׉?4ׁB! בCט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://mfEun0wJgBZo7G8hEQ2jlSoC8fJ6g7QRg_oWkkfeudc `׉	 7cassandra://NO_6QSArAH_gYEDemLxK6AEPCZtSTQTQrPe8NS4Uyl0Y`r׉	 7cassandra://pUxQSV2kmle2NtDtVK7uVfkJG5ADRnmj2dyYdVLf2gE ` hlwb 4 ׈Ehlwb 3׉E׉	 7cassandra://pUxQSV2kmle2NtDtVK7uVfkJG5ADRnmj2dyYdVLf2gE ` hlwb 3hlwb 3בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://xGUXvi5b08t092GNn0bsd11JMXdpFccpFFZcuG4PygU `et׉	 7cassandra://f_J3sAKPWGm8Dh4fAnSZq2oQ8xSRZfQSyXtwly8W4U0͜9`׉	 7cassandra://l7vSCuMwxQe36iFu2-FSQHVpBHX8HNen5ptVtVe0ydM6` hlxb 4#נhlxb 4) 	9ׁH  http://BIRDYMAGAZINE.COM/CONTACTׁׁЈנhlxb 4( p	9ׁH $http://BIRDYMAGAZINE.COM/SUBMISSIONSׁׁЈנhlxb 4' C̧	9ׁHhttp://BIRDYMAGAZINE.COM/SHOPׁׁЈנhlxb 4& Vp
9ׁHhttp://BIRDY.MAׁׁЈ׉E׉	 7cassandra://l7vSCuMwxQe36iFu2-FSQHVpBHX8HNen5ptVtVe0ydM6` hlwb 3׉EuISSUE 141 | SEPTEMBER 2025
NICK FLOOK, YOU KNOW WHERE I'LL BE - @FLOOKO
HOLLOWSEEKER: KRYSTI JOMÉI
DISTRICT 808: JONNY DESTEFANO
THE ELEPHANTS: JULIANNA BECKERT
GRIFFIN: KAYVAN S. T. KHALATBARI
BLEAKBERRIES: CRISTIN COLVIN
DIVERSIONARY SPLIT: MARK MOTHERSBAUGH
MAURITS CORNELIS ESCHER: ALAN ROY
FRIDGE RAID: DANIEL LANDES
FRONT COVER: PAUL JACKSON, APE ON KILLING MACHINE BOSTON DYNAMIC
DOG - @PAULJACKSONLIVES
BACK COVER: DAVE DANZARA, WE'RE DOOMED - @LOSTINTIMEDESIGNS
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TAGERT, JORDAN DOLL, JASON WHITE, BRIAN POLK, ERIC JOYNER, JASON
HELLER, HANA ZITTEL, JOE VAUX, TOM MURPHY, DANIEL LANDES, EVAN
LORENZEN, RUMTUM, MICHAEL DAVID KING, DAVE DANZARA
ETHER: PAUL JACKSON, RYTIS BERNOTAS, EDOS DROCHER, SUSANN BROX
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SILPHIUM RESIN: MARIANO OREAMUNO, DS THORNBURG, PHIL GARZA,
ZAC DUNN
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1
hlwb 3hlwb 3בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://-q-80T8-N9vvRawrRENzQW7FTHOpj7sQKnYFgv8-nD4 \`et׉	 7cassandra://jXRKi6-UNCXQuvW0XoV7nFDfiO0v847B2hHOklCGSms;`׉	 7cassandra://4g5j5_34Xi11dM1M-1D5TcmtQtzF7pTgSBSCof1AEYg@` hlxb 4*׉EJOSH KEYES, HIDE AND SEEK
׉	 7cassandra://4g5j5_34Xi11dM1M-1D5TcmtQtzF7pTgSBSCof1AEYg@` hlwb 3׉Eythe
prowl
BY ZAC DUNN
Black paws moved slowly past the ruins
that lay silent. The bunny smelled something
succulent and cautiously edged to investigate
its source. They both crept from the places
they slept to a window frame that had
remained the same for far too long, only to
wonder where the other was. The tiny bunny
held minute breaths that murmured the cat's
purr. Their bellies were too hungry for them to
be calm — to move back to the burrows that
would keep them both safe from the prying
eyes they knew all too well to evade.
As the panther gazed over the filthy cement
ledge looking for his prey, a small bird drew his
attention. Its chirps distracted his keen ears
from hearing the fearful palpitations he could
sense so close. The bird summoned several
more that flew into the filthy bunker, filling
its moldy wall with a delicate song that drove
the panther mad. Yet he was starving this cool
morning and pounced over the ledge to either
catch one or banish the infernal ratchet from
the space he felt held his next morsel of flesh
oh so close. But as his paws landed on the floor
the tiny bunny was much too clever, making
haste to scurry back up over the ledge and into
the dense brush that clung to the bunker.
The panther growled and hissed at the cursed
birds, but they mocked his advance with a
simple tune that only made him more irate.
The bunker was cold and empty like his belly
now. The bunny made it back to his burrow
beneath the mighty banyan tree just up the
hill. To hide and sleep from the claws and paws
that seek to gobble him up whole.
