Friday, November 28, 2008

Life & Death of The Party


"Life & Death of The Party"
a social guide
by Jake Kilroy

AN EXCERPT:
Chapter 9: Drinking Too Much & Blaming Your Friends

Your friends suck. I mean, right? They take you to this party, they offer you free beer, you drink too much and they totally let you call the host's girlfriend a "rabbit whore." And then, they scold you. Oh, talking monkey is so sorry! He never let it happen again! Bananananana?

Sure, sure, your friends were trying to cover your mouth and tell you to stop talking, but they were also the ones that brought you and gave you beer.

And I'm sorry. I didn't realize that I was signing a contract upon coming to this box social. I was under the impression that it was a party and the host's girlfriend was, in fact, a total "rabbit whore." And no, I have no idea what a "rabbit whore" actually is. Shut up. Anyway, the point remains: don't give me free alcohol and then try to put me on lockdown. That's like giving King Kong a whole handful of Ann Darrow and then trying to take him down like a vet with a nuke.

In fact, I'm sick of this entire conversation. I'm just gonna nod my head until it falls off or drifts off. Or until I'm lucid enough to pee in the salsa. Salsuck, methinks!

You know what? Just for that "rabbit whore" getting on my case about the whole rabbit whordeal, I'm stealing her birth control pills.

I'm outta here.

What the hell? Unhand me!

I said, unhand me!

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Thanksgiving


"Thanksgiving"
a collection of quotes
edited by Jake Kilroy

AN EXCERPT:
Thanksgiving is an emotional holiday. People travel thousands of miles to be with people they only see once a year. And then discover once a year is way too often.
- Johnny Carson

Thanksgiving Day comes, by statute, once a year; to the honest man it comes as frequently as the heart of gratitude will allow.
- Edward Sandford Martin

Thanksgiving, after all, is a word of action.
- W.J. Cameron

Thanksgiving Day, a function which originated in New England two or three centuries ago when those people recognized that they really had something to be thankful for, annually, not oftener, if they had succeeded in exterminating their neighbors, the Indians, during the previous twelve months instead of getting exterminated by their neighbors, the Indians. Thanksgiving Day became a habit, for the reason that in the course of time, as the years drifted on, it was perceived that the exterminating had ceased to be mutual and was all on the white man's side, consequently on the Lord's side; hence it was proper to thank the Lord for it and extend the usual annual compliments.
- Mark Twain

Thanksgiving was never meant to be shut up in a single day.
- Robert Caspar Lintner

An optimist is a person who starts a new diet on Thanksgiving Day.
- Irv Kupcinet

There is one day that is ours. There is one day when all we Americans who are not self-made go back to the old home to eat saleratus biscuits and marvel how much nearer to the porch the old pump looks than it used to. Thanksgiving Day is the one day that is purely American.
- O. Henry

On Thanksgiving Day we acknowledge our dependence.
- William Jennings Bryan

Thanksgiving is America's national chow-down feast, the one occasion each year when gluttony becomes a patriotic duty.
- Michael Dresser

I love Thanksgiving turkey. It's the only time in Los Angeles that you see natural breasts.
- Arnold Schwarzenegger

Happy We-Stole-Your-Land-and-Killed-Your-People Day!
- Al, from the film "Sweet November"

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

A Lion In Washington


"A Lion In Washington"
a diary about eating donkeys and elephants
by Ashley Ayres

AN EXCERPT:

Washington, DC is not just stomping grounds. It's a watering hole sinking. It's a feeding ground with scarce nutrition. You could set the trees on fire and those closest to the ground wouldn't notice. The ash could look like rain in the off-season anyhow. Hunting isn't good for those with a briefcase. They'd rather outsource it.

That's where I come in.

Well, not yet anyway.

What's black, red and white all over? It's not a riddle or a joke. I'm telling you as nicely as I can that this city is damage. It's beautifully settled and unsettling beauty, all aglow when the right holiday comes around. Otherwise, it's slow cars and faster hands. Move in, every poster says. This city is yours...technically, the government mumbles. It would take an anarchist to paint faces here, spouses whisper to one another. Ah yes, you with the prettiest eyes, America.

Black eyes, red eyes, white eyes. Soulless vs. heartless vs. gutless.

Paints an awful picture, doesn't it? Well, thank goodness that art doesn't sell as well here as it should. You have to spit at the wind overlooking the river to feel anything, something close to a kiss. Dodged a bullet, you think. Ironic for a president's stay, you laugh.

Well, I'm a character assassin with the longest smile. Want to hear a worse joke? I'm the John Wilkes Booth of spiritual killing. And I make a killing. First order of the highest order, you know.

Pay the good man and you'll never have to pray to the bad god. I play middleweight.

And I love every second of this blurry black, red and white town. No matter how I try to sell it blue.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Empire Boys


"Empire Boys"
a novel about those coasting on the East Coast

by Jake Kilroy

AN EXCERPT:
"Mahty, I ain't neva been so showe 'bout breakin' an enterin'. It just...well, I don't know."

"Listen, dey call you Jimmy Bones fuh a reason, right?"

"Yea, but dey...ok, they're gone. How are we really doing this?"

"We're going through the basement window. We'll go up the basement stairs. They won't see us coming. Here's a bat. You knock over anyone who moves."

"Wouldn't that be everyone?"

"Not the ones I already nailed with taser shots. They're shaking and shifting like the last kids in a bad dodgeball game."

"That's the best analogy you got?"

