John William Waterhouse’s “Mermaid,” 1900

Oil on canvas.

Waterhouse, John William, 1849-1917; A Mermaid

Introducing Scott Thomas Outlar “Happy Hour Hallelujah”

Check out “Happy Hour Hallelujah,” a book of poetry by my friend Scott Thomas Outlar!

Raja's Insight's avatarRaja's Insight

Happy Hour Hallelujah front cover draft

Preface . . .

Ultimately, Happy Hour Hallelujah is a proclamation and celebration of life even while staring the suffering of existence squarely in the eyes. It is an affirmation of the Great Yes that art defiantly screams in the face of entropy’s existential core. It is a truth that seeks to puncture through deception. It is a fire that yearns to rise from out the ashes. It is the next step forward when all momentum seems to be at a standstill. It is a light piercing through the darkness. It is nothing more and nothing less than the expression of one man’s vision toward the future….

Now Available At: www.ctupublishinggroup.com/scott-thomas-outlar-.html

View original post

Louis Gallait’s “Power of Music,” 1851

Cover to “Robin,” Brian Bolland, 1991

DC Comics, limited series, 1 of 5.

drake2

Cover to “Silverback” #1, Matt Wagner, 1989

siverback

“These are a few of my favorite things.”

I am now the proud owner of … a goodly portion of all the “Grendel” comics Matt Wagner ever wrote.  What you see in the top row are “Grendel Omnibus” Volumes 1, 2 and 3.  (I believe I actually shared my review of Volume 1 on this site a while ago.)  These would comprise a nearly inclusive history of Hunter Rose, Christine Spar, Brian Li Sung, Orion Assante and Eppy Thatcher.  All that remains for me to collect is the fourth Omnibus trade-paperback, chronicling the possibly immortal Grendel Prime and his imperiled charge, Jupiter Assante.

The Omnibus editions do not include crossovers with heroes such as Batman and The Shadow, as those characters are obviously owned by other companies.  Nor do they include the diverse dystopian future tales depicted by various artists in the 1990’s “Grendel Tales.”  But I am in heaven with what you see below — or maybe hell, considering these books’ central motif.

To top it all off, that hefty tome beneath the comics is W. H. Auden’s “Collected Poems,” edited by Edward Mendelson, with the poet’s work between 1927 and his death in 1973.  It’s 927 pages.  It weighs 30 pounds, probably.  And it is indexed by both the poem’s titles and their first lines.  That is what you call a lifetime investment.

The comics will be excellent summer reading; as will Auden.  But I’ll focus more on the Briton when fall arrives.  Like his countryman, Doyle, he might be best enjoyed outdoors on a gray and increasingly brisk Autumn day.

I need to buy books more often.

 

20160812_193810

 

 

Charles Copeland West’s “News From Sebastapol,” 1875

ENG090290271  01

“It’s the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine.”

If your idea of a decent bedtime story is a tale of a terrible future, then stop on over at The Bees Are Dead.  We’ve got some wonderful dystopian poetry, prose and photography, thanks to a diverse group of truly talented contributors.  There are some unsettling visions, but you won’t be sorry you visited.

Today’s feature was “The Red Dream” (“красная мечта,”)  a haunting photographic composition by Ekaterine Dovzhenko depicting former Soviet states.  Be sure also to read “Homeland,” Robert Borski’s superb, psychedelic riff of L. Frank Baum’s “The Wizard of Oz.”

 

Photo credit: Albert Goodwin’s “Apocalypse,” 1903

Max Braun’s “Universal Declaration of Human Rights” (Photo)

Braun: “Why the title?  Because both realities are sad.”

 

60 Jahre Allgemeine Erklärung der Menschenrechte (3084670759).jpg

Photo credit: By Max Braun – 60 Jahre Allgemeine Erklärung der Menschenrechte, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37203687

“Odd Rant Lump” is most apropos, I think.

Rearrange the letters of Donald Trump’s name and you get “Tan Dump Lord.”

Not to mention “Damp Old Runt,” “Dolt and Rump,” and “Odd Rant Lump.”

M’jus’ sayin’.

Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers