
3:AM Magazine posts my review of Andrew Bird’s Noble Beast (Unfortunately, they changed my title from “An Uncalculated Blow to the Heart” to “Oh, Whistle and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”). You may find it HERE.

Patti Smith rang in her ears as she climbed up the misty mountain. She could barely hear winter’s leftover birds. She was running, running away. If I could just quit tomorrow and tomorrow and so forth and so on, she thought, I could be so happy. Running over the hills. Out to the sweet hereafter and unknown. Sweet dreams. Concrete, tar, metal, and glass. She left it all. All that noise knocking in her eardrums like some bonehead drummer. The other night she woke up screaming, “I hate this fucking place!” She had had enough. So she ran. Can’t stand still, she thought. I’ll make the midnight train. My mind is a running faucet. We don’t have to agree. We don’t have to agree.
The world was sucking him through a straw. Sweat trickled down his forehead as he looked at her postcard. Two glassy-eyed deer, light pouring through the arms of an army of elms, snow-capped mountains above it all like stone-faced gods. He had never seen snow. He thought about her, her body swelling beneath her hyacinth-blue dress, how the sun painted gold on her face, the way her lips trembled when she said goodbye. He’d been drinking an hour now, pining for her, and was slowly losing his faith. He felt like singing, so he stood up—the porch swing sounding like startled mice—and grabbed his beat up guitar.
Ever since a ghost of a chance wrote his disappearing act, John Madera had only seen glory from the cheap seats, but, after mistaken identity theft, he’d finally found himself. You may find him at hitherandthithering waters and My Pet Earworm, reviewing for Bookslut, The Quarterly Conversation, 3:AM Magazine, New Pages, and Word Riot (the latter two are forthcoming). elimae has published his fiction. He sings and plays guitar for Mother Flux.