The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Please welcome to the world … Kristen Felicetti Log Off & Oscar d’Artois The Island (Shabby Dollhouse)

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Kristen Felicetti Log Off
Shabby Doll House
Cover illustration by Jinhwa Jang
Cover design by Tim Vienckowski
Retail price: $19
Buy it

Hello, people of the Internet. Let it be known that today, 9/5/Y2K, my legal guardian Brian finally joined the modern world and connected our computer to the great World Wide Web.

In the early 2000s, from a dial-up connection in a Western New York suburb, sixteen-year-old Ellora Gao logs on to the Internet to start a secret LiveJournal. Abandoned as a child by her troubled mother and left with her former stepfather Brian, an emotionally distant alcoholic, Ellora hopes to find the close relationships online that are missing from her real life.

But her online diary isn’t entirely serious, it’s also where she can gossip and rant about music, books, and everyone at her high school, including two intriguing new friends, Alice, a reformed bad girl, and Tiff, a cocky musical prodigy. As the school year unfolds, Ellora shares every challenge she faces with her growing LiveJournal readership: memories of her estranged mother, frustration with Brian’s lack of parenting, concern for Alice’s health, romantic feelings for Tiff, and her place in a post-Y2K world on the cusp of major change.

 

‘If one is very fortunate, a few books will fundamentally change their life. Such is the case for me and Log Off, an indelibly wise coming-of-age story crackling with humor and nostalgia. Felicetti will heal you, delight you, and make you want to hug your younger self; Log Off is an instant classic, a heartbreaker and a balm, and we’re all the luckier for it.’ — T Kira Māhealani Madden

‘Log Off is a time machine, brilliantly evoking the Y2K era in all its LiveJournal glory. Kristen Felicetti’s prose feels as real and intimate as making a friend on the Internet for the very first time and finding the key to her diary—I loved it.’ — Chelsea Hodson

Log Off is a brilliant and inventive debut with an unforgettable voice. Kristen Felicetti’s writing is so off-handedly wise and instructive, I couldn’t help but think of Log Off as a survival manual and by the end of my reading all other survival manuals were now obsolete.’ — Bud Smith

 

Kristen Felicetti Website
The Bushwick Review
Kristen Felicetti substack
KF @ instagram
KF @ X/Twitter
TikTok: LOG OFF @ mrbrendansbookshelf
‘Faith’, a story
KF interviewed @ Peach Mag
Another Fucking Writing Podcast: Kristen Felicetti
Jinhwa Jang Website
Shabby Doll House

 


Profound Experience of Poetry with Kristen Felicetti

 

Excerpt
from Vol. 1 Brooklyn

Your Important American Historical Figure

In middle school, I enjoyed some moderate popularity with a clique of girls named Jenny, Jen, Kendall, and Naomi. Halfway through eighth grade, Jenny called my home and ceremoniously informed me, “I don’t want to be friends anymore.”

I had been sorely friend dumped and the next day the other girls followed suit.

Kendall repeated a variation of the same thing Jenny said, and Jen, the little coward, couldn’t even tell me in person. She passed me a note folded like a fortune cookie that when opened read, “We shouldn’t be friends. Nothing in common. Sorry.”

I don’t know why it came as such a surprise. After all, I had participated in doing a similar excommunication of Naomi with them over the summer.

A small part of me felt relieved. I’d never quite fit in with them and the process of hiding that had been stressful. I didn’t have the nice families and homes they had. And I spent a lot of time studying how they acted and what they talked about, so I could then go and do a similar thing the next time we hung out or sometimes even only a half hour later. An exhausting charade, but it was over now, and I could finally retreat into my head and fully obsess over what I genuinely liked. I had begun logging some serious internet sessions at the library. I’d joined a Tori Amos mailing list and a Fiona Apple message board, and started making friends on there.

The problem was I no longer had any friends in real life and that made day-to-day eighth grade existence rough. Lunch period especially. Maybe that’s why I went a little off the rails with my Fiona Apple presentation.

For Mrs. Gardner’s social studies class, we all had to do a presentation on an important American historical figure in talk show format. Another classmate would act as the show’s host and guide the interview. On the day of our presentation, we were encouraged to come to school dressed as our important American historical figure.