"Listen, Jim, I'll kill you dead. Right now. How's that?"

"Fine, fine, fine. Empire Boys, eh?"

"Never been another mutiny that could play the orchestra too."

"Should I grab a knife?"

"Why would you? You've got brass knuckles and a bat. You're stronger than a cheap blade. Besides, your wits are sharper than the Devil's horns."

"Ok, that one was good."

"Any last words before we pledge our allegiance to weapons?"

"Sure. You're like a brother to me, Martin."

"I wanna hear better last words."

"I'll be the last man standing even if I'm not the last one dead."

"Nah, something more spiritual."

"My knuckles may be broken, but my spirit will never be."

"That wasn't spiritual, Jim."

"Ok, ok, ok...I am the last revolution, the last graveyard, the last willing spit of God."

"Good. Another one."

"The angels will play their trumpets when we stop harping."

"Another one!"

"May God bury us in the last century of Earth!"

"Another one!"

"Their blood is the most unholy of rain and I am the most ungodly of heroes!"

"Another one!"

"Never another grave, never another reason for Heaven to doubt our intentions, never while the Devil isn'thot enough to touch or torch our souls!"

"Another one!"

"The pale horse of death is no match for the paler horse of man!"

"Another one!"

"This bat is my glory, let the Almighty carry my hands swiftly, challenging my enemies to challenge their own god."

"Keep going!"

"And through any valley, I am tall. Over any mountain, I am humble. I am aware of my own bones, breakable and able to break. I am in control. I am God. I am the Devil. I am sin. I am sainthood. I am ordained. I am the luscious taste of evil. I am the Mardi Gras in winter. I am New Year's Eve on fire. I am all encompassing. I am all destruction. I am here for eternity and hear lifetimes, all congruent, all more harrowing than the last. I will march forward, upward, never seeing any sky, praising my own damned livelihood underneath a broken windowpane, raining down on my spine, never feeling ultimate pain. I will never doubt you or myself, and I will surely never misjudge character. You are true, I am truth and there will be skulls rattling above and below, no doubt in Heaven or Hell, I will walk the fine line between, burying all who oppose us. I will fight, I should wreck, I can kill, I might bury. By morning, I will be an angel or a saint with blood on my robes. Yea?"

There was a long pause.

"Well, how was that?" Jimmy asked.

"Good Lord, Jim, the death sentence of the Countess Markiewicz wasn't even that harsh. I don't know what some of what you said meant, but goddamn, Jimmy! Good show! Now let's wreck and ruin!"

Then they charged the stairs.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Clean Camping


"Clean Camping"
a guide to politeness in the wilderness
by Nicky Clark

AN EXCERPT:
Listen, I'm not saying you have to love nature. I don't. I think nature is like a bad boyfriend, constantly inviting you into his lush softness and plush beauty, but then he starts putting marks on your body that make you itch. Pretty soon, you're sleeping in a tent, freezing to make breakfast. Even making coffee becomes a difficult and defying effort.

But I like swimming. So I guess...that's like a good New Year's with the boyfriend on his best behavior. But if it's winter, it's cold. Just like a bad boyfriend. It stings you. It wears on your heart. It hurts your privates.

Somehow, you'll make it to the top of a great mountain, and you'll think, "I did this. Me." And on your proud march down, you'll notice how much nature helped you. The rock was perfectly sloped, the ground was perfectly solid and the insects were perfectly calm. Should you thank nature? No. Nature can go suck its own egg.

Before you realize what you're doing, you're kicking any plant that even remotely hangs over a path, you're swearing off hiking and you're actually punching trees.

"Hiking boots! Attaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack!" you scream in a god-awful melody that only the birds can hear. Nobody's around for miles. The relationship is not doing well.

"Meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeen!" you scream as you miss men now. At least they never gave you bug bites, at least they never made you pee in an outhouse, at least they never made you carry your own stupid water bottle because the river had scat in it.

"I'll kiiiiiiiiiiilllllllll yooooooooooooouuuuuu, naaaaaaattttuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuure!" you wail, panting and undressing as you run down the hill, tripping over your own feet, cutting your legs on branches you didn't see and thinking only of eating honey.

But you still want to preserve nature. It's here to stay, in all of your apathetic and unruly delusional moments speeds. Kill, kill, kill! Save, save, save! You're fighting against yourself and your better instincts.

Well, keep it clean and maybe you won't have to worry about your impact, chuckles.

Stop throwing your beer cans. You suck.

Stop leaving candy wrappers. You suck.

And stop saving the whales. They suck.

No, seriously, find something better to save, jerks.

Friday, November 21, 2008

A Mask, A Miss, A Mistress, A Mattress


"A Mask, A Miss, A Mistress, A Mattress"
a collection of one act plays...and things
by Jake Kilroy

AN EXCERPT:
"Toasts"

We all raised our glasses, filled with different liquors, wines and spirits.

"To what then?" asked the bushy eyebrowed man.

"To travesty," said the girl in a slinky red dress.

"To divine comedy of man," said the rosy-nose burly mate.

"To forgetting," said the lanky insurance salesman.

"To education," said the grad student.

"To the mystery of saints," said the sinner

"To the charm of sinners," said the saint.

"To the harrowing culture of heroes," said the service man.

"To colorless collars," said the gas station attendant.

"To answers," said the scientist.

"To wandering," said the nomad.

"To style," said the fashionista.

"To wit," said Oscar Wilde.

