Monday, December 28, 2009

Contumely




the dawning of a new year
plods unwaveringly toward
the sheared sheep
while we
the sheep waiting to be sheared
shoot play rockets in the air
blow up balloons
to bring in this new decade
our leaders
from Hussein to the
Senate and the House of Representatives
on down to local elected officials
are spittin' in our faces
and calling it rain
nothing but abuse of power
they're stickin' it to us
because they can
they are not only discourteous
they are sneeringly disrespectful
used to be
once upon a time
there were two parties
in Washington
one balancing the other out
no more
Hussein's party is like pit bulls
always on the attack
never letting go of the prize
the other one
the limp-wristed one's
the Runpublicans
tuck their tails and slink away
while the majority of the American public
is being dealt
degrading and insulting defeat
as religious totalitarianism
can you say theocracy
is beginning to be smelled from afar
(where's the ACLU)
plants its foot
squarely on our backs
somewhere, somehow the idea of government
by and for the people
have been discarded like so many
table scraps
after an elite and smug banquet
while we
find ourselves clinging to beliefs of old
such as
pride in who we are
Americans
not championing diversity
Americans
not Mexican-Americans
Polish-Americans
Native-Americans
Whatever-and-Whoever-Americans
Americans
to stand up for diversity
is foolish and destructive
see what it has gotten us, huh?
the mere word
diverse means different
not the same
different
the crack in the Republic has been widened by that word
if you live in America
legally
you should call yourself an American
fuck the hyphen
standing strong and united
for the mother country
not
putting her down

we have lost our soul
suicide by apathy
a very slow bleed

©December 25, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Christmas Eve
















remembering this day from times past
giddy anticipation
in my thoughts
like an empty glass waiting to be filled
on the morrow when St. Nick
comes to town
would that red Schwinn bicycle
be under the Christmas tree?

Christmas Eve Night
tried to stay awake
gonna catch Santa in the act
always fell asleep
don't know to this day
how I managed
to do that
with all the excited anticipation

that, of course was then
this is yet
another Christmas Eve
I have lived to see
gone for many years
is the vibrant giddiness
that excited anticipation
will I be able to sleep tonight?

visions of sugar plums and Santa
will not keep me awake
still, I've no doubt
sleep will be hard to come by
Christ in the Manger
is on my thoughts
as never before in my many years
on earth

something else
bothers me
this Christmas Eve
a runaway train
not Santa
wondering if he will bring
that red Schwinn bicycle
on Christmas morn

no, a darkening cloud
hovers o'er our heads
picking up speed
like a runaway freight train
as it races
closer and closer
to totalitarianism
in the guise of "helping" us

where is
Christ-On-The-Cross
when we need Him?
when life as we know it is
over
as we follow
sheep-like
those who we trust with our lives

He is there
where he has always been
waiting for us to
come back to Him
and relinquish the unhealthy hold
of secularism
politically-correct-stupidity
and return to sanity

He is there
where He had always been

©December 24, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

What The Hell Is The Matter With Our Leaders?

The Republic developed a crack
When President Roosevelt imposed
His own government takeover bid
Yes
I am aware of the Great Depression
Aware something had to be done
Thing is
He went too far
Making a crack in the foundation
Of the Constitution
With the advent of The New Deal
Since that creeping government takeover
We've been hell-bent
On surrendering our sovereignty
Each preceding president adding to the total
Except for one
President Ronald Reagan
Now we have a monster on our hands
Now we have a man
Ready and willing to destroy an America
He despises
And turn it into a glorified gulag
Armed with his "Private Citizen Army"
Funded more or greater than the regular army
Are they walking the streets already?
Say ACORN . . .
Nobody sees the evil in this?
In this voter intimidation?
The "high, lofty sentiments" which came into play
For the voters of America
Has foolishly turned over to a vowed anarchist
Has scornfully said
The Constitution needs working on
Refuses to pay respect to our flag
Why?
Because he doesn't think it is his flag?
Health care
Global warming
Obamacare
Don't get me started

©December 20, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Friday, December 18, 2009

Life's Sonnet #2




The fall season is sad to me,
No joy found in the cooling breeze,
Leaves fall to ground give me no glee.
I think of love's many degrees.


A young love that blooms in the spring,
Grows and thrives in summertime sun,
Everything perfect for queen and king,
But autumn find love almost done.


All that's left is winter's cold chill,
To shatter love's bough to the quick.
Leaving lovers to pay the bill,
And dismantle love brick by brick.


Spring awaits the fair maiden's thoughts,
Will love return or will it naught.



©September 26, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Life's Sonnet #1



My foresight and reality are one,
I cannot divide them in two, you see;
They help me as I look toward the sun,
Foresight, reality and me are three.

My heart tells me no, look back to the past,
I calm my heart with tenderness and care,
And say there is a future unsurpassed,
If we but reach for it, it will be there.

This inner struggle has cost us a lot,
The pursuit of the beyond scares us both,
Still, it's not too late a dream to be sought,
A paltry weed needs the sun for its growth.

We wake up and look for the morning light,
From it we ascend to infinite heights.

©September 25, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Freedom
























Muslim president
usurper of the throne
hemorrhaging across the land
freedom laid to waste
Flag thrown in the gutter
dispirited, without hope, bleeding within
stunned look on too many faces
bumper stickers saying
don’t blame me I didn’t vote for him
lame excuse
but they just have to say something
dark cloud hovers
smothers and settles down
freedom’s just another word
if spoken gets you sent to the “camps”
works its charm
keeps people quiet
keeps people informing on neighbors
on strangers, even family
citizen army strong, regular army decimated
a terrifying time for some
utopia for the rest
history déjà vu all over again
resistance stomped into the ground
only one voice
The Messiah
ineffectual person in charge
distorted and perverted use of the Constitution
their gods are power and silencing opposition
teaching school children his praises
allowing no descent
run, rabbit, run
hope and change, hope and change, hope and . . .
justice denied
the bully pulpit
the bully street thugs

a faint flame burns for freedom
kept alive by those who understand
by those who risk death
all this
written about
in my novel
Margaret and David: A Love Story

©December 6, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

We Have Some Time
























Loveliness
caught me staring
vivid emerald eyes stared back
unblinking
asking the unasked
touching my soul
deeply
saying she understood
approved
of this visual tête-à-tête

Meandering stream
rippling surface current
beneath antediluvian oak
laden with vibrant green leaves
nature's awning
a blanket spread
impending lovers
cool gentle zephyr
unable
twin passion to impede

My trembling hand she took
to her breast
natural crimson lips touched
my bone dry mouth
lingered there
tasting of jasmine sachet
tentative tongue
scorched mine
set off
simultaneous sighs

We have some time
whispered mouth against my ear
hot against passion spent
tangled skirt
twisted pants strewn
hodgepodge
here and there
I knew not words
to answer

Old am I now
life lived did survive
never forgot
nameless girl
ancient oak
summer days of love
tender and good
jasmine smells
memory haunted by her words
We have some time

Friday, November 27, 2009

Book Review - "Level 26"
























There are evil people in this world as we all are aware of. They are called many names; monster, fiend, devil, immoral, wicked and so forth. Society likes to pinpoint the evil doers around us by giving then angry monikers, but sometimes nothing seems to fit a particular evil. When a person goes against every moral sense to this point we are at a loss to pigeonhole him or her, but we do keep trying.

In Level 26 such a man exists. This book is written by the creator of the television phenomenon, "CSI," Anthony Zuiker with Duane Swierczynski. It is, to use Zuiker's own words the worlds first "digi-novel." Level 26 is an interactive read, the first of its kind, where every twenty pages or so you are given an Internet address and code to unlock a video which will give you a visual of what you have just read. I, for one, love the concept and it brought the book into my intimate self as I read and then watched its progress.

In Level 26, law enforcement has a scale with which they categorize certain murderers, from one to twenty-five. In Level 26 they have had to notch the number upward to 26, hence the novel's name. The serial killer in this book has eluded capture for decades. He has plied his trade all over the world and there are no rhyme or reason to the people he selects. Steve Dark, the protagonist of the novel, has chased him for years, and in Rome almost captured or killed him, but he got away. After such a close call the murderer targeted Steve's adopted family and killed them all, driving Steve into exile and out of the FBI

Steve is working on happiness away from being exposed to the dregs of society. He is married and a soon-to-be-father. His demons have been chased, if not away, at least out of the forefront of his thoughts. But the FBI wants him back. The dark past beckons and Steve is forced to come back to the job and work with his ex-boss and a former worker with who he had a disastrous one-night affair.

Level 26 is an experience. The murderer seems to think he has God on his side, and in fact is a disciple of God. He also has a personal interest in taunting Steve Dark, giving him clues which turn out to be dead-ends, or at least a residence that he has just recently vacated. As Steve's wife is kidnapped right under the FBI's nose and secreted in a dungeon by the murderer, treachery, political correctness and hate come to a forefront and clash as Steve and his two allies fight to find, and rescue her before it is too late.

And when they do combine to trap the killer the story is over. It is done. Or is it?

I highly recommend this ground breaking novel for what books will evolve into in the years to come.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Book Review - A Mystic Garden























Thanks to Dawn Wilson for giving me this little book so packed full of life and living, death and resurrection . . .


A Mystic Garden derived its name from author Gunilla Norris's hometown of Mystic, Connecticut. It is a fitting name, for because of the geographical location of her home and the inner spirit of which she wrote this one hundred and on page book. A tiny book it is in size and bulk, but the inside of it, the writing, is immense and will touch the heart and soul of anyone who picks it up and begins to read.

A Mystic Garden is many things according to the one who is reading it. Gunilla Norris speaks of gardening throughout this book and how the four seasons affect the seeding, the pampering and the growing of her garden up until harvest time, or if there are merely flowers she grows, the peak of their life span.

But A Mystic Garden goes a step further than most gardening books. The author relates gardening, its hardships, its promise, failures and success to the human essence and the ups and downs we enjoy and are saddened by. This book takes the reader from the starkness and apparent death of winter to our own lives and even souls. As the garden grows fallow during the dearth of warmth, so does our spirit as we hunker down in front of the fireplaces and keep artificially warm. We await spring and its sunshine and growing abilities. Like the garden we are dormant for the most part during the winter season.

A Mystic Garden takes the reader through all four seasons, complaining about this or that and joyful because of that or this. Through it all, Gunilla Norris gives example and example of the similarity of her garden to our souls. When the garden is in full bloom and the flowers and vegetables are at their peak to yet another winter where everything is bleak and frozen this book correlates it to our human inner self in such a beautiful and simple way that it will touch the reader in places where he or she hasn't been touched before.

I wholeheartedly recommend A Mystic Garden, this pint-sized book of death to its rejuvenation of seeding, followed by growth as it blooms for the harvest to come and back to winters cold fingers of death again. Gunilla Norris prefaces the book with a Spanish Proverb, In the garden more grows than the gardener sows. If you find yourself turning the pages of this book you will quite understand what this proverb means.

©November 23, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Being There
























I squirted red wine
From a goatskin flask
In a besotted Greek salute to
Bacchus, god of wine and revelry.
But I wasn’t there.

I wore fine linen garments, powder in my hair,
A manly rite of passage
In perverted old Europe
And stepped gracefully to the
Minuet with Lucrezia Borgia.
But I wasn’t there.

I jitterbugged in the Speakeasy
With the Flappers of Chicago,
Kicking high and lovin’ hard
On bathtub gin, free expression
And Marxists philosophy.
But I wasn’t there.

I dug the scene at The Duplex,
Kerouac’s favorite watering hole
With Ginzberg spewing righteous
Beatnik intellect there in
Greenwich Village.
But I wasn’t there.

I draped love beads
Round my neck,
Standing among the faithful
Digging Janis in San Francisco with
Big Brother and the Holding Company.
This time I was there.

And I’ll be there in the flesh,
Decked out in my costume of choice
At the World’s First United Mardi Gras
Celebration in the Mojave Desert,
Puking on Gila Monsters and
Chasing Roadrunners.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Sins Of The Past
























If I were someone,
Someone not me,
The sins of the past
Would let me be.

The sins of the past
Would another one hurt,
Deep inside where ugly
Resides like piled-up dirt.

Deep inside where ugly
Causes the mother to be mean,
Gives birth to the son
She thought was obscene.

Causes the mother to be mean
Since the father was a rolling stone.
A rolling stone became his son,
Searching the highways for his clone.

A rolling stone became his son
Going from town to town.
Leaving unloved children in his wake,
Searching for father to shoot him down.

Going from town to town
He finds his father hunkered down.
Old now unable to run,
He looks up at his son with the gun.

Old now unable to run
He laughs, coughs and laughs more.
Opening his arms saying "Do it now
And then go back and shoot the whore.

-©May 7, 2003 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Betty Boop Was A Slut

























This may come as a big surprise but
Betty Boop was an out-and-out slut.
How she fooled them all, it was a joke,
She would never turn down any bloke.

Her life of depravity you see
Started with Dick (whadda name) Tracy.
After scouring the city for crime,
Upon his nightstick Betty did climb.

Oh my, yes, Betty was such a mess
Just a smile and she would drop that dress.
Moon Mulligan had her to play with,
Or in a pinch she'd take Snuffy Smith.

The Boop had Flash Gordon, the spaceman,
Taught him more ways than a moonbeam can.
It was all to make Steve Canyon mad,
Oh, Betty was a mean one; so sad.

She didn't cull, she welcomed them all,
Even rumors about Olive Oyl.
A wild child, she lived life at full tilt,
She could, you know, look how she was built.

Joe Palooka found he could not fight
With Betty, she had an overbite.
That made it interesting and oral,
When all done the men had no quarrel.

She starred in Tijuana Bibles
And Mary Worth sued her for libel.
Grabbed Popeye for a sexual brawl,
Then told everybody he was small.

A gourmet lass, she worked like a chef
Even double-teamed old Mutt and Jeff.
Batman too, he wrote her a letter,
She snickered, said Robin was better.

Shared her slut title with Nancy Drew,
Between the two they had quite a queue.
Blondie gave her a run, did not shirk,
Hurrying Dagwood, quick off to work.

Loving the man of steel was her plight,
Why not, it was hard as Kryptonite?
What a pitiful shape she was in,
Superman was in love with her twin.

©February 14, 2005 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Rooming House on St. Charles























1968 . . .
New Orleans
I'd been in worse
and better
places
just a room to sleep
sweaty nights
and sit
in the daytime, on the bed
being quiet
not to bother anyone
that is how I was then . . .
how I wanted it
to hide my future, my
secrets
secrets which drove me there
in the first place
damn it to hell and back
Downtown Jackson Brown
Minnie the Moocher
all those cats
doing Mardi Gras
outside my window
shuttered and closed tight, my window
because . . . I felt like shit
why not
who was I to think thoughts
grandeur ones
so I sit and sweat
and
horde my puny little secrets
secrets, like
I am no good
and
everybody knows it
something
made me write

Sitting all alone
In a smoky, crowded bar
Life passes him by


What happened to the
. . . . . . . .
hell, I can't even remember
what
is gone
sad
ain't it sad
how did it get this way
alone
when the whole world is partying
made me also write this

Carnival is here
Crowds jam the street with laughter
He plays solitaire


Last night I ventured into
society
sorta
kinda
well, I went here

High above the street
A lonely window shines bright
Love is bought and sold


Oh, yeah, I forgot
I have
secrets
to tell
if you wanna to hear
you do, huh
don't you
my, my
what good are secrets
if nobody wants to hear 'em
so I write 'em down
on paper, yeah

Crumpled note on floor
Tells the story of love gone.
A time for dying

Friday, November 6, 2009

Dedicated to the Victims of Ft. Hood Massacre


Terrorist in store earlier in the day before he murdered thirteen people and wounded many more . . .







A cold and pitiless wind moves among us,
A current of current rising from epochs old.
Can we sleep serenely and without fear when
Amid stirrings of horse’s hoofs he smiles?
Beneath primordial moons deviously does plot,
Time is of no value, eternity has evolved.
Without the ticking sound of the life’s clock,
Snorting Arabian steed’s anxious for the fight.
Poised on every shore, peering into windows,
O, so stealthy, when at last the moon has hid.
And the tide washes up, deposits combatants,
They come, by air, luxury liner, banana boat.
By the soles of their feet, souls of their God,
Like residue from a growing, fanatical storm.
What blood moves through these warriors,
Which provokes bloodlust as easily as a smile?
He is there, over there, here too, right here,
Where the children are at play with yesterday’s
Values, yesterday’s view, yesterday’s excitement?
When the tongue and eyes of the ancient ones
Speak softly, gazing upon the long awaited prize.
The thundering of million’s of hoofs let loose,
Neighing a battle cry to the dead, silent old ones.
And we, well we go about our business of sanity,
Thinking we are good, we are clean, we laugh.
Calmly we do leave the doors and the windows
Ajar for our visitors who are now neighbors,
To finish the ancient martyr’s settling of scores.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Winter's Moon


















I stare out my window tonight,
The cold moon gives off a strange light.
Its so mournful I heard it sigh,
Setting up there so very high.

I know that sigh, I know it well,
Within my heart it mutely dwells.
A sigh can be a lovely thing,
Sometimes it makes you want to sing.

Somewhere, some place there is some one,
Looking at the moon just for fun.
Tonight we are together free,
That's a very good way to be.

Tomorrow's dawn will shine anew,
I wonder how life is with you.
The one who watched the moon with me,
With poet's thoughts we both agree.

Will we be poets come daybreak,
Or has it all been one more fake?
Will we pick up our guns and fire,
Your god and mine are just for hire.

©November 2, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Friday, October 30, 2009

I'll Be Doing It Until I Die



















Brad Gaines grabbed Clorox
A bottle of glass cleaner
Tossed them into the twenty-year-old Buick
Cranked 'er up and took off
Headed for a cemetery
Been making the same trip
For many years
Despite the pleas of his wife and kids to stop

I'll be doing it until I die, the young man said.

These trips started twenty years ago
He makes the 175-mile trip
To visit a friend he never really knew
But a single play on a football field
Fused them together
As though they were brothers
Gains, a tailback for Vanderbilt
Went after Chucky Mullins
A safety for Mississippi
Going high in the air for a pass
Grimes caught him in the back
And then rushed back to the Vanderbilt huddle
Chucky never got back up
Neck shattered
Died two years later
It's just football
Nobody's fault
Everybody agreed
Even Grimes
It's all part of the game,
but it doesn't change the facts, you know . . .


Three times a year
Gaines drives from Nashville
To Russelville, Alabama
And to Chucky's grave simply marked

Chucky, Man of Courage

What drives Grimes
To make this trip three times a year
He says
There have been times when I had to hitchhike
Because I ran out of gas
Had blown out tires
Car broke down

His wife and children
And total strangers have worried about him
Maybe the only one who can truly understand
Is Mullins lying 'neath the ground

Gaines, white kid from hoity-toity Vanderbilt
Mullins, skinny black kid from nowhere town
Gaines couldn't sleep after the accident
No longer cared about the sport
He grew upon
Didn't even play his senior season
He visited Mullins in the hospital
It wasn't your fault Mullins told him.
Mullins spirit was strong
Walter Payton, Janet Jackson
George Bush came to call
Still Mullins was called to his spiritual home
And Brad visits
Plucks weeds, clean grime from the headstone
Then sit down beside the grave
Converses and prays
Why?
Because I love him
To Grimes it is just that simple

What will Grimes headstone read one day
Man of Guilt
Man of Craziness
Man of Compassion

Whatever it will be, somehow you just know
Mullins will be glad to clean it

©October 30, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Traveler





The traveler meandered down the dusty road like an abandoned cur, stopping momentarily to gaze at a Broken Heart lying in the ditch. It was like something which had come straight out of nightmarish dreams. Shading his eyes from a tremendous August sun, he peered off to the right where a mortally wounded Psyche laid in the dust being baked into something calloused and hard and no longer part of the poor soul it had come from. To his left, where he didn't have to shade his eyes because the sun was hot on his back, rose a huge Mountain of Betrayal. Tears the size of his hand tumbled down its weathered slope to drop into a swirling vortex of optimism, which reprocessed it back to betrayal, forever recycling the sadness of man's Treachery. The traveler closed his eyes and sighed as old Sol began its final plunge behind the craggy mountains, where it would soon retire for the night.

"I can't do this."

No answer. The traveler had expected none. But it was not silence which greeted his declaration. Faint moans of Anguish could be heard over the tormented pleas of a small child. Male? Female? He did not know. It mattered not. The pain was real. Yes, it was, and he withstood the sound better by keeping his eyes closed.

The road was familiar. He had never been here, though. Not in this life. That was the thing, then. Since everything here seemed familiar, but twisted; out of kilter, the traveler had to ask the question.

"Am I dead?"

Far away he heard Shattered Hope screech.

"Am I dead, or is this the way to The All-American Dream?"

Raucous laughter issued from Wickedness which was hidden somewhere. The traveler had heard this laughter before, but Wickedness never showed its face. Coward. Instead it played evil games inside your mind. He vaguely realized that the reason you could never see it was because it is you.

This rather strange road he walked was familiar in an obscure, unfamiliar way. Since early this morning, or was it yesterday morning, oh, no matter. Since he had found himself here he recognized certain . . . things. Nothing he could put his finger on and say, "Look, I remember this from . . ." No. Nothing like that. There was a surreal quality about certain things which defied definition. There were things he saw he had never seen before, but why then, did he know what they were?

Like the Broken Heart baking in the August heat.

Was it his? Or some other unfortunate traveler who had passed this way before? The Broken Heart, of course, was not like the Valentine Day pretty heart all drawn so nice and neat. No. This was a real heart, lying alongside the road, dirty, with dried blood all around it. This heart was alive and making strong, thump, thump-thumping sounds which reverberated inside his head, nearly causing him to lose what sanity he was holding onto.
He had attempted to cover up the Broken Heart to mute the sound. But there was nothing he could use to place over it. If he had been wearing a shirt he would have used that but he was not wearing one. Actually he wasn't wearing clothes at all. He shivered. It was approaching nighttime and he recalled it had gotten cold last night.

The traveler began to trudge slowly down the road again, shelter on his mind. Soon he came upon a wooden bridge built over foaming, raging rapids. He stopped, fearful of crossing the bridge. He took a tentative step. The bridge creaked, gave somewhat with his weight. Another step. Groans from the timber. He froze. After a deep breath he took five very quick steps and was almost in the middle of the bridge when he heard . . . them.

He stood; naked, afraid, and alone, debating whether he should go back or go forward. Instead of doing either he placed his hand on the bridge's railing to keep his knees from giving way from a terrifying dread. He leaned forward trying to steady himself and the noise became ferocious. He knew he should not, but still he looked down into the rapids.

But the foaming water was not rapids at all. No, it was only a languid little stream, and the only reason it was foaming and churning was because of the drowning Libidos and accompanying Egos.

"Please, what do you want from me?"

He stared into the horrible scene as hundreds, no thousands of perishing Libidos screamed out for one more chance to go back to the very perversion which had sent them to their watery grave in the first place. Defiant and lustful to the absolute end is mankind's absorption with skin against skin. The traveler lingered his eyes on the water below because to not do so he would have had to look into himself.

Taking a few quick, very intense mouthfuls of air, he leaned further over the railing and stared into the turbulence below as if he were seeing the very last thing on earth. Rank odor emitted from the water, an odor which could mean only death and decay. Suddenly he saw something scurrying from the water. Then another. And more. Egos were making a mad dash for . . . where? Where could an Ego go if it had no body to prod and to push? Still. They were leaving the water by the hundreds and they looked so comical the traveler laughed aloud in spite of his own dire situation.

They bounced ahead without feet in a kaleidoscope of colors, mostly black, dark blues or heavy greens, no wimpy colors for the Egos of the world. And the noise! Deafening. How could they make sounds? But they did. Angry sounds, like jet planes screaming inside his head. Then suddenly, they stopped. The traveler watched in fascination and horror as the Egos became too big for themselves and burst into gore and globs of Ego matter. Then they were gone; seeping down the bank toward the stream.

What had been fetid odors wafting from below gave way to a different fragrance; the lingering smell of all the lovers he had known. The combined smell was at first pleasant and satisfying, taking the traveler back to better times and the sensuousness of a woman's caress. Faces flooded his thoughts. Headless, naked bodies fought for dominance inside his head until there was only one left. It had a grotesque body that looked not feminine or anything remotely close to it. It was a misshapen apparition, but it did have a head, and the face on the head was recognizable.

"See?" The face spoke. "I am your lover, can you not see that? I am the only thing you have ever loved, I am you."

The traveler screamed. Then he ran and ran and ran, and the road became as straight as it had been crooked before. But he could not escape from himself. He understood that. The woman thing was gone but it still lived as surely as he took the next gasping breath, and it did so because it was him with all the warts.

A forlorn, solitary howl interrupted the traveler's perverse musings. It was such a sad and lonesome wail it could only come from a hound. The traveler took it as a warning. A cautionary howl for the stranger who walks among the remnants and distasteful ingredients which make up mankind.

Plop. Plop. Plop. One foot in front of the other. It should be night. It is not. It is twilight. He needed to find . . . Shelter.

"Why?"

He startled himself with his question. Shelter because he was, or would be, cold. Shelter to hide his nakedness. He was ashamed of his slightly rounded stomach, his slightly sagging breasts; his rapidly receding penis. Shelter to hide his imperfections.
Oh, my. The howling hound was there with him, pressing his cold, wet nose against his bare leg. Oh, my. The hound walked ahead of him. He was, of course, not a hound. A beast though. He was that. A beast that spoke.

"I am here to take you." The traveler did not see the beast's mouth moving when it talked, but he knew that it did.

"Where?"

"Follow me." It began to lope. The traveler did not run after it. Soon the hound was out of sight.

The traveler continued walking. What else was he to do? There was no where else to go. Each step he took he was met with Ghostly images from his past. Only they were not Ghosts. Unless Ghosts could touch and feel and bleed and sob and scream into his face angry words and screeches and claw his backside and front side and attack his genitals, especially his genitals. He could not defend himself because somewhere without him being aware, his arms had fallen from his body. There was no blood. It had not hurt. He was at the mercy of his past sins as they went about absorbing them into the very pores of his being. Still, he walked, and as he did so he was determined to forgive his persecutors even though it seemed they had held onto their grudges.

He knew most of them. His Mother. She was the worst. Blaming him. For everything. She was the worst. Old Girlfriends. Old Wives. Vicious. Unrelenting in there desire to hurt. Payback is . . . Toughtittie . . . Reap what you sow . . . Yes . . . What goes around . . . All That Jazz! He was being hit and poked and jabbed with sharp fingernails and bit with filed-down teeth and kicked and he thought he would surely fall to the earth and be beaten until he died but . . . They stopped. His Mother's chest burst open and her heart fairly flew from her bosom onto the ground and split into. Broken Heart. The rest did the same. Everyone he had known, everyone he guessed he had hurt in ways he could not remember now, lost their hearts and minds and love and joy, all to be strewn alongside the dusty road the traveler walked.
Now he understood.

They were all gone and in their wake had left the parts of themselves they blamed the traveler for destroying. Hearts, broken Hearts were the most prominent but there were also Minds Unstable and Love Destroyed. Love Destroyed was the most awful of them. He had heard of Love his whole life and had never known exactly what it was. Now that he was looking at Love Destroyed it was all he could do to keep from regurgitating. Love Destroyed was a dreadful thing to behold. Love Destroyed was a small golden sphere approximately the size of a small green pea when it fell from those who had just left. When they touched the ground there was an audible gasp and then no more sounds were heard.

The golden sphere morphed into such a lovely child, a child of no particular sex, but a Child of Innocence, and a Child desirous of guidance and someone to attach to and grow into love personified. It was not to be, however, because the lovely Child's skin began to peel from its body and as it did its eyes stared straight into the travelers and the eyes said, "I never had a chance to grow into my potential, and it was because of you." Then it turned into a caricature of an old hag, the kind you see in fairy tales as witches and melted back down to the pea size it used to be, sprouted roots and bloomed into hate intensified. When that happened, the traveler had to turn away, the horrible stench and penetrating stare was too much for him.

He stumbled down the road, half running, half walking; stumbling. A huge, intense, bright light blinded him and caused him to lurch sideways and finally collapse onto the sandy road. Before he passed out the moans and shrieks and screams of all the Broken Hearts and Minds Unstable and Wounded Psyches and Mountains of Betrayal lanced his heart and brain so passionately and sadly that dying to escape would be a blessing.

His eyes opened to the loveliest woman he had ever seen. She had been swiping at his forehead with a cool, moist rag. She smiled and the world smiled and was happy. The traveler was in bed. Not his bed. She poured a sparkling glass of water and touched it to his feverish lips and before he supped from it he knew that it would be the best tasting water he had ever drunk. It was. She sat the glass on the small table and stood to leave.

"Oh, please," the traveler said, "don't go. Where am I? What is your name?"

She smiled. The world smiled again. "You are here. My name is Gentle." With that she turned and left him alone. But no. Someone else was here. The traveler sensed another presence.

"How do you feel?"

The voice, like the girl's, saturated him with breathtaking sensations. A rich baritone voice full of wonderful . . . ambiance. "Tell me what I am doing here, please."

"My name is Go," the voice answered. "You are being prepared."

"Why, am I--"

"Yes. You are dying, traveler. You are in the hospital room in the city where you reside. We have been preparing you for the transition."

"Oh."

"Fear not, we will treat you kindly."

"But the road, and oh, the people and all the--"

"That is part of the transition, an unkind part to be sure, traveler, but necessary."

"Why? To show me my past sins?"

"No. Everybody thinks that. It is a cleansing. It is not for everyone because everyone has not been such a man as yourself, genuine good person, but one who hurt many along the way.
"The attacks? The Broken Hearts, the--"

"It was done to make you understand, that although you were sinful in your life, you were not responsible for other people's heartaches in the end. You were not attacked on that road for that reason. You, traveler, although you made awful mistakes you weren't the only one who did. Those within your sphere must walk the same road you have just walked; we are, after all, accountable for what we do and what we allow others to do to us."

"Were?"

"Yes, you are dead now. My companion and I will assist you the rest of the way." The young woman appeared beside the bed.

"Take her hand, now mine."

The traveler saw the voice standing beside the woman and he was as beautiful as she and they both wore long, flowing white robes and when he took their hands he wasn't surprised that he had his arms back and he understood the significance of their names now.