9:12am L BEDFORD
FOLLOW FOR MORE:
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3
hlwb 3hlwb 3בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://pnMzYppL8cKh_nQn7MzeTUwtR7xwU_aa_4UeREna_ss v^`et׉	 7cassandra://dIpvzbjqsKpjizao88sIxQdcn_OMI97RAJ4QIbX6JHQ(`׉	 7cassandra://tLfADz7Xi1hGp71RtyCwxhqx5I-j0_bLZCRY6dctqOY@P` hlxb 4-׉EGRANT WILLIAMS, HOME
׉	 7cassandra://tLfADz7Xi1hGp71RtyCwxhqx5I-j0_bLZCRY6dctqOY@P` hlwb 4 ׈Ehlwb 4hlwb 4 בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://8hrLuqE5xpq-xS5poZxEu_tVB3-YoJytOuyRzjFchfI ĺ`et׉	 7cassandra://RrvFhtJiomsm5T0E62M6Dpj0vp7JcuW4t0YRHV72Yik
`׉	 7cassandra://SDGVZg449RzAIpvWGIqn22pFinp74RBK6Qs9fEmQ2pcG}` hlyb 40׉E *MARK MOTHERSBAUGH, BIRDHOUSE HEAD
No. 141
׉	 7cassandra://SDGVZg449RzAIpvWGIqn22pFinp74RBK6Qs9fEmQ2pcG}` hlwb 4׈Ehlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://KZKlLKLL_0ANoD0htVO3V9aNwu1tygGiJFfqhvV4FGk 34`et׉	 7cassandra://Hm6BQbcM0ADQU1RcoF4wmvmNBo_SmrzUq7Cm1-Zv_IA`׉	 7cassandra://bLy5zz0rphMvegp5tDOniR2720a79tU81DEW_HfbKAUC` hlyb 42נhlyb 44 <ہj
9ׁHhttp://ERICJOYNER.COMׁׁЈ׉E“DON’T BORE US, GET TO THE CHORUS”
SHORTENED COMMUNICATION FOR TODAY’S TLDR LIFESTYLE
BY BRIAN POLK
DO YOU EVER HAVE TO BOIL TEA WATER FIVE OR SIX TIMES
BECAUSE YOU KEEP FORGETTING THAT YOU’RE TRYING TO
MAKE TEA?
This happens to me frequently. I put the kettle on, find something to
do in the other room, and then come back to tepid water. It’s almost
as if tea kettles should make some kind of high-pitched whistle to let
you know that it’s ready. Who do I talk to about that?
BANDS SURE SANG ABOUT LEGS A LOT MORE IN THE PAST
THAN THEY DO NOW
“Legs” by ZZ Top, “Hot Legs” by Rod Stewart, “Lord Of The Thighs”
No. 141
by Aerosmith, and “Girl, Girls, Girls” by Mötley Crüe all mention legs
as sexual objects. I feel like it was the style at the time, because these
days none of my friends will ever say anything like, “My new girlfriend
has amazing legs.” And even if someone in my friend group did say
that, the rest of us would respond with something like, “What a weird
thing to say.”
I’M STARTING WITH THE MAN IN THE MIRROR; I’M ASKING HIM
WHY HE DRANK SO MUCH VODKA LAST NIGHT
He responded, “Because it was fun. You should know. You were
there.” That’s when I said, “Oh yeah. We did have fun, didn’t we?”
ART BY JASON WHITE
׉	 7cassandra://bLy5zz0rphMvegp5tDOniR2720a79tU81DEW_HfbKAUC` hlwb 4׉EThen my partner started to get concerned because I was talking to
myself in the bathroom again.
DID YOU GET THE MICHAEL JACKSON REFERENCE IN THE
LAST ENTRY?
I should probably stop referencing songs that are 37 years old unless
I’m with someone else who’s also getting close to qualifying for AARP
benefits.
SOMETIMES I’LL TELL MY COWORKER, “IT’S ON OCTOBER
26TH.” AND WITHOUT LOOKING AT A CALENDAR, SHE’LL SAY,
“OKAY, THAT’S A SUNDAY.”
How the fuck does she do that?
I FELT PROFOUND REGRET WHEN I BIT INTO A PEACH THAT
WASN’T RIPE YET
Unrealized peach potential is the absolute worst thing about peach
season.
DO YOU EVER DAYDREAM AT YOUR JOB ABOUT HOW YOU
NEVER THOUGHT YOU’D BE STUCK IN A BORING 9-TO5
WHERE YOU NEVER GET USE YOUR CREATIVITY OR
TALENT, BECAUSE YOU THOUGHT YOU HAD SO MUCH MORE
POTENTIAL THAN THIS, BUT YOU NEVER FOUND ANY OTHER
WAY TO MAKE MONEY, AND NOW IT’S TOO LATE TO SWITCH
CAREERS, SO YOU HAVE NO CHOICE BUT TO SAY OUT LOUD
TO NO ONE, “MAYBE THIS WAS THE BEST I COULD DO?”
Yeah, that sure does suck.
YOU CAN’T MICROMANAGE YOUR WAY TO SUCCESS
It has been my experience that micromanagers do not actually
like to be referred to by any of the following three designations:
“micromanagers,” “ineptly cruel bosses,” or “insufferable disciplinarians
who have no clue how to earn the respect of others and therefore have
to resort to using fear and shame to garner grudging recognition for
their position of authority, which no one can actually respect, and so
they spend the entirety of their working careers frustrated that no one
likes or appreciates them.” And of course, most of them are all three.
WHEN RAINDROPS KEEP FALLING ON MY HEAD, THAT MEANS
MY EYES WILL SOON BE TURNING RED
I don’t care what that song says, I get upset when I get rained on!
OKAY, I JUST REFERENCED A SONG THAT’S 55 YEARS OLD
Maybe it’s time to cut my losses and try again next issue.
ERIC JOYNER, THE LAST TRAIN TO CLARKSVILLE - ERICJOYNER.COM
9
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://NdH_JiA8sZDjPAXWhQZrBvSrTKtNSKrDJ3uwhxTbPCE a`et׉	 7cassandra://oiPWvLCl5V1ftl2yo0_D43RJDJQX7HJ4Umcs9Ik3uEQ `׉	 7cassandra://DS4jBRo1szPyFWxMikTDens_BbeCc3o_KSXcniIZDrsJ` hlzb 45׉E
OCTOPUS
FACTORY
GALAXY
BY JASON HELLER
Henry Oxford Wallace walked through the doctor's garden with his
head wrapped in mist, squinting as if seeing its verdant splendors
for the first time. Sunlight streaked across the sky like soapsuds.
Clockwork hummingbirds siphoned gasoline from metallic flowers. In
the distance, nude children danced with animals and uprooted saplings
in some kind of mindless, wind-up pantomime.
This made Henry want to cry, but no tears would come. He raised his
hands to his face, brushed his fingertips along his scarred and bearded
cheeks.
Then he felt them, smooth as bone. The dice. He remembered: He'd
been given dice for eyes.
"Henry?" The voice behind him gave him a start. "Henry, come back
to the house with me. The doctor can help. There's too much to see
out here right now. We'll come back when it's dark. It won't be so
frightening then."
"Yes, Eleanor," he said, taking his sister's hand. He dared to glance
down at it. Instead of skin and nails, the flesh of her fingers was
sheathed in waxed paper and shattered glass.
When they returned to the house — the doctor's country estate, far
from the gaslit streets and loud Model Ts of the nearby city — Eleanor
called upstairs to their host. Dr. Islington came down, spindly and
flushed, and led Henry to his examination room, shutting the door
behind them. As the bigger man took out his notebook and pen, Henry
stood shivering in the middle of the room, trying to avoid the large
mirror hanging alongside the charts and diagrams on the wall.
But a stolen glimpse reflected the same image he'd begun seeing
the day before: two bone-white dice, polished to pearly opalescence,
pivoting in the deep, wide sockets where his eyes should have been.
The numbers six and a three were facing forward, nine tiny black dots,
dilated and baleful.
No. 141
"Sorry, Henry, very sorry." Dr. Islington gestured at the mirror. "I should
have covered that up. It's, ahem, still the dice you see, eh?"
Henry tried and failed to tear his gaze from the mirror. "Yes, Doctor.
But … it's more than just that. I've been seeing other things too. In
the garden today, with Eleanor, everything around me looked strange.
More so than usual even."
The doctor began scratching in his notebook. "Sit down, my boy," he
bid Henry. "Describe it to me."
Henry did. He told Dr. Islington about the carnival of visions in the
garden, the odd and impossible phantasms that swam in the corners
of his new eyes. He tried to put into words the children and animals,
the hummingbirds and flowers, the sun and its vibrant scum of lemony
foam.
But that wasn't all, Henry continued. Earlier that day he'd sent the
doctor's servants out of the kitchen so that he could cook breakfast
with Eleanor. They'd loved cooking breakfast together as children.
But as Henry cracked eggs into a bowl, each yolk appeared to him as a
jellied ocean squirming with swarms of unborn stars. Then, just as his
knife was about to descend into a loaf of dark rye, it turned into a little,
slate-shingled house bustling with the members of a soberly dressed
and Lilliputian family.
His sister, of course, had seen only eggs and bread on the table before
them, and could do nothing but clasp her brother's hands and coo into
his ear as he whimpered in confusion.
"It's getting worse," Henry concluded. "Can't you figure out what's the
matter? Don't take me wrong, Doctor. I'm grateful for the operation,
to be able to see again. And you've been very generous letting Eleanor
and myself stay here while I recuperate. But I … I fear I'm going mad. I
haven’t had the blessing of sight since I was seven-years-old. The world
looks strange enough to me as it is. But now? I can't tell which visions I
should heed as reality and which I should dismiss as apparition."
OCTOPUS ROSE GARDEN BY CARLIE
EYES BY MARK MOTHERSBAUGH
׉	 7cassandra://DS4jBRo1szPyFWxMikTDens_BbeCc3o_KSXcniIZDrsJ` hlwb 4׉EDr. Islington put down his pen and
steepled his fingers. His eyes twinkled
under a heavy brow. "Henry, I can't tell
you with certainty what's happening to
you. But I do have a theory. This procedure
I used on you, as you've known from the
beginning, is an experimental one — a
marvel only possible in this enlightened
new century. But rerouting the channels
of your brain to bypass the tissue damage
that had blinded you all those years ago …
to be honest, I was operating a bit blind
myself."
The doctor gave a low chuckle then
shifted himself in his chair as Henry,
unaware that he was staring, bore into the
man's face with his eyes.
"What I believe is occurring,” Dr.
Islington went on, avoiding Henry's gaze,
"is an awakening. A rebirth of what the
philosophers have called the mythopoeic
mind. See, Henry, before science eclipsed
the scientist himself and recast the human
psyche in its own rigid image, our minds
were much more fluid and intuitive. Our
perception was wildly subjective. Long
ago, for instance, two individuals from
two different tribes of man could look at
the same object — a stick, say, or a snake
— and see two wholly different things.
The wars of that pre-scientific era weren't
simply conflicts over resources. They were
battles between epistemologies, between
distinct interpretations of sensory input,
between irreconcilable empirical realities.
In a way, men fought over the right to see
the world the way they wished, and to
populate that world with objects and gods
of their own invention."
The doctor paused for a moment to
peer out the window of the examination
room, his eyes lingering on the artful
arrangements of shrubs and stones in
the garden beyond. "What I'm proposing,
Henry, is this: These are no mere
hallucinations
you've been witnessing.
They are what I would classify as mythopoeic manifestations. In short,
sir, they are metaphors."
Henry rubbed his temples in hard, small circles, as if trying to accelerate
his inner processing of the doctor's ideas. "If you're right," Henry said
eventually, his voice rising, "then what about my eyes? What are these
dice supposed to be goddamned metaphors for?"
