Cover to “Amazing Stories,” Walter Popp, September 1952

This art is so bad it’s good. (Why is the scientist HUGE?)

Ziff-Davis Publishing.

LEAD Technologies Inc. V1.01

Selections from Dennis Villelmi’s “Fretensis,” read by Eric Robert Nolan

If you didn’t catch these recordings last week over at The Bees Are Dead, I was honored to read from Dennis Villelmi’s superb book of cosmic horror poetry, “Fretensis: In the Image of a Blind God” (2014).  The Bees Are Dead has graciously allowed me to release them here again at the blog.

Thanks again, Dennis, for allowing me to share your Gothic visions this way.

 

 

 

“View of Delft,” Johannes Vermeer, circa 1660

Oil on canvas.

Vermeer-view-of-delft

Happy Independence Day!

Have fun and be safe.

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I am nearing completion of a vampire apocalypse story.

I hope to have it completed … soon? (I’m currently at 11,000 words; I’m guessing it should be maybe … 16,000.)

I’ll be releasing it for free right here on the blog. I’ll keep you guys posted.

 

 

dark_eyes

 

Cover to “Batman: The Long Halloween” #10, Tim Sale, 1997

DC Comics.

Batman_the_Long_Halloween_10

A Holocaust survivor reacts to the Nazis at Charlottesville. (Huffington Post)

And here I have been reading that one third of Americans don’t even believe that six million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust.

Tomorrow is July Fourth.  In addition to celebrating, let’s remember what America should be fighting against.

 

“Wind from the Sea,” Andrew Wyeth, 1947

Tempera on hardboard.

Andrew Wyeth - Wind from the Sea, 1947

This is perfectly logical. (Cory Booker on Trump’s prospective Supreme Court pick)

Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) on Donald Trump’s prospective United States Supreme Court nomination:

“I think it’s questionable we should be considering a nominee from a president who has a history of demanding these loyalty tests and we could be responsible for participating in something that could undermine that investigation.  I do not believe this committee should, or can in good conscience, consider a nominee put forward by this president until that investigation is concluded.”

Watch the entire video below — it’s just over three and a half minutes long.

 

 

“Unter den Linden Street in Berlin,” Anna Bilińska-Bohdanowicz, 1890

Oil on canvas.

Bilińska_Unter_den_Linden_01

Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers