Most. Romantic. Book. Ever.

This post is dedicated to Tom Robbins (1932 — 2025) Nearly a hundred years here, and we barely got to know you; so devoted you were, to helping us get to know ourselves. Thank you, my brother.

Once upon a time: I was meant to perform a reading at my brother’s second wedding, but true to form, I chickened out; luckily, my name never made it into the program anyway, because my brother possesses even worse follow-through than I do (if you can believe that.) Five years later I found myself tasked with performing another reading, this time for my second brother’s first wedding. Determined to prove how much I’d grown: this time, I REFUSED to chicken out! But the question nagged at me for months. What to read? An especially bedeviling predicament for someone like me, whose Idea of Love is (to put it generously, let’s say . . .) niche. Of course, my heart knew what I WANTED to read; it knew from the very moment I was asked. Eventually I would give up my heart’s desire and go with the tried and true Kahlil Gibran, although I’d like to believe I chose one of his not-quite-so cliché verses. But in a perfect world (absent of shame, and full of understanding,) my reading would’ve sounded like this instead:

“WHO KNOWS HOW TO MAKE LOVE STAY? 1.) Tell love you are going to Junior’s Deli on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn to pick up a cheesecake, and if love stays, it can have half. It will stay. 2.) Tell love you want a memento of it and obtain a lock of its hair. Burn the hair in a dime-store incense burner with yin/yang symbols on three sides. Face southwest. Talk fast over the burning hair in a convincingly exotic language. Remove the ashes of the burnt hair and use them to paint a mustache on your face. Find love. Tell it you are someone new. It will stay. 3.) Wake love up in the middle of the night. Tell it the world is on fire. Dash to the bedroom window and pee out of it. Casually return to bed and assure love that everything is going to be all right. Fall asleep. Love will be there in the morning.”

— Tom Robbins, Still Life With Woodpecker (1980) AKA the timeless tale of an exiled princess-turned-cheerleader, and the horny but well-meaning terrorist who explodes inside her, reducing her walls to smithereens. Oh, and by the way: this is the novel that indirectly coined the phrase “don’t yuck my yum.” Yeah, I agree: you DO need to read it. Right. . . Now.

If you couldn’t already tell, this magnificent excerpt comes from one of my all-time favorite novels, as intrinsic as anything else to my understanding of Love; but I ultimately decided it might be too vulgar to play well among the ceremony’s conservative crowd of lawyers and high-end government folk. Hence my perception of Love proving to be so niche, because the rest of the book boasts much more silliness and raunch, yet to me it will remain eternally the most romantic book in the entire world. That may seem the proclamation of an immature and hyperbolic simp, but I declare it with absolute certainty; that’s how intimately its story has embedded itself within me, my every aspect. Not only is it BY FAR the most passionate and fun read I’ve encountered in my life, somehow it’s also one of the wisest. For example, had I followed the advice within its pages, I probably would’ve stayed truer to myself at my brother’s wedding, not caring what anyone else thought of me; and in doing so, I could’ve saved myself that regret. (“Humanity has advanced, when it has advanced, not because it has been sober, responsible, and cautious, but because it has been playful, rebellious, and immature.”) Perhaps my tragically distant relationship with my family would also have advanced in this way, at least a smidgen, if I’d only allowed myself the room to be playful at this critical juncture; instead, I chose the safest route, which helped them understand me better exactly none.

For being such a raucous romp of a novel, though, it actually begins and ends on notes of cryptically vital Life-knowledge. Upon opening it, we’re hit with this hard-and-fastball: “Albert Camus wrote that the only serious question is whether to kill yourself or not. Tom Robbins wrote that the only serious question is whether time has a beginning and an end. Camus clearly got up on the wrong side of the bed, and Robbins must have forgotten to set the alarm. There is only one serious question. And that is: who knows how to make love stay? Answer me that and I will tell you whether or not to kill yourself.” Thankfully, the book departs from us on a much softer (though no less sagacious) note, more representative of its overall tone, when it tells us: “But I can and will remind you of two of the most important facts I know. (1.) Everything is part of it. (2.) It’s never too late to have a happy childhood.”

