dennis scharnberg

hierarchy of madness

“All is lost!  All is lost!”  No.  Everything was already lost.  Quite before.

Charles Jeffrey Yett,  Writing in Miniature—Vol. Three.

feeding the fishes

Philosophy:  the persistent—sometimes rigorous—avoidance of stating the obvious.

W. Karl Bavinger,  The Misanthrope’s Way With Words.

honor among thieves

Modernism is poised—in all instances—at the brink of bad.  It is always ready to be(come) bad.

Hudson Hume,  A New Coat of Paint.

profundity without portfolio

When I am amused, how close am I to disgust?

Jeremy Clyde,  The Method of Non Sequitur.

the dotted line

What are we?  What we always were.  But now we are enabled in different ways.

Roger Hedgecook,  Stolen and Sold for Parts.

preternaturally awful buildings

“No, he won’t like it,” sighed Gladys.  “He’ll have his reasons.  And he will list them.”

Mark Anthony,  The Tale of the Mirror.

another deteriorating psyche

Can anyone—anyone alive—be thanked enough?

Tanner Faust,  A Scrapbook of Impertinent Interrogatives.

reports of dreams

“The thing about rottenness is that it always seems so wonderful at first.”  Grimshaw sometimes drifted into a muttering reverie about the scientific breakthroughs to come.

Jason Starling, ed.,  Adventures in Narrative Parsimony.

several curious particulars

Gullikson is certain that he is ruined forever by anything that he reads.  But he also believes that some ruination is worth it.

Charles Jeffrey Yett,  Writing in Miniature—Vol. Three.

forms and protocols

Here is an important matter: When did mirrors become commonplace?

Pierce Tuttle,  Things Not Quite Said.