Oil on canvas.
Is “Not Being Able to Wait” an alternate title here? I’m not sure, because I don’t understand the Italian translations I’ve found online.

Oil on canvas.
Is “Not Being Able to Wait” an alternate title here? I’m not sure, because I don’t understand the Italian translations I’ve found online.

From a dear friend and her family!! It unfolds into a “Captain America: Civil War” poster! (I feel certain her boys had a hand in picking this out.)
You know you’re a weird guy when the posters you love at age 44 are the same as those you would have loved at age 14.
The question the poster poses can only be purely rhetorical, BECAUSE OF COURSE I SIDE WITH CAP.


This cover would be a reprint for an issue from the original series in the late 1980’s.

“The Strain” is zany, over-the-top, serialized comic book horror that often veers too close to high camp. I keep waiting for either “South Park” of “Family Guy” to lampoon it. It’s sometimes pretty brainless, and it often seems like the product of a group of hyperactive 14 year old boys sitting down to imagine a vampire apocalypse.
But what the hell? The damn thing works. It isn’t as smart or as grown up as the moody “The Walking Dead,” “Fear the Walking Dead” or “Stranger Things.” But it’s got a fast pace, a kinetic energy and an unpredictability that all of those shows lack. It’s just … more fun. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t love it. And, as my interest in slow-moving zombie dramas starts to wane, this might become my favorite horror show currently on television.
It’s damned ambitious. The writers here desperately want to show a full scale monster armageddon, and they don’t seem to care much that they’ve got a limited budget or a finite number of extras. (We are told, now, that the vampire plague is spreading throughout the country, and is no longer confined to New York City.)
And it’s still scary. Guillermo del Toro’s screeching, leopard-fast vampire baddies are still unnerving. They’re goddam albino apex predators and they’re repulsive. And I think their appeal is surprising after two seasons of audience exposure. I predicted a while back that this show’s horror elements would lose their momentum, and I’ve pleasantly been proven wrong. (Hey, if you’re a horror fan who loves monsters, you eventually crave story antagonists other than doomed, pitiful zombies.)
Last night’s Season 3 premiere offered little that was new. But it did offer Navy Seals fighting vampires in the NYC sewers, and that was frikkin’ sweet. I’d give it a 9 out of 10.

I purchased Lade Saint’s “Window To The Soul” last night, and I can’t wait to sit down with it.
The author just happens to be a very dear friend of mine, and she’s personally shared with me some of the extraordinary experiences she has described here in her first book.
Lade’s accounts of her childhood are occasionally frightening, sometimes quite heartwarming, and always intriguing. I think that this will be some bedtime reading that I’ll have a hard time putting down — even if it might keep me up at night.
“Window To The Soul” can be found at Amazon right here:
“Window To The Soul,” by Lade Saint
Uckfield, England? (I think that’s where the photo is from.)
I just wanted to drop a quick note here to thank all the kind (and occasionally quite frikkin’ hilarious) birthday greetings, from my friends both online and off.
Love you you guys!
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Photo credit: By Simon Harriyott from Uckfield, England – Milepost 44Uploaded by Oxyman, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=24732822
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Photo credit: By Krish Dulal – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37424046
Cover by “Grendel” creator Matt Wagner.

Interior art by Tim Sale, with colors by Teddy Kristiansen. The story was written by Diana Schutz.

No, I was never a fan of Olivia Newton John, nor am I old enough to recall her stardom in any great detail. I need to mention “Xanadu” at least once here at this blog, however, as it is forever linked in my mind with the summer of 1980.
This song was played endlessly at the beach by sunbathing teenage girls. They mostly went unnoticed by me, as this was the summer before I entered the third grade, and I hadn’t developed much interest in girls just yet. But thinking of this song immediately returns me to the beach again as a little boy. (My parents sent me there with my siblings a lot, something for which retrospect has taught me to feel thankful.)
I have a lot of memories of going to the beach in the early 80’s — burning sand, screaming for the ice cream man, and sidestepping endless arrays of discarded bottlecaps in the gravel parking lot. (The local teenagers must have done a hell of a lot of drinking there; upturned bottlecaps hurt when you stepped on them.) This was also the summer that my friend Brian’s little brother, Brad, erroneously told me that Han Solo died in “The Empire Strikes Back.” (There were no “Episode” prefixes when the first Star Wars films came out.)
There was another hit by John that can transport me back the early 80’s. That would be “Physical,” which was played and sang ubiquitously in 1981 by the girls in my fourth grade class. (I still remember Linda, who lived on the next street, talking about John in awed tones: “A looooot of people think she is beautiful.”)
But I’d prefer not to think of that song, if I can help it. While “Xanadu” is arguably still fun and catchy, “Physical” is best left forgotten.
Hey, gang — the August 2016 Issue of Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine was released today. Check out my friend Dennis Villelmi’s “Spending and Saving” on Page 4; it’s my favorite poem that he’s authored.
A lighthearted short summer poem of mine, “Bumblebee,” also appears in the issue on Page 8.
You can order a softcover copy of the August Issue for just over $3 right here:
Or, you can download a free electronic copy of the magazine in PDF format right here:
Enjoy!