Webcomic (24) |
It is interesting that Ikea should appear as a metaphor in The Insurrection of his Lust below, since I am currently struggling with a piece of flat pack furniture after my previous bookcase spontaneously cumbusted. Whilst falling on me. The instructions for the thing, worryingly, seem to suggest that I should disregard the little allen-key they gave me and resort to a hammer. Though this does come at the back page, so I'm not sure if its supposed to be the last resort or what...
Labels: Webcomic
Metafiction: 'The Insurrection of his lust' |
And yes, there really is a hair dresser's near me called Mark Anthony's. Predictably, it is full of cheesey classical busts and the like. Watch this space; I'll see if can find a picture.
Tune of the moment: Wild Horses - The Sundays
Jac
Labels: fiction, Metafiction
'The insurrection of his lust' |
That one should be, if she were made for woman,
Suffice to say then, novelty is nothing new to me. Until two years ago, I never had to look for it; novelty rudely banged into my room every morning whilst I was still trying to shake of the hang-over she'd left me with the night before. She came to me in all kinds of forms; tincture, powder or bleached blonde. On the rocks or down the phone at two in the morning. However, my supply soon began to dry up. After all, there are only so many sins a man can commit, and if like me you were born a Roman Catholic - well then, the big ones have already been committed for you. So I had to turn somewhere else to get my fix, like a junkie robbing an old granny. Except eventually even that began to get boring.
I tried my hand at everything; through myself out of planes, ran away to sea, even tried treachery and teaching. All in an effort to find a career which would keep me tripping on the grade A novelty I needed (wanted) to survive. And every day I went without the prospect of ending it all with pills or a pistol became more appealing. The undiscovered country beckoned; I probably would have done it too if I could think of the conclusive way to go out in style, but if was going to do it a clichéd way then I wanted to try them all. Then I found it.
Call me Mark Anthony. I'm a hair-dresser now; it's like hedonism but the hours are better, and the only time you have to pick hairs out your teeth is when you sneeze on someone's new box-cut. Not only do I get my novelty now, I'm selling it second hand for £45 an hour. New people come to see me everyday; and when I'm finished with the scissors then they're someone else. I get two faces for the price of one, and they're paying. I couldn't even find as many call-girls in a day - let alone afford them. And even when the same customer returns; well, they're not the person they were two months ago. They've grown, just like their hair; new hairs, forced up by angry follicles that will persist in outrage at the indignity of their castration long after their owner has seen their last blue-rinse and perm.
I'm novelties' master now, not the other way round. I was getting tired of playing submissive anyway; the Romans had it right all along. In sex, like everything else, it's better to the master than the slave. In fact, the Roman's knew a lot of things - like the importance of good grooming. Barbers, baths, and a shave once a day; hair pomade and oil; and using a pumice stone on the chin to scrape away the dead skin and reveal the new stuff beneath. A new face to greet each new day and to strip away the marks of iniquity."
Labels: fiction, magikal realism
Cambridge: On Closer Inspection #1 (by Emily Wright) Thursday, June 28, 2007 |
Emily Wright |
Emily is "a psychology and sociology student with varied artistic ambitions, whose talents lie in giving lychees human features and making dressesout of maps. When not indulging these creative whims, the academic study of the media and late-night boggle provide intellectual diversions. Often to be found giggling, confused and sporting a very large lens."
She has submitted numerous photographs, most of them taken in and around Cambridge; which is probably why she's entitled her collection Cambridge: On closer inspection. I guess. Rather than overload you (and blogger) with her beautiful photogaphs all in one go, we'll be posting them in two parts.
Labels: On art, photography, submissions
Webcomic (23) Wednesday, June 27, 2007 |
My exam results come out tomorrow. Scary prospect.
Tune of the moment: Candy - Iggy Pop & Kate Pierson
Jac
Labels: Webcomic
Webcomic (22) Tuesday, June 26, 2007 |
Here's the comic that was supposed to have been going up yesterday (in lin with the new update schedule) but didn't because I spent so long playing with the new HTML template. I'm dealing with material now which is pretty old, so I'm looking forward to finishing this current story arc so I have the opportunity to write something fresh.
Tune of the moment: Silent Hotels - The Answering Machine
Jac
Labels: Webcomic
Site Changes Monday, June 25, 2007 |
If you find any problems, or are particularly impressed, feel free to leave us feedback in the form of comments.
Tune of the moment: To The Sea - Razorlight
Jac
Labels: news
Why Him? (by Mark Zacharias) Friday, June 22, 2007 |
my whimpers drowned out by cries
Of those fresh to their plight.
The blind, the lame, the paralysed –
We lay there as casualties of a war
in which we'd never agreed to fight.
We gathered in hope,
we lay there in expectation
in fear
in desperation.
