If any of you guys enjoyed “Roanoke Summer Midnight” the other day, you can find the handful of other poems I’ve written so far this year right here.
Source: My poetry, 2017
If any of you guys enjoyed “Roanoke Summer Midnight” the other day, you can find the handful of other poems I’ve written so far this year right here.
Source: My poetry, 2017
Thank you, George A. Romero, for the countless hours of creepy entertainment that you gave us — both through your own movies and the entire horror sub-genre that they created.
I had so much fun I thought the world would end.
Article re: George A Romero’s death in the Los Angeles Times
DC Comics.

Marvel Comics.
Just a picture of three American businessmen being strung up by a female Russian spy. No political subtext here.

Oil on canvas.

“Roanoke Summer Midnight”
Its silhouetted mountains
are great blue gods at slumber
the faded-haze azure horizon’s
giants in the dim.
Those slopes have known a billion bones of hares
that raced upon them other midnights, then,
pausing, one by one,
and drawing up their downy legs at last to final sleep.
Where the Shenandoahs’ driving
beryl falls to black,
ultramarine to onyx,
lay legions of hares — generations resting.
There are the hills where ivory
rabbits sleep among gods.
Ahead and under moonlight
the curving rural road obscures its end.
At right, an intersecting well-lit modern block
confuses the curling topography.
The fresh and symmetrical asphalt’s angle
mars the winding thoroughfare with order —
a ninety-degree anachronism.
That new and perfect subdivision
affronts the corner’s antebellum chimney,
broken down to stones and overrun in lavender
— its lilac colors driven plum by sunset.
That last century’s smokestack
was itself effrontery once
to the formless places where natives stayed,
their only edifice the stars,
their only currency the blinding coin of moon.
Eyeing, then, the summits’ crowning cobalt
driving down in royal blue to coal,
I hope to one day take my rest
there, in the darkening indigo,
alongside giants,
among white rabbits in myriad easy stillness,
to pause myself at last and sleep beneath
what meadows stretch in cerulean dark,
where hares will race like moon-kissed silver,
or comets of darting pearl.
(c) Eric Robert Nolan 2017

Photo credit: By Jessie Eastland (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons

Oats Studios dropped its newest science fiction – horror short film yesterday, and it’s pretty damned good. “ZYGOTE” follows (an all grown up!) Dakota Fanning and Jose Pablo Cantillo as they try to escape an inspired and truly horrifying monster. (Cantillo was none other than Martinez a few seasons ago on “The Walking Dead.” )
My enjoyment here was hampered just a little with some problems I had with the short film’s audio … I tried watching this both with my laptop’s speakers and with my headphones, and I found the early dialogue a little difficult to hear either way. (I’m guessing the problem is only mine.)
Nevertheless, this was a pretty decent short film, taking writer-director Neill Blomkamp’s zeal for body horror to a new level. (I get the sense that Blomkamp watched a lot of David Cronenberg growing up.)
Fans of John Carpenter’s “The Thing” should be pleased. Check it out below.
From the “Knightfall” storyline.

Take this for whatever it’s worth to you — it’s my relatively chill summer playlist. A good college buddy of mine consistently posts a “Friday Dance Party” playlist on Facebook every week. (The Dude is on a mission to make the whole world dance.) This, I prefer to think, is a more laid back seasonal complement.
Hey, you want to hear something really sad? I really like Airborne Toxic Event a hell of a lot, but, when I tried to Google them earlier tonight, I typed in “Toxic Sundown Avenger.” That is what happens when an old man tries to get into the young people’s music.
*I’m* the one who’s “sundowning.”
*****
[Explicit lyric warning for Daniela Andrade and Kawehi.]
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