At first, I was stumped as to how I would dress as Fiona Apple. We didn’t have any physical resemblance, me being Asian and all. Nor did she have any identifiable outfits. She mostly wore loose-fitting skirts and midriff-baring tank tops, the latter of which I was definitely not doing. Then I remembered a story I had read from her now infamous Rolling Stone profile. It ends with her talking about a fantasy she has, where she enters the school chapel and sprouts wings. Everyone who has ever teased her, or thought she was weird, is suddenly amazed that she has this extraordinary ability, and as she rises and flies away from them forever, they all whisper in awe, “Fiona has wings… Fiona has wings…” I bought some cheap costume angel wings and called it a day.

During the presentation, I talked about Fiona Apple’s music, but after briefly touching upon her career successes, I mostly used the opportunity to portray Fiona’s complex and troubled self. I quoted extensively from the Rolling Stone profile, which by then I had completely memorized.

I told my classmates to go with themselves, and how I ate nothing but split pea soup for my entire tour. I talked about how I was currently on psychiatric medication because I had wanted to die before. I talked about how in fifth grade I’d said, “I’m going to kill myself and take my sister with me,” and how I used to stab the back of my closet because that was better than stabbing someone. I spoke about how when I read my first bad review, I scratched my arm until it bled.

And I saw Jenny, Jen, and Kendall watching this and thinking, “Wow, we really made the right choice dropping this crazy bitch.” But in the moment of the Fiona Apple presentation, it was the one time I didn’t feel bad about them dumping me.

Instead, I felt triumphant.

Yes, I was very proud of this presentation. I’d stayed in character the whole time. I’d also brought up serious topics that scared me to talk about, like rape and self-injury, but that I knew were necessary to mention as part of Fiona’s personal history and important to discuss with my peers in general. And I could tell I’d held my classmates’ attention. They had not been bored. If there was any flaw, it was maybe that I’d not done it with enough humor. The real Fiona Apple would have done this with a little more subtlety, a little more of a wink, like how she described her music video for “Criminal” as tongue-in-cheek. Overall though, it had been a great success.

Apparently Mrs. Gardner felt otherwise, because the next day she slid me a pass that said I had an appointment with Ms. Burke, the guidance counselor.

“Have you ever tried to harm yourself? Or had suicidal thoughts?” asked Ms. Burke. Her voice always sounded like she’d been sucking on helium.

“I wasn’t talking as me,” I said. “I was in character as Fiona Apple and communicating how she felt.”

“Yes, about that,” she said. “Mrs. Gardner told me the assignment was to present on an important American historical figure. Did you not understand the assignment? This means someone like George Washington or Susan B. Anthony.”

My first inclination was to respond, “Fiona Apple is an important American historical figure,” but I knew that would not go over well, so I didn’t say anything.

Ms. Burke folded her hands in her lap. “Ellie, how are things at home?”

“Things are good.”

“Well, it’s interesting to hear you say that, because I already called home. I heard about your mother. Why don’t we talk about how you felt when she left?”

I was not going to talk to this airhead about my mom. “It’s not a big deal. And this has nothing to do with that.”

She smiled like she pitied me, which I hated. I stared her down.

“I sense a lot of anger here,” she said. “At me, and at yourself. I’m going to recommend you go to Group.”

That got a reaction out of me. “No!”

Group was a program run by the drug and alcohol counselor Mr. Davis. It was almost exclusively populated by the Bad Kids, a clique of goths that loitered near the front entrance before and after school. I no longer had any friends, that was clear, but I really did not want to be seen as someone who went to Group.

But my sulky self had sealed my fate with Ms. Burke, and later that week I was pulled out of class and forced to attend Group. Half the Bad Kids were there, sporting the latest Hot Topic fashions. Their most recent incident was campaigning for a Satanic Bible Study outside the Christian Bible Study Club. They sat around a table waiting for Mr. Davis to arrive.

I picked an open seat across from my old friend Alice Sharpe. Alice used to be my best friend in third grade, but we never had a falling out like I’d had with Jenny/Jen/Kendall. We simply drifted apart in fourth grade when we weren’t in the same class anymore. That drift took us to different places in middle school. She wore a Nine Inch Nails t-shirt that was at least two sizes too large for her, a black choker with studs, heavy eye makeup, and black lipstick. I, on the other hand, wore a rainbow striped t-shirt with floral decals, which had been purchased from Limited Too.

“Hey,” she said. There was some recognition of our elementary school friendship in her voice. “I heard about your Fiona Apple presentation. Did you really say you were going to kill yourself and take your sister with you?”

