“entire sweating restless world”

Excerpt(s) from Chapter 9 of  LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at the end of the world. (More succinctly: about a troubled young man who starts college during this era of American politics.)


The door was unlocked. Judging from the smell, it’d been left unlocked for a drug-dealer or two. A pungent mixture saturated the air and devoured me as I crept within; entranced. It was like I was floating on his sweat-glands, swimming through his bladder. Climbing his swollen, throbbing intestines. My lips parted so I could taste the flatulent agony, the stagnant waste and recycled air that I recognized from my own life: he hadn’t left his room in days, maybe even weeks.

(. . .)

I’d never felt closer to him, entangled there with his un-showered body. Under sodden, warmly chilling sheets, with crumbs of god-knows-what sticking to my skin. I became possessed with an overwhelming need to lick him clean, to grind my tongue across every pore, valley and bulge of his flesh until I cleansed him of his depression. I would take him into my mouth and hold him inside, bathing him there forever if I had to, if it meant I could lick and suck all his stains away: the lifetime of stains left by selfish parents, thoughtless friends, uncaring strangers, unexamined pain and unexpressed passion. I smelled myself in his unrepentant sloth; saw myself in his dewy-jungle armpit; tasted myself in his salty sadness; heard myself in his near-but-faraway heartbeat. Felt myself, in his struggling to be held. He was me, born into a different body. I was in bed with the entire sweating restless world.

You can read more excerpts (and soon, the first five chapters) here.

Love always,

real cover

tentative cover

your Mister

“a gun on every table”

Excerpt from Chapter 8 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at the end of the world. (More succinctly: about a troubled young man who starts college during this era of American politics.)

(In this scene: Miss Lonelyhearts finally–at his friend’s insistence–gives in and watches Trump’s “hilarious” candidacy announcement.)


My laughter persisted while I fished for cig number four. Okay. This wasn’t so bad after all; mostly just loud and bloated incoherence. A desperate, dying man, who’d never truly grown an ounce in his life. Because he was given money instead of love or guidance. Just like I’d expected. I laughed because I needed to; it made me feel like I wasn’t afraid of him. Like I wasn’t afraid of what he was bringing-out in people. As long as I laughed, he would just be some spoiled little rich boy who could never really hurt me; because he’d probably cheated and bought his way through school, and eventually through life. Whereas I had struggled. And was forced to learn.

Now he was telling the audience not to believe the Bureau of Labor Statistics; he insisted the ‘real’ unemployment rate was three or four times what they said it was. I laughed even harder; who was THIS fucking maniac, to tell people what to believe?

Then he mentioned nuclear weapons, and the laughter stopped. I became a homeless orphan as the whole world burned and I lost all feeling. People and their buildings unknowingly melted into shadows all around me. Survivors developed the beginnings of the cancer that would rot their grandchildren’s insides. Centuries passed, and poisoned people grew poisoned things from poisoned earth. Humanity died without living.

OUCH. I flicked the filter out the window without looking, then lifted the burnt flesh to my mouth, to suck and lick the warmth–at first, to soothe the burn; but I gradually became aroused by the salty, pulsing soot of my fingers. So I closed my eyes and pressed my face against it. And slid my tongue in it. All was probing, reactionary dampness.

Hot water spilled onto my chest, causing me to re-enter the moment with a full-body jerk. Panicked, I braced my laptop, then heaved a relieving sigh at its safety. Was I crying? or were my eyes just irritated? I reached for another cigarette as I heard him, and remembered where I was.

Well, you need somebody, because politicians are all talk, no action. Nothing’s gonna get done. They will not bring us–believe me–to the Promised Land. They will not. . . I will be the greatest jobs president that god ever created.

I chain-smoked with blurry eyes as I continued to watch Trump’s ramble: comparing politics to football, saying he was ‘really rich,’ and then apparently trying to say ‘braggadocious’ before giving up and deciding it was too ambitious of a word for him. I allowed myself to chuckle at his incompetence, even though I knew the world was ending. He rambled through some more nonsense, before circling back to his favorite topic: his wealth.

nobody knows what I’m worth. And the one thing is that when you run, you have to announce and certify to all sorts of governmental authorities your net worth. So I said, ‘That’s OK.’ I’m proud of my net worth.

