Lamentation’” by David Alexander Craig
- “A boner for-like-ever” by Brian McElmurry
- “Damned by God” by Brian McElmurry
- “Events Leading to My Arrest” by Brian McElmurry
- “This is your Cat on Drugs” by Brian McElmurry
- “Tijuana Story” by Brian McElmurry
- Book review: “Suicide” by Edouard Leve by Brian McElmurry
- Meta-Book Review by Brian McElmurry: “Suicide” by Edouard Leve
- “Roots” by Caitlyn Cavanaugh
- “Tamarind” by Brian McElmurry
- “Heel-cowl” by Denise Dooley
- “Cleopatra’s Needle, Part Two” by David Alexander Craig
- “The Past is Prologue (More or Less)” by Michael Arria
- “Workshop Comments, 2006″ by Amanda Rybin
- “Cleopatra’s Needle, Part One” by David Alexander Craig
- “The Beach Breeze” by Brian McElmurry
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Monthly Archives: February 2012
Blake Butler BOOSTING in Steve Roggenbuck’s ear
BOOST ME ENRINQUE Blake Butler is a published writer by a big publishing house. He runs HTMLgiant. You can find his books in B&N. He’s experimental. Steve Roggenbuck is a poet who makes macros (image poems), videos, quit his MFA … Continue reading
Posted in On Things
Tagged 666, Blake Butler, BOOST, FRICK, Image poems, Justin Beiber, Macros, my ear, satan, Steve Roggenbuck
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The Internet is Real: Richard Grayson emailed me a pdf of his ebook “Winter in Brooklyn December 1971 – March 1972″
Richard Grayson‘s email header read, “a couple books you’ll probably find boring.” He explained they were from his diaries, and written for himself. I opened the 1st pdf “Late Spring in Sunrise 1982″ and read the 1st few pages regarding a … Continue reading
Posted in On Things
Tagged 70's, book review, Brooklyn, Diary, LGTB, Liberal Arts Major, NYC, Richard Grayson, Winter in Brooklyn December 1971 - March 1972
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The Internet is Real: Gabby Gabby emailed me a pdf of her ebook “pretty flowers”
“pretty flowers” is a curious formatted poem, or group of poems without any clear delineation between them by Gabby Gabby [1]. There is no rhyme or stanzas, per se, yet this is 100% poetry. In a large Helvetica (italicized?) font each … Continue reading
Posted in On Things
Tagged Brian McElmurry, Brooklyn, Gabby Gabby, Internet Literature, McElmurry, Muumuu House, poetry, poetry review, pretty flowers, pretty flowers ebook, state fairs, Steve Roggenbuck, The Internet is Real Series, Thomas Jefferson, tumblr, vegan, Virginia, Virginia is for lovers, youthful ideals
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The Internet is Real: Walter Mackey messaged me a pdf of his ebook ‘Okstupid’
How I came across ‘Okstupid’ by Walter Mackey Carnivorous Judy is Walter Mackey’s handle on Facebook. He had posted a picture of Bjork CDs that many of my FB friend’s involved in ‘internet literature’ had commented on. Jimmy Chen (my … Continue reading
The Internet is real: Ana C. mailed me her chapbook “make-believe love-making”
The internet is real. On Jan. 27th while toner was being heated onto paper, I scrolled through my Facebook feed. I make copies while depressed, or weirdly hyper, 40 hrs a week, and read things online because my job doesn’t require the … Continue reading
On the Significance of Monday
I began this post on Monday, but found myself unable to complete it until Wednesday. Speaks to the phenomenon in question, I’d say… What is it about Monday that produces melancholy in so many people? Countless songs have been written … Continue reading