• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Exterminating Angel Press

Exterminating Angel Press

Creative Solutions for Practical Idealists.

  • Home.
  • Our Books.
  • About Us.
    • What EAP’s About.
    • Why Exterminating Angel?
    • Becoming Part of the EAP Community.
    • EAP’s Poetry Editor Speaks!
    • Contributors.
    • EAP Press.
  • EAP: The Magazine.
    • EAP: The Magazine Archive
  • Tod Blog.
  • Jam Today.
  • Contact Us.
  • Cart.

Exangel

All at Sea.

December 31, 2024 by Exangel

by Cliff Beck.

Sailing eastwards under a clear sky
towards yet another day that once seemed so far away
we follow the stars we have always known to steer by.
I stand motionless at the prow
between the bow wave which,
like the treasure trove of memories saved
from my journey to now,
grows ever larger behind me;
while ahead the wind in the rigging,
the cries of the gulls and the spray in my face
herald a future
which I needs must embrace.

I ponder the things I remember and those I forget,
the regrets consigned to an oubliette
buried deep in my history
as we continue east
into tomorrow’s mystery
watching dolphins leap across the swell
on a journey they know so well
they neither remember nor forget.

Life presents us with so much,
most of which is left untouched, unnoticed, unretained
while we shape our private domains
with what we choose to keep and choose to lose,
choose to remember and choose to forget.
But what to let go and what to hold?
Should I remember drinking coffee in Padua,
or that the train to Venice left at half past one,
or that we almost missed it and had to run
without seeing Giotto’s frescoes.
But did we discover anything
about how the time goes?
Or should I let the detail disappear,
remembering the essence, the shades of meaning
that echo down the years,
forming the present and shaping a future
with its roots and its destiny in the past.

We sail on cutting through the waves,
through time zones, through our lives
developing closer ties
with these shadows and echoes
as they rebound and resound
between what’s been, what’s here and what’s to come,
well aware that we should take care lest we forget
not only the past, but with it, the future too.
I look up at the crows nest
and wonder if I could see
the present in its entirety?
Would I see how a sequence of now
grew from memories of then into impressions of when?
An albatross passes on its peregrination
which began at its final destination.

Winds strengthen, waves grow
as we voyage though the age of screen machines.
Relentless torrents of information
flood the decks with anxiety
and a maelstrom of digital debris
swamps my mind with superficiality
making the memory blind
to the echoes and leitmotifs
that bring reality into sharp relief.
The storm clouds coalesce
into banks of fog which dispossess me
of these intuitive, guiding beacons
leaving me lost, feeling distraught
and I wallow in oblivion, an abdication from thought,
barely aware that everything is stored in those clouds,
ready for AI to retrieve, manipulate and use to deceive,
shaping me, my past, my present and my future as it feels fit.

Ignoring Orpheus’ exhortation,
to drink of the Mnemosyne and find liberation
from the curse of too much forgetting
I drank too deeply at the Lethe Pool
becoming a hapless, shipwrecked fool
drifting in a slow-motion vortex
with no idea of what to do next;
my mind entangled in the threads of a web of shrouds
and the last shreds of my memory lost in the clouds.

 

My Last Word.

December 31, 2024 by Exangel

by Lana Hechtman Ayers. This red room is coming to an end. See how the overhead bulb flickers? You insist on baking bread but I have no time for crumbs. Allow me to sink into violet chimes as my shadow grows deeper. Some will gossip about sonnets, others about Sonny Rollins on sax. All curiosity […]

A Tale of Brandade.

December 31, 2024 by Exangel

So for Christmas this year, I really had a craving for roast duck. No problem with that. The only issue being that my Beloved doesn’t eat meat. He does, however, consume fish with gusto. What would be festive enough in the fish department for Christmas dinner, easy on the cook who is also roasting a […]

Scattered Showers.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

First apologies, then congrats. Apologies for how late this issue is—life happens, you know? I’m still operating at the tail end of recovering from eye surgery, overlaid with a mean case of covid. That rather slowed me up. I hardly know myself slowed up. I suppose I should get to know this version. But some […]

Baked Apple for Breakfast.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

It’s fall. The weather has changed. It even snowed last week on the mountain above me. All that right after a heat wave, so I, the dogs, and the trees heaved a sigh of relief. The trees that can showed their gratitude by beginning the turn to a brilliance of color. The oaks, the mountain […]

Before you know it you’re pretty much dead.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

by Gale Acuff. and in the Afterlife, Heaven or Hell or a third place if there is one and if there isn’t then that doesn’t seem very fair or democratic but what do I know, I’m only ten years old, Eternity gets left to the grownups, I guess, but one day I’ll be one, a […]

when the stars align chaos reigns.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

by JW James. even with your eyes wide open you will take the wrong road this is the road of blizzards and fandom your eyes are bloodshot you sing anthems tonight that seem endless this is the wrong road at the right time you lose car keys and fall in love this is the uncheckered […]

Advice to the Distressed.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

by Barry Vitcov. Filled with the allure of double rainbows, my dreams are often in technicolor; sometimes fanciful with bright lights aglow, other times a transparent watercolor. Your dreams are nightmares filled with fear and dread, the kind that wake you in the chill of night and cause you to shake yourself from your bed […]

Advice.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

by Marissa Bell Toffoli. Easy to give, hard to take. I’m collecting wise words like buttons in a jar. Shook up– how they rattle before settling in. Pick one, test the weight of it in your hand. Try another, try them all. Hem and haw, and sew a new design. Plan for things to go […]

never mind they were wolves.

November 1, 2024 by Exangel

by Chris Farago. I was with, teaching them to darn their own skin in case of a mishap among the pliant furs. one of them told me no we’re fine, dial back the fanaticism to a three— we’ll edit our lore and make you an honorary wolf if you just shut the fuck about disaster […]

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Cart.

Check Out Our Magazine.

In This Issue.

  • Inuit (from “My Life with Dogs”).
  • Vagabond Awareness.
  • Riga Stories.
  • A Library Heart.
  • Back into Paradise.
  • Glass vs Wheel Wheel vs Glass vs.
  • How We Became Mortal.
  • What You Hate.
  • Demiurge Helpline.
  • Brush Up Your Shakespeare.
  • Sublime.
  • A rainbow arcing over.
  • Free to be.
  • Van Means From.
  • Last Train to Memphis.
  • Scribbling at 3:00 a.m.
  • Mirrored Images.
  • The gulls hang over the station.

In The News.

That cult classic pirate/sci fi mash up GREENBEARD, by Richard James Bentley, is now a rollicking audiobook, available from Audible.com. Narrated and acted by Colby Elliott of Last Word Audio, you’ll be overwhelmed by the riches and hilarity within.

“Captain Sylvestre de Greybagges is your typical seventeenth-century Cambridge-educated lawyer turned Caribbean pirate, as comfortable debating the virtues of William Shakespeare, Isaac Newton, and compound interest as he is wielding a cutlass, needling archrival Henry Morgan, and parsing rum-soaked gossip for his next target. When a pepper monger’s loose tongue lets out a rumor about a fleet loaded with silver, the Captain sets sail only to find himself in a close encounter of a very different kind.

After escaping with his sanity barely intact and his beard transformed an alarming bright green, Greybagges rallies The Ark de Triomphe crew for a revenge-fueled, thrill-a-minute adventure to the ends of the earth and beyond.

This frolicsome tale of skullduggery, jiggery-pokery, and chicanery upon Ye High Seas is brimming with hilarious puns, masterful historical allusions, and nonstop literary hijinks. Including sly references to Thomas Pynchon, Treasure Island, 1940s cinema, and notable historical figures, this mélange of delights will captivate readers with its rollicking adventure, rich descriptions of food and fashion, and learned asides into scientific, philosophical, and colonial history.”

THE SUPERGIRLS is back, revised and updated!

supergirls-take-1

In The News.

Newport Public Library hosted a three part Zoom series on Visionary Fiction, led by Tod.  

And we love them for it, too.

The first discussion was a lively blast. You can watch it here. The second, Looking Back to Look Forward can be seen here.

The third was the best of all. Visions of the Future, with a cast of characters including poets, audiobook artists, historians, Starhawk, and Mary Shelley. Among others. Link is here.

In the News.

SNOTTY SAVES THE DAY is now an audiobook, narrated by Last Word Audio’s mellifluous Colby Elliott. It launched May 10th, but for a limited time, you can listen for free with an Audible trial membership. So what are you waiting for? Start listening to the wonders of how Arcadia was born from the worst section of the worst neighborhood in the worst empire of all the worlds since the universe began.

In The News.

If you love audio books, don’t miss the new release of REPORT TO MEGALOPOLIS, by Tod Davies, narrated by Colby Elliott of Last Word Audio. The tortured Aspern Grayling tries to rise above the truth of his own story, fighting with reality every step of the way, and Colby’s voice is the perfect match for our modern day Dr. Frankenstein.

In The News.

Mike Madrid dishes on Miss Fury to the BBC . . .

Tod on the Importance of Visionary Fiction

Check out this video of “Beyond Utopia: The Importance of Fantasy,” Tod’s recent talk at the tenth World-Ecology Research Network Conference, June 2019, in San Francisco. She covers everything from Wind in the Willows to the work of Kim Stanley Robinson, with a look at The History of Arcadia along the way. As usual, she’s going on about how visionary fiction has an important place in the formation of a world we want and need to have.

Copyright © 2026 · Exterminating Angel Press · Designed by Ashland Websites