The doctor answered with Henry an unreadable expression. Then he
smiled at the younger man.
Henry made every effort not to scream as the doctor's face suddenly
flowered into a violent, bruise-colored cloud. The smoky mass spread
upward from his starched collar to the ceiling, seething all the while
with tiny figures that appeared to be either locusts or vultures.
"Why, it's obvious, Henry," the doctor's voice echoed from deep within
the purple nimbus that had been, just a moment ago, his head. "The
dice symbolize uncertainty. Everything that is not yet known. Wasn't
your entire operation, after all, a gamble?"
That night Henry laid awake and listened to the apple trees beyond
the garden swish in the stiff wind of an incoming storm. The trees, he
comforted himself, at least sounded like trees.
11
NICK FLOOK, CELESTIAL FALLS - @FLOOKO
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://U6VQpm0vajIJvAZx5hKmZqMhQLSwQDsoUCbDGOir2Ys `et׉	 7cassandra://vQBEHVwBkuOJom0WGM6EQIKzTl49Kssh6hoac8EytwE  `׉	 7cassandra://OgdgG6FvTlS24G0mm93HTL9xTpXV1men17VU_X-r17wD` hlzb 48׉Ehis afternoons sifting through his memories to catch every last ghost
of his youth kept him somehow sane, even as it left him buried in
notebooks, filling page after page with verse he could not see.
Notebooks. That thought shook Henry out of his reverie. Of course.
As he reached for his robe in the dark of his room, a crack of thunder
rattled the house. Henry swore his sister's laughter rose from out of
the garden to join it.
The doctor's examination room was shuttered and unlit. Henry,
however, was used to negotiating the dark. He crossed the room in
stocking feet and stopped at the edge of the desk. Soon his fingers
found a drawer and, in it, Dr. Islington's notebook. As Henry groped
for a candle and then lit it, letting his eyes adjust to the flame, he
remembered the doctor's metamorphosis of the day before, the
terrific sense of awe it had instilled in him. Then he flipped through the
notebook until he found Islington's most recent entry:
Eleanor had been right. The night was much easier for Henry. As the
doctor had explained to them soon after the operation, while Henry's
eyes were still bandaged, less light means less visual stimulus entering
the brain. The closer Henry could come to his previous state of absolute
blindness, the less he was prone to these terrific visions. Even then,
there seemed always to be a glee the doctor exhibited in hearing about
and recording in his notebook Henry's latest phantasmagorical episode.
A hiss from outside his window jolted Henry out of his thoughts.
"Brother, it's me. Come down." He parted his curtains, and even in the
dim light he could see Eleanor's long, pale hair undulating in the wind.
As lightning danced in and out of the racing clouds, her locks took on
the appearance of tentacles.
Henry squinted. "What are you doing out there?" he whispered back.
"You'll wake the doctor. Come back inside."
He heard her laugh, the same mischievous giggle she'd had since
they were children. Then the luminous mass of her hair — now blonde,
now green, now blonde again — bobbed away in the lightning-charged
darkness toward the garden.
As Henry slept that night, he dreamed he and Eleanor were both
children again. They played upon the gleaming new tracks the rail
company had stitched across the fields behind their grandmother's
house. All manner of beasts, machines, and combinations thereof
crawled along those tracks as Henry groaned and turned in his bed:
steam engines curled first into nautili, then into pachyderm-shaped
gramophones, and then into electric-eyed cats that licked their
sparking fur with ferrotype tongues bearing images of comets and
atoms. Around that mad factory, that assembly line of illusion, Henry
and Eleanor darted and laughed, gorging themselves on the ripe,
metallic berries that sprang as if by magic from their footprints until
their lips were blue and their bellies sore.
Henry awoke with a start, the storm still raging and the sky like ink.
As he savored the already fading images of his dream, he remembered
what their mother had said years ago after hearing Henry babble wild
tales of the menagerie in grandmother's fields: "You will be a poet
someday, Henry. In the age of steam and electricity, a poet. God help
you."
That was before the auto accident, before he'd gone blind. True to
his mother's prediction though, he did become a poet of sorts. Not
one of any particular stature; more of a hobbyist really. But spending
No. 141
May 18, 1913
Today, a breakthrough profound enough to make the philosophers
proud! Our young man Henry has far surpassed anything of which we
could have dreamed. But let's not pervert Henry's magnificent new state
of being by speaking of it in terms of dreams as the quack Freud might.
Rather, Henry's apparitions are of true mythopoeic significance. They
are a new epistemology, an epiphany! This man, his sight denied him
for so long, has leapt both forward and backward in psychic evolution,
as befits the cyclical nature of our human consciousness. And even
better: This evolution seems to be accelerating at an exponential rate,
a feedback loop in which his visions feed on themselves. We must give
eternal thanks to Eleanor for volunteering him for the operation; finding
the perfect candidate such as Henry — a man who had lost his biological
sight yet retained the innate eye of a poet — was not easy, and Henry has
been more than worth every penny we paid his sister.
Here Henry stopped reading. Paid? Eleanor? She had told Henry that
she'd depleted most of the family's savings to pay for Dr. Islington's
operation. There had been no mention of her getting paid. Puzzled, he
reached to turn to the next the page of the doctor's notebook — but he
stopped as he heard footsteps in the hallway outside. Before he could
think of hiding, the door of the examination room opened.
It was the doctor.
"Henry? What are you doing in here, my boy?" Islington was wearing
pajamas, and his thin hair was disheveled. Henry almost didn't notice
the pistol in his hand.
"I think I'm the one who should be asking questions here, Doctor." He
held up the notebook. "What is this? What does this mean? Am I your
patient or your, your guinea pig? What have you and my sister been
keeping from me?"
Islington lowered his pistol. "Henry," he pleaded, "you misunderstand."
