Update – February 24, 2:02 am

Watching YouTube videos by Tom Nicholas, Ph.D student. First was a very interesting but brief look at the meaning of postdramatic theatre. Now a look at the meaning of “dramaturgy”. These are his first videos, but they are very well thought out. I recommend them. They cover “deep” subjects, but are clear, concise, and well-written and accessible to the layman. I am going to bed after this second one. Good night.

Update – February 24, 1:30 am

Finished watching “Hughie” by Eugene O’Neill a few minutes ago. Another one act play dependent on one character’s monologue, but interesting to see how Erie, a B.S. artist, was dependent on Hughie as sort of a one-man support group and how the new night clerk recognizes this and steps in to fill Hughie’s shoes.

My Interview with KSJE Will Air on March 7 at 10:30 A.M.

ps4 SLATTERY
Photo from about 2007.

In February, I recorded an interview on my works and writing with “Write On Four Corners“, a program with KSJE 90.9 FM, the Farmington (NM) National Public Radio station.  The interview will air on March 7, 2018, at 10:30 a.m.  The interview covered a wide range of topics concerning my writing and my writing plans for the future including upcoming work.  Be sure to tune in.  The program was hosted by Traci HalesVass, retired assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at San Juan College in Farmington.  The interview will be available on podcast after the broadcast.

To celebrate this, on the day of the broadcast, I am giving away e-copies of all my works available on Amazon Kindle.  These include A Tale of Hell and Other Works of Horror, Alien Embrace, The Scent and Other Stories, Click, Diabolical:  Three Tales of Jack Thurston and Revenge, and Nocturne: Poems of Love, Distance, and the Night, a callous and disinterested lover.  Follow this link to my Amazon Author’s page to find out more about each work.

My Interview with KSJE Will Air on March 7 at 10:30 A.M.

ps4 SLATTERY
Photo from about 2007.

In February, I recorded an interview on my works and writing with “Write On Four Corners“, a program with KSJE 90.9 FM, the Farmington (NM) National Public Radio station.  The interview will air on March 7, 2018, at 10:30 a.m.  The interview covered a wide range of topics concerning my writing and my writing plans for the future including upcoming work.  Be sure to tune in.  The program was hosted by Traci HalesVass, retired assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at San Juan College in Farmington.  The interview will be available on podcast after the broadcast.

To celebrate this, on the day of the broadcast, I am giving away e-copies of all my works available on Amazon Kindle.  These include A Tale of Hell and Other Works of Horror, Alien Embrace, The Scent and Other Stories, Click, Diabolical:  Three Tales of Jack Thurston and Revenge, and Nocturne: Poems of Love, Distance, and the Night, a callous and disinterested lover.  Follow this link to my Amazon Author’s page to find out more about each work.

“Lady Frankenstein and the Mummy’s Brain” from Drunk in a Graveyard

Scary Tales Publishing, who I’ve talked about in the past with their “Fractured Scary Tales” series, are back with a new release titles “Lady Frankenstein and the Mummy’s Brain.” Making its debut at the spring comics conventions at both Long Beach Convention Center in California and Kansas City’s Bartle Hall in Missouri, this new 20-page […]

via NEW! Horror Comic “Lady Frankenstein and the Mummy’s Brain” Coming Soon — DRUNK IN A GRAVEYARD

“Back to Blogging” from RogerMoorePoetdotcom

It took a long time. Many apologies for my absence. Thanks to the people at WordPress, I found my blog after a six month absence, and I am ready to start blogging again. I look forward to reconnecting with my many blogging friends. Roger.

via Back to Blogging — rogermoorepoetdotcom

“Her Strong Enchantments Failing” by A.E. Housman

A.E. Housman

Her strong enchantments failing,
Her towers of fear in wreck,
Her limbecks dried of poisons
And the knife at her neck,

The Queen of air and darkness
Begins to shrill and cry,
“O young man, O my slayer,
To-morrow you shall die.”

O Queen of air and darkness,
I think ’tis truth you say,
And I shall die tomorrow;
But you will die to-day.

My Interview with KSJE Will Air on March 7 at 10:30 A.M.

ps4 SLATTERY
Photo from about 2007.

In February, I recorded an interview on my works and writing with “Write On Four Corners“, a program with KSJE 90.9 FM, the Farmington (NM) National Public Radio station.  The interview will air on March 7, 2018, at 10:30 a.m.  The interview covered a wide range of topics concerning my writing and my writing plans for the future including upcoming work.  Be sure to tune in.  The program was hosted by Traci HalesVass, retired assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at San Juan College in Farmington.  The interview will be available on podcast after the broadcast.

To celebrate this, on the day of the broadcast, I am giving away e-copies of all my works available on Amazon Kindle.  These include A Tale of Hell and Other Works of Horror, Alien Embrace, The Scent and Other Stories, Click, Diabolical:  Three Tales of Jack Thurston and Revenge, and Nocturne: Poems of Love, Distance, and the Night, a callous and disinterested lover.  Follow this link to my Amazon Author’s page to find out more about each work.