Mercifully, (and might I add: timely as Hell) for those of us who may find ourselves living under fascist or proto-fascist regimes, this book also includes lots of practical tips for understanding how we got here, messages of hope to aid you in coping, and/or passages that will recognize the pain you’re in, to make you feel seen: “… the truism that if we want a better world we will have to be better people came to be acknowledged, if not thoroughly understood, by a significantly large minority.” /// “Society had a crime problem. It hired cops to attack crime. Now society has a cop problem.” /// “Inessential insanities get one in trouble with oneself. Essential insanities get one in trouble with others. It’s always preferable to be in trouble with others. In fact, it may be essential. . . . Without the essential (intimate) insanities . . . behavior becomes predictable and therefore easy to control.” /// “… there are two kinds of people in this world: those who believe there are two kinds of people in this world and those who are smart enough to know better.” /// “What I’m saying is simply that every totalitarian society, no matter how strict, has had its underground.” Proceeding from that last point, Robbins goes on to educate and inspire us with the true story of Children of Paradise, Marcel Carné’s cinematic “celebration of the human spirit in all of its goofy, gentle, and grotesque guises,” which he (and hundreds of others!) filmed guerilla-style, illicitly, in the streets of Nazi-occupied France, “right under the Nazis’ noses . . . inside the belly of the beast.” Nearly a century later, it’s still capable of “moving audiences around the world.”

Here’s another huge piece of relevant education Robbins’ novel provides us with, which blows my mind even to this day, and which I never grow tired of explaining to people: “Equality is not in regarding different things similarly, equality is in regarding different things differently.” In other words, the fight for Equality lies not in seeking equal treatment, but in seeking equal respect and consideration. Presently, I cannot think of a more necessary distinction to make, nor a more necessary time in which to make it.

How is it possible that all these disparate elements exist within the same novel, at turns so lackadaisical then deathly serious? Incredibly, it contains so many wonderous pieces I’ve yet to even touch upon; like how the entire work is framed as a battle between an author and his temperamental typewriter; or how it touchingly retells the Frog-as-Prince fairytale, but as a prison communiqué. Even something as commonplace and presumably unassailable as The Calendar is not safe from Robbins’ incisive keystroke. Granted, I might be outrageously reaching here, but I assume that (by writing this line: “The moon invented natural rhythm. Civilization uninvented it.”) he was tacitly agreeing with my position that mankind would benefit from a reworked calendar of 13 months with 28 days each, thereby placing us in better sync with the cycle of our Moon. For all you Witchy Ones out there, he positively REVERES the moon here, in these pages. Additionally, he tackles the doldrums of despondence that Sunday seems to evoke in all of us, and he manages to articulate this phenomenon like nobody before or since. (“The busiest, loudest Sunday will always seem subdued next to the quietest Saturday. You go to paint the town red on a Sunday, you’d better be prepared for pink.” Elsewhere, more solemnly, he writes: “Sunday, a wan, stiff shadow of robust Saturday. Sunday, the day divorced fathers with ‘visitation’ rights take their children to the zoo. Sunday, forced leisure for folks who have no aptitude for leisure. Sunday, when the hangover knows no bounds. Sunday, the day the boyfriend didn’t come to the hospital. Sunday, an overfed white cat mewing hymns and farting footballs.”) Who else in human history has so reverently rendered the relentless restlessness of The Day of Rest?

Now, to bring this review(?) full-circle, let me leave you with some suggestions of Still Life With Woodpecker quotes that you could include in your own wedding vows, or in readings you deliver at other people’s weddings. 1.) “‘A better world has gotta start somewhere. Why not with you and me?'” 2.) “Love is private and primitive and a bit on the funky and frightening side.” 3.) “There are three lost continents,’ she lamented. ‘We are one: The Lovers.'” 4.) “What stood on the pyramids?” / “Souls. Souls like you and me. And we have to stand on them now. The pyramid is the bottom, and the top is us. The top is all of us. All of us who’re crazy enough and brave enough and in love enough. The pyramids were built as pedestals that the souls of the truly alive and the truly in love could stand upon and bark at the moon. And I believe that our souls, yours and mine, will stand together atop the pyramids forever.” 5.) “Funny how we think of romance as always involving two, when the romance of solitude can be ever so much more delicious and intense. Alone, the world offers itself freely to us. To be unmasked, it has no choice.” DISCLAIMER: THAT LAST ONE IS PARTIALLY A PARAPHRASED KAFKA, AND I INCLUDED IT ON THIS LIST MOSTLY FOR ALL MY FELLOW SINGLETONS OUT THERE, TO KEEP IN MIND WHEN VALENTINE’s DAY STRIKES LATER THIS WEEK.

