Scott C. Holstad

To Reference That Joy Division Song Again

I keep my curtains drawn, lights low, paranoia level high. Those fucking nosy neighbors called the cops on me while I was washing the dishes with the kitchen window open, not yet owning drapes or blinds. They told the cops they saw me break out a “butcher knife” and actually carve my arms into bloody ribbons while giving them “death grins” and other weirdo shit that the cops agreed, after arriving to check things out, seemed ludicrous. I mean, I was wearing a perfectly clean white button-down, home from work. If I’d been using “a butcher knife to carve my arms into bloody ribbons,” like my drugged-out neighbors asserted, my perfect white shirt would look kind of different, you know? Maybe with some reddish stains, maybe actively dripping (or worse) blood staining it or literally soaking through the cloth, confirming their indictment of me rather than showing the cops they were weirdo troublemakers. Obviously.

Except.

Except the cops never asked to look at my actual arms, torso or anywhere else, nor to roll up my sleeves or disrobe so they could ascertain for themselves the truth of what seemed obvious – clean white shirt, no blood, no harm, no foul, right?

Except things were momentarily interesting when the younger cop saw a raised white scar on my left hand and asked about it. We all laughed when I admitted that I’d done some stupid things in college and this had been one of them, that when going through Hell Week near the end of pledging my fraternity, I’d drunkenly lost a stupid dare/bet and was forced to endure two seniors carving the fraternity’s Greek letter symbols into my hand with a knife. Hurt like hell and no one had thought I’d basically be branded for life, but there you are – crazy, officers, right? 

Right.

Though if you actually looked hard at that scar, it’d be tough to make out which Greek letters, which fraternity. Some might look and conclude it was more likely the work of Freddy Kreuger, not drunk frat boys eager to score points. Honestly, I sure couldn’t guess what could be seen in that scar. It was an angry mish mash of cuts, slices and etchings amounting to chaos theory, not really what the power of suggestion would lead others to believe they saw. What and which realities are ever right anyway? I doubt anyone really knows.

I wanted to be left alone and finally was. First, one clueless cop admitted he’d always wondered what kind of weird shit those frat kids did. Laughed when I replied, “Obviously not just those drunken orgies you always see in the movies.

I was glad to see them go when they did because I was kind of surprised and relieved they hadn’t asked me to remove my shirt. If I had, I’d have a whole lot of explaining to do about all of the scars decorating my body – my arms, chest, inner thighs. The tic tac toe game carved into my chest over time with many beautiful tools, most especially my Cold Steel 15” serrated tanto I loved so much, nor the bloody serrated loving courtesy my Benchmade, SOG, Gerber, K-BAR, Kershaw and other beloved blades in my collection.

Yes, hard to explain but harder still, I imagine, the arms wrapped into rapidly dampening rust-colored Ace bandages, and I noticed, with some leakage that would be hard to explain. I mean, WTH, right?

As I ripped the bandages from my arms, you could see scars, scabs, open red and soaking wet cuts oozing blood, leaking blood, in a new development, even gushing blood, but it was the scars, those precious scars that were key to my identity, my very existence, that weren’t tats, weren’t Greek letters, weren’t pentagrams, but just like me, WEREN’T SHIT AND NEVER WERE SUPPOSED TO BE, because chaos theory can rule the mind and body just as legitimately as it seeks to explain other concepts more theoretical than the very real and tangible, if in a micro way, my personal needs, fears, beliefs, coping skills.

I mean no one would believe this shit, right? Who ever heard of a middle-aged man who cuts because foreplay sucks in comparison and he’s addicted to creating and maintaining scars of beauty and significance on his most loved and hated canvas?

Would never happen, right? I mean they’d lock anyone like that up, call him Hannibal or something like that because we’re not dealing with geniuses here, or creatives or artists. Pencil pushing, braindead cogs in the machine who pack heat, who will kill in a heartbeat but would call ME the sick one. My scars bear out my philosophy and my loves and fears. The other peoples’ lack of visible scars doesn’t hide their internal cancerous decay nor their fear of anyone not like them.

I call bullshit on them!

I like it better alone.

I always preferred Dessau’s cover of Joy Division’s “Isolation” to the original. Its industrial aggression that comes screaming out at you more accurately reflects my sense of personal isolation and my feelings than Ian Curtis’s distinctive voice sharing those same lyrics, but for me, the band’s near-synth pop sound that tries to drearily bounce along with the listener in an existential despair really undercuts the rage and bitterness I feel that few are more qualified to express on my behalf than Ministry’s Al Jourgensen, who apparently and fittingly produced the Dessau version. 

Maybe it’s really this simple. Joy Division’s version stood for a very real suicidal ideation as we would all find out. But Dessau’s “Isolation” could be just scar tissue layered on more scar tissue yet though the flesh decays and body weakens, the only suicide to be found is more likely invented by some pervy author seeking a harmony between control and chaos they’ll never attain – but it won’t kill them, their characters or the readers either. Just more scarring in a world of art for art’s sake. And maybe that’s good enough.

Puma Perl

Around the Next Bend

We never know.

We’re a bunch of Scarlet O’Haras
repeating tomorrow is another day,
making ball gowns out of curtains
and curtains out of ball gowns.

Shut up, Scarlet, you racist bitch.

Tomorrow is another day off
for the unemployed, another day
off from eating for the hungry,
another day off from dreaming
of a better life as ICE is deployed
to tear families apart. You swore
you’d never go hungry again,
Scarlet O’Hara. Wish you were here,
losing your SNAPS and your mind.
Because that’s what starvation does.
But maybe there’s something around
the bend that will surprise you
and fuck up the kings and queens
not to mention the jokers.

Because, after all, we never know. 

Misti Rainwater-Lites

My Pisces Boyfriend

brown hair, brown eyes
which I have preferred since
I was two years old and fell for my first Pisces
my first cousin (the one I kissed in Granny’s closet)
he doesn’t pay his taxes
he doesn’t drive
he puts it down on the page
like nobody else
Lou Reed and Kurt Cobain have been dethroned
oh my fucking god
he plays the piano AND the guitar
and his voice
fuck me to Ohio
his voice is straight
from God’s own oven
and he gets it
goddamn he knows
the shit ass score
and I have a history of being a heartless whore but trust me on this
try to believe me
I know it’s hard
but I tell you
I will love this motherfucker
all the way to the grave
even though he’s playing Coachella
and I’m so much nada in Texas
okay you caught me
yes I am tripping
I’m a Gen X crone
crushing on a Gen Z rock star straight outta Brooklyn
but in some parallel universe
I just know
we are having better sex
than John and Yoko
on their best day

Damon Hubbs

Soviet Sports Halls and Young Men with Erections 

     It’s a big day for anyone 
who cares about serious literature. 
I’m so devastated 
I baked a cake for the party. 
When you say It’s not heaven
It’s New Haven  
I think of Soviet sports halls 
and young men with erections, 
satellites detecting threats 
in negative space. 

     Let’s get a discourse going 
the combat shock 
of slutty waists and jangly teeth.  
Exercise is a natural cocaine. 
The disparaged propagandist is here. 
The disgraced financier.
Send nudes. Send drones. 
The boss drives a pink Tesla. 
He puffs his chest like Idi Amin.  
What other way 

     is there to say it. Ask that Rilke(y) poet 
from Vermont 
she’s always pissing at the moon. 
Ladies and gentlemen 
of the future, I fail to know 
the world 
for what it is. 
Your biceps are strange bedfellows.  
I’m in the ratline like 
something worse than naked. 

Brian Rosenberger

Last Call

The cold and distant Moon, an observer.
The Moon offers neither forgiveness nor condemnation,
Never one to suggest advice.
It’s just the Moon after all.
Just an observer, a witness, for what comes next.
Lest you forget, the Moon controls the tides, 
Influences some people’s moods 
And reflects the Sun. 
Disrespect the Moon at your peril.
The bar’s patrons stagger and stumble.
Last call is last call after all.
And while the Moon remains cold and distant,
The Reaper’s night is just getting started.
Let’s keep this party going, his smile bone-white.
Where to next, He whispers.
His Scythe points the way. 
The Moon lights the path.

William Taylor Jr.

Like I’d Miss the Sun

No one wants to read this sad sack poem
pouring out of me after two glasses
of white wine,
so I imagine myself a melancholy
charmingly self-effacing 
country singer
with an old song about how
I wish I hadn’t done you wrong,
and how I miss you
like I’d miss the sun
even though I’ll never tell you so,
and how in another world
I’m a stronger and better man.
I would sing it at some little bar
in the Midwest on a Tuesday night.
I’d drink from my whiskey 
and strum the first few notes
and the people  
would whoop and yell because
it was their favorite song,
the one they listened to
after coming home from the bar
while pouring themselves 
one more drink.
Some of them drove 40 miles 
from their shitty little town just 
to hear this one song.
I’d pause, tune my guitar,
and then really dive into it,
singing with a cracked little warble 
in my voice like I always did.
The people would close their eyes
and sway and sing along.
Some of them would cry 
as they drank their drinks
and when I was done 
there would be a moment of reverent silence
and then enthusiastic applause.
I’d humbly nod,
pick up what was left of my whiskey
from the stained wooden floor,  
shuffle offstage 
and find somewhere quiet  
to drink and cry.

Joe Prosit

Something Wet This Way Cums

The peddler always sold lightning rods on Mondays. He waited till Tuesdays to sell books. Yet, here he was with a big trunk full of them. The curator didn’t appreciate the break in the routine. 

“You know the rules of The New Ways. No hats indoors,” the curator reminded him as she sat behind her desk.

“My apologies.” He grinned and doffed his porkpie hat. He was sweating. Ill-at-ease. A little too eager to get to business. 

“So, what do you have for the Museum of The Old Ways today?” the curator asked.

“Books,” the peddler said. 

“But today is Monday,” the curator said. “Why the deviation from our standard schedule?”

“Well… They’re… um… They’re different than my usual inventory, and I knew you’d want to see them right away,” the peddler said.

“Well. No need to stand on formality then. Show me,” the curator said.

Still unnerved, the peddler opened his large case and set a paperback book on the desk before her. 

All Horny on the Western Front, the cover read. 

Now, the curator didn’t read the books of The Old Ways, but she was familiar with their titles, and there was something off about this one. 

“I have more. Lots more,” the peddler said and spread three additional books across the desk.

The curator read the titles carefully, critically. From left to right, they were Frankenshaft, The Catcher and The Pitcher in the Rye, and Dr. Jackoff and Missus Thighs. 

“What… um… What exactly are you trying to peddle here, book peddler?” the curator asked.

“Well, you see, the publisher had a vandal in their employ. And, this vandal, he was able to… um… alter some of the covers before they went to print,” the peddler said. “But, as the curator of the Museum of The Old Ways, you are obligated to accept many things that no longer reflect the values of our New Ways. After all, book banning is poor form and altogether a social faux pas.” 

“We ban nothing from the Museum of The Old Ways,” the curator said. “But we do curate what is in our collection. And these…”

“I have others,” the peddler said. 

On top of the growing pile, he added Brave New Whore, One Spunked Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, and Naked Lunch. 

“This one,” he tapped on the cover of the last book, “is actually unaltered. I guess the vandal couldn’t figure out how to make this one any more lurid than it already is.” 

“Or, rest assured, peddler. We are quite aware of that book,” the curator said. “And inside the covers?”

“Unaltered. The words are just as they were originally published. This one here?” He pointed at a copy of Moby Thicc. “It’s Moby Dick. Word for word, just as Melville wrote it.” 

“And, dare I ask, Little Philipino Ladyboys?

