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.

YOU’D ACTUALLY BE SURPRISED AT THE THINGS I CAN WRITE.

“The Maiden,” Gustav Klimt, 1913

Oil on canvas.

Then again, maybe it’s a mooed point.

I really want a group of my peers to persuade me of something that they already agree upon.

I’ve heard that this “herd mentality” is a good protection against coronavirus.

Think about it — how many cows do you know who’ve caught it?

“Temeridad de Martincho en la Plaza de Zaragoza,” Francisco Goya, circa 1815

“The Recklessness of Martincho in Zarazoga Square.”  Etching.

800px-Goya_Tauromachia1

The Piker Press publishes “prayer upon an empty hilltop”

I’m honored today to see my poem “prayer upon an empty hilltop” appear over at The Piker Press.

You can find it right here.

Thanks, as always, to Editor Sand Pilarski for allowing me to see my work in such a terrific online indie lit magazine!

Cover to “Red Skull: Incarnate” #1, David Aja, 2011

Marvel Comics.

I saw Black Widow!

But it wasn’t this year’s upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe movie — it was a real goddam highly venomous spider on the outside of my garbage pail just now. (The signature red hourglass marking would be on its underside.) I would have loved to find Scarlett Johansson clinging to the side of my garbage pails, but generally my luck doesn’t work like that.

My neighbor found it and pointed it out to me, and my Internet search indeed seems to confirm that it is of the Southern Black Widow Spider (Latrodectus mactans) species. I also learned two fun facts: 1) “black widows” are actually several species of spiders that are also called “true widows,” which I find vaguely poetic, and 2) these are the most venomous spiders in North America. The female’s bite is approximately 15 times more potent than than a rattlesnake bite. Okay … that second fact is probably more terrifying than it is “fun.”

My neighbor also started telling me other black widow facts, like how if you find one, you can expect to find more because of … mating season or something, but I literally walked away as fast as I could, because that’s the kind of fatally depressing news I expect from the national news.

Anyway, my best friend got a new pet just yesterday, and she keeps showing off her hamster pics — so maybe this is my way of keeping up with the Joneses.

 

 

“On les aura! 2e Emprunt de la Défense Nationale.” World War I poster, Abel Faivre, 1916

“We will know! 2nd National Defense loan.”  Color lithograph.  France.

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“The Binch,” by Rob Suggs

Eric Robert Nolan's avatarEric Robert Nolan, Author

“The Binch,” by Rob Suggs

Every U down in Uville liked the U.S. a lot,
But the Binch, who lived Far East of Uville, did not.
The Binch hated U.S! The whole U.S. way!
Now don’t ask me why, for nobody can say,
It could be his turban was screwed on too tight.
Or the sun from the desert had beaten too bright
But I think that the most likely reason of all
May have been that his heart was two sizes too small.

But, Whatever the reason, his heart or his turban,
He stood facing Uville, the part that was urban.
“They’re doing their business,” he snarled from his perch.
“They’re raising their families! They’re going to church!
They’re leading the world, and their empire is thriving,
I MUST keep the S’s and U’s from surviving!”
Tomorrow, he knew, all the U’s and the S’s,
Would put on their…

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Never Forget.

Photo credit: Sted716 / CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)