He crossed the room to where the younger man stood at the desk, his
steps light and careful. "This has been the arrangement all along, see?
You're not simply regaining your sight. You've been given the truest
sight of all, your birthright as a human being — the godlike perception
that's been clipped and corrupted by this sick and scientific world.
"We're wielding science against itself, don't you see? There are many
of us, men of learning and wisdom, and we've put you on the path,
we believe, to the ultimate vision, to bear witness to the ultimate
RYTIS BERNOTAS, COSMIC LIGHT
׉	 7cassandra://OgdgG6FvTlS24G0mm93HTL9xTpXV1men17VU_X-r17wD` hlwb 4׉Eometaphor." He grabbed his notebook off his desk where Henry had
been reading it. "But you must stay with me, Henry. You must tell me
what you see. Before this is all over, you may very well gaze upon the
face of God, of Creation itself. You must tell us what form it takes. You
must allow your poet's mind, that delirious eye, to be our microscope
aimed at the heart of the cardinal metaphor!"
The doctor began waving his pistol in the air as his voice climbed in
pitch and ardor. Henry froze. On impulse he glanced at the mirror across
the room, the one the doctor had always failed to cover up. He saw
with alarm that his eyes were, in fact, no longer dice. Instead they had
become fireworks, kaleidoscopes, maypoles, merry-go-rounds, all at
once, spinning and sparking and spitting more colors than he ever knew
existed.
Henry lunged across the desk and grabbed the pistol from the doctor's
hand. It turned to raw meat in his grasp, its wet weight flopping across
his knuckles. Then he turned it around, found a trigger made of gristle,
and pulled it. A putrid jet of jellylike lymph arced through the room,
stinking and steaming in the air. As serpents and vapors spewed from
the whirlpool that had once been the doctor's head, Henry heard his
sister's scream come from outside, from the rain-swept garden. He
walked through a giant mouth that had opened in the wall of the room,
careful to avoid its dripping teeth, and went to find her.
"Eleanor!" he yelled into the storm as he trudged through the lush
muck of the garden. The soft patter of rain had picked up once more,
and the wind blew black clouds across the faint rinse of sunrise on the
horizon. He realized he still had the gun in his hand — only the meat had
melted into the flesh of his hand, and his hand had in turn become the
gun, his thumb the barrel, his bitten nails the bullets.
Caught by the gale, the very substance of his new eyes streamed
through the wet spring air in front of his face like egg whites in a pot
of boiling water. Each of his eyes, he realized, could now see itself,
and Henry felt proud at having achieved such an exquisite paradox.
He could also see that his eyes had begun to change form every few
seconds: now diamonds, now jellyfish, now testicles, now nebulae. In a
spasm of inspiration, he severed the thin tethers that rooted them to
his head; free at last, they hovered balloon-like above of him.
So bemused, Henry at last saw Eleanor among the trees, naked and
dancing with the animals as those haunted children had the day before.
He reached out to her with his new hand, and it screamed at her. She
fell. Ribbons of seaweed sprouted from her lips, and the mud of the
garden sucked at her body like a mouth.
Day broke. Henry looked down upon his sister, his new eyes bubbling
high among the apple blossoms, and he saw that she was good. She
was, in fact, no longer his betrayer, no longer sister, no longer little
Eleanor — but a giantess throbbing with the probability of every
woman, every human, that had been or could ever be. She was at once
an octopus, a factory, a galaxy, and she raised her muddy, myriad arms
in a sensuous spiral to him.
Henry scooped a bed out of the wet soil of the garden and took this
monster, this mother, and he joined her, as he only should in this world
of cubes and colors, his new eyes smiling and crawling with larvae in
the raw sugar sun.
13
EDOS DROCHER AKA KITOHODKA, GIVE U ORANGATE SKULL
hlwb 4	hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://0zRgD0Ba7-vcg6LVvmnPqa7z0Z0J9nOm-o6SAZRuxeo U`et׉	 7cassandra://b3izGyyIdF9rQdwC-wltE45xqCkz_yXNTsmXTp2wVsk<`׉	 7cassandra://tsqYyhyjYuEyQ1Fii3QKN7pe_Lazw7OroCoFZgj2u4kQ` hl{b 4:׉ESkin by Mieke Versyp, Illustrated by Sabien Clement,
Translated by Sammy Koot (2025)
Belgian artists Mieke Versyp and Sabien Clement’s 2025
graphic novel, Skin, shows what can emerge when the skin of
your old life is shed and you become closer to your true
self. Rita is separated from her husband and her daughter
has moved out, leaving her to live in solitude. Detached
from her previous life, she boldly decides to start nude
modeling for a drawing class, feigning previous experience.
Arranging these classes is Esther, a brilliant illustrator
who sees beyond what is in front of her, drawing the essence
underneath each subject. At home, she takes care of stick
bugs, tiny creatures that cannot stay in one skin, molting
and reemerging multiple times as they age. In the process,
they can lose a leg, unable to regrow this lost part unless
they are young. Ester is plagued by past trauma and anxiety,
rarely going out and connecting beyond her art classes.
Slowly, through this chance meeting, the two women form
a bond through their idiosyncrasies and urge for human
connection.
Illustrated with soft watercolors and line drawing, and
arranged with varied comic frame placement, Skin is a
delicate collage of imagery sprinkled across each page.
Sabien Clement draws her figures in a way that makes them
seem larger than life while being slight and fragile,
perfectly matching the essence of Mieke Versyp’s portrait
of friendship, aging and change. A sweet glimpse into the
vitality of connection, Skin is a beautiful ode to the human
ability to grow closer and closer to our true selves.
Grand Tour by Elisa Gonzalez (2023)
Figs in the tree, figs on the stones.