Little Women,” the peddler answered. “Some of these are pretty obvious. Wurthing Dikes is actually Wurthing Heights. The Lion The Bitch and The Dominatrix is, of course, The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe…

 “And you want me to purchase these for the museum?” the curator said.

“Well, see, the publisher is struggling financially, reading not really en vogue at the moment, and well, if I can’t move these books…”

“The financial well-being of a publisher incapable of controlling their employees is no business of mine, peddler,” the curator said.

“Don’t say no. Not yet. I haven’t even shown you Missionary on the Orient Express. The cover art, I have to say, is done very tastefully,” the peddler said. “And here’s A Tale of Two Titties. You can hardly notice the difference.”

“And I suppose you’d have me pass Weiner-in-the-Pooh as the classic children’s storybook?”

“Never mind that one. It’s a picture book, and well, this vandal was a bit of an artist,” the peddler said. “And Charlie in the Scat Factory. And Incest Family Robinson.

“Sir. The Museum of The Old Ways will not be purchasing any of these books,” the curator said firmly.

“My good lady. I didn’t want to bring you these titles,” the peddler said. “I know the high standards by which we hold ourselves in The New Ways. I know this is unbecoming of both me as a book dealer–”

“Peddler,” the curator corrected.

“–and you as a curator. But some of these books, the unaltered content is just as vile as these titles. You already have The Left Hand of Darkness on display. Is it such a breach of decorum to shelve The Left Handjob of Darkness next to it?”

“Peddler. Just because we have books on our shelves does not mean individuals should pick them up and read them,” the curator said. 

Atlas Subbed then? The original work is–”

“Sir. This entire conversation is wholly absurd. Do you have any excuse for this behavior? Has someone put you up to this?”

“Actually, if I may be truthful…” The peddler leaned over the array of vulgar titles spread across the desk and whispered, “There are entities watching this very interaction. They’ve always been watching. Since the dawn of human existence, they’ve been watching. And yes, they sent me here, with these books, in hopes of getting them into circulation.”

“So the vandal–”

“I lied. There is no vandal. These books didn’t come from my usual publisher,” the peddler said.

“And these Watchers…?”

“They’ve grown bored with us as of late,” the peddler said. “The New Ways don’t satisfy their rather decadent tastes, and this is their way of injecting some of The Old Ways back into our modern, more civil society.”

“Well, you can understand my objections. I will have no part in soiling our New Ways with this… with this smut,” the curator said.

“Just one? If I walk out of this museum having not moved a single copy–”

“Your dealings with these Watchers is not my business,” the curator said. “How you got involved with such people–”

“They are not people. And believe me when I tell you that I leave here with all of these books, they will liquify me into a puddle the moment I step back into the daylight,” the peddler said.

The curator searched his eyes for signs of deceit, of tomfoolery, of a misplaced sense of humor. She found none. Nevertheless, “I’m afraid there’s nothing I can do. There is simply no place for Lord of the Cock Rings or To Cuck a Mockingbird or The Money Shot of Dorian Gray in our collection. And now, sir, I will have to ask you to leave.”

“Please. Just one. I’m telling you, if I leave here with all these books, a laser beam will come down from the sky and melt me into goo before I can cross the parking lot. Just… Just…” 

He shuffled through the mound of books, searching for perhaps the least objectionable of them all. His hands came up clasping a copy of Fahrenheit 469.

“Please,” he begged.

“If I take that book from you, will you leave? And take the rest of this filth with you?” 

“I doubt one book will be enough to appease them,” the peddler said.

“One book is already far too many by my count,” the curator said. “But if it will make you go away.”

***

For the rest of the day, the curator did her best to forget all about the exchange. And she was fairly successful. It wasn’t until the end of the workday that she returned to her office and saw the copy of Fahrenheit 469 resting on her desk. As she gathered her things, she picked up the book, determined to bring it home and throw it in the incinerator. 

On her way out, she cracked the cover. The first line intrigued her, so she read the next. By the time she pushed through the front doors of The Museum of The Old Ways and stepped into the sunlight, she was so engrossed, she almost slipped and fell on a wet spot. Luckily, she caught her balance. 