"To the quiet upstarts," said George Orwell.

"To undying love," said F. Scott Fitzgerald.

"To swallowing a gun faster than this drink," said Ernest Hemingway.

"To cooking your brains before dawn," said Sylvia Plath.

"To being a crazy bitch," said Lenny Bruce.

"To Lenny Bruce being a dickhead," Sylvia Plath replied bitterly.

"To trust," said Julius Caesar with a laugh.

"To blasphemy, foreplay and arrogance," I said.

They all stared at me.

"Oh, ok...to charming bad decisions and neglecting your conscience," I said.

They continued to stare.

"You know...Sylvia over there got two things," I said.

"Yeah, but she's accomplished something. Mr. Kilroy, have you ever even read The Bell Jar?" asked the college professor.

"Yes," I lied.

"And?" he asked.

"And I'm with Lenny. To Sylvia Plath being a nutty twat!" I yelled.

And we drank.

Lenny cheered and clapped after he set his glass down.

I really do hate most of the attendees at these dinner parties.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Loving & Lusting (In The City)


"Loving & Lusting (In The City)"
a collection of poems
by Jake Kilroy

AN EXCERPT:
"Her Mixtapes"
it might just be that the world is looking to hate jake kilroy.

She told me once that she set her stereo on fire and threw it out a car window.
And from that day forward, I promised to never made her another mix tape.

Two months later, she made me a mix tape.
That Christmas, I gave it to my grandmother to tape over for NPR.

On New Year's Eve, I kissed her.
And the next day, she set my heart on fire and threw me out a bedroom door.

A year later, she kissed me.
The next holiday, I made her a mix tape and broke her stunning heart.

On Palm Sunday, she left a mixtape in my mailbox.
But on Easter Sunday, I knifed a note to her door.

The note read, "Forget holidays, forget mixtapes and forget your lover."
She saw me the next day.

She yelled, "You're the only lover I've had for months."
I said, "I know, and I'm a bad person. I've been making mixtapes for others."

"Other women?"
"Well, men don't fall for my musical trickery."

A month later, she said, "Don't get drunk and kiss me on holidays."
I said, "Then it wouldn't be a holiday, would it?"

She was mine for roughly seven months after that.
Then I started writing her poetry.

She'll probably read this and throw up.
And if I captured it on a mixtape, I'd be more honest than the others.

For the record, I blew up my car radio once, back when I had nights to drive,
before the liquor store stops and late hours hook-up drops.

I pulled bikinis off swimmingly in pools and danced skirts off with hands,
all the while listening to a mixtape she made me some Thanksgiving.

But I've got no rapture to part with, no sainthood to ordain.
I've just got a car bench seat where I can drank whiskey sorrowfully.

And I always listen to her mixtapes.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

How To Seduce Everyone


"How To Seduce Everyone"
a guide for the ride
by Eyvette Min

PREFACE:
Dear reader,

As I write this, it is 6:32 a.m. and I have a martini in one hand and a boy in the other.

Did I just get up or did I just get home? Is it going to be a wildly fantastic day or was it a fantastically wild night? I suppose it's the age old question that has nothing to do with old age; it has to do with your fevers, what makes your body clock tick like a timebomb during a weekend on the town.

Which are you taking home, the taxi or the man? Here's a hint: one saves you time and money. One's fare and the other's fair. Drop that F. Now what are you: "are" (concrete and stationary) or "air" (free and angelic)?

Nobody paying fare is playing fair, girl. Didn't they teach you that as soon as you learned how to paint your fingernails and wiggle your tush? Oh my, have you been paying for you own meals? Well, let me tell you, I haven't paid for a meal since Jack-In-The-Box was serving kangaroo meat.

You have the answers. Now you just have to make those boys question themselves.

Ah, these questions, these challenges, these wonders, these battles...so alarming and charming, like a book of poetry set on fire and put out to sea to die.

Health vs. wealth, property vs. luxury, nature vs. nurture, strawberries vs. cream....

Why not have both, I say?

I can exercise all right and exercise my right, I can have my stake while having my steak, and I can have my wilderness with my wildness, all with some strawberries & cream, of course.

Boys are easy, not flimsy. Girls, well, we're another war. And we invented the rules, just so you know; scrawled in lipstick and vodka. Maybe finalized by a scream down Fifth Avenue in a limo.

This is your time, your night, your life. I mean, who else is gonna dance for you?

Ever seen a hot tub before dawn? Well, I'll tell you, it sparkles, like a glistening bath of diamonds. Sugardaddies aren't just candy, darling. Sometimes, they're sweeter.

And, if you must know, after midnight, I often drop the "ward" and keep my wardrobe down to a slim minimum....a sliminmum? Wow, that's a mouthful.

Which brings me back to boys being easy.

You can always have it good by being no good. But remember the three Cs: classy, coy and celebrationious.

Fine, ok, that last one's not a word. But I'm sure if you dropped your lip gloss and bent over to get it in front of Webster, he'd make anything you said a word. You could be a word, but you're more than that; you're a phrase, a sentence, an essay, a novel, in fact, you're the whole goddamn language, really.

So, here's your new motto, ladies (cherish it):

You don't have to be easy to have it easy. You just need to make it look easy.

Work it and you'll never work again.

Well, you have to read this book and I've gotta jet (am I leaving or did some nice young man actually buy me a jet? I suppose you'll know the answer by the last chapter).

So, I'm off, even when I'm dead-on.