Go Gentle.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Dinner Date




Got a light

This dame wasn't bashful
I struck a match
She sucked on the Chesterfield
Inhaled once
She stuck it into the Molten Lava Cake desert
The butt wore a lipstick tiara
I sipped my rosé
Wishing it was a draft
It was her party, doubt she knew what a draft was
She was on in years
Still had that little girl face
Unbecoming on a matronly woman
Too much lipstick
Too much rouge
Laughed too raucous
Tried to set me at ease
With ribald jokes
Clichéd, well-worn ribald jokes
She gave me her best come-on look
It was frightening
I smiled
It was her party
It was her play
Society dame looking for rough trade
Could get nasty
Could be that is what the lady wants

Have you ever killed anyone

Her voice was whiskey gravely never mine the rosé
Eyes were glazed and her mouth trembled
In anticipation to my answer
"Probably no one you know," I gave her that
She suppressed a smile

Would you pour the wine

It was not a request
The creature needed bedtime stories
Her emancipated chest rose and fell rapidly
Anticipation will do that
I poured the wine
She placed a hand on my stubble
I hadn’t shaved on purpose

I think I would like the street life


she whispered conspiratorially
A look of fearful excitement passed over her face
High color rose into her cheeks
Studied me closely
So closely, so intimately
Goosebumps made like the Indy 500 up my spine
A shudder shook me
She mistook for animal magnetism
Made her day

Sometimes being a tough Private Eye
Means you have to go undercover
I was dreading this night

©October 18, 2009 Jerry Pat Bolton

Friday, October 23, 2009

God Is Not the Source of Evil


I wish to thank all the ones who have tried to help me in this frustrating search for the answer to a simple question. While the question's answer has remained, until yesterday, elusive to me. I want especially thank Christine Alwin on Authors Den who delivered the mechanism that liberated me.

Thank you, Christine.

God Is Not the Source of Evil

For years I've posed the question to God
Why do children have to suffer so much
Cancer, abuse, and much more
I've wondered about this for most of my life
Goes back to when I was a small boy
A teenager who lived nearby
Backed over his baby brother in the yard
The teenager, in shock, ran off into the woods
Took two days before they found him

I guess I've been posing my question in many way
Orally or through poetry I've asked
Began a novel to uncover the answer
Hoped to settle the question once and for all
I still may write the book
The slant will just be different
I have friends who have tried to help
All in all they failed
I've been sent books
Video's of preacher's touching on the subject
None of it washed with me
None of it addressed the children problem
Just went on and on about "original sin"
Its blemish on humanity

My last poem I posted on AD
"Life's Sonnet #11"
Addressed my concerns again
Someone commented on the poem
Said she might be able to help with my quest.
Yesterday she sent a video
I put it on
Began to watch
After five minutes I decided
It was going to be like the rest I've seen
Was NOT going to concentrate on innocent children
Rather the suffering of mankind in general
Still, I left it running
As I did a few household chores
Half listening
It was as I was washing up a few dishes
That I heard a phrase
Which damned near floored me.

God is not the source of evil

I, we, and they, have been asking the wrong question
There is a war going on
Earth is its battleground
Satan has His own ways to fight
Deep down and dirty
That lesson I seem to have forgotten
So it seems have many others
Even those who are supposed to know
And understand the answer
I have asked so many people "the" question
Over the years
One clergyman hum-hawed
On the phone
Said he would get back to me
Probably the most asked question
Of God that there is
He had nothing to say to me about it
That was over two months ago
He has never "gotten back to me"
That one phrase

God is not the source of evil

Explained it better than thousands of
Theological summaries ever could
Everything became vividly clear
That one phrase begat another phrase

God gave us choices

Though that does not address the innocent
For they have no choice
Still, it took on a whole different meaning
Than it used to
After I finished with the dishes
That phrase running through my mind
I came back to the computer
Sat there staring at it
As though I expected God to speak to me through it
I finally realized He had already spoke to me
In as clear and understandable a voice as
He possibly could
It was to me what
The Burning Bush was to Moses

I went to bed last night
This on my mind
I awoke this morning
This on my mind
I have a feeling it will stay on my mind
Influencing my thinking
Until I am no longer able to think

October 21, 2009 / Jerry Pat Bolton

Monday, September 28, 2009

Taking a Break, Sorta


I am taking a break from novel writing. It seems I am forever and always writing a novel. That is not a bad thing. However, eventually you become sorta burned out. I have never understood writers who say they have writer's block. I have more plots running through my head than I have time to work on the. True, there are times when the words for a particular project has difficulty flowing from my literary pen, but when that happens I go to another and usually that is the one I was meant to write in the first place. At this time in my "career" I have embarked on a different kind of pause, or retreat when it comes to writing. I have ten books published. Since I finally was beaten down and had enough rejection slips from the New York Publishers to paper a large room with, I opted for the self publishing bit. Lulu was where I went. All of my books are novels with the exception of Misdemeanors & Felonies: A Memoir. Since my financial situation is limited, receiving only a little social security check each month I was not in a position to pay $300-500 for a professional proofreader, the result being that my novels have typos, grammar and other assorted problems. So! I have embarked on a "cleansing" of the novels. I am sure there will still be a few errors here and there, because a person proofreading his own work is a no-no, except in the case of first, maybe second drafts. By the time you have it, in your opinion, as good as you can get it and are ready for publication, that is the time to find a good word doctor. In the meantime I write poems, book reviews, etc., whatever comes to me, but now novels. I honestly think I need to stay away from novels for a longer duration than I have in the past. Working on the published one's will give me something to do so I won't be tempted to start another book. That has been my problem in the past when I felt the need to take a vacation from the novels; boredom. That is because for a long time now, I have not had any other outside activities with which to occupy my mind. When Dottie was still with me it was a full-time job seeing after her and running the necessary errands I needed to take care of her, and of course, me. It has been six months since she has passed, and instead of trying to seek other venues to occupy me when I wasn't writing, or didn't want to write, I hunkered down and went at writing with a vengeance. Partly, I know, to keep my mind occupied with other things except her memory. It didn't work all that great, because a large percentage of that writing was Dottie-related. Even the novel Unholy Pursuit had many references of her in it. Anyway, here I am, plugging away on the corrections of the published novels and hoping I will stay healthy long enough to get the rest of the ideas of novels on paper and published. I guess I am pushing it, but I need another ten years. At least.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Red Light Book Review



Merci Rayborn has a lot to live down. In T. Jefferson Parker's first-rate thriller, Red Light, Marci not only has to deal with the fact that, Tim Hess, her lover and father of her two-year-old child was murdered in the line of duty. Both Merci and Hess worked as detectives for the sheriff's department and Merci blames herself for Hess' death. This blame, like a dark, hovering cloud, has followed her around for two years.

