We debut our new feature, Five Answers, One Question, with an interview with Scott Waldyn, Editor-in-chief of Literary Orphans!
We debut our new feature, Five Answers, One Question, with an interview with Scott Waldyn, Editor-in-chief of Literary Orphans!
The Drunk Monkeys Filmcast crew counts down the Best Films of 2016!
We discuss: Moonlight, Manchester by the Sea, Fences, Silence, and much, much more!
That mean little monkey returns! Another installment of Mr. Butterchips by Alex Schumacher.
Helen Burke graces Drunk Monkeys with a set of her 60's inspired illustrations.
The cabinets clash with the countertops. Matching mahogany-stained floorboards and cupboards accentuate black granite countertops and backsplash tiles. The intention: a dark, bold appearance. The result: the kitchen looks like a giant Hershey bar.
a bernese mountain dog collects dust
in the livingroom
as fox news hammers home
the integrity of relics
The names of the dead—
absent: 42453
etched on a slab of wood
pumps gas with a farmer’s bicep
and sells off brand energy drinks 2 for $4
tallying the state tax
to determine her own worth
Yoshi hated being old. Her joints and the rest of her body were stiff and sore with age. She slept a lot, so at times it wasn’t too bad, except when she woke and had to rise after many hours. It was difficult to get her legs to cooperate. She’d slip on the hardwood floor or even on the ramp to the back yard.
Hooded among night drifts as September sweats out summer
Taken to walking, reading
my mind, mine and these sweet streets
strip sunsets, while Sativa burns-- blended in
Diesel--through my nostril, because my inseam keen
Captain Canada rides into 2017 with a look at Fellini and horror.
He couldn’t quite explain it, but Aidan felt that if he didn’t look at himself in the mirror, to really look, to shore up any and all doubts, to burn the motivation coming from his eyes into his psyche, if he didn’t have a proper stare to recharge his identity, oh about, once every twenty minutes or so, he’d disappear.
My gaze clung to phantoms:
the mother and son whose worn boots
and thin hats could not hide
the numb mask typical of cemetery patrons
in mid-January.
She’d posed for Giorgio a few times, but that was before his Dolce & Gabbana phase, before he’d gelled his black hair into a thick screw, fastened at the nape of his neck by a clear elastic. Today, his neon green and black, geometric-print shirt—unbuttoned one, or maybe two buttons too many—was tucked, haphazardly, into his fitted leather pants, secured with a grossly-oversized belt buckle blasting the logo of his brand du jour.
With inauguration day just a few weeks away, I have been thinking a lot about our President- Elect. Having not voted for him, completely perplexed as to why anyone would, I wanted to know the reasons why 61 million Americans voted for him this past November 8. What I encountered was a series of reasons that I found both enlightening and alarming. Though a large majority of Trump voters did not think he was a particularly good candidate, they considered the alternatives, including a vote for Hillary Clinton, far worse.
I was just sitting on the patio watching the bats fly around when her car pulled up. I didn’t know it was her at first, which was a bit of a gift. Another few peaceful moments enjoying the serene chirps as the bats blindly circled. A faint glow still hung in the sky, but she had her headlights on. I noticed the vague illumination through the thin bamboo fence bordering the patio.
off in the distance
abandoned army barracks
give way to wonder
to what this town once was
He wakes up to the sound of rocks hitting his window – scarcely more than pebbles, not enough to do damage, but enough to wake him up. Sure, Dylan’s a light sleeper, but it’s still a ridiculous maneuver and that can only mean one thing. Harper McLeod, childhood best friend and platonic soulmate, is back in action and needs an accomplice.
A man in a spherical red bodysuit perched across the street from the art museum. Binoculars pressed rings into his eye sockets. Six stories below, a white van disgorged black-clad passengers. The blue flame of a blowtorch illuminated a ground level door. The round red man’s chest jutted out. A cape fluttered behind him as he cut a silhouette against the full moon. He punched a number on his cell phone.
is full of ghost stories
faded yearbook photos
of dreams that died
on loose gravel