Ciao,
Eyvette

p.s. Yes, I did make it so that Chapter 15 smells like Strawberries & Cream. That's the sexy chapter.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Smokes


"Smokes"
a novel
by Jessica Getty

AN EXCERPT:
The city was shades of gray, streaming yellow lights above and cliche, a plane in the distance made noise of the bridge. Marie took a long drag of her clove and watch the smoke drift up her face and fade into the city skyline. A boat sounded.

"All adrift, we have to shift, never taking what we're making, a dry smile for the miracle mile," she said with a sigh, reciting a line from a poem she had written for Daniel some years ago, back when she actually wrote poetry instead of reading and hating it. Poetry is for the hopeless, she would tell herself, keeping her senses clean.

Her shoulders slumped, a pale comparison to the staunch buildings, uptight and magnificent, a glory for those who stand, not reserved for those who sit or sleep.

Patrick appeared behind her, stumbling out the window.

"Why'd you leave the party?" asked Patrick, as he took a seat next to Marie.

"Had some dreaming to kill," said Marie.

"That's hardly inspiring."

"Wow. Nothing gets by you, eh?"

"Ah, there's that charm of yours," Patrick said with a small laugh. Marie smiled too.

"Patrick, what should become of us? What are we supposed to be doing? What are we supposed to be accomplishing? Aren't we supposed to be martyrs by now or something?"

"God, no, I don't want to be a martyr until I've long given up."

"Then that's not a martyr."

"Just because the history books never wrote that a martyr begged for his life doesn't mean that he didn't," Patrick said with a gloating smile. "I'll see you back inside."

Patrick slipped inside the window and returned to their friends. Marie took a long drag of her clove and slumped over her knees a little more, her legs dangling off the roof, some eight stories up on a hill. What if she were to fall? What if she were to fly? Is there any different in the beginning stages? No, not really. All it takes is one jump and one leap of confidence.

She'd probably be able to write good poetry after the hospital stay. She wondered if the nurses and doctors would let her smoke if she were dying.

God help Heaven if it doesn't have a smoking room, she thought.

Marie smiled. That was a good line. Maybe she'd write a poem tonight, as soon as her guests were gone. Or maybe she'd jump. Either way, whether in Heaven or Hell, at least it's not limbo.

She felt sick to her stomach. She took a final draw of smoke, filling her lungs with the waves of gray, watching the fog roll into the city from the bay. She stood up and headed back into her apartment, but not without one final look at the city. She wished that someone had been playing a saxophone for the moon. It was too pretty. Maybe a tuba it for the bay. Maybe a french horn for the car alarms. Maybe a clarinet for the birds. Maybe a trumpet for the lovers with their shades pulled, waiting for the morning to come and their day to change. In a city, there are no musicians that want you to hear free music. They just slip up from time to time, playing what they want, forgetting there are others around.

And maybe that's all it took for her to write poetry.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Aimless


"Aimless: one man's journey without any sense of direction"
another adventure
by Jake Kilroy

PREFACE:
Tennessee, Whiskey & Beatnik Poetry: The Adventure

My friend Grant and I were dying of boredom and bored of dying on the West Coast. We decided to do something about it, we decided to wreck Tennessee and drink ourselves to death.

So, we're flying out to that flat trapezoid state that's half an east coast fury and half a southern belle. Once again, I plan on living like Jack Kerouac and any beatnik poet writer that ever thought the written word was worth more than alliteration and oxygen mixed together in a cocktail.

Grant said, "We're going to live like Dean and Sal, though I don't know which of us is which. I'm not sure who will be the writer and who will be the screw-up. My girlfriend says if I were traveling with anybody else, I'd be the voice of reason. But, I think because I'm traveling with you...that makes me the crazy one."

He's talking bar fights and I'm talking jail nights. I told him that I had planned on being Sal anyway, just because once we finally dragged our broken bodies and fiery souls home, I intended with every dedicated sweaty ounce in my body to document our furious chaos in scribbles and frantic sketches of the countryside. I'll even buy a typewriter, I thought.

And that's where this comes in. This is the manifesto I wrote on the road, a pen dipped in magic, a luxury I haven't always had to my own disintegrating name.

So, I'm Sal, Grant is Dean, and I hope to Christ that he (or He) steals us some cars, just in case we leave the rental in a river. Maybe while we're swimming, we'd leave it in neutral, and so would be the story to tell the curious grandkids. While we're jumping off barren cliffs in the Midwest (if such landmarks exist in the clunky cornfields and miles of the Western Promise not yet corrupted by urban sprawl), we'll soon realize that we may have done ourselves in. We'll tread water (Grant maybe with a cigarette or chewing tobacco in his mouth, and I maybe with sunglasses on), and watch our great ride home sink to whatever river it is that we may pass the afternoon in.

The sun will shine as we watch it bounce off the license plate before it finally submerges, coughing up bubbles to where we tread the deepest water. We'll both stare, gawking as we stay afloat, before I know both of us would laugh like mad, acutely aware that we have no way of making it back to California, but also being excited to tell the story whenever we return by whatever means we'd later figure.

We'd be botched extraordinarily if that asphalt ship went down, but we'd laugh for days as we took the bus home from Kansas across sketchy looming time zones. And besides, time zones only matter on maps. It's not like Grant or I will care if it's two or three in the afternoon. We just want to be sure that we have another hour of sunlight. And we'll realize it soon enough when the sky breaks orange and sputters yellow and some raggedy purple, and finally the clouds are red, and it's nothing but a paintbrush shadow carrying us into quiet evenings of fireflies and conversation.

Also, whiskey.

We'll land in Tennessee with a tent, two sleeping bags, an acoustic guitar, a bottle of whiskey, a small bag of clothes, and a notebook and a camera. We're going to wander through the airport looking like "those guys," the ones who look completely out of their minds or the most brilliant men walking the earth, traveling and searching for the almighty goal of immortality. We'll be the men/boys on the street who look like we know which direction paradise is, like we know where the answers lay, somewhere beyond the city, and most certainly somewhere beyond the working man's mental realm.

We have no intentions of high luxury. We will sleep in our car or tent the whole way home.

We will pause to swim early mornings in rivers and talk entire afternoons in Midwestern cornfields. Our car's antenna will pick up folk, country and blues only. Our arms will be tan from dangling out the window under an overbearing Midwestern sun and our bodies will be cold at night under a harvest moon, always climbing as a giant over the trees, over the mountains, above the small quiet desolate towns, pinned tight against the nocturnal sky.

Life will be some joyride, us in the front seat with days and nights to kill with our best songs and tape recordings of dialogue. Never with any mal intention, never murdering our days and nights, but rather overwhelming these passing afternoons and evenings well into slumber. For how long, I couldn't even begin to imagine or wager.

We will throw concrete jungle philosophy around small farming towns, just to see how it all fares across this roadmap of a nation. We will find heartache and blessings on the open road. There will be no sunset we won't see and no sunrise that won't cause shift in our sleep. We'll live like cowboys dependent on a rented car. And we will read used book store fiction and fall asleep to a cracking fire and strumming guitar.

Our hearts will beat so loud and affectionately that it will always sound like we wear it on our sleeves, but we'll probably just leave it back in Tennessee with whatever sense or reason we once had in our claustrophobic hometown.

I don't want to feel like I'm moving through motions.

I want to feel like I'm traveling through some kind of warp, straight through that highway I've always dreamed about. It's the one where I'm everlasting, the one I felt occasionally in high school when everything made sense but I was still out of my head entirely (junior year), the one that caused such an uproar in my heart about living and maybe dying in Australia, where I may or may not have been a drunk philosopher poet who attended the operas with his beatnik woman who spent her afternoons playing records and teaching me how to dance.

You see, it's all poetry for the crumbling eras living and whispering in your heart.

We are all everlasting, and we'll travel through jungles and oceans, but there's some city that we don't catch up on, inside us, and we make snide remarks about it all, never realizing our own truth. It's when you finally start moving fast enough or slow enough that the times are making sense to you, where you finally go to bed immediately. And the death of insomnia isn't from a long day or lack of previous sleep weighing upon your skyrocketing skull. It's from some closure that covers you better than the blanket you only hold onto for sentimental reasons.

There's truth in all of us, and it just seems like everyone has their own separate timebombs that will blow them up apart to the same conclusion: we are everlasting. And we should all know and act upon it.

We won't come home hungry and we're not coming back thirsty.

We're coming back complete.

Friday, November 14, 2008

You Will Learn Nothing


"You Will Learn Nothing"
a college guide
by Jake Kilroy

BACK COVER:
Ever hate that kid who always had his hand up in a lecture class? Ever lie during club rush to get free stuff? Ever attend rallies and protests because you thought the pseudo-hippie was hot? Ever…hey, read this book!

AN EXCERPT:
I wasn’t always the smoothest when trying to score with sorority girls either.

“Yeah, I’m in a fraternity,” I told a hot blonde in my math class once.

“Oh, cool. What fraternity?”

“I can’t pronounce it.”

“What do you mean you can’t pronounce it?”

“It’s in a robot language of some kind. Or maybe Egyptian. I don't know. I've fallen asleep in all of my classes having to do with Asia.”

“It’s Greek.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, I’m sure it’s Greek.”

“How do you know anyway? Aren’t you, like, a public relations major?”

“Yes, but I’m also in Alpha Delta Phi.”

“And that’s what…? Like, a secret group of government operatives?”

“Huh? Do you seriously not know what your fraternity is called or are you just trying to score?”

“No, I’m in…Delta Force Gamma Ray Alpha Dog…”

“Wow.”

“Impressed?”

"No."

"Oh yeah? Well, this entire time we've been talking, I've been staring at your boobs. So...I win. Deal with it."

Thursday, November 13, 2008

The Painter


"The Painter"
a novella
by Raymie Iadevaia

"The greatest form of art is simply getting people to understand or appreciate art," the painter said. Now that he had hijacked the stage, he had the full attention of everyone at the benefit. The tuxedos and gowns stared at him.

And he wasn't nervous. Not at all. This was what they had been waiting for, this is what he had been preparing for.

"If one was to ask the average American citizen who some of the best painters were, most would list Picasso as one. Ask them why and they’d ask for multiple choice. It’s a terrible crime to let people slide between knowing and understanding. Appreciation is a dead art form, I suppose."

A man coughed. The painter pointed at him and the man was immediately silent. The painter shrugged and continued.

"Art critics, of any medium, and actual artists are radically different. It’s not as if one could compare college professors and college students. Sure, they're able to share the same institution, but never are they allowed to be condemned to exposure in the same light. It would be downright silly to compare them, and yet, art critics feel as if they are in step with artists."

A woman stood up as if to defend herself as an art critic.

"You're not," the painter said, staring the woman down. "I can't believe I have to tell you this, but I assure you, you're not," the painter repeated. He spoke to the crowd once again.

"Art is about personal impression, and if we actually consider this, art critics should be out of jobs. They are paid to tell the mass population, which I include myself in, what is good, what is bad, what is contemporary or hip, what is magnificent, what is radical, what is truth. And I mean, my god, how spitefully unoriginal."

No one was drinking the punch. A cigarette was floating between the ice cubes. Nobody noticed. Everyone was watching the painter.

"Art critics are the mailmen of love letters. They can certainly deliver them, but they surely didn't write them. This, I suppose, is the great injustice of art."

Marilyn slipped in the back door. She stood by the bathroom, next to the waiters. She noticed tears streaming down one the cheeks of a tall waiter with a thin mustache.

"So, if I may repeat myself, the audience will always listen, but the promising question is if they will understand. Art critics can openly hate everything and they will still be paid. To publicly conjure up some meandering insight is easy for them, but applying it as interpretation is the harder part of the job, and I’m sure they would rather put it off as fact."

Marilyn was pushed out of the way. A busboy stormed his way into the bathroom. He had dropped acid during appetizers and was terrified of the talking beard on stage. The busboy hid under the sink for the rest of the night.

"Art critics will present their opinions as matter-of-facts, which is what they are paid to do. And it's those who realize the harsh and unbridled nature of art that will do it justice absolute. But it will never be a critic. It'll be someone with a tool in their hand made for creating, not destroying. Burn this world before you build it again, you think. And art critics think they know better than the artist," the painer said with a scoff and roll of his head.

"If John F. Kennedy was shot in this very room, at least one art critic would criticize Lee Harvey Oswald for his form," the painter said with a laugh. "And that is it for me this evening. My canvas is dry and my mouth is worse. May some angel stab you through the heart, so that you may know mercy. Good night and thank you for your time."

The art critics were stunned. They stood dumbfounded. But the rest of the hall erupted into cheers; loud, delerious, unruly, glorious cheers. And, for once, it was deafening and the art critics had nothing to say.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Snowflake Gardens


"Snowflake Gardens"
a paperback about the finer things: wine, pool and a warm gun
by Mallory Keeler

AN EXCERPT:
Riley and Sam stood in the cemetery. They were alone, excluding the hundreds of dead around them.

"You got your gun?" asked Riley.

"I've got two," said Sam. "Markowitz will have two bloody stumps for legs before he even realizes he's still got two arms to shoot with."

"Jesus," mumbled Riley.

"Well, how often are you supposed to watch a friend get murdered, huh? Isn't that kind of a once in a lifetime thing? Once you see it, odds are against seeing it again. Am I right? Well, consider our week. Consider what we've seen," said Sam. "Jackson got shot off the goddamn bridge! You would've thought he was flying if you didn't know Markowitz pumped him full with a shotgun!"

"Yea," said Riley quietly, "I know."

"And we don't even know where the femme fetale is, do we?"

"Probably at the pool hall."

"Where the pool tables are coffins," said Sam, shutting his eyes, remembering Gary's death.

"Look, we don't even know if she's really working for Markowitz, for us or for herself. She's got interests all over the place. She stands to make a profit from everyone it seems like," said Riley with a shrug.

There was a long eerie silence. The wind was picking up. Riley tilted his fedora and reached into his trenchcoat for a cigarette.

"Gary slept with her, you know," said Sam with a grunt.

"Really?" said Riley, pulling his cigarette away. "Why didn't you tell me? This changes suspects, this changes motives, this changes everything!"

"No, it doesn't. What's done is done, what's dead is dead, and now I pray for my soul versus theirs," said Sam, cocking both of his guns.

It started snowing.

Riley looked around. Everything was in black and white. He brushed some snow off a tombstone and kicked some dirt away from the letters.

"Like demons crawling the earth, spreading disease, he'll shoot his men down hot before they freeze," said Riley, looking around at the buried. "And like angels covering their tracks, in the dead of night, he'll bury his wounded at Snowflake Gardens all right."

Riley let out a sigh and cocked his gun.

Sam grinned slightly, "Let's go."

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

A Little Out Of Place


"A Little Out Of Place"
a novel
by Jason Kornfeld

AN EXCERPT:
"He's awful, you know," Mike whispered.

Oh, I hadn't noticed that he's rude to everyone, that he's inconsiderate of the few friends he has left, that he's so unaware that he's the friend that we would let be burned at the stake," said Max.

"Why do we remain friends with him?"

Max shrugged, "Convenience?"

"True, but torturous. It's almost always easier to ignore a friend than to part ways."

Max let out a long sigh, glancing down the aisle to his left. He looked to his right at Michael and then to the stage, watching the dancers swirl and twirl in pink and white. Max sighed again, "Glory be the last soldier dead."

"No, glory be the high officers that pay off the family," Michael said with a grin.

Though Max and Michael were showing terrifying amounts of teeth, the rows around them kept empty. The ballet was only a local production and they were only there to see Juliette. She was not the best dancer on stage, but she did have the most ghostly presence.

"Really though? What of his smile? It's false, isn't it?"

"Sometimes, I think his cheeks were pierced years ago, as if he knew his own friends would sell him up the river just to build a cheap dam later in life,"said Michael, as if a bitter taste remained in his gums, from the cocktail or from the chicken. "He pierced his cheeks so he couldn't cry, so he could seem like he deals with everything in good grace, so he could consider every morning a new day instead of a new war."

"Good Lord, why did you create our friend?"said Max.

"Good Devil, why did you create our enemy?" said Michael.

"And why are they the same person?" said Liam as he sat down. "Sorry I'm late. How's she doing?"

"Pretty good, a few slips, but I'll tell her that she did wonderful," said Michael.

Max and Michael both welcomed Liam with sincere handshakes and grins. Liam wasn't the friend that Max and Michael spoke of with noose lips. In fact, Liam had been done with their friend since the last holiday season.

"God, I hate that guy," said Liam.

"We should form some kind of militia," said Max.

"Hey, glory be the infantry," said Michael.

"Glory be the high officers that pays off the families," said Max with a smile.

"I don't understand ballet," said Liam.

Monday, November 10, 2008

The Irish Drink


"The Irish Drink"
by Jake Kilroy

PREFACE:
I’m doing you a favor, chum.

The Irish Drink is a conversation starter. Is it a sentence? Is it a noun? Is it the book you’ve come to keep next to your family photo albums? Is it maybe the favorite book of the blonde at the bar? Is it 21st Century's Ulysses?

I don’t know (but I think we all surely doubt it's not the last one). However, I don’t live with you and we're not drinking buddies…yet. Hold tight, I’ve got a book to write. Yes, of course this book will have scattered rhymes. I’m Irish, you know. There’s poetry in nearly everything I spout.

Still, the Irish remain drinkers, and drinkers still consider it a good destiny to be Irish.

So let us consider what history has been made by the Irish and what of it had to do with a good pint. Maybe a dirty whiskey sitting on ice. Maybe a cleaner bill of health. Maybe a cleaner bill of dirty whiskey.

History has drinkers. Drinkers have history. Only sometimes you can drink history.

They named a whiskey after Michael Collins. Eamon de Valera didn’t even become a rum. Maybe it was because he wasn’t sweet enough. But then again, what philosophy can you imagine with ice instead of dreams?

Whiskey was first counted in the early 15th Century as being distilled by Irish monks. History!

Some cultures have peyote, some cultures have whiskey. The Irish are clearly under the latter umbrella. And a good pint is and has been the cornerstone of all western socials.

But I think it's hard to know what came first, the person or the problem.

I suppose I may be reading too much into a book that I didn't write or read. But I did write this book. Haven't read it since though. A problem? Oh, I've got shelves of them.

And, you know, maybe it’s not so much that I’ve got a drinking problem. Maybe the drink has a me problem.

I mean, didn't you ever wonder what you were toasting to?

Cheers,
Jake Kilroy

Friday, November 7, 2008

Robots & Capitalists


"Robots & Capitalists"
a novel work of pulp fiction
by Jake Kilroy

AN EXCERPT:
Leonardo was tired.

He was exhausted. Dreadfully ripe for sleep. But he hadn’t said what he wanted to scream in the ballroom. Instead, he'd have it out with her in the hallway. He was shaking.

“A personality crisis is not a striking set of minute tidbits that you can diagnose for your own self-esteem, Gabrielle!” he struggled to yell.

Gabrielle stopped.

“These are human beings, just in case you were wondering,” Leonardo continued. “No, not all of us can be robots and capitalists. Some of us actually break for the common man. I know when my mouth carries itself farther than my heart. I am not digging up fields or mass graves for wisdom, just so we’re clear. I feel that's how you treat your brutal sense of things.”

The trees whistled outside. Leonardo's voice boomed over them.

“So, don't feed me this birdseed and tell me I’ll be full,” Leonardo continued. “Don’t make it seem as if you like to be brutally honest. You only want to shock the dreams out of people, good or bad, just so they have a reaction. Let's be honest, with that empty life of yours, when was the last time you really said something profound, to maybe get your own reaction? I'll give you a hint: you were still a child.”

Even without Leonardo's anger and anguish, the house was not quiet. Gabrielle could hear the party guests on the other side of the veranda, but Leonardo was not yet done.

“One man's self-destruction is not another's glory,” Leonardo said. “No matter how much you want to believe I treasure your trash.”

Gabrielle began to cry.

“I went to bed shaking last night and it was only a reckoning on the future. Nothing's going to make a sacrifice of the past in art or leisure, and I damn well sure won't use nap time to cut up your telephone wires. I promise you that I won't make a pretty penny off your thoughts,” Leonardo said before laughing a mean chuckle. “As if I could sell a big sinking ego to anybody but this circle of friends.”

The rain that had spent the afternoon over the farmlands was now well over the mansion.

“Tell me when the idle ideals wear off and you catch up with your mouth,” Leonardo said with authority and a final sneering noise.

“Leonardo!” Gabrielle cried out as she chased him to the door, carrying her red dress. But Leonardo was already marching through the rain to his car.

The moon was low over the countryside. Though neither crying in the gardens noticed.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Manahandled


"Manahandled"
a restaurant guide
by Kevin Manahan

AN EXCERPT:

Olive Garden
3755 Alton Parkway
Irvine, CA 92606


RATINGS:
FOOD: 6
ATMOSPHERE: 5
ATTRACTIVE PEOPLE: scattered
SERVICE: simply the word "putz"
OVERALL SCORE (OUT OF A POSSIBLE 10 MANAHANS): 5

The food was like any Olive Garden meal, so I won't go into that. I mean, it's a chain. So let's talk about the resident chain potsmoker and my waitress, Julie.

From the Olive Garden:
This lady is high. She is totally baked out of her mind. She's probably eating all of the breadsticks while listening to the Allman Brothers. I bet she thinks that her hands are flashlights and her legs are being massaged by gnomes. At some point, I'm sure she will burp up a Cypress Hill CD.

"So, what can I get yooooouuu?" (I spelled that accurately, I assure you)

"The Coke I asked for twice already," I replied in my most forced tone. My teeth are grinding from kindness.

"Ohhhhh, ok. So two Diet Cokes?"

"What? No. Wait...no. Just one. Regular."

"Just one regular Diet Coke."

"What...? No, lady, listen to me. One Coke."

"Haha. It sounded like you said onecoke."

"What the hell is onecoke?"

"I don't know. You said it."

Long pause. Visions of strangling flash.

"I see. May I please speak with your manager?"

"Can't. He's, like, busyyyyyyyy?"

"Yes, I'm sure he is, but...wait, I'm sorry, but how is that a question?"

"What's a question?"

Long pause. Visions of red painting walls.

"Meaning, what is a question or what part of what I said was a question?"

"Three!"

Stunned. I freeze. My body hurts.

"You know that wasn't a math question, right?"

"Anytime someone asks me something hard, I figure it's math."

"I see. Well, send your manager over whenever you get the chance. I think he might've accidentally hired a broken VCR hooked up to a toaster."

"I don't get it."

"Didn't think you would. Quick! What's the difference between a bunny?"

"Three!"

"Wow. Stellar work there. Just stellar work. Get your manager."

"I'll tryyyyyy. And don't worry, I'll make sure he gets you that Pepsi."

"What...? Wait, you can't serve Pepsi and Coke at the same place."

"Well, we also have lemonade."

"No, I'm saying you can't serve both Pepsi and Coke in the same restaurant."

"Well, I could try to stir them together for you. Do you want me to use Diet Pepsi as well?"

"No, listen, you crazy piece of insanity, give me my Coke without spit in it and tell your manager I want to slap you with every breadstick that you somehow didn't eat. Pothead!"

"I wouldn't spit in iiiiiiiiiiiiiit."

"Good. Because I have a machine in my pocket that can detect spit."

"Really?"

"Yes, it looks like a phone, but it's not. It's a spit-detecting machine. Now, go get me my Coke."

"Okaaaaaaaaaay."

Some minutes later, she approaches me again.

"Hi, welcome to Red Robin, my name is Julie. What can I get you?"

"Are you smoking clown farts? This isn't Red Robin."

She laughs. "I know. I thought I could trick you."

My brain explodes.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Finally


"Finally"
by America


BACK COVER:
We have faith. We believe in hope and change. We believe in authority, we believe in the system, we believe in politics. We believe in honesty, we believe in intelligence, we believe in ethics. We believe in the evolution of the American citizen. We believe in the glory of ourselves. We believe in the inevitable.

We are ready. We are hoping and changing. We are authority, we are the system, we are politics. We are honest, we are intelligent, we are ethical. We are the evolving American citizen. We are glorious. We are the unstoppable.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

The American Flag And My Body Are On Fire


"The American Flag And My Body Are On Fire"
by Jake Kilroy


AN EXCERPT:
Thank goodness the elephants and donkeys started starving. It only seems to be a fair trade for the gluttony of years before.

The elephants began begging for peanuts and the donkeys started begging for attention. It seemed mildly ironic that the elephants were scouring the planet for their own energy when they seemed so against alternative fuel, like they had stabbed themselves in the chest and were wondering where the last butter knife in the house was. The donkeys were hardly more of an attraction. They slept in shadows. Without a spotlight, no good deed has self-praise, and nobody cares if a donkey dies in the dark.

Maybe the elephants should have rethought their policies and the donkeys should have reviewed their politics. The elephants had too much confidence, so they never thought they'd go hungry and the donkeys were too meek, so they were to scared to eat their fair share.

Both parties shall starve to death, their bones laying waste to what was overlooked. As their carcasses sink further into the earth, as the rivers pour over the graves and the flowers magnificently bloom over what was once a sputtering cough of a dying animal, there will be peace.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Being Jesus Isn't Hard


"Being Jesus Isn't Hard: Walking on water, and other miracles I can do without trying"
by Kim Orr

TAGLINE:
The only thing harder than being Jesus is writing a book about it

AN EXCERPT:
Can you imagine?

A 7-year-old that was accidentally turning water into wine everywhere she went! I hated it!

My parents were always mad at me for having alcohol in my room and all my friends thought I was making sour Kool-Aid. Naturally, I developed a little bit of resentment for my powers.

And then I thought, "Hey, this all sounds familiar. Didn't this happen in some kind of Disney movie?"

But I was quickly reminded that it was the Bible. This all happened to Jesus some good years ago.

Poor Jesus was just like me, probably going through the same stuff I was: doing wacky things to his friends' fish, having to explain things all the time, dealing with long hair and making good use of wood.

How did He deal with it? What did He do? What would He do these days with the archaic choices of cheap drugs and porno mags? With the computer and television? With ski resorts and beach houses?

Wouldn't Jesus just shrug and start cruising along the 101 listening to The Who? Wouldn't He join safaris in Africa and watch the animals play? Wouldn't He play Scrabble and Boggle? Wouldn't He know where good outlet malls were and go to matinees? Wouldn't He flunk science? Wouldn't He count cards in Las Vegas?

I mean it. Really, what the hell would Jesus do?

WTHWJD?