“Yoooo! That’s tight,” said a boy at the table wearing an Insane Clown Posse t-shirt.

“Yes. It’s called acting,” I said.

Alice didn’t seem to care about that. “I like Fiona Apple too. Are you also into Ani DiFranco?”

“Yeah,” I said, surprised. I hadn’t met anyone at school who liked either of them, only people on the internet. “Not as much, but I like Little Plastic Castle. It’s a little front-loaded though. I think the better songs are in the beginning.”

“What? Are you kidding me? ‘Independence Day’ is my favorite song ever.”

But she wasn’t mad that I’d disagreed with her about this latter album track. She was smiling like she’d found a worthy sparring partner.

“Lesbian music!” groaned ICP T-shirt.

“That’s offensive,” said Chris Walsh, who wore black nail polish.

“That is offensive,” said Alice. “Besides, Ani, like moi, is bisexual, so the term lesbian music is not even accurate.”

“Whatever, dyke,” said ICP T-shirt.

Alice promptly flicked him off. I saw my chance at making the high school honors track fly out the window if I spent more time with these delinquents. But Alice was still focused on me. “What about Tori Amos, do you like her?”

I nodded.

“Favorite album?”

Boys for Pele.”

She grinned. “Mine too.”

Mr. Davis walked in with his dog and immediately, some of the Bad Kids jumped out of their seats in a rush to pet the black-and-white Border collie. Mr. Davis was bald and kind of weird, so a lot of people said mean things about him. For example, there was a persistent rumor that Mr. Davis had a dog because he was blind and this was his Seeing Eye Dog, even though it was clear he was obviously not blind—I had just watched him stroll into the classroom and check the attendance sheet. The dog’s purpose was clearly to provide ease and comfort for the kids he counseled. The other mean rumor about him was that he had AIDS.

In Group, I had to introduce myself because I was new. I kept it brief.

“Hi, I’m Ellie. It wasn’t my choice to be here.”

Then everyone else talked about how things had gone for them since last week. Despite the tough front they put on by the school entrance, some of the kids really got into it. They talked about their messed up home lives or the drugs they’d done or some abuses they’d suffered. There were tears and shouting and Mr. Davis just sat there calmly with his dog, and as I listened to him respond to them all in a soft, soothing voice, I noticed I was the only one in the room not wearing head-to-toe black. The whole scene was tragic. The only thing that could have made me consider returning was the opportunity to see Alice (she didn’t contribute much to Group either), but that did not outweigh the fact that I knew I had to do whatever I could to get out of this situation.

The next day I booked an appointment with Ms. Burke and showed up to her office with a huge smile on my face. There were two spectacular performances in this whole experience. The first was the Fiona Apple presentation itself. The second was the one I put on during my follow-up visit to Ms. Burke’s office.

I told her how upset I’d been about my mom abandoning me and how the Fiona Apple presentation had really been a cry for help. I thanked her for helping me realize that. I was going to be seeking my own counseling outside of school to process my feelings, but in the meantime, it was counterproductive for me to attend Group. There was a lot of negativity in Group, which didn’t feel healthy for me to be around right now.

The following week, when I walked through the school entrance, Alice stopped me. Instead of the choker, she wore a red ribbon that reminded me of that scary story where a girl has a ribbon around her neck and then when she takes the ribbon off her head falls off too.

“I see you’re too good for Group and got yourself out,” she said.

When I opened my mouth to object, she shook her head and said, “You’re lucky. I wish I could do that too. But that’s never happening for me.” She reached into her bag for a pen. “Maybe we could hang out sometime. Like we used to?”

“Yeah, that’d be cool.”

“We can listen to some albums.” She handed me the pen and rolled up her sleeve. “Write your number.”

As I wrote my number on her arm, I noticed red cuts, like tally marks, that had been hidden by her sleeve. I tried not to look at them, but it added a deeper understanding to why she wasn’t going to be able to lie her way out of Group.

“I’ll call you,” she said, and then slid back into the Bad Kids clique.

I waited an embarrassingly long time for that call. I don’t know why. Sometimes I stayed home after school, instead of going to the library to use the internet, because I thought this might be the day Alice called. But then I realized it was just another interaction that held more meaning for me than for the other person.

Mr. Davis mysteriously got fired, so Group was taken over by Ms. Burke, and later, dissolved completely. I returned to the library and calculated the number of days until I would officially be an adult. The answer was a whopping 1,542.

