Cover to “Green Lantern Corps” #46, Patrick Gleason, 2010

DC Comics.

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“Life is only a borrowing of bones.”

In the end, everyone is aware of this:
nobody keeps any of what he has,
and life is only a borrowing of bones.

— Pablo Neruda, “October Fullness”



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Illustration from Of the Structure of the Human Body.  Andreas Vesalius (author and illustrator).  Woodcut.

There is some confusion about the date of this illustration.  Most sources point to the book indicated above.  Two editions were published; one in 1543 and one in 1555.

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Spillwords Press features “Ode to a New Black Ballpoint Pen.”

I am so honored to see Spillwords Press publish my short poem, “Ode to a New Black Ballpoint Pen.”  You can find it right here.

Thanks, as always, to Editor Dagmara K. for allowing me to be a part of this amazing community of writers!




I don’t even remember taking this photo.

And it isn’t well composed at all.

But it’s still interesting, because there’s a lot going on here.

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A very short review of “Squid Game” (2021)

Capping off the Halloween watchlist this year was Hwang Dong-hyuk’s “Squid Game” (2021) which was (mostly) worth the hype.  Don’t be discouraged by its campy visuals or its familiar premise.  (Deathtrap game shows have been with us since at least the 1987 adaptation of Stephen King’s “The Running Man.”)  This miniseries is truly good enough to be bingeworthy.

After a bit a slow start, there are visceral, inventive action-horror sequences and surprisingly effective character development.  There’s some good acting too — most notably by Yeong-su Oh, as an ostensibly disadvantaged older contestant in the miniseries’ eponymous contest.

The “twists” and “layers” you might have heard about might be a bit overhyped.  I predicted most of the big reveals, and I am no goddam Copernicus.  (Ask anyone.)  I actually wasn’t happy with the final reveal — I thought the story was stronger without it.

But “Squid Game” shines nonetheless, because it expertly capitalizes on the heartrending human drama that its premise allows for.  It’s an unflinching (and occasionally touching) snapshot of its creators’ view of human nature — and that’s why it’s a superior horror thriller.



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Night Train!!

No, I’m not talking about the truly abominable malt liquor.

I’m talking about an actual night train in Roanoke, Virginia.