All posts by Eric Robert Nolan

Eric Robert Nolan graduated from Mary Washington College in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. He spent several years a news reporter and editorial writer for the Culpeper Star Exponent in Culpeper, Virginia. His work has also appeared on the front pages of numerous newspapers in Virginia, including The Free Lance – Star and The Daily Progress. Eric entered the field of philanthropy in 1996, as a grant writer for nonprofit healthcare organizations. Eric’s poetry has been featured by Dead Beats Literary Blog, Dagda Publishing, The International War Veterans’ Poetry Archive, and elsewhere. His poetry will also be published by Illumen Magazine in its Spring 2014 issue.

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HAPPY ST. PATRICK’S DAY!!

Stained-glass window portraying St. Patrick, photo by Andreas F. Borchert, 2010.  St. Benin’s Church, Kilbennan, County Galway, Ireland.

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Carilion Clinic’s light-up heart in Crystal Spring, Roanoke, Virginia

Seen from the Jefferson Street overpass, looking west beyond the railroad tracks.  March 2022.

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Indiana Nolan and the Windowsill of Crystal Skulls.

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Poetry and commentary, 2022

Hey, guys — if you happen to follow my poetry and commentary, I’ve started a new page here at the site for publications in 2022:

POETRY AND COMMENTARY, 2022



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Illustration for a Czech fairy tale, Artuš Scheiner, circa 1913

Wikimedia Commons provides little information for this image, which I quite enjoyed as soon as I saw it.  The entry does say that the unnamed fairy tale depicted is about three enchanted dogs.  I wonder if might even be some variation “The Three Dogs,” my favorite fairy tale as a child.

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Saying goodbye to Sean.

I received some inordinately sad news this weekend from the United Kingdom. The independent literature community has lost an immeasurably talented voice and, for many of us, a dear friend. Sean L. Macro has passed away.

If you follow this blog, then you know that I have been a fan of Sean’s writing since 2014; I began corresponding with him just after the publication of his book, Happy Hour At The Misery Bar. Sean was an exceptionally gifted poet, with a mastery of stream-of-consciousness narrative that was absolutely enviable. His winding poetic lines ensnared the reader within a poem’s point of view, and then wove them into a complex examination of his chosen theme. The reader was truly drawn into Sean’s writing, and he employed this gift to effortlessly convey both beauty and a sense of loss.

Sean and I occasionally shared our work with one another, bridging the vast gulf of the Atlantic through the Internet. And I grew to admire him as much for his character as for his poetic faculties.

I think that he was one of the few truly good souls that I have ever met — for whom kindness and generosity were every bit as natural as breathing. There was a gentleness in him that I have never seen in anyone else. He was far, far too modest to appreciate his own abilities, and consistently overgenerous in his praise of others. He was polite in a way that seemed … old-fashioned, to me, anyway. He sometimes seemed like an anachronism, or a man out of time — like a visitor from some long past generation in which thoughtfulness was the norm, courtesy was the rule, and men and women were truly gentlemen and ladies.

Sean’s gentleness — that rare sensitivity of which he seemed completely unaware — was unique. It makes his loss unique as well.

We are going to miss you, Sean.



Aramesh

“Eastern Star,” Shahrzad Shirazi, circa 2007

“The Source,” Anne Brigman, 1907

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Via the Borderline Inappropriate Facebook page:

Kindness

Cover to “US Weekly Magazine,” May 1993

American Media, Inc.  Depicted is Demi Moore.

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