poetry/ lit

sub-entry 19> episode 0100.11010 \/\/ on the reflections of impermanence

August 8, 2010
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sub-entry 19> episode 0100.11010 \/\/ on the reflections of impermanence

The apartment building smelled of must and lavender, as if somebody had walked through the hallways waving fresh lavender in the air just yesterday but now even that scent was growing old and musty. I and my mosquitoed compatriot, Scape, stopped at the door to the apartment. The buzzing hallway light just above us flickered right on cue, and I pushed the door open to apartment 10. The door creaked (like they seem to do in this kind of situation) and the room beyond the door was dim, the air thick. I walked in and the room was in shambles – the desk, dresser and table were covered in heaps of torn and crumpled paper. Blanketing the walls and the dirty window were maybe a hundred moths, all twitching their wings and waving their antennae about. The old man who lived in the apartment was standing on the cluttered desk, writing a seemingly endless stream of ones and zeros on the wall with his finger, which was dripping with black ink. Across the room was the boy, maybe 14 years old, shoving notebooks and a compass into a shoulder bag. The boy barely looked up at us when we entered.

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sub-entry 18> episode 2 1/4\/\/on things that were and things that have yet to be

August 1, 2010
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sub-entry 18> episode 2 1/4\/\/on things that were and things that have yet to be

New Orleans is often considered the most haunted city in the states. Sure, there are the ghosts out there who go “Woooo” when people walk past dilapidated houses – but it’s ghosts like that who give the rest of the ghosts here a bad rap.

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the expositor\/\/building bridges

July 29, 2010
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the expositor\/\/building bridges

Bookworms are usually thought of as somewhat solitary, socially inept people. Websites such as BookCrossing like to portray books as a bridge between people, a means of connection for those with like minds, all over the world. Read a lot, they imply, and you will find literary company wherever you go. But, is it really true? Is a well-stocked bookshelf a way to win friends and influence people? Here are five interactions from the life of The Expositor. You be the judge: 1987: I was a messy kid. Rather than suggesting I brush my hair and make some friends, my father encouraged me to obtain a copy of a story about a magical woman named Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle who cured a girl of slobbery by planting radish seeds in the dirt in her ears. Unfortunately, the book was only available at the public library branch in Pawtucket, RI – maybe a twenty-minute drive from our home in Providence, but an Odyssey in the estimation of my Pennsylvania-bred father. Still, he loved his disheveled little bookworm, so he bundled me into his Volkswagen on a snowy winter evening and promptly got lost. A more reasonable person – such as my mother –

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sub-entry 17>> episode 50.6 \/\/ on ghosts of places and people

July 25, 2010
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sub-entry 17>> episode 50.6 \/\/ on ghosts of places and people

As I drifted underneath the electric lamps of Spanish Fort, passing by the upscale restaurants and cabaret shows and heading towards the amusement park rides, I tried not to make eye contact with the ghosts.

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theavantguardian’s summer reading list

July 19, 2010
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theavantguardian’s summer reading list

We here at the avant guardian like to read books. Or Kindle files. Or graffiti scrawled on the cinderblock walls of gas station restrooms.  Oh really, that’s what you think of Obama? And thanks for giving me your girlfriend’s phone number–maybe I will give her a call. Does she happen to like French cinema? Anyway, here’s the first of our three summer lists. Stay tuned for our Summer Playlist and Summer Movie Marathon. These are, definitively, the books you’ll want to read while you’re in gridlock traffic on your way to an oil-covered beach. Or to a LeBron jersey burning party. Or to lay a bouquet of moonflowers on NASA’s grave. Awesome by Jack Pendarvis tyler re: says: “Pyrotechnic funnyman Jack Pendarvis poops out a short-ish novel about a giant named Awesome who goes on an absurd full-throttle quest to recapture his outlandishly glorious human-sized love, Glorious Jones. One of the few books I wish I’d pooped out; full of profane adventure, the buggering of other giants, the removal of genitals, and a robot butler named Jimmy.” Fup by Jim Dodge chicken flava says: “True American Northwest spiritual philosophy in the form of a novella about a duck brimming with humanity

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sub-entry 16> episode 7.14 \/\/ on entomology and the insects within

July 18, 2010
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sub-entry 16> episode 7.14 \/\/ on entomology and the insects within

Besides being ridiculously hot and sticky, summers in New Orleans are loud. Every afternoon you can hear the cacophony of falling rain pouring in waves over the cracked streets, backed up by the thunder as it tries to rip the sky apart. And every evening, after the storms have passed and all is quiet for an hour or so, the symphony begins: cicadas, crickets and frogs all vying for dominance of the air space, singing their hearts out to find their mates, or professing their love for the mates they've already found.

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sub-entry 15> episode 8.08 \/\/ on substances from which the world is not made

July 11, 2010
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sub-entry 15> episode 8.08 \/\/ on substances from which the world is not made

As you know well by now, my line of work and my way of life are one and the same – almost every aspect of my day revolves around my job. That’s alright with me, though, cause it’s this job that keeps me moving, keeps me breathing the life of the city. Nonetheless, it’s not often that I end up in a “normal” situation – and to tell the truth, these kinds of situations feel anything but “normal” to me. But walking out of the gorgeous Strand Theater in the 1920s with a pretty girl on my arm definitely had its appeal.

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sub-entry 14> episode 3.7 \/\/ on death and its absence

July 4, 2010
By
MardiGrasCanalSt1920sQuaintNO

Coming back to life is never a good idea – it's more like having every hangover you've ever had, all at the same time, and waking up to someone starting up a lawnmower right next to your head.

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sub-entry 13> episode 179.1 \/\/ on divining, forgetting and ignoring

June 27, 2010
By
market alive

Something that only a couple hundred years ago was a place to trade with Indians. Torn apart again and again by hurricanes and fires, just to be rebuilt, re-imagined, reprocessed. It’s died and been resurrected more times than I have.

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sub-entry 12> episode 8/9\/\/on the allocation of wonder

June 20, 2010
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marigny 1

There are people who walk through the night as if it were day, and the day as if it were night. They pass through solid walls and locked doors like actors pushing aside a curtain to walk backstage - completely unhindered, completely unseen.

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