Stains of rotting fruit spread and shadow at the sun’s
whim.
The steady dissolution of body into form that signals
the progress
of a masterpiece.
Elisa Gonzalez’s 2023 debut poetry collection shines with
elegant prose centered on grief, family and memory. In the
second poem in the collection, “After My Brother’s Death, I
Reflect on The Iliad,” she moves through the range of pain after
her brother’s murder. Gonzalez’s grief follows her, purposefully
present when she replays the news footage of his murder, but
always lingering no matter the daily task. As she explores this
grief, mixed with memory and childhood reminisce, she mirrors
it with the grief of Priam in The Iliad.
In another standout poem, “Epistemology Of The Shower,”
Gonzalez tells of uncovering her queerness, of youthful sexual
discovery, and the shame that overshadows these moments, created
through societal expectations and religion. “I learned you can
separate pleasure from / disgrace, through / it’s hard to make
a habit of pure happiness, / when there’s so much / to know.”
Elisa Gonzalez has yet to release another work, but her 2023
collection is a noteworthy debut from a poignant, new poet. Her
work has also appeared in The New Yorker and The Paris Review.
No. 141
By Hana Zittel
׉	 7cassandra://tsqYyhyjYuEyQ1Fii3QKN7pe_Lazw7OroCoFZgj2u4kQ` hlwb 4
׉E 9ISSUE 107 COVER BY MARK MOTHERSBAUGH | PHOTO BY ZAC DUNN
hlwb 4hlwb 4
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hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://BzA60tVHEDTNopivO2ryJNGkkhT3nx2UeRBMty-KROs `et׉	 7cassandra://9zCLrddg31MWHKTEG7qScvHPfaIWP5fpwbYZ3lYoqbU`׉	 7cassandra://DO7de-fnI9PIwP8-00oJQWtJSg3BfTf9FJHuTJ4qbOYF4` hl|b 4>׉E21 Band Names
Or
The Road To Hell
Paved With Chum
By Zac Dunn
Knife Callus
Conspiracy of One
Unknown Unknowns
Crafted By False Digits
Sorry Not Sorry
Waffles 'n' Concrete
Poor Choices A Go Go
Splash That Grain On The Fire
Blood Right Diaper
Pillar of Filth
Pantheon of Pitiful Forgiveness
Soul Sucking Peloton Mom
Short Straw Big Issues
Liver Eating Johnson
No. 141
Dumpster Fire Epiphany
Taco Truck Botox
Smash The Feels
Bingo Goat Slayer
Headpiece of Staff Infection
Bodega Dream Weaver
Medieval Dentistry Revival
׉	 7cassandra://DO7de-fnI9PIwP8-00oJQWtJSg3BfTf9FJHuTJ4qbOYF4` hlwb 4׉EOmitted
Additions
So Long And Thanks For All The Rabies,
Kabuki Bunny Soldier, I Farted In Your Face
Mask, Super Jerk Reunion, Satan's Rusty
Trombone, Sloppy Sleepover, Cold War PBJ,
Bucket Dipper Always, 2x4 Face, Witch
Dr. Wayzout, Reckless Sushi Chef, Cold
Cold Cold, The Force Is Not With You, Ever
Fatal Flaw, Sorest Loser, No Woman No
Sly, Mortal Foe BFF, Big City Chum Love,
Mutineer Mascot, Commando Sub Puppy,
Tool of My Faulty Vision, Bashful Flasher,
Socks Over Slippers, Shitty Attitude Job
Interview, Messy Breakup Power Lunch,
Guido Von Shizer, Hammer Hunchback of
Ego Pain, Scabs At Work, Puppy Glove,
Hamburger Stand Nemesis, Make Up Sex
Quiff, Sucker For Fudge, Chrome-Plated
Buster Unicorn, Basic Face Mute Evangelist,
Claus Claus Claus
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://y4zUi8QNWoNXelmhB-mvNmGPyeicqewYMRFVtFBTypU @`et׉	 7cassandra://4Fdj-GyKWEsajwfnC4lJjwjso7AU0QQGKXVBihTYD6E`׉	 7cassandra://ngzOVbiUSyp7UBFmnG-fRQBOW4UnLPbx4ytIDtUShRIP` hl|b 4@נhl|b 4C 
̉9ׁHhttp://CREATICKLE.ETSY.COMׁׁЈ׉ETHE WEIRD
AND WONDERFUL
WORLD OF
SUSANN
BROX
NILSEN
THE MYSTERIOUS MURDY BIRDY
Based on a true story.
When my husband and I lived in the countryside, we experienced
something quite mysterious and unexplainable. For the record, this
was Norway during winter time, meaning excessive amount of snow
and polar night darkness.
One night, we woke up to the most horrendous scream outside our
bedroom window. We heard it several times, and to be honest, it
sounded like human torture. The scream quickly moved from one place
to another outside — it almost seemed like a flying bird. We nervously
looked out the window, but it was pitch black. Since it sounded like a
bloody murder, and we imagined it was some kind of bird, we named
the mysterious creature Murdy Birdy.
We heard Murdy Birdy once a week, and always during the night. Every
time we tried to get a glance of it, we couldn't see anything because of
the darkness. This made us question its appearance, so we discussed
what it could look like. This was a fast-moving thing, so it probably had
a very large wingspan. The scream was out of this world, so the throat
had to be thick and muscular. We were convinced that this wasn't a
creature with a vegetarian diet, the menu was most likely red, fresh
meat. The only color that fits this description would be black and white.
And last, let's throw in some dead eyes with small pupils.
After some time we got used to hearing Murdy Birdy now and then.