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Oscar d’Artois The Island, a book-length haiku
Shabby Doll House
Artwork by Mad Manning
Retail price: $16
Buy it

Written over the course of two summers following the poet’s 33rd birthday.

Longing for an irretrievable beach paradise ✔
Yearning for an abandoned tower to hide in ✔
(Failing to) deal with ageing by building a hot transcendent yoga body ✔
Loving convenience in spite of yourself ✔
A manifesto against self-optimization ✔
Blasé satanism ?
An elegy for desire ✔
A meditation on death ?
A bisexual epic ✔
An unrelenting affirmation that “this world is all there is” ✔

Obsession, delusion, solitude, longing. That’s the thing with The Island.

 

‘Witty and self-deprecating and instantly relatable.’ — VALLUM

‘A fast life lived in an existential daze with a pop-punk poetic consciousness.’ — DAZED

‘I loved so many references in The Island. Cold brew, yoga, spritzes, consumer culture, the internet, queerness… So funny and real and sparkly.’ — Chloe Caldwell

‘A book of fantasy built on internet dreams and nostalgia for what never existed: the fantasy of an eternal American youth, the wish that love can save us, the hope that we can practice for death. A re-projection of the images projected on us every day. An affirmation that as misguided as we are, we too deserve poetry.’ — Melissa Broder

 

Oscar d’Artois substack
‘Teen Surf Goth’
‘Notre Damn’, by Oscar d’Artois
‘Surprise View’, by Oscar d’Artois
Od’A’s defunct website
‘(too fragile for this world)’, by Oscar d’Artois
Od’A @ instagram
studio stretchy @ instagram
Od’A interview @ The Fanzine
Mad Manning Website
Mad Manning Tattoos
Shabby Doll House

 


maple flavored almond butter

 

Excerpt

Party supplies to wreck me :

my fucking birthday

a grave that reads « SANSOUCIS »

occupy the vibes

Vanessa Carlton moshpit

pumpkin spice grey sweats

day moon over bull mural

indulgent trailmix

extremely advanced sunset

opiate moonscape

sentimental mug owning

altar for jock socks

unabashed cross-legging

ghosts of sunflowers

melancholy sky penis

vaping laserbeams

my seltzer graveyard belly

chilled red, pure seaglass

sunwind on soft skin now you’re

talking my language !

archipelago of pain

we call experience

lit candle torrential rain

greek temple at dawn

tree lined path star-studded sky

when i go back to

cities i can’t remember

how people even speak so

lying in the dark

in a room full of strangers

i take sick pleasure

in opening my eyes ohm

peace motherfuckers

what i mean’s any thing is

a thing that contains

its own opposite you know

blossoms are dying

chastity is horniness

a company called

Translate By Humans’ secret

is they use machine-

translation liberally

black holes are lurking

in the hearts of giant stars

i’m cute when nasty

yoga can make me anxious

tell me to relax

i will when it’s time to stop

palm tree heavens leave

me whipped raw by compulsion

& then when they don’t

i think myself a martyr

bleeding, ascending

my own pink cloud rhapsody

an opera house

at the bottom of a lake

imploding lotus

blablablablablablabla

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Listen on Spotify
Listen on Apple Podcasts

 

Listen on Spotify
Listen on Apple Podcasts

 

 

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p.s. Hey. Today the blog gladly turns itself into a welcome mat-style platform for two new books from the legendary and ultra-cool and transcendently charming Shabby Doll House. I’ve read both Kristen Felicetti’s novel and Oscar d’Artois’s epic-ish poem, and they’re both wonderful, and thus I can whole heartedly and full throatily recommend them to all and sundry aka you. Please spend your local time today checking them out and pressing your itchy fingers on the appropriate links if you so choose. Thanks! ** Dominik, Hi!!! Thanks. If I had a slave, I would certainly want him to have a tortured, productive head on his shoulders, so yes. Good to know love has a mean side. Knowing that, I would like love to brow beat our film’s self-serving producers into loving collaborators, post-haste, G. ** Charalampos, Hi. Yeah, dude had a dreamy resume. Thanks about the interview. My brain is a novel idea airport. Uh, GbV EPs? I guess I would most recommend ‘Fast Japanese Spin Cycle’ and ‘The Grand Hour’. Paris hugs you back with me crushed in between. ** Mark, Yay! It’s a rich volume. Which Kraftwerk album did you see being literalised? Envy. Wow, I did hang out at the Pikme-Up. I haven’t thought about that place in ages. Crazy. Maybe I met or something Tawny. Good to see you, bud. ** Steve, Well, good about the not much pain. I hope you can sort out a speedy replacement appointment today. My weekend was … okay, to put a good face on it. Everyone, Steve has two new reviews for all of us, on Eric Chenaux Trio’s DELIGHTS OF MY LIFE here, and on Marco Bellocchio’s KIDNAPPED here. Steve says, ‘Scroll down halfway the page for the Chenaux review.’ I’ll test the CharliXCX, thanks. ** Misanthrope, It’s true, I think dark stuff might be my fluff and the whimsical stuff might be my substance. Very sorry obviously to hear that about Little Show. That boy is a complicated mess of a mess, but my hopes that he’ll rise above remain. So sorry, man. Good thing you have your love to distract you. Now that Rafa is out, my interest in the French Open is way down, but maybe. What I do need to do is buy tickets to the skateboarding competition at the Olympics since it’ll be happening two blocks from me. ** Corey Heiferman, You do qualify as an old timer around here, but just think about how old a timer that makes me. Hm, no, I don’t think I’ve ever written something targeted to a particular’s venue’s guidelines or taste. But why not if that experimenting sounds fun? ** _Black_Acrylic, Me too re: Bond films in my early youth. What was your fave? ** Justin D, Your dad is, or at least was, so nice. How sweet. I know of ‘Return to Monkey Island’, but I’ve never played the games. Okay, noted. No, I want to restart my video game addiction. I want my resistance to be destroyed. So you’re only helping me. And I feel utmost gratitude. ** Darby🤨, Wait, so Men’s mental health awareness month and Pride Month are the same month? Now that’s interesting. I’ve stood on the fringes of a couple of Pride parades just to see what they actually are and try to understand what feeling they create in people who want their pride to be monumentalised via a public display. Right, that Monet got attacked here the other day. I agree, I think it’s a completely ineffective move on their parts. Uh, I think Tour de France happened a couple of months ago, if I’m remembering right. Ah, no wonder I like Cupcake Man so much. Very good to know. You saved me yet again. Bon week so far, pal. ** Cletus, Hi, Glad you managed to score the book. I hope your week is even better than your weekend. ** Lucas, Hey. Thanks. The meeting was hell, and there’s a part two this morning, which could be even more hellish. Or not. But probably. It was raining so I just barely did Nuit Blanche. Zac did more of it and said there was nothing that wasn’t whatever/so-so. Typical. Sorry about your mixed bag weekend, but I guess it could have been worse. I’m sort of an eternal optimist, if you can’t already tell. Why, I don’t know. Thanks about ‘The Dream Police’. I like some of my poems and think they’re pretty good, but I just didn’t seem to have the chops to get as ambitious with poetry as I wanted to be, so I eased out of the practice or whatever. But thank you. I really appreciate it, and that makes me feel better about them. Awesome squirrel shots. Really cool photos. Where you are right now looks pretty nice. At least from the viewing spot of my cityscape. Happy Monday to you, sir. ** HaRpEr //, Hi! I think it (‘Out 1’) might be on the Criterion Channel? Europe doesn’t have the Criterion Channel, sadly. Everyone, Does anyone here know how to stream Rivette’s ‘Out 1’? If so, please pipe up as it would help our pal HaRpEr //. Thanks. ‘Successive slidings…’ is my favorite Robbe-Grillet film. I hope you can see it, obvs. Awesome that you read ‘Death Sentence’. I’m sure I mentioned that it’s my all-time favorite novel. Yes, as you no doubt know, using neutral pronouns in French is borderline impossible, so when he did that it was a revelation. Really happy you liked that novel. I hope so much that your bad personal stuff passes. I don’t know what I could possibly do to help, if there’s something, I’m here and down. ** Uday, Happily, I’m pretty certain there’s not a library on earth that has ‘Antoine Monnier’ among its holdings. Trust me, you’re better off without it. Yeah, movie stuff majorly sucks at the moment. But everything passes, I guess. Feel good art weirdly can make one feel good if one is in a very uncritical and very happy (and maybe very sad) mood, I agree. Lovely week’s beginning to you and yours. ** Bill, Hi, B. Call me crazy, but I think ‘I Wished’ is probably better if you don’t know the Cycle. But you know I like confusion. That is one of crazy-ass double bill right there, agreed. And your brain is still okay? I think ‘Flunker’ is at the printer, and hopefully it’ll be ready to wing it way to everywhere, uh, soon. -ish. ** Okay. The blog is a Shabby Dollhouse outpost today, and do traipse about with eyes wide open and fingers in action. See you tomorrow.