This led him to an exhaustive listing of his business dealings and their estimated worth; but he assured the audience he wasn’t doing it to brag:

I don’t HAVE to brag,’ he bragged.

He transitioned clumsily into saying he would build a wall between America and Mexico (and somehow make Mexico pay for it?) And then he promised to protect Americans’ guns. Not their families, just their guns. Guns were the only one of the two he mentioned protecting, anyway. In fact: every time he’d said the word ‘family’ at all during the speech, he was only referring to his own. Just to name them, to say how ‘great’ they were, and how ‘proud’ he was. Only once did he notably mention being inspired by an American citizen that wasn’t blood-related to him. He talked of a nameless woman: someone he’d seen on TV, talking about a local crime, whom he then felt compelled to call: ‘and she said, ‘You know, Mr. Trump, I was always against guns. I didn’t want guns. And now, since this happened . . . We now have a gun on every table.

‘‘We’re ready to start shooting,’’ this terrified woman told Trump, to which he replied: ‘Very interesting.

Not too bad, I told myself; just typical dictator shit.


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

Love always,

your Mister

“every wet stranger”

Excerpt from Chapter 6 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, coming-of-age dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at the end of the world.

(In this scene: I use my own hometown as inspiration to delve into the psychology behind Trumpism. Please let me know how you think I did!)


I recognized his bow-tie. Why did I recognize that bow-tie?

‘I just didn’t think our conversation was finished. From earlier . . .’

Oh yeah! He was the guy from my morning-class. I’d forgotten about our debate; the memory had sunken into the murk of the day. But it was definitely him, the guy from the class where we’d discussed welfare reform.

I’d argued that welfare was a waste, that it ‘makes people lazy, and it’s too easy to take advantage of.’ I passionately believed these things because I had been taught them. I was still possessed by the politics of my hometown. I’d been taught and surrounded by under-educated and under-represented people my entire life. Furthermore, I’d been taught and surrounded by lower- and lower-middle-class people, who’d been taught to be ashamed of themselves. But they’d also been taught to be too proud to ever admit that they’re ashamed, or that they need help.

They channeled the anxiety of these contradictions into blame. They blamed people who were poorer than them, and they blamed people who were richer than them; but they blamed the richer a little bit less, though, because they admired those people and wanted–more than anything else–to be them. And they never blamed people in similar circumstances as themselves, because that would welcome the possibility that they themselves could also be blamed.

They believed the world was at fault for all their failures, but their successes were theirs and theirs alone. I believed this, too. I called myself a ‘rugged individualist,’ which was a term I’d heard in History class when I was younger. I remembered that a President had coined the term, but I’d forgotten the exact context of it. It meant that I believed everyone was responsible for solving their own problems, no matter what caused them.

That’s why I argued with The Bow-Tie in class earlier, after he asserted that welfare programs ‘are good investments for any society.’ He said that such programs made the world safer, because they helped provide sustenance, education, and healthcare for people–and especially children–who would otherwise be powerless, malnourished, and desperate.

After he said this, I lazily reached into my bag and brandished my umbrella. I explained that I carried an umbrella with me everywhere, no matter the weather.

‘So, when it rains,’ I said, ‘I’m ready. I like to say that it’s my Northeastern blood; expect the unexpected. I’m not going to walk up to someone who wasn’t prepared and just hand them my umbrella. I’m going to expect them to figure it out for themselves.’

‘But what about people who can’t afford umbrellas?’ he asked.

‘Oh! So every wet stranger is my responsibility?’

‘The world is everyone’s responsibility.’

I sniggered and dismissed his point with a sharp wave of my hand. I didn’t feel like expending the effort of finding words to rebut him. Which was probably why he was sitting down on the bench next to me, claiming our discussion wasn’t finished. Damn him. And damn his perceptiveness . . . that gorgeous perceptiveness.