Considering all that he’s meant to me, I’ve ingested distressingly little of Tom Robbins’ oeuvre. There are a couple of his titles burning a hole in my TBR pile (not to mention my actual, physical bookshelf,) but maybe I just don’t wanna take the chance that reading another of his novels will break his perfect streak for me. You see, both the books I’ve read by him (this one and Jitterbug Perfume) have earned exclusive 5-star status from me. And between the two of them, part of me feels like he taught me The Meaning of Life. Exhibit A, from Jitterbug Perfume: “A sense of humor, properly developed, is superior to any religion so far devised.” /// Exhibit B, from the novel at hand: “Wasn’t it made clear that civilization is not an end in itself but a theater or gymnasium in which the evolving individual finds facilities for practice?” Wasn’t it made clear, indeed. Thanks to you, my friend. Rest in peace.

When you lend one of your favorite books out to someone you’re trying to flirt with. . . Oh well, I’d like to think Robbins would approve.

Love always,

Mister L.

Elementary Particles of Emotion

If I had to categorize the Elementary Particles of the Emotional Multiverse, I would separate them into Desire, Boredom, and Rage. These three ingredients make up everything in the Emotional Dimensions, just as our Brain, Heart, and Loins compose that which contains our souls; each component worth more than the sum of its parts by joining together with the others in order to create us—thus adding up to 3.14.

  • Desire is Electricity, the force which compels formation of new pathways.
  • Boredom is Stagnation, eventual Death.
  • Rage is entropy and Chaos; the breakdown of thoughts, rules, and information which swirlingly devours at the center of most galaxies and unnecessary sufferings.

My Brain is Desire, my Loins are Boredom, and my Heart is Rage. Therefore:

Brain = Electricity

Heart = Chaos

Loins = Stagnation, culminating in HEAT DEATH should it become too pervasive; this is why we wear our loins so briefly in the Scheme of Things.


Welp, there’s whatever that was.

Love always,

Mister L.

“something he thought was happiness”

Excerpt from Chapter 4 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, coming-of-age dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at the end of the world.

(…in which we meet a character known as Dead Eyes, “so-called because of his almost-black brown eyes and vacant stare. I assumed it was because he was stoned all the time, which he was, but he hid it well. He had the same vacant stare even when sober. It was just his personality. People called him Dead Eyes as a term of endearment, though; not of ridicule. All the girls at school seemed to think it was sexy. And honestly, they were right. There was something about his way of looking right-through you that made you more desperate than ever to be noticed.”)


During our visits, he always poured himself a few small glasses of his parents’ scotch. Whenever he accidentally ingested a large amount, he would pour a little water into the bottle to raise the liquid level and make his thievery less obvious. His parents rarely spoke to each other anymore, and they slept in separate bedrooms; so if they noticed some scotch was gone, they would probably just assume the other drank it.

His parents’ lack of communication, with each other and with him, had become important pieces of something he thought was happiness. Whenever his parents left him alone, he would come alive by deadening himself. With booze, cigarettes, weed. He would usually offer me some–‘to loosen you up,’ he would say–but I would usually decline all but the occasional dainty sip of scotch. ‘Such a pussy,’ he would always laugh at me, and I would respond by giggling an ‘I know, I’m sorry’ before pulling him into a rough and wet kiss to distract from my uncoolness.

I often found myself distracting him with flirtation because we didn’t share a lot of interests or opinions. Even if we did, he probably wouldn’t have enjoyed discussing them. I said once that I thought his parents sleeping in separate rooms was oddly romantic; then I blushed and touched him, and I admitted that it reminded me of the type of togetherness he and I shared; I said, whenever I got married, I would need to have a separate bedroom / office of my own, where I could retire without waking my spouse on the nights I stayed up late.

He said it was ‘fucked up’ that I’d want separate bedrooms.

I asked him if he ever thought about being married someday, and he said it bummed him out to think about that. He said he’d need to marry a woman, so they probably wouldn’t have sex much because he wouldn’t ‘be that into it.’

I asked why he watched porn of women if they didn’t turn him on, and he said it was different with porn because he could almost imagine that it was a guy doing all the things the girl-on-screen was doing.

Plus, he said it’d be too hard to remember to delete his Internet browsing history every single time, like he’d need to do if he watched gay porn; just in case his parents ever snooped on his computer.

