“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

The Hope Does Not Spill

I received a particularly disappointing rejection last week; BUT: it’s the first rejection I’ve ever received that was addressed to “Miss Lonelyhearts,” so I’ve decided that it was cool and that I’ll take it as a win. I’ve also found a bit of solace in this poem I wrote about a month ago, which touches on depression and writer’s block.


The Hope Does Not Spill

Calm, warm blue
beckons me like a husband
from beneath
the sweating white ice.
It commands me
to bring it release,
promising
it will do the same
for me, eventually;
and, although it never has,
I can’t stop myself from
imagining, again, what it would
be like to believe this thing
I don’t remember asking
to be filled with,
which abuses me tenderly,
passionately sometimes
with healing bruises, telling me
that I am nothing without it,
that it is godlike and far
older than I can imagine,
and that I am unknowably lucky
to be its vessel,
to divide myself and slowly die
so it can continue replicating
itself, maybe forever,
replenished by countless other vessels,
some impossibly younger and sexier
than I am–
cells within cells within cells
that don’t technically exist yet–
because I am too stupid
or too something or everything
to contain it, understand it
completely.

It screams at me
for the first time
as I trace its path,
a river down my arm;
it’s so loud
but so impossibly faraway
inside me,
so I cannot hear it
but I know what it wants,
what it always wants:
to be freed, for me
to stab the cold, wet
touchability that separates us,
breaking it just enough so
I can chug its burgundy
on the other side
of the ice, released,
and finally drown in it.
My finger reaches
the end of that river
and strokes what it finds there:
an opaque patch of ice;

my body collapses
like the ice in my mind
as I blink away dryness
and try to cry out
all the trapped, dead, frozen things,
but the hope does not spill from me.


rejection

Historical document: my first rejection as “Miss Lonelyhearts”!

Love always,

your Mister

Miss Lonelyhearts Attends a Party Alone

Miss Lonelyhearts Attends a Party Alone

Enter;
all eyes on me,
like the laughing ghosts
and hidden cameras that watch me
masturbate and not be clean
and look at strangers longingly.
Not one face I know
(well, REALLY know) but
all knowledge is incomplete anyway.
Even I’m a mystery among mysteries,
but maybe that’s not so bad
since meeting and learning about people
is like reading, but more intense
and intimate,
like reading the universe’s mind.
Yes, oh god, it’s all so clear to me now:
how everything is music and art
that writes and rewrites itself
forever everywhere
in every clumsy skeleton,
with drunken highs and metaphor
and dialogue and climaxes.
I suppose I can leave whenever I want,
but I know this will never leave me:
memory, anxiety,
possibility;
as long as I’m alive,
parties rage inside my head.
Why was I ever so afraid to go?


I’ve been working on prose for the last 4 months, so I’m a little rusty with poetry but I hope you enjoyed it! I wrote this poem today, which is my fourth so far for National Poetry Month! Wish me luck moving forward (because I’m going to need it, desperately.)

Hang in there, scribes; I’m sure you have it in you, and the world needs you to share it with us! =]

Love always,

your Mister

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my last drink

November 21, 2021
1492 days ago.

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