Tag: Comics

  • The Good Earth

    Let’s make our planet good again
    think pigeons their T Rex origin.

    Oh wings of flesh and steel to fly
    you must first grow feathers.

    What cares the sloth slug squished
    by dino or sprayed with Ortho?

    As for Anthro won’t he be petrified
    up to his waste in his own coprolite?

    Rid us our original sins
    let us be innocent again.

    Imagine no water no fire no air
    worse called in sick your au pair.

    Earth responds ever was I a grand hotel
    now is checkout time fare-thee-well.

    The Good Earth

  • Survival Manual

    I was walking in Mt Tabor Park the other day, on a path rarely taken, steep on the south side, affording views of the college campus, its low buildings in the shade of the giant trees, the wide swath of grass between Gray and the cafe green but empty. I paused to reflect, praying peace, happiness, and lightness of spirit might fall like gentle rain onto my old colleagues and former students, and just before I moved on, I spied a small blue pocket notebook, partially buried in the brush under a bush. I pulled it out and dusted it off.

    On the cover was handwritten, in a swirling cursive style, “Survival Manual.” I paged through the little notebook, about the size of a hand, about 40 pages or so, unlined, filled with handwritten notes, instructions, recipes, doodles, lists – places to go, things to do, people to see, books to read, movies liked or disliked, and short poems with simple drawings, every page crammed full of such stuff until, like a Jackson Pollock painting, there seemed not a single space left for another drip or word. There being no place nearby to sit comfortably and study the notebook further, I stuck it into my back pocket and walked on, wondering what catastrophe, big or small, might have resulted in the notebook’s author having lost it.

    Home from the walk, I tossed the Survival Manual, not feeling, perhaps naively, mortally threatened at the moment, onto my desk in the dining room, already askew with bad reading and writing habits, books with bookmarks stuck in the middle, notebooks covered with dust still full of the promise of empty pages. “Write in me!” someone had finger-written in the dust of one. Magazines and journals weeks, months, quarters old. Before long, “Survival Manual” was buried beneath more pressing, unfinished projects.

    A few weeks drifted by, catastrophes here and there, near and far, sudden, usually unexpected turns throwing people overboard whatever ship they happened to be sailing at the time. Still, I lacked the necessary closeness at hand to bring me to my senses and recognize the plight of our planet includes, indeed, all of us, including me. I mean to say, I’m aware of our current risks, dangers, follies and what ifs, but what really am I proactively doing to come to the aid of our planet? I mean to say, is showering only every third day or so and recycling properly, enough? Then came, locally, yet another heat wave record, and finding that I was confined by the heat outdoors to the house, even in the evening, when the sun had gone down, I decided to direct an electric fan toward my dining room desk and clear the clutter. If I had to be so hot, I would at least be neat about it. The fan, of course, produces heat as an unnoticed but negative side effect, as does the laptop on which I’m now typing these notes, bringing to you, too, dear reader of the Toads, a mere suggestion from the “Survival Manual.”

    I uncovered the survival manual, immediately set aside my goal for a clean desk, and sat down in front of the fan with the manual in hand to take a closer look. I decided the notebook to be the work of a genius or madman. Of course, now that we are old and among the awakened ones, we realize the two are often one and the same. The survival manual author, who I will now refer to as SMA, wrote in a kind of shorthand style, skipping superfluous parts of speech, using fragments ignoring subject or predicate, adding icon doodles to illustrate ideas, inventions. SMA apparently possessed an ironic kind of sense of humor, too. A few of the drawings were captioned with hopeless and unexpected explanations: “Planet Senile”; “Moving to the Moon – what to take along”; “Breaststroke for polluted waters”; “How to recycle the non-recyclable.”

    I paused at a page titled “Under Extreme [Heat].” Rather than describe it, I’ve attached a pic taken with my cell, to wit: 20180729_113151

    It suddenly dawned on me that “Survival Manual” is a book of cartoons.

     

  • A Cool Cat’s Spring

    A Cool Cat’s Spring

    City park a bench come Spring
    passersby doing their thing
    King slips into Queen being
    antique clown bums a smoke
    everybody doing something
    and those have nothing at all
    nothing their thing this Spring.

    Cool cat gesticulated crouch
    down by the empty reservoir
    live on social media channel
    pothole posts and midnight tweets
    comic flickers flower round the pole
    breaking beaks on noisy bedspring
    like every Spring that’s ever been.

    Now Jack and Jill dressed to kill
    over the hill they spring and sing
    shall Jack hath Jill and nought go ill?
    or doth not Jill make a good Jack?
    spring seeds put to bed then will time
    Summer rest before work begins earnest
    August and lugubrious September.

    The ambiguities of Spring befuddle
    tulip mania in all this muddle the old
    let the thistledown grow those
    with little to increase shall not spray
    the unwanted children free to roam and play
    the glow of a new Pentecost settles
    over a movable East and festive West.

    The Age of Privacy is over
    all must now show their hands
    still the war the weather the constant worry
    but another night passes in local peace
    and the coffee house on the corner
    open as usual still a few things
    we might rely on not to our detriment.

  • Some Comics Explained

    Some Comics Explained

    Words were never so simple as we were taught to believe. Tricksters of the trade make things look like all the chess moves were preordained. And if we are reading second hand, through the prism of translation, so much the better for our lack of understanding!

    and I quote
    “You said, ‘”and I quote…’”

    Words are not to understand, but to experience, to share, the ordinary daily world we work so hard at from being cornered.

    smiles
    The face prepared to meet the faces.

    Do we understand the invisible string of musical notes? What do they mean? Already heard and gone, and where did they go, these industrial sounds?

    apartment house
    Tenement

    Words work within their industry, economy, structures.

    performance
    Performance

    Dust particles, falling, drifting, piling up, the tongue the only rule, the teeth, lips, mouth.

    moon sea creature
    The moon looked like a banana.

    The poem is an old thing, some kind of tool, maybe, an implement, but what was it used for?

    eye floater
    Eye floater.

    He started off so serious, as if he were out to save something, someone. But first he had to persuade there was some danger. These comics, by the way, these unsophisticated, small-scale drawings, are made with fingers on the simplest of phone apps, with just a few basic colors, and no tricks.

    But mostly at night, in the middle of the night, when sleeplessness becomes comical.

  • Some Winter Comics

     

  • A Noir Comics

    A Noir Comics

    a noir comic
    a noir comics
    ire & furry
    ire & furry
    "Oh, Lord"
    “Oh, Lord, won’t you buy me a night on the town?”
    Belly Buttons
    “Mine’s bigger than yours.”
    NIghtfall
    Nightfall
    Haircut
    Haircut
    Rain
    Rain
  • Around Thanksgiving Comics

  • isit

    is it? is it? is it?
    what time is it?
    the cricket asks

    the night notes call
    a view of space with
    ornamental lights

    near like the cat
    hiss skin rips
    claws a violet sky
    saturates maroon
    the cauliflower
    cumulus moon

    this squall passes
    as does this darkness
    the outdoor words
    drift over the river
    as the last cricket replies

    is it? is it? is it?
    time to get
    out of bed yet?