When he said that, I remembered a slogan that I’d seen every day on the door of my first-grade classroom; in big block letters, it read: EVERY CHILD IS A STORY WAITING TO BE TOLD. And then I thought about Dead Eyes’ parents, and how they treated him more like a letter they were writing: to distant relatives, to friends from college, to members of their church. He was somebody else’s letter instead of his own story, and I was sad for him. He ‘couldn’t’ be gay and still have parents, because that would disappoint them too much. Back when he joined the basketball team (instead of football, which his father played,) his parents’ reactions made it clear to him that such a disappointment was the biggest kind they could tolerate while still supporting him, emotionally et cetera.

I often wondered if his parents would’ve been proud to know that their son was addicted to the same scotch as they were.


Read more excerpts (and soon, the first five chapters) here.

real cover

Be gentle; this is only a tentative cover.

Love always,

your Mister

“the sex that gestates Life”

Excerpt from Chapter 2 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, coming-of-age dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at end of the world.

(In this scene: Miss Lonelyhearts reminisces about a bible-study teacher he knew in high school, whom he jokingly referred to as “Father.” ( “I thanked him and called him ‘Father’ as a joke, knowing he wasn’t a priest; the word tingled on my tongue, lips, and teeth. Like a powerful spell. A secret magic that everyone was born with and I was just discovering.” )


He asked how I felt about god and the bible so far. I told him I thought it was silly that people referred to god as ‘He, with a capital H.’ I said, if god did exist and for-some-reason had a sex, ‘I would imagine it’s the sex that gestates Life.’ He laughed at my candidness and I was warmed inside. He told me that he agreed; that he didn’t think god was sexed. And he told me, in regards to my childbirth-as-punishment concern, that he believed the sacrifice of Christ had washed away most of that Old-Testament thinking, along with the rules like not shaving and not eating shellfish.

It was all so rational. He asked me if I was ready to accept Christ into my heart; I said I wasn’t sure.

He began playing the organ as if possessed. Everything moved around me with music and connectedness. I closed my eyes and felt the soul behind the song. It was troubled, but searching and eager, and I felt something for it that I imagined was love. I was one with it. I opened my eyes and realized that Father was overtaken with the fluidity of happiness like I’d never seen in him.

He was active but calm.

He stopped playing and, without looking at me, said that he wrote it for me; that I was his muse.

‘Shouldn’t your muse be god?’

‘It can be . . .’ he smiled at me. ‘You’ve got a fire in your eyes. You know that?’

‘I think it’s just light,’ I blushed.

He started telling me that he loved my voice, and he thought I should sing in the choir. I started to say I didn’t think my voice was good enough, then he grabbed my face and pressed his lips into mine. They opened instinctively for him, and I let him inside me. He tasted like a smell I recognized; like cigarette smoke. It felt like caffeine and a sunshiny walk, and I wanted more. I needed more. Our tongues flirted with real oneness, and I was lost in how warm, pulsing and purposeful our movements were.

He leaned into me further, and I felt an expectation in the pressure of his body on mine. A snake slithered up his throat and down my own, but I didn’t want it there; I pushed my body back against his, and the snake slithered back into his belly. I could sense its coiled comfort there. I could also feel the sudden, newfound absence in myself, but the absence felt more natural than the urgency to fill it.

I separated us to breathe. I looked at him and thought about how natural it would feel to love him, with a love I’d never known. He asked if it was okay that he kissed me, and if it felt good for me. I told him it was lovely, but that I didn’t have any experience for comparison.

Upon hearing that he was my first kiss, his eyes retracted in shadow. I called to him lovingly as he slipped into the abyss, but some demoniac doubt had contorted his face beyond reason. He acted like he didn’t hear my concern, and he yelled at me to leave. He continued screaming until I rose from the bench and inched away from him. Then he began pounding on the organ with a disjointed urgency. The rumbling made me turn and run; the Earth was riddled with apocalyptic fits.

The forceful, directionless thunder followed me, even as I descended the steps outside. I was certain the church would collapse. But then I glanced at its facade one more time, and I realized that the church had been built to withstand and amplify that very noise.


Read more excerpts (and soon, the first five chapters) here.

real cover

Be gentle; this is only a tentative cover.

Love always,

your Mister

Understand Why People Love Me?

Understand Why People Love Me?

I know you feel guilty,
I know you know why,
but why did you do it?

Were you angry or scared?
or worried that nobody loves you?
I’m the one you hurt and I forgive you,
and I’d like to help you not feel guilty anymore.
That’s why I’m asking these questions, like:
What about me upset you?
Was it something I said or did?
Did I remind you of someone you don’t like?
or someone you were told to be afraid of?
someone you think is beneath you?
I would like to understand my part,
the role in which you’ve cast me,
so I can help YOU understand it,

understand that sometimes I don’t know what I believe,
and sometimes I’m so angry I feel like I can’t be a good person,
and sometimes I get lonely,
so lonely I think about dying
because the things that make me proud of myself might not make others proud of me.
I have an idea of what love is
but I wonder sometimes if I’ve ever really felt it, for myself or anyone else;

sometimes I worry I don’t deserve it.
Do you ever feel that way?


Love always,

your Mister

Heaven Reminds You of Me,”

Heaven Reminds You of Me,”

That lovely summer changed me
maybe more than it changed you.
Sometimes when I look up at night,
I no longer see the moon.
In its place, your smiling face
is looking ever upward, too.

I once tasted heaven
in the moonlight on your face,
and prompt silly thoughts arrived,
like, “I hope Heaven reminds you of me,”
even if we’re not together.
We talked about our future,
staring back into the past,
just old light on a dark night.

You filled and surrounded me,

now in the observatory’s shadow–
just a building among trees,
only where we first met–
a product of man’s history,
men who dreamed of building
taller and seeing farther, but
all we really cared about
was trying to get closer.

You helped me finally understand
how something called a God
could really just be love
and a face you see above,
always smiling and expecting you
to be a kinder man.


Love always,

your Mister

The Meteors Battered Into Me;

The Meteors Battered Into Me;

He makes me feel
like the Earth as it was being formed,
and he’s the ethereal mist
that evaporated into my atmosphere
from all the meteors battered into me;

he lingered there for so many years—
too many years, but who’s to say?—
and is now raining onto me and into me,
unceasingly filling me and shaping me
until I become
the glorious blue-marble wanderer
I was always destined to be:
a wellspring of loving life.


Love always,

your Mister

Wish You’d Come Help Me–

Wish You’d Come Help Me–

They call me a summer,
so I’ll probably meet you in winter
because that’s just who I am,
but hopefully you know that already.
***
They say you’ll be wrapped in golden twine,
like the kind that ties our lives together
and roughly translates heart to head
or lends magic to my dreams of your smile.

Yes, the twine we both wear in those dreams of mine,
when we spelunk into stars and laugh at life,
and when you help me believe in everything again,
even those times we lived planets apart.

These shimmery strings chafe music on my memories,
the futures and pasts of my past and future lives,
and the violin’s bow is yours now, as it’s always been,
the stranger who snows soft music into my lives.
***
Snow falls from my coat, splashing drab bookshelves–
wait, have I heard this song before?
My heart stops and I see gold, then hear it and taste it.
“Can I help you with anything today, sir?”

Those eyes look so familiar.


If you’re currently struggling to find something to believe in, let me offer you some heartfelt advice: eye-contact will help.

Love always,

your Mister

You Say You Love Me,

You Say You Love Me,

“Love the sinner, hate the sin”
still proudly preaches hate within,
so please don’t say you love me
if you think my love is sin.

For when you say you love me,
and I make to say it back,
my peaceful heart will meet with hate
from understanding that you lack.

You shouldn’t say you love me
when fear and hatred lie below,
for what you’re feeling isn’t love,
just a word you think you know.

I hate none of what you do,
and even less of who you are,
therefore it masks insanity
to hate me from afar.


You are not capable of both hatred and spiritual Love.

Love always,

your Mister

My Mom Has Gifted Me:

My Mom Has Gifted Me:

My mom has gifted me:
this lovely life to live,
a heart that sees,
a brain that breathes
the blood she was
so kind to give.

Without Her saving blood,
I couldn’t speak,
I couldn’t love.
Before Her braving flesh,
my soul was little
more than nothingness:

a star no life could see,
but still she felt my plea,
“in your image, labor me,
delivered in your purity.”

Then from darkness I was torn,
to Her sacrificial kindness born.
Now I walk with Her upright,
share Her love and speak Her light.
* * *
So, thank your mother every day,
for freeing you from silence.
She gave you everything
you need to love,
and to forget that
does her violence.


I hope you don’t consider my capitalization blasphemous; it’s part of the scriptural imagery I employed in this poem to demonstrate the fact that childbirth–not just once, but for the creation of ALL human beings–has always been and will always be a miracle, not a punishment.

Love always,

your Mister

Previous Older Entries

my last drink

November 21, 2021
1492 days ago.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 95 other subscribers