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

Love always,

real cover

Be gentle; this is only a tentative cover.

your Mister

“the mess that’s America”

Excerpt from Chapter 5 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, coming-of-age dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at the end of the world.


Dead Eyes shrugged in response. He had no idea what would make him sad because he had no idea what would make him happy. His malaise was the product of a common and dangerous mixture: selfishness and self-unawareness.

‘I’m obsessed with the mess that’s America!’–another Marina & The Diamonds song was blaring from the car’s speakers–‘I’m obsessed with the mess that’s Amer-i-ca-a-a!’ I was so happy that Dead Eyes liked her music. She was one of my favorite artists, and he often heard me listening to her, so he’d built up a quick tolerance to (and eventual appreciation of) her work.

I was honestly so overjoyed just to be in the car with him. That was the first time he ever allowed it, since we were traveling a few hours away for the concert. There was no chance of seeing anyone we knew out there; plus, I think he was secretly taking the risk just because he’d grown to love Marina & The Diamonds’ music so much. He never specifically asked me to play it, but he’d stopped complaining whenever I played it around him; and that was HUGE.

I reached for his hand, like I imagined a wife would do if her husband was driving. He swatted my hand away the moment it touched him; I was finishing one of my annoying rambles when he swatted and interrupted me:

‘It’s not like I’m saying one is more TALENTED than the other or anything, because all that stuff’s subjective anyway. I’m just saying that I’m a little more attracted to Marina’s movement because SHE calls her fans ‘Diamonds,’ whereas Lady Gaga calls HER fans ‘Monsters.’ And I GET that both names are powerful images, and they’re both about being confident, and proud of what makes us different, but–I don’t know–the Diamond’s just a much more comforting image to me . . . It’s my birthstone, you know–’

That’s when he swatted me, and said:

‘I still don’t get why you’re dressed like that.’

Dead Eyes wasn’t happy that I was dressed as Marina; specifically, in the outfit she wore during the closing of the concert we were about to see. I actually just think he was upset that I was dressed femininely. I matched everything to her outfit as best I could, and I even got a convincing wig; but I couldn’t afford shoes as outrageous as hers, so I was wearing my faded sneakers. All night I’d been earnestly hoping that the rest of my outfit would make up for the ugliness and poverty of my feet. I looked down at my rugged shoes with the worn soles; and I sighed, remembering a variation of what I heard girls in my grade say all the time: ‘If you wanna check if a guy is gay, just look at his shoes. They always have nice shoes. A gay guy would KILL HIMSELF if he had to wear dirty straight-guy shoes.’

I tried to grab his hand again, this time more tenderly, but he yelled at me to stop bugging him. I wanted to play his wife in the car with him; I wanted to be a family. But we’d both been taught that when a man falls in love with a woman, he marries her; and we’d both also learned, from whispers and obscene jokes, that some men liked to have sex with other men, and those men could never marry.

I found myself praying, for the first time in my life. I was praying to nothing and no one in particular; I prayed for all the people who’d taught us; for everybody like them; and for all the people they’d ever taught: I prayed that none of them would ever stop learning.

But I guess it was enough for me that he and I were just going to a concert together. I wasn’t sure if I loved him, but he’d definitely become a habit of mine–just like Marina’s music. I couldn’t remember a single day when I didn’t listen to at least five Marina songs. I always told people: ‘Marina & The Diamonds is the closest thing that I have to religious beliefs,’ and that phrase still feels true today, even in memory.

When we walked into the venue, a group of rowdy people yelled at us from the mosh-pit: ‘MARINA! MARINA’S HERE, EVERYBODY! LOOK, MARINA’S HERE!’ But they were most likely just making fun of me for dressing up like her.


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

real cover

Be gentle; this is only a tentative cover.

Love always,

your Mister

“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

“fish became man”

Excerpt from Chapter 1 of LONELYHEARTS 2016, my upcoming campy, surrealish, coming-of-age dramedy novel about a bipolar pansexual at the end of the world.

