Cover to “Chamber of Chills” #23, Lee Elias, 1954

Harvey Publications.

Cover to “Worlds of Fear” #10, Norman Saunders, 1953

Fawcett Publications.

“It’s nothing against you to fall down flat. /But to lie there — that’s a disgrace.”

This might be a new favorite!

Source: American Literature on Facebook

“Glow Of The City,” Martin Lewis, 1929

Etching.

“Don’t complain about the snow on your neighbor’s roof when your own doorstep is unclean.”

― Confucius



Empire Poetry Verse is available on Amazon

Hey, gang — you can order Local Gems Press’ newest poetry anthology from Amazon; see the link below.  Its title is Empire Poetry Verse: A New York State Poetry Anthology, and it features poems from nearly 200 poets who have ties to New York.  (I am one of them; if you happen to order the book, please check out my love poem, “Like White Plumeria Petal.”)

Empire Poetry Verse



“Mast-Tree Grove,” Ivan Shishkin, 1898

Oil on canvas.

Throwback Thursday: “A Bridge Too Far” (1977)

“A Bridge Too Far” (1977) was one of those war movies that my Dad enjoyed; it would have appeared on television a couple of years after its theatrical release (1979? 1980?).  Back then, I thought of it as a “really old movie” — which was understandable, because my father liked some truly old movies, even by 1980’s standards.   But “A Bridge Too Far” actually hit the screens at roughly the same time as the original “Star Wars,” which most kids in my neighborhood had seen in the theater.

I found it online and finally watched it in its entirety — it’s actually a really good film.  (Adapted from its eponymous 1974 novel by Cornelius Ryan, it’s a three-hour, meticulous depiction of Operation Market Garden — the Allies’ 1944 invasion of German-occupied Holland.)

The cast list is astounding — it’s basically a lengthy “Who’s Who” of 1970’s cinema.  (Seriously, look at it.)  If you enjoy period war films, I recommend this.



Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers