Dynamite

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I’ve noticed an increase in exploding heads

It is

alarming but pleasant

like the scent of wild cherry wood

smoldering as the sky dims.

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They are the walking end

soothing visions of relief

and loss

with

no eyes to see

no mouths to scream.

Just the fluffy, white bushels of smoke left behind

after a barrage of intensities

too powerful for men

to withstand.

“I’ve Noticed an Increase in Exploding Heads” by Angie Hoover-Hillhouse

Artwork: 

“Outburst” by Jumpstick

http://society6.com/JUMPSICK/Outburst-4AT_Print

“Loose Canon” by Richard Vargaz

http://society6.com/RichardVergez/Loose-Canon_Print

Top 5 Tuesday: American Authors who went to War

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1.) Shel Silverstein

author of Where the Sidewalk Ends, The Giving Tree, A light in the Attic

 Shel Silverstein, author of The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends, began drawing cartoons for the military newspaper, “Stars and Stripes”, in the 1950s, when he served in Japan and Korea.

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2.) Roald Dahl

Author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Matilda, James and the Giant Peach

Dahl was a fighter pilot in World War II,  until he got shot down in the Libyan desert, which left him with head injuries that eventually caused him to have terrible headaches. One of Dahl’s first published works was a piece for the Saturday Evening Post called “Shot Down Over Libya,” which became a popular article and helped encourage him to try his hand at writing.

[information taken from here]

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3.) Mario Puzo

author of the Godfather Trilogy (novels and films)

Mario Puzo was brought up in a poor family in New York. He served in Germany in World War II and later went to college on the GI Bill.

[ information taken from here]
 
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4.) J.R.R. Tolkien

author of The Lord of The Rings Trilogy, The Hobbit, & Multiple critical essays including Beowulf: the Monsters & the Critics

Tolkien was a survivor of the trenches of World War I, who wrote that “a real taste for fairy-stories was wakened by philology on the threshold of manhood, and quickened to full life by war.”

 

 
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5.) Jack Kerouac

author of On the Road, The Subterraneans, & Big Sur

“Before he became a famous novelist of the counterculture, Jack Kerouac enlisted in the U.S Naval Reserve. He lasted through only 10 days of boot camp, spent more than two months in a psychiatric ward and then was deemed ‘unfit for service.'”

( Los Angeles Times )

 
Link to Jack Kerouac Artwork:

Await Anxious


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the discomfort of familiarity with consistency

gnaws at necks

slides down the spine

and taunts with time

once

hours would fly then fall

wine white would bloom burgundy  blood

pale purple cotton clouds would wave through black blue skies

memories would meld with dreams

and dance in the lush possibility of each impossibility

the dulled murky mind longs to return to such a time

when i was mine

“Taunting Time” by Meaghan Merrifield

Artwork by Marko Koeppe

http://society6.com/MarkoKoeppe

Flourish

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with a dark fiery flourish

everything collapses

slow and unsteady

the biting beat

emanating from sour souls slipping to sleep

once bold

brash

brutal

unapologetically indulged

slurped up the spit of the sea

blew bubbles at the sky and laughed as it cried

earned exquisiteness

all ends should be so utter

so complete

“Flourish” by Meaghan Merrifield

“Die in Despair / Live in Ecstasy” by Eugenia Loli

http://society6.com/EugeniaLoli/Die-in-Despair–Live-in-Ecstasy_Print

A Wrinkle in Time

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in the corner,

where the top lip turns into the bottom lip,

is a fine crease

that reveals the laughter

and devastation

of life already lived–

it is not red and tough

like the scar of a healed incision,

but gentle and strange–

and sometimes concealed

by

flattering lighting.

And although it is elusive

it is there to stay–

a faint reminder of the years

resting in lost

memories.

“A Wrinkle in Time” by Angie Hoover-Hillhouse

Artwork: Valbona by Dessie Terzeiva 

This piece will be featured in an upcoming stage production called Cat-Fight, which explores  the complexities of womanhood!

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