Unbecoming, being so distracted, she decided. The curator tucked the book away for further examination and study after she got home. 

Paige Johnson

Soft Launch

Before my first inhale of 8-bit Heaven, 
I’ve only known ketamine to be 
what Publix butchers palm-pass 
in fun-size bags, some spikey 
space dust bought off single 
mothers as kids squish soggy 
fries into their backseat carpet.

I only know it has something
to do with nailing roommates
to lumpy couches. Wall-eyed
meditation among sunrise weeds.
What blacks out embarrassment 
after Kraken oil Rum rummaging
past midnight that leads to thrown
phones and punched houseplants.

But in your bedroom, in the tufted 
quail-blue office chair, K sounds
safer, kinder, described as LSD lite,
sedating like BNW Soma, short-lived,
not life-consuming or -threatening.
It looks like cocaine, an icier snowfall.
We cut pale worms on a paper plate.

In the minute before ignition, I paint
smiling snails and obese bumblebees,
put on a gravelly podcast that makes 
the apocalypse sound like a nuclear field day. 

George Gad Economou

Nights in a Booth

her chiseled body swirled down the pole,
her high heels kicking in the air as she landed on
the platform. she was breathing in the gasps of
the crowd, drawing life from the lustful gazes glued on her.
the spotlights made the sweat on her silky skin to glisten,
and her long, auburn hair flowed down her shoulders.
with a smile that could hypnotize anyone she unbuckled her
top, revealing her monstrous tits to the astonished crowd.
I was in my booth, swigging Four Roses out of the bottle and
holding a pencil between my fingers, ready to violate another
cocktail napkin. she crawled around the
platform, almost had sex with the steel pole standing there
like a massive phallus; most of the men in the room
ordered drinks and the song came to an end.
she picked up her top and strutted away. they wanted
an encore; someone else climbed on
the platform and a rock song (guess which) blared from the speakers.
“liked the show?” she asked as she crawled into my booth
and stole a sip out of my bottle.
“you’re a true artist,” I said. “the Rembrandt of stripping.”
“you know you’ll get laid even without the cheesy compliments, right?”
“I’m aware,” I chuckled and had a long pull out of the bottle.
she wrung the bottle out of my grip, had a good sip, then blew a kiss
on my lips. it was time to do her rounds, give lapdances to desperate
fuckers eager to feel a woman’s touch no matter the cost.
I remained on the booth, drinking and scribbling cheap poems on
napkins. none of the other working girls approached; they were
all afraid of my Gina. the night was
over, I had more than a fifth of Four Roses in my bloodstream,
and we took the bus to my apartment. the ride sobered me up
just enough to get an erection; we fucked, and at eight in the
morning I cracked a fresh bottle of bourbon, toasting the saps
coming to work at the office building across the street.
Gina was fast asleep on my bed and my fingers were on
fire, typing out meaningless poems faster than my
hazy brain could process them. two hours later,
I passed out and her kisses riled me out of
my beautiful slumber, forcing me to make coffee
and share a kiss with her before she had to
shower and get ready for another long night.

Todd Cirillo

Fame & Fancy Literature

I am sitting in Harry’s Corner Bar
listening to the din
of people talking loudly
in the summertime heat
of New Orleans.
I am on a two-day bender
out celebrating something
I really don’t know
and cannot name.
I am pushing myself too hard
trying for something,
for anything to spark.
A middle-aged woman
with silver streaked hair
puts a five into the old jukebox
and plays,
Luckenbach, Texas by Waylon Jennings.
She doesn’t know that I wrote a poem
about that very song.
In fact, the poem is called,
Luckenbach, Texas!
It is in my book, Disposable Darlings
whose cover was photographed
right here in this same bar,
blowup dolls and all.

If I had the book with me
or the poem memorized
I’d recite it for her
under the purple neon Abita beer sign
but she has since moved on
to Garth Brooks
and that is just not conducive
to respectable literature.