I'm so lovin' this book! Funny funny funny!
For the easily offended, though, read at your own risk!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
A menagerie of scribbled thoughts, memories, and favorite things
The slow overture of rain,
each drop breaking
without breaking into
the next, describes
the unrelenting, syncopated
mind. Not unlike
the hummingbirds
imagining their wings
to be their heart, and swallows
believing the horizon
to be a line they lift
and drop. What is it
they cast for? The poplars,
advancing or retreating,
lose their stature
equally, and yet stand firm,
making arrangements
in order to become
imaginary. The city
draws the mind in streets,
and streets compel it
from their intersections
where a little
belongs to no one. It is
what is driven through
all stationary portions
of the world, gravity's
stake in things, the leaves,
pressed against the dank
window of November
soil, remain unwelcome
till transformed, parts
of a puzzle unsolvable
till the edges give a bit
and soften. See how
then the picture becomes clear,
the mind entering the ground
more easily in pieces,
and all the richer for it.
4 comments:
I absolutely love Christopher Moore! After reading Lamb, I actually felt closer to Christ probably because Moore's portrayal of Him made Him more human (certainly blasphemous to some)...someone I can actually relate to. Plus, I like the idea of Biff, Joshua, and coffee. :P
I know, right? This has been sitting on a friend's shelf for the longest time and I'm thinking hey, I should have read this eons ago!
Biff, Joshua, coffee, you and me!
Yipee!
Need to get my own copy!
Oh, yes, Fens, you will definitely love this!
=)
Post a Comment