![]() |
|
|---|
![]() |
ARTICLES |
|---|
It's a painting of a coffee cup on some plywood, in color. Pictures of a dog. What else? The incredible mission statement concerning the mega 15th album release from galactic pop-ornamental-family-music senation HAPPY JAWBONE. Church debauchery gone write! Stunning poesis from Mrs. Lukens, written while passed out on an actual Ash Wednesday. Stirring, lyric, and stirring. How else would you describe this poem? No, really, these descriptions are hard to write. A robot from Titan encounters a being from beyond in a deimension apart from our own! Automatism is paramount! Humanity is explored! People will die! Photos accompany this rather grey vision of life? Or a simulation. Jupiter Jack presents a racy, mind-trip of a poem. Out o sight. Oh wow, cool poems? Of course, it's the Poetry Living Room. What is the sound of an excited Japanese cross dresser that is sick at the bass? Can a life be summed up in twenty-eight points? So many wives. Beehive returns from hiatus with a few poems from Nathan Logan. An intriguing and often illuminating letter, recently received here at Beehive HQ, for your enjoyment. Another Living Room instalment featuring Vietnamese sensation, Dang Than! Back in thee living room again with Mr. Nelson. Featuring new modern classics I pointed at the moon until my finger fell off, Larkinghard Punch, and two others. A quick but resonant poem on the duality of nature from Mr. Odin. A new poem/story featuring Dada and the parents! Don't miss this one. A short work that dares to ask the question: what is the square root of sleep? Time. Bald. Bare. Sheer. The only words... Striking. The only words to describe these photographs ahead. A fantastic first-hand account of the very first sproutings of civilization! An immediate classic! Eine andere unglaubliche Ratenzahlung unserer Poesie-Wohnzimmer-Reihe, diese Woche vom Fräulein Keel. A short piece of prose on the grueling existentialism of everyday life...or the grueling optimism of it. You decide! Eine unglaubliche Geschichte des Leids in der Linie der Gefahr, zum von das zu speichern Bärenfreunde. Another poem from Miss Cihlar. This one an exciting journey through the depths of insomnia!. An account-in-verse-account of a party of the gods...or just a poor party? You decide!. Professor PT Alacrum and his trusty sidekick The Brown Bear use their Busted Temporal Time Machine on a journaey to fin de siècle Europe, and return with this stunning account. A short but stunning work of poetical poetry in chromochromatic eye sense. A stirring, haunting, and, yes, often experimental first chapter of Ms Hays' ongoing Zombie piece, coupled with two also stirring, also haunting, perhaps also experimental, photographs. Volume 5 of our prestigious Poetry Living Room series featuring four poems from poetress Ms Puckett. A hyper foreign language meta-invitation from the stars. English speakers beware! A very dirty children's story about a sailor with a big fucking orange head. This volume of our Living Room series features a page of spread out poetry from Nicholas A Deboer. Ah, yes, a wee bit of poetry from the green wilds of Ireland on the deification or ramification of modern life via words. Bienenstock Zeitschrift has braved the jungles of the third internet to find these striking examples of exotic poetry, presented here exclusively for our readers. An epic poem concerning a girl and his car (and some other things).. All sorts of poems from the grandmaster of poetry, M.C. NIGHTGAME. Two poems by Ms Cihlar, She Eats Me Out of House and Home and Keeping a Family Album. A poem possibly about fear or love of the visualtion of the god head and shaking, maybe, presented lone on a page. A ripping tale featuring dust and roads in the Outback.. Poems and drawings from M de Rais highlight this experiment in automatism. The life of late Guayaquil native son, Pepito Jones, is presented in a heart-felt rendering from Mr Chavarria. Three poems from Ms Stefaniak: The Hunt, Disfortunate, and Preface Banned in 1176. A light-hearted tale about drugs, starvation, and a large piece of ham Two poems are coupled with reflections on the state of contemporary poetics in relation to groceries. A brief outline of the authorship of a little known novel from the nineteen-sixties, The Squid of Tomorrow. An odd quick and often disturbing account of death, entomology, binary coding, and sexual deviancy at 30,000 feet. USArmy Cadet, resident New Yorker, and amateur Philosopher, Matt Alioto, presents his views on gender politics, nationalism, religious studies, existentialism, and various other essential topics in this easy to use guide. Professor P.T. Alacrum from M.I.T. discusses the occult origins of eyeglasses and their connections with modern optics experiments in the fifties, while tracing the history of God,`and explaining the Buddhist concept of dzogchen. Featuring poetical works by Policarpio de La Trinidas, David Estrada, Daniel Chavarria, Pepito Jones, and Ezekial & Ezra Earheart.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|