But when spring started to arrive, it suddenly disappeared! One
No. 141
day, later that year, my husband came across a video on YouTube by
coincidence. It was a sound clip of an Arctic fox doing mating calls. It
was the exact same sound as Murdy Birdy! The case was now solved,
but had a bittersweet end. For a while it was kind of exciting to have a
supernatural pet living outside our window. RIP Murdy Birdy.
CHECK OUT SUSI’S WEIRD AND WONDERFUL CREATIONS:
INSTAGRAM: @SUSI_THEWEIRDANDWONDERFUL
WEIRDWONDERFULSUSI.BIGCARTEL.COM
׉	 7cassandra://ngzOVbiUSyp7UBFmnG-fRQBOW4UnLPbx4ytIDtUShRIP` hlwb 4׉E 921
ART BY CREATICKLE - @CREATICKLE | CREATICKLE.ETSY.COM
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9ׁH *http://QUEENCITYSOUNDSANDART.WORDPRESS.COMׁׁЈ׉E׉	 7cassandra://G5NZ1VlA1mlpagLCKN4r7O9usn_hffBiz0lSD9Wf18ssX` hlwb 4׉EBY TOM MURPHY
BOLONIUM – FONEY
Replete with now archaic cultural references — “Avoid the Noid” being well past its due by date — a song titled
“Outta Touch” weaves those other such pop culture relics in perfectly. Including an homage to lovable arch nerd
Pee-wee Herman, this “accordion rock” album manages to work against all odds. It takes the concept of being
self-aware and irony to new levels while not sacrificing an eccentric musical vision that could be pure gimmickry,
except for the superb musicianship and detailed attention to songcraft. Are these people super into Zappa,
Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, and They Might Be Giants? If not, it sounds like it’s aimed toward fans of all three.
FLUTTER – WHEN YOU LOVE SOMEBODY
On first listen this EP is like taking a time machine back to the late 70s or early 80s when the memory of Big
Star and the Raspberries were fresh and The dB’s were in that lane innovating the sound of power pop. But
Flutter’s guitar has a little more garage rock grit and punch behind the jangle and melodies, evoking 2010’s
vintage sound. The lyrics about the travails of love and yearning for connection are refreshingly free of modern
notions of self-awareness, and hit as utterly sincere as delivered by Josh Colpitts’ Phil Lynott-esque baritone.
JEFFREY WENTWORTH STEVENS – MY MYLAR LUNGS
As summer transitions to fall, these songs are like a catalog of the more mundane moments of warmer months.
If you take a moment to pause and appreciate, you’ll find the elegant beauty in the details of experiences and
stimuli you normally take for granted and pay no mind. The minimal techno beats are as much texture as route
to deliver the calming rhythms and harmonic interplay of tones coming into the foreground and fading back.
Like Stevens was able to imagine the changing of larger patterns of weather and season, while creating the
musical equivalent of that subtle shift. It’s a deeply calming and introspective set of ambient compositions that
are beyond nostalgic to capturing eternal and recurring emotional resonances as sound collages.
RUBEDO – CITRINITAS
Recorded at RARE Records in Winchester, TN, one imagines a touch of the kind of soul and pop music produced
in Memphis and Nashville absorbed into these songs. Rubedo has always had a gift for crafting a hook. But here,
the music has soulfulness — an extra level of thoughtfulness and introspection — that’s long been there, but is
now much more at the forefront. The first side is tender songs about a love, with an expanded spiritual aspect to
its expression, elevating the sentiments well beyond cliche. When “Oligarch Slank” kicks in, it’s pure righteous
outrage thrilling in rhetoric and its fiery, fuzzed-out arrangements. Side Two is thus a little dirtier in tone with
more aggressive and noisy songwriting, yet still informed by a love of human struggle for a more nurturing
world heard on Side One.
TIME – RADIOLARIAN BALLET
All of Time’s albums — including those as Calm. with AwareNess who does some production here — are like the
literary successor of insurgent poetic artforms. His most recent records have deeply personal stories in which
he finds ways of tracing experiences into larger social narratives and analysis. It is critical pedagogy in practice,
minus the pretension of assuming he can enact transformation in others. Instead his work encourages our own
honesty and truth in finding ourselves in the constellation of human consciousness that has the power to enact
change. And yet, the melancholic and layered beats is what draws you into these complex yet accessible stories
and keeps you listening.
ZEPHR – PAST LIVES
The glittery guitar tone that carries the melody of “Rome,” and the dual vocals with an enthusiastic momentum,
hits the brain like a wonderful fusion of Hot Water Music and Hüsker Dü. It evokes the raw exuberance and thrill
of being alive even with its challenges and disappointments. Throughout the record, the band vividly captures
working class life and the struggle to find joy and meaning when the carpet gets yanked from underneath you
by late capitalism. That despair cuts into your friend circle, yet finds a way to embrace what’s vital and sustain
a sense of personal dignity.
FOR MORE, VISIT QUEENCITYSOUNDSANDART.WORDPRESS.COM
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://EhOfQIrKsXnfoIrj7Ov_j75Xruld0eF-s2CIqXXr6gk #N`et׉	 7cassandra://pKZd0LCQ-375mCpIFdTlr9eHAWt7BraN4774urq4mxI 0`׉	 7cassandra://hUGVf0FDvoxxpVb71MYLQ2MinJocYLO4mISAjRpWNG4f` hlb 4F׉E׉	 7cassandra://hUGVf0FDvoxxpVb71MYLQ2MinJocYLO4mISAjRpWNG4f` hlwb 4׈Ehlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://NbMEChNLa2r8i3HSWmJnFD3i-LWjfdM2HxSkh6KtJkg _y`et׉	 7cassandra://Wlf5sm6XFnZ9wuLjVBjafC3l51nKAcMAKYjyEOyE020`׉	 7cassandra://LmygHNbNEbjEp5hYvG2EzJnELrJBP5s1Ss9DyrbYVQ0M` hlb 4H׉E׉	 7cassandra://LmygHNbNEbjEp5hYvG2EzJnELrJBP5s1Ss9DyrbYVQ0M` hlwb 4׉E27
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://ZtqlLWTG2S3Us3S2VTir4VMVNNPjkActUwMbXulPNzQ `et׉	 7cassandra://yUPrWUl0T4Os9mOATU4SFgQKoaqs8abpNaNfufRzlg8 {`׉	 7cassandra://fdvNxiRyO0hwyjgDvfx87LYpoahb1nFS6owiF7lC7soM` hlb 4K׉E "NICK FLOOK, NOIR NIGHTS - @FLOOKO
׉	 7cassandra://fdvNxiRyO0hwyjgDvfx87LYpoahb1nFS6owiF7lC7soM` hlwb 4׉ErMIDLIFE IN
THE CITY ...
