as sofar as is this & are:era
January 31, 2010
The second & sixth in a chapbook series. Two books of poetry by Derek Piotr Crofut.
as sofar as is this
are:era
In Retrograde
October 13, 2009
The fifth in a chapbook series. A book of prose-poetry by Harper Koenig.
In Retrograde.
The fourth in a chapbook series. An excerpt from a larger work by Ben Brooks.
This boy was not immunised but chastised. He ate paper boxes. The trial.
thereisaleperinthecourt
August 5, 2009
The third in a chapbook series. A book of poetry by Abraham Harping.
thereisaleperinthecourt.
Dear Blogosphere
July 14, 2009
I am so out of touch with you. Is this what the modern “writer” does? Has writing been translated into blogging? Is that the new Websters word? It makes me sad, but excited in an evolutionary sort of way.
Blogosphere, I want to eat you alive, would you be alright with that?
You don’t really have an option.
This was my meta-introduction into the blogging world.
I think this is big.
Explosively,
Carah
Me-Us
July 13, 2009
The first in a chapbook series. A book of prose-poetry by Carah A. Naseem.
Me-Us.
Welcome to Upton Thoroughfare
July 6, 2009
We are people who write things.
Specifically, things about life that we think are beautiful, but maybe other people don’t.
Like people with silly freckles, or drives to work, or geometry on our roof, or transgender pick-up lines.
Things like that, I guess.
We publish online books, ebooks, chapbooks, whatever you’d like to call them. I suddenly want to call them Uncle Jimmies, for lack of something original.
So, our first Uncle Jimmy is ready for pumping out, much like a baby in Utah.
It’s “Me-Us” by Carah A. Naseem.
The next one baking in our proverbial oven is tentatively titled “thereisaleperinthecourt” by Abraham Harping, and also, still in formative stages, is “Anachrony” by Kieran Naseem.
You can look forward to in the more distant future Uncle Jimmies by Emma deBeer Charno, Martina Crouch, and so on.
These may be names you don’t know up until this point, but I assure you, you WILL be saying them loudly and with passion very very soon. (I’m referring to when you’re passionately referring good things to your “literary friends”.)
Okay, now that the formalities are over, COMMENCE ABSURDITY.