Tag Archives: Scott Thomas Outlar

Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine features “Our Room In Brooklyn”

The September 2016 Issue of Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine was just released, with pieces both by me and by a couple of good friends of mine.  You can find my poem, “Our Room In Brooklyn,” on page 14.  Be sure also to check out “Bacchus and Cheap Tobacco,” by Dennis Villelmi, as well as “Antidote,” by Scott Thomas Outlar.

You can purchase the September Issue in right here, or you can simply download a free electronic copy in PDF format here.

Enjoy.

 

Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine Issue 18 - September 2016

The Bees Are (Still) Dead

If you’re in the mood for some excellent apocalyptic or dystopian reading, then do remember to stop over at The Bees Are Dead.  We recently have been fortunate for the opportunity to share dark visions from poets throughout the world, including Edilson A. Ferreira, Jason Ramsey, Jonathan May, Jonel Abellanosa, Andres Rodriguez, Marianne Szlyk, Stela Xega and Scott Thomas Outlar.

I myself am especially partial to May’s outstanding poem, “The Wolves;” its imagery is both nightmarishly vivid and expertly rendered.  You can find it right here:

“The Wolves,” by Jonathan May

And be sure to peruse the poetry, short stories and photography by all of our contributors.

 

The Wolves Pursuing Sol and Mani.jpg

Photo credit: By John Charles Dollman – Guerber, H. A. (Hélène Adeline) (1909). Myths of the Norsemen from the Eddas and Sagas. London : Harrap. This illustration facing page 8. Digitized by the Internet Archive and available from http://www.archive.org/details/mythsofthenorsem00gueruoft Some simple image processing by User:Haukurth, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4722868

Submit your creative work to “The Bees Are Dead!”

Hey, gang — my colleagues and I over at The Bees Are Dead are just thrilled with the submissions we’ve been receiving after the launch of our transatlantic webzine!  As you might know from my blog right here, we’ve been honored to launch the site with a powerful poem by Scott Thomas Outlar.  And Eddie Skelson’s “Fort Hope” was a wickedly clever post-apocalyptic zombie story.

Again, we’re interested in your very darkest visions of worlds gone bad — the editorial focus of The Bees Are Dead is dystopian and post-apocalyptic prose, poetry, art, photography and reviews.  Our submission guidelines are actually fairly flexible; click here and take a look:

Submissions – The Bees Are Dead

If you have submitted already, thanks!  If you are working on a submission, then keep at it!  And if you enjoy stories or verses about fearsome futures or world-ending catastrophes, then bookmark us and remember to visit!  We hope to keep you entertained!

 

Escaping the dome (13799295904).jpg

Photo credit: By yumikrum – escaping the dome, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=48418763

 

Don’t miss “Suicidal March of the Worms,” by Scott Thomas Outlar

If you haven’t already, please stop by The Bees Are Dead and enjoy “Suicidal March of the Worms,” by Scott Thomas Outlar!  This is the very first poem published at the site:

“Suicidal March of the Worms,” by Scott Thomas Outlar

 

 

 

Check out these poems by Scott Thomas Outlar.

My new friend Scott Thomas Outlar has published three new pieces over at Winamop, and they’re damned good.

I especially like “Mixology.”

Read them here:  http://winamop.com/sto1500.htm

Here, Kitty, Kitty.

It’s the quick November dark that descends annually, silently on us like a vast black cat – just after we turn our clocks back for daylight savings time.

I’ll be greeting the newly early dark tonight by relaxing with Issue 8 of Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine.  I’m going to revisit two poems that I especially like: Scott Thomas Outlar’s “Sucking Vapors” and Erren Geraud Kelly’s “Coffeehouse Poem #43.”

 

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