And then we heard of his approach.
Was it he that had turned well water into fine wine
at a wedding, a while back?
Hushed rumours of his powers had reached us before,
but I wasn't buying it.
I've seen others like him come and go over the years,
promising it all
but, like us, helpless in the face of brokenness.
Forgive me for not holding my breath
when the whispers started
but I'd rather place my faith in a swirling pool
than in one of God's bearded politicians.
Despite misgivings, I admit to being struck
by this itinerant preacher;
he saw us with different eyes, I swear I could see
a storm of anger brewing
under that compassionate gaze.
Countless hours spent at the water's lip
now blurred to nothing,
and like everyone else, I pleaded with him
for consideration, for mercy
for whatever he could spare.
No-one heard him stoop to ask,
without the cadence of irony
near-mocking words: 'Do you want to get well?'
Does the starving man crave food?
Does the barren woman long to give life?
Who looks upon a helpess cripple and asks callous questions?
Here, we sit and endure,
rejected and degenerate,
awaiting redemption only death brings.
'Well then, get up! Pick up your mat and walk!'
But still I lay there, watching
in wonder, in longing, in jealous rage
as the cripple did just that -
thirty-eight years spread on a mat,
now he stood up and skipped away.
But why not me?
What about the rest of us?
Labels: poetry, submissions
Mark Zacharias |
Mark Zacharias describes himself as 'Twenty-something suffering middle-aged spread and pensioner's stamina. English teacher to Harlesden, Neasden and Wembley's finest. Nicknamed 'The Angry Growler' thanks to an unfortunate ressemblence to a walrus' unshaved privates. Changing passions but a long-term commitment to travel, experience, wine, women & the Word (not the Terry Christian programme of old). Somewhat Jacobean in my wrestles with God but no dodgy hip to show for it yet.'
His first contribution to the website is a poem. It is based on John 5:1-9, and is a response to the moral ambiguity of healing. It is somewhat reminiscent of Gerard Manley Hopkins, a Victorian priest and poet, much of whose work struggles with reconciling his faith with the bouts of depression and illness. Mark appears to be attempting something similar with his Why Him? Enjoy!
Labels: poetry, submissions
‘Be young, be foolish, be happy’ (Cobb, Whitley) - 2:06 Thursday, June 21, 2007 |
And remember friends you vowed
Never to forget, to love
With all your heart. Contrary
Concerns, jobs, the Tube
Put tearful promises
Earnestly made in drink and romance
Into a dog-eared box in the attic,
Squashed by the children’s rugby socks.
You said you’d protect them;
These ones you cooked with,
Cried with in the calm,
Through the storm of life.
This is the promise you made,
That every phone call
Would be a prayer to the One
That would never leave them,
The stopper in the skeins that
Hold us together.
Their names are the scrawl on yearbooks,
The accessories of the happiest memories
From when you were young, attractive.
These are the men you swore you’d
Drink with in twenty years
In suburban cricket clubhouses,
These are the girls in silk dresses that you
Promised your heart to, show me them,
Give them this message:
‘I have not forgotten you,
To me you are beautiful.
I have lived because of you’.
Sanjay
Webcomic (21) Sunday, June 10, 2007 |
Tune of the moment: Close to me - The Cure
Labels: Webcomic
Webcomic (20) Monday, June 04, 2007 |
I'd like to point out at this point that the views represented in this webcomic in no way reflect those of anyone at Magikal Realism. My character Simon may be an idiot who inadvertently makes jokes about Pope being disabled, but I am not. Though it would be very easy, seeing as how Pope was once trampled by a cow.
In other news, I've spent today celebrating my new found freedom by playing on the Wii in our college JCR. Wii Sports is fun (I actually worked up a pretty good sweat on Wii boxing), as is Zelda, but the real star is Rayman for pointless but fun mini-games. Also, I suck at Wii Tennis. Hopefully should get round to some more writing soon too. The brunette is in the middle of her exams at the moment, so I'm trying to be supportive at the moment and we're going to have a big celebration when she's done and annoy everyone else who is just starting.
Finally there is now a voting button at the top left of the page for Top Web Comics. Click if you enjoy the webcomic, and we'll shoot up the ranks. In fact you can click it once a day, so do. I'll get round to adding a banner to the site eventually so we can get some decent publicity.
Tune of the moment: Afternoon Delight - Starland V
Jac
Labels: Webcomic
Webcomic (19) Friday, June 01, 2007 |
Woooooo! I've finally wrestled my life back from the Cambridge English Tripos. Prepare for more webcomic updates, more short stories, and many many more drunken ramblings from arse-holed Jac. Also Sanjay finishes on Wednesday, so prepare for more poetry. And that isn't an idle threat...
Tune of the moment: New York New York New - Tellison
Jac
Labels: Webcomic