Bone-dead tired

It’s never the thing you think that wears you down. Yes, you’re tired. Yes, you’re hurting. But it’s always the most random thing that floors you, isn’t it? The moment where you’re so done that your tongue can’t even be bothered to move. Your fingers clench refusing to uncurl. Your legs just stop and drop you straight to the couch. the bed. the floor. The weird counter at some diner in the middle of nowhere at 2 a.m. when you can smell the half-burned cholesterol wafting from the smoke in the kitchen and your arteries reflexively harden.

“Coffee. Black.” You give to the waitress who side-eyes you and grunts, sneers. “You ain’t from around here,” is written in her body language. And maybe if you’re daring, you try a slice of pie that she recommended to a regular (oh but not to you, Mr./Mrs./Mx. Coffee Black) that’s likely been on that damn counter since 1955. Maybe you take some home with you if it doesn’t churn your stomach immediately. Because no one in here with you looks human enough to have a home to return to.

They’ve all faded like half-crushed-out Lucky Strikes left to their fates in alleyway puddles. Their bones gleaming in the chrome surfaces that have been polished like the grill of a 1958 Plymouth Fury. No blood to be drained from any of these turnips anymore. You feel yourself melt into your seat, like you’ve always meant to be right there and have never been anywhere else. That’s when the waitress’s blood-red lips curl and she takes out her pen and pad, “Where’ve you been, Stranger?”

And you realize you’ve lost who you were, although you don’t remember why you should care. “I’ll take the special and make it as rare as the law allows.”

Maybe if the cheap steak’s bloody enough, you’ll feel alive again.

For Indie Authors and Poets

Does this sound like you and your work?:

  • Self-published or published through a lesser-known publisher
  • Your art does not pay the bills
  • You don’t have a following yet (or it is small)
  • Reviews are sparse, if they exist at all

Then I have a proposal for you: send me an email or comment below with a link to your website, the book you most would like me to review, and information on how or where I can purchase the copy. I’m not asking or wanting free copies, but I am collecting a list of books and e-books to review and showcase on this website for my own practice.

Since I don’t have any reviews up as examples yet, I want to give folks an idea of what I’m going to be looking at:

  • Is this a novel or collection I would read again?
  • Would I recommend this to others and what audience(s) do I think would most enjoy the work?
  • Top three likes and dislikes about the book.

All reviews will include a link to the author’s website or any page that gives readers a place to go to learn about you, your work, and purchase your book(s). If you send along a brief bio as well, I’ll use it!