15 Comments

  1. ted rees

    Nice! Just recorded a little podcast yesterday afternoon with Kristen, Oscar, and Carrie Lorig. Can’t wait to get these books!

    Hope yr well, Dennis. The PP newsletter interview is tremendous.

    xot

  2. Katalyze

    Hi Dennis! How are you? I’ve been in a several years long reading slump.. I think pandemic and increased workload and a few hard losses took a toll on my ability to calmly concentrate on reading. The books today look interesting though! All I have managed to read in the past year are the English translations of Sayaka Murata’s books, and I really loved them a lot.

    News from here is that last month I put on a noise / experimental show where I curated the lineup..which is the first time I’ve taken on the sole organizing. I was pretty happy with that. And in a few weeks I’m playing my first show. I’ve done a couple of DJ sets but this will be the first time performing my own music.

    Hope you’re well! Kat x

  3. Tosh Berman

    Rivette’s ‘Out 1’ and the other “Out” editions are shown on Kanopy in the U.S. Kanopy is from the American Library system, and one needs a library card to subscribe to the channel. And it’s free.

  4. Mark

    We saw Tour de France… but they did a solid two hour set with many fabulous digressions into other albums. There is a doc about Pikme-up https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B004080MX8/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r We are gearing up for the LA Zine Fest with new zines on Kid Congo, Gregg Araki and Peter Hujar in the works. Lawndale was awesome! Great to see Jack. Working for Trulee today…

  5. PL

    Hey Dennis! How you doing? I’m ok. Turns out the guy I was interested in is straight, which is odd, but not the end of the world. I finally watched ‘Querelle’ and I liked it very much, I think it’s my favourite of Fassbinder, even though ‘Petra von Kant’ is fantastic too. I also took the weekend to read Junji Ito’s ‘Uzumaki’, it’s nice, but the drawings are better than the story. What do you think about this one? Oh, and I watched Breillat’s ‘Sleeping Beauty’ too. It’s better than her ‘Barbe Bleue’ but it’s definitely not her best work. I started learning french and… yeah I think that’s it. I really liked your last slaves post, I was wondering if you have fun reading and selecting it. I personally always have a good laugh. But the UBOREME lady is nuts. Anyways, hope you are doing great!

  6. _Black_Acrylic

    Congrats Kristen and Oscar! Shabby Dollhouse is a major player alright.

    Even though it sucks, my fave Bond film as a kid used to be Moonraker. Always thought that Jaws was the coolest bad guy.

  7. Lucas

    hi dennis,

    sorry about the hellish meeting(s). I hope the rest of your day was pleasant enough to make up for it. I’m doing okay. this post is great! I’ll need to tune in to that livejournal podcast episode, especially. I’m too young to have used it but early internet sites have always fascinated me. granted, it’s a fascination that usually just leads me to watching excessively long videos explaining early internet drama and subcultures but they have entertainment value. ofc I have to mention the sluts too, which is the first book by you I read

    for harper, I’ve been watching out 1 here: https://t.ly/8iFbw

    happy tuesday from me and sally and these toulouse geese I saw near the lake! https://imgur.com/a/GF8LU0C

    • Oscar 🌀

      Hey, Lucas!

      Hopefully you see this! If you’re into excessively long videos about early internet culture and drama (snap!) I just wanted to recommend STRANGE ÆONS’ videos if you haven’t watched their stuff already — specifically their videos about Snapewives (relevant to the LiveJournal mentions today) and reality shifting (not early internet, but incredible).

      Have a good one! :3

      • Lucas

        hi oscar! thank you for the recommendation but I’ve already seen both of those videos haha, I’m a big fan of strange æons too

        have a good one right back!

  8. Dominik

    Hi!!

    Everything about this post speaks to me, especially the excerpt from “Log Off.” Thank you so much for the introduction!

    Shit, the producers again… What happened this time…?

    Love flying over a forest on the back of his ex-boyfriend in his dream (and wondering what this means), Od.

  9. Oscar 🌀

    Today, I offer you a large group of ducks (a flock, a waddling, a raft, a brood, a team) waddling rapidly towards you and their quacks all sound like ‘Hi, Dennis!’