“A Review of The Paris Review’s Overproduced Podcast” from Biblioklept

In his introduction to the first episode of The Paris Review Podcast, former editor Lorin Stein tells us that we’re going to hear some great writing. He then claims, “what you won’t hear is much in the way of hosting from me or anyone else. We’re just going to let the writing speak for itself, the way […]

via A review of The Paris Review’s overproduced podcast — Biblioklept

Article on Clark Ashton Smith from Horror Delve

Clark Ashton Smith was an painter, poet, sculpture and writer born in 1893 in California. He had several horror, fantasy and science fiction stories published in Weird Tales and other pulp magazines of the time. This led to his developing a thriving correspondence with both H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard. I particularly love Smith’s […]

via 13 FANTASY AND HORROR TALES BY CLARK ASHTON SMITH — Horror Delve

My Interview with KSJE Will Air on March 7 at 10:30 A.M.

ps4 SLATTERY
Photo from about 2007.

Traci Hales-Vass, who conducted my interview for her new program, Write On Four Corners, just now notified me that my interview will air on March 7, 2018, at 10:30 a.m.  The interview covered a range of topics concerning my writing and my writing plans for the future.  Be sure to tune in.   KSJE is 90.9 FM, National Public Radio.

“Nocturne: Poems of Love, Distance, and the Night, a callous and disinterested lover” is Being Published Today.

NocturneToday, February 2, 2018, I am publishing my latest work, my only book of poetry.  It will be available initially only in e-book via Amazon and Kindle, but a print version will be released soon thereafter.

These poems were written from about 1985 to 1993, during which time I was an officer in the US Navy. This was a time of rapid and frequent change for me in many ways, including geographically, emotionally, professionally, and romantically.

During this time I had several lovers, who were always of good character and heart. They doubtlessly loved me more than I deserved, but I had an overpowering drive to experience as many women as I could. It was never a matter of heartlessly notching my proverbial bedpost, but honestly enjoying women for who they were. All these women were sincere in their feelings, beautiful in body and spirit, and honest with their emotions.  I suppose that what prevented me from forming a permanent attachment to any was a subtle, congenital character flaw of a need for solitude that inevitably won out over a need for a solid relationship.

As time passed, I enjoyed the hunt for women more and more and was more and more satisfied with one-night stands that I could find in local bars. My original sincerity gradually faded as I grew to identify more and more with the nightlife and the night itself. I lived for the night. Dawn was the unwelcome end to my adventures.

What stimulated my interest was my move to my first duty station at Naval Air Station Whidbey on Whidbey Island in northern Puget Sound in 1985. I fell quickly in love with the beauty of the San Juan Islands, Puget Sound, and the whole of the Puget Sound culture. I traveled as much as I could on weekends and, whenever I could, I would drop in on some small, out-of-the-way bookshop, where I became familiar with the works of local writers such as Tess Gallagher and Raymond Carver.

Something about that northwestern literary voice alleviated much of the professional tension I was feeling and I began to devour more and more of the northwestern literature, which became a stepping stone to a new literary world as I expanded my reading to the Beats, W.S. Merwin, and many others around the world. Soon I dabbled in writing poetry and found it at least as enjoyable as reading it, because it allowed me to ideas and feelings that had no other escape.

Somewhere around 1993 I began developing an interest in photography, which allowed me to express myself in other ways in which I could interact more intensely with my environment. Over the following years my love for photography supplanted my love for poetry, and then, true to my fickle nature, fiction began to supplant my love for photography, though the attraction to film and darkroom still lingers like the fond memory of a former lover.

Over the past year, I have begun contemplating my retirement from my current career and have begun to work at establishing myself as a writer for my second career. As part of that transition, I decided to collect as many of my poems as I could find and to publish them as my first serious literary accomplishment. Some of these are based on actual events; others are fiction designed to capture the spirit of the moment.

In reviewing them, I detected a theme. Therefore, I arranged them not in chronological order, but in an order that tells what I perceive as the story of my spiritual and emotional development during those years.

I made none of the photos contained herein. They are all public domain photos from online stock agencies. However, I selected each one carefully for capturing the intended spirit of the poem preceding it.

New Interview on KSJE 90.9 FM and More…

cropped-inside-og2-2-a
Phil Slattery, 2015

Tonight, I recorded an interview with Traci Hales-Vass for her new radio show “Write On 4 Corners” on KSJE 90.9 FM National Public Radio. They will let me know when it’s to be broadcast and I will announce it on this page.  The discussion centered on my writing and my upcoming works to be published.

While there, I learned that I have been accepted onto the new KSJE advisory board.  They will contact me with the first meeting date.