Who will enter the octagon?
Will the predecessor of Dr. Frankenstein’s lineage prevail in the octagon? Or will the werewolf devour his flesh?
Two enigmatic figures approach an underground... More > octagon sanctioned by the U.S. Government in order to keep supernaturals in check.
One opponent comes from the realm of magickal science, forming monsters out of cadavers that he hopes will win prize money to fund expensive experiments.
The other, a ronin werewolf desiring to rejoin his pack, returns to Colorado to win a place among those that ostracized him decades ago. He follows the pack’s trail to Los Angeles and discovers the underground octagon, entering the contest against Frankenstein’s creations.
Both opponents know the consequences for failure, yet they face death to achieve their dreams. Two monsters enter, but only one can leave the octagon alive.< Less
A one‑act featuring the notorious anti‑hero of Arthur Miller’s Crucible, and the women he exploited. John Proctor, finding himself in the boundary lands of patriarchy after his... More > execution, encounters a second trial—this time by the women. Proctor, who does not believe in witches, scrambles desperately for context as he is tested by his ex-wife, his mistress, a formerly enslaved Caribbean woman, the town baglady, the town bluestocking, and the town matriarch.< Less
Covers prospecting in California, Colorado, Utah, Montana, New Mexico, British Columbia and gives practical and detailed advise. The author was a professor at the Colorado School of Mines. 126... More > figures plus other illustrations, 2 maps, Alaska, and of Kootenay District, British Columbia. Arthur Lakes 1896< Less
Covers prospecting in California, Colorado, Utah, Montana, New Mexico, British Columbia and gives practical and detailed advise. The author was a professor at the Colorado School of Mines. There are... More > 126 figures plus other illustrations, 2 maps, Alaska, and of Kootenay District, British Columbia. - Arthur Lakes 1896< Less
A one act featuring the notorious anti hero of Arthur Miller’s Crucible, and the women he exploited. John Proctor, finding himself in the boundary lands of patriarchy after his
execution,... More > encounters a second trial—this time by the women. Proctor, who does not believe in witches, scrambles desperately for context as he is tested by his ex-wife, his mistress, a formerly enslaved Caribbean woman, the town baglady, the town bluestocking, and the town matriarch.< Less
A one act featuring the notorious anti hero of Arthur Miller’s Crucible, and the women he exploited. John Proctor, finding himself in the boundary lands of patriarchy after his
execution,... More > encounters a second trial—this time by the women. Proctor, who does not believe in witches, scrambles desperately for context as he is tested by his ex-wife, his mistress, a formerly enslaved Caribbean woman, the town baglady, the town bluestocking, and the town matriarch.< Less
This project is quite unusual in that it combines, in separate parts, autobiographical sketches of the author with biographical sketches of some of the writers who have influenced him most, including... More > Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Aldous Huxley, Arthur Koestler, Henry Miller, Hermann Hesse, and Lawrence Durrell. At the end, Mr O'Loughlin has appended a list of books borrowed from his local library during a twelve-year period coinciding, in part, with the composition of this project, so that one can compare his reading - and what he thought of it - with the original material here as a guide to how becoming eventually turned, for him, into being. All in all, a boldly original and inventive idea crowned by a photographic self-portrait taken several years ago when his hair was still quite long.< Less
Editor Chris Bartholomew wanted to create an online magazine at a dark time in her life. Diagnosed with cancer, Chris created "Static Movement" with the sole purpose of publishing stories... More > readers could escape in. Within these pages are stories from veteran and up-and-coming writers. Most important, however, are the stories and artwork that will lure the reader into new vistas, where they will become lost. Hollywood producers spin yarns to take you on a ride; zombies rise from their graves at the skilled hands of Eric Brown; and literary fiction flows like a stream from the minds of those who love quality above all else. Pick this book up and you hold new worlds, technological marvels, pure horror and literary fiction of purest quality. We invite you to escape into Static Movement.< Less
Editor Chris Bartholomew wanted to create an online magazine at a dark time in her life. Diagnosed with cancer, Chris created "Static Movement" with the sole purpose of publishing stories... More > readers could escape in. Within these pages are stories from veteran and up-and-coming writers. Most important, however, are the stories and artwork that will lure the reader into new vistas, where they will become lost. Hollywood producers spin yarns to take you on a ride; zombies rise from their graves at the skilled hands of Eric Brown; and literary fiction flows like a stream from the minds of those who love quality above all else. Pick this book up and you hold new worlds, technological marvels, pure horror and literary fiction of purest quality. We invite you to escape into Static Movement.< Less
An essay that examines the tragic outcomes in the literary works of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men and Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman and how they depict the "American Dream."