In Red Light, when a nineteen-year-old prostitute is murdered Merci catches the case. As she begins to unravel the young woman's life she is dismayed that a woman so young should be, as she put it, "a real pro." The clues slowly, but surely began to point the finger toward a fellow officer Mike McNally, a member of the vice squad. To make matter worse Merci is having a confusing affair with him. To complicate matters even more, her supervisor drops a cold case on her desk that dates back to the sixties.

At first the cold case is not that much of a priority. That changes as the clues to the recent murder lead her to have serious doubts about Mike and his involvement with the young prostitute. She begins looking at the cold case as a way to clear her mind of her suspicions concerning her boyfriend. But being the detective that she is she wants the truth to come out no matter who it might touch. Balancing the two cases, one recent and one decade's old, Merci is saddled with the guilt feeling of her dead lover and a growing feeling of remorse because of the clues she is finding lead her toward the ever growing suspicion that Mike, her present lover, killed the young woman.

As she is beset with rage and remorse concerning her feelings about Mike and the murder, she finds that the cold case has similar features. In both cases a prostitute with ties to the sheriff's department has been murdered. The cold case becomes a political hot potato as Marci continues to pursue it as she does the recent case. Between the two cases her world is turned upside down and she is drowning in rage for believing Mike is guilty of the murder and shame that she is unable to give him the benefit of the doubt. It's the clues. They keep piling up and so do the ones concerning the cold case. Merci is emotionally vulnerable and that is not a good thing.

Red Light is a good book. T. Jefferson Parker, in this reviewer's opinion has never written anything but good books. I have read a number of books written by Parker and have never came away from any of them without a feeling of complete satisfaction

Monday, September 21, 2009

Unholy Pursuit Book Review

This review of my book,Unholy Pursuit was written by N.L. Snowden, author of In and out of Madness . . .


UNHOLY PURSUIT
By
Jerry Pat Bolton




Jerry Pat Bolton has written a novel that is both entertaining and thought provoking. Written in first person in a memoir style, he takes you on a fantasy journey that is at first quite believable. The protagonist, Joe John Jefferies, a seventy-year-old man contemplating a memory of a girl with no name. Although his was a happy marriage, this girl's memory floated in and out of his conscious mind through the years. They met on a road in Georgia and spent the day in a sexual marathon. They went their separate ways without exchanging names.

After Joe loses his wife of many years and his grieving is done, he decides to set out and find this girl. His friends laugh at him. His mistress, Rita Beaverman, insists on going with him. He feels no love for this woman, only lust. He doesn't want her interfering with his quest. Against everyone's insistence, he heads for Georgia. The first night he stops to sleep in a motel, and who should show up but Rita. Although Rita possessed power over Joe with her undulating sexuality, he rejects her and sends her packing with what appears to be a broken heart.

Something in his subconscious plants the seeds of an Uncle Jack being connected to this nameless girl. In many surreal coincidences, Joe finds there is an Uncle Jack connected to the family that owns the diner he frequents in Georgia. After going on a treasure hunt of leads, he ends up in a nursing home with a very old relative of the family. She predicts her death and leaves Joe with her dying words and a puzzle to unravel.

Joe finds the spot on the road where he and the unnamed girl met and wishes with all his being that she'll miraculously show up. To his delight, she does, and he finds out that her name is Casondrah, and she has been controlling him all of his life since their encounter. At first, he doesn't care, as the sex is once again glorious.

While in his motel room, a man suddenly appears dressed as a Charles Dickens character and calls himself Carlester. He shares a secret with Joe that Bolton so elegantly allows the reader to believe in the fantasy that takes over Joe's life.

In the end, Joe discovers that Casondrah is his enemy, Carlester is his friend. He ends up in Wyoming with Casondrah and Alexandria, a vampire, saves his and a sad waif by the name of Constance's lives. Bolton knows his geography as he places the reader in many locales as Joe discovers he is the one and only one to destroy a world's evil. It's a game of cat and mouse with the loser going to hell. Joe and his comrades battle Casondrah and even Satan himself. The book twists and turns, and every time the reader thinks things are going to work out, he adds another adversary, another battle, another escape only to find Joe worse off than he was. Bolton sends the reader to the climax of the book taking short breaths and hearing their own hearts beating in their chest.

What makes this book even better is that Bolton throws in some philosophy that the reader will ponder and question the Status Quo.

I highly recommend this page tuner and book for people who love constant action.
This book is available at Amazon on the Kindle version: http://www.amazon.com/UnHoly-Pursuit-na/dp/B002KW4SOU/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1253555150&sr=1-1

If you would prefer it in book form, go here: http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/unholy-pursuit/7303385 which can be purchases here . . .