(In the movie version of my mind, Miss Lonelyhearts’ ringtone is “Break the Ice” by Britney Spears, and he does a ridiculous and slightly provocative dance down the aisle to it while wearing a hooded blue robe. #TheMoreYouKnow)


Thrush barely finished speaking before Miss Lonelyhearts’ phone rang from a pocket in the crowd, causing almost every head in the audience to rotate and scan the shadowed faces around them.

Miss Lonelyhearts let it ring. He wanted to prolong their ecstatic curiosity for as long as possible. Once he answered the phone and revealed himself for the first time, he would no longer be words. He would be eyebrows, he would be teeth, and he would be clothes. He would be judged, if only slightly, so he wanted his last moments of abstraction to feel more eternal than urgent. As he felt the last ring approaching, Miss Lonelyhearts grasped the ticking bomb in his pocket and detonated it. The ringing stopped, as did its vibration and amplified echo.

“Miss Lonelyhearts?” Thrush cooed again, this time into his phone.

“This is he,” Miss Lonelyhearts stood. He kept his phone pressed to his face for only a few seconds. After he walked into the aisle, he ended the rehearsed call and placed the phone back in his pocket.

“Ah, yes, there he is: the lovely and irreplaceable Miss Lonelyhearts, ladies and gentlemen! Sometimes late, but always reliable. Let’s give ‘im a round of applause!” Thrush announced, as if reminding the confused and silent crowd to be respectful.

Controlled clapping filled the auditorium on his command, much different and more considered than the indiscriminate reactions of the crowd thus far. Everyone was too preoccupied with absorbing Miss Lonelyhearts’ appearance to scream or stand, so surprised whispers could be heard above the mechanical applause.

Miss Lonelyhearts swam down the shadowy aisle like a catfish, devouring just enough of the audience’s reactions to maintain his nerve and stride. Confused looks abounded, but the occasional smile shined. “Called it! I told you!” someone whispered to a neighbor as Miss Lonelyhearts passed, probably referring to his sex. Odd, he thought, and faltered for a moment; a lot more men than I was expecting. The swim was short, and the catfish approached the stage. After drawing one last clumsy breath, Miss Lonelyhearts ascended. Feet met stage, fish became man.

Miss Lonelyhearts grabbed the silk robe draped across the foot of the bed, wrapped it around himself, and tied it tightly. The shiny blue fabric concealed his outfit, except for the whisper of a white collar still echoing the peak of his Adam’s-apple. He was haloed in the heart-lights, surrounded by the color of blood mixed with shaving foam. Miss Lonelyhearts had chosen this color to camouflage his naturally flushed complexion. He turned to face his public, and their ocean of applause–along with their handfuls of howls and whistles–parted at his words:

“Thank you for being you, and for being here tonight,” Miss Lonelyhearts smiled at them. “I know how difficult it must be, for all of you, to be yourself and feel present in this room with me tonight–in a world that so often seems to wish you were anything but yourself. That pressure weighs on you, a mysterious stress that never goes away because you can never quite determine its cause. It keeps you up at night, and sometimes it makes you say and do horrible things you don’t really mean. . .”


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

Love always,

real cover

Be gentle; this is only a tentative cover.

your Mister

Miss Lonelyhearts and The Beast

Chapter 2, rough draft:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1XUxKJ1uO9ECszyCildBYo6HnIkLIbZxxyE3yNpE5ns4/edit?usp=sharing

Miss Lonelyhearts Delivers a Proposal

Chapter 1, rough draft:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1id9grzKrN4iS_TZEotlOAqEnNq4ASP2dRUDUeXmUMwo/edit?usp=sharing


Disclaimer: On page 4 of this chapter, Miss Lonelyhearts describes a headline about Donald Trump’s remarks that he would force all Muslims in the United States to wear ID badges, similar to badges that Jews were forced to wear in Nazi Germany. Trump ACTUALLY said he would force all Muslims to register their identities in a national directory, which is functionally the same racist and fascist policy enacted in Nazi Germany. Therefore, while the story itself was a rumor, it was just a tiny rumor on top of a grotesquely gargantuan truth. The rumor circulated and trended, and Trump’s hateful supporters commented heinous things on these stories.

my last drink

November 21, 2021
1492 days ago.

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