BY DANIEL LANDES
When the storm rolled in, I was unprepared for its severity. Consumed
as I am with the immediacy of my reality, I missed the warnings. Had I
visited a rooftop I would have seen the clouds forming way out on the
Eastern Plains. Rolling grey clouds, illuminated by intermittent flashes
of lightning, dragging the earth with wispy tendrils of rain. From the
rooftop I would have seen where the city ends and the vastness of
the eastern horizon flattens out. Looking west to see the immediate
presence of Mount Blue Sky bumping base with the foothills outside of
Denver. Mount Blue Sky was previously named after former Colorado
governor John Evans who proved himself to be a murderous bastard
when his declarations to “kill and destroy” hostile Indians lead to much
death; including women, children and the elderly at the Sand Creek
Massacre. Mountains, unlike monuments to Confederate soldiers,
can’t be torn down, but you sure as fuck can rename them.
Had I not stopped paying attention to the news (my mental real
estate is not available for just any developer to bulldoze), I could have
heard the weather forecast predicting the intensity of the storm that
was coming. Instead I’m down here on street level getting soaked to
the bone looking at old photos on my phone wondering why me? My
depth of field has shrunk to the end of my arm. I cannot see beyond
my fingers. My world is small and immediate. Unimportant yet
urgent. I carry the anxiety of someone who has actual responsibility
to something greater than the economy. The rainwater is rising in the
gutters and I feel no agency to move.
My parents have both died within the last few years. I miss my mother.
She gave me comfort since before I could crawl. My father is buried
alongside all the conversations we were both too afraid to have. I miss
my father too. Not because he gave me comfort. Quite the opposite. I
miss him for what was not said, like the opportunity to find out about
his intentions and motivations. I am left with my assumptions. Over
the years I have assumed his positive intent. It’s easier that way. I feel
lost without them.
My sons, who I kissed a million times when their wrists were fat and
their fingers chubby, have moved out of the house. Cleaning out the
closet, I found a box filled with their childhood arts. I will never live to
experience a joy as great as those times. Halcyon days indeed. They do
not have a childhood home to return to so they come and sleep on the
couch and feel awkward about raiding the fridge.
When I was young I climbed the highest peaks in the Rocky Mountains.
From the summit I could see for miles, the mountain ranges beyond
mountain ranges all beneath a half dome sky. I haven’t climbed a
mountain in many years. My world is now so small and immediate.
What I know is this storm will pass; the storms always pass. The sun
will come out, my clothes will dry. But will I remember? Remember to
climb? To expand my horizons and see beyond my immediate situation
to see what is coming? Or will I stay down here on street level, content
with my distractions, and act caught off guard when another storm
rolls in?
29
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://HduCouBMtyrbRDXYJRaZ6bgNhgfPR3PZSnqbEyVnhaE X`et׉	 7cassandra://-kJ0YJ7dEfOrtLBUX6xVj9eXCWJ2fQeZ6P_ZSSVXwL8E`׉	 7cassandra://3LeTttkkoPipInmVCjm4XPR6a3dlKTC5Fl3PiMuWDf4R` hlb 4M׉E ,EVAN LORENZEN, LAYERS - BEST OF 075
No. 141
׉	 7cassandra://3LeTttkkoPipInmVCjm4XPR6a3dlKTC5Fl3PiMuWDf4R` hlwb 4׉ERUMTUM
31
hlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://Df8oA3Blk7i7APvOxD7SsctbVPtZ1ZnxtVvFk2NsLzc .[`et׉	 7cassandra://-b7Oh8ZEIIAgMuKluq2DsQc6cL2BMLTg0k_DFeZLwho`׉	 7cassandra://ZShCczG2ill_G3xKnFEeBRCQHagRj-haEk9f5vpLHm0NX` hlb 4O׉E !ROBYN TAYLOR, DESERT ALIEN WORLD
׉	 7cassandra://ZShCczG2ill_G3xKnFEeBRCQHagRj-haEk9f5vpLHm0NX` hlwb 4׈Ehlwb 4hlwb 4בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://1wZHn4OMXLXihC9Qy491VQMenoxdy5RwIDNDNHtUh9E 	~T`׉	 7cassandra://CcCwenTl1v-dxJFlUcE71WPaozmWxOSBzdWQ6mLJXNk`r׉	 7cassandra://O8qsNny2OApXagnqSFepikRg2dBhrvUPTN-8MqLDdCo=W` hlb 4Q׉E׉	 7cassandra://O8qsNny2OApXagnqSFepikRg2dBhrvUPTN-8MqLDdCo=W` hlwb 4׈Ehlwb 4hlwb 4,BIRDY ISSUE 141 Published September 2025. Birdy Magazine is Denver's only magazine: art, words, comedy, et cetera. Available monthly in print or online.hlo];뉢