    I accepted the offer and dropped out of my PhD! It’s pretty surreal. Saw your other comment about Nuit Blanche being kinda mid, so that’s a bummer. I hope your meetings and stuff were at least less of a bummer? If possible?

    The excerpts today were great! I listened to the LiveJournal podcast too, which was cool. I never used LiveJournal (just missed it) but I spent a ridiculous amount of time on Tumblr. I wonder if in a few years there will be some sort of Tumblr novel? The place was a goldmine for really weird, really niche stuff — before the NSFW ban, anyway.

    Today I hope that the aforementioned ducks are genuinely friendly and well-intentioned. You never know.

  10. Steve

    Sorry about the weekend. Film-related stress?

    I’m happy to have scheduled my next dental surgery for Thursday afternoon. The next few days are likely to be stressful, but I hope that by the weekend, I’m completely done with all this stress and the pain associated with it.

    Have you ever done a Shu Lea Cheang Day? I’m in the middle of writing an article about her BAM retrospective later this month for Gay City News. I think her latest film, UKI, is also her weakest. The heavy reliance on computer animation makes it sterile and weightless, like a lot of recent video art. The cyberpunk porn of I.K.U. was more successful; aside from a few Japanese pink films, I’ve never seen anything like it.

    The Criterion Channel’s current series on “New New Queer Cinema”, encompassing TRENQUE LAUQUEN, FORT BUCHANAN, Andrew Haigh’s WEEKEND, Lucio Castro’s END OF THE CENTURY and others, is a great concept. I just watched Dennis Lim and Michael Koresky’s discussion of the series, and I learned for the first time that Lucrecia Martel is queer.

  11. HaRpEr //

    Hey Dennis, and thanks everyone for aiding my grail quest for ‘Out 1’, and thanks DC for the support. I’m okay, just strung out from what feels like an endless race back and forth and never getting anywhere. I had a terrible phone call with my dad where he was accusing me of not trying hard enough or something and made several accusations that I knew he’d say and let me know what a terrible time he’s having at the moment. He keeps saying I should apply to McDonald’s. We made up anyway, I don’t have the energy for staying mad at people for too long. It’s not worth it. And I feel juvenile moaning about my parents anyway so its best to put it out of mind. This whole thing will sort itself out but it just requires time.

    Anyway, I did see ‘Duelle’ today and it’s the exact thing I go crazy for. I’m so happy to have found a new director to explore. Also, I started Cynthia Carr’s biography of Candy Darling which came out, who has been a hero of mine since I was a kid. It’s really well written as well, and definitely takes some stylistic risks that a lot of straight forward biographies are afraid of doing. It’s got the Eileen Myles stamp of approval on the blurb as well. The book’s making me realize more that I need to see Werner Schroeter’s ‘The Death of Maria Malibran’ which Candy was in, and also explore Schroeter’s oeuvre in general.

  12. Nicholas.

    Howdy! It’s me I’m back and elated to announce I’ve begun the developing the Muse applied sciences corner of the MMTV universe and it might be my favorite part. It’s funny how both science and magic are pitched as opposites but you me and everyone are literally made of stars which is magical in its own regard on top of the science of our atoms and their laws it’s all fantastical to me and equally real. Hum what’s the last thing you forgot in a rush for me it’d have to be a lighter. What was for dinner and I’ll be right back. Oh also I’ve always wanted a sort of halo on my back or over my head actually definitely both that I could alter the color and physical characteristics of at will for my dream body mod do you have one even something more cyberpunk if that’s your vibe or a few extra fingers to play the piano can you tell I just watched Gattaca for the first time. BRB & TTYLXOX

  13. Uday

    I love this extract!!! Adding it to my ever expanding list (but on priority). Is there any way to get a signed copy of Flunker? I know its corny but something about that feeling is really nice. Hope the movie stuff passes more like a dizzy spell than kidney stones. I’d planned to sleep hours ago but can’t because the election over in India is keeping me up. At some point my computer will shut down and then I’ll probably catch some shut-eye (made sure not to charge my phone either). Feel-good art for me is for happiness. When I’m sad I try my best to replicate the feeling with art to intensify it. The process of getting over it is almost like an orgasm, where it peaks and then is over. Case in point: watching Mysterious Skin and fainting but not once since getting sad about that stuff. Or even how I got really into your work last year after flirting with it for a while.

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