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Joseph Boys

The Breath Before

November 25, 2022 by Morgan Delaney

Image generated by OpenAI’s DALL-E 2 AI system. Prompt by Morgan Delaney

Originally appeared in my newsletter from August 13th. Some bits might not make sense out of context!

Gamarjoba is hello in Georgian!

We’ve been busy with the move, but arrived last Thursday night. Pudding (cat) flew with us in the cabin and didn’t like it.

Manchee (dog) flew in the hold. He has revealed nothing, but my suspicion is that he liked it even less.

Tbilisi is very different from Nur-sultan. There are people and dogs everywhere! It’s exactly the shock therapy Manchee needs.

On the barren steppes of Kazakhstan’s capital city, it was possible to go for ages without meeting another person, which made it a big deal for him when one did turn up.

In writing news I’ve made it as far as “Chapter 27: The Mysterious Wonder Drug” in The Squared Circle, and I received my author proof copies of People Skins, Volume 2, so keep an eye out for a cover reveal and more details very soon! Out now!

I’m not the only believer in changing things up. P. G. Wodehouse did too, as you’ll discover in my selection of recommendations at the bottom of this email.

In the meantime, sit back and enjoy the main feature, which argues that it’s not a change but a fixed routine that you need.

Allow me to present

Flash Fiction: The Breath Before
You get better every day. According to the mantra from your free online therapy videos.

At least the daily repetition of it makes you less self-conscious when you tell it to reflection in the mirror.

The mirror is in your parent’s bathroom, and the body it reflects is as weedy as twenty years ago when you were sixteen, the last one in class to hit puberty.

But you get better every day. You’re now supervisor of the cleaning crew.

Of course, you can’t take days off, because the supervisor has to plug any holes in the team if someone else calls in sick, but you’re finally moving up that ladder.

In the mirror you see a black mark under the skin where your heart is. It looks like a bruise, but you don’t know from what.

It doesn’t hurt either.

In fact, you don’t feel anything at all.

It’s a hot day. Your crew sweat through their t-shirts and wipe their gloved hands on their trousers before wiping their foreheads dry with a squeak of rubber.

You don’t notice the heat, and you check everyone is adding cleaning liquid to their water, because you can’t smell it. Maybe you are sick.

You’ll be better in the morning. It’s your mantra: you get better every day.

You need to keep telling yourself that.

It’s just a bruise where your heart was. Is, you correct yourself.

You go to work.

You come home again.

In the morning, you tell yourself you’re getting better.

Every day.

The bruise doesn’t hurt.

Not when your parents die. Not when you realise that supervisor—hole plugger without extra pay—is the top of the corporate ladder for you.

Inside, you’re getting better.

You’re getting used to it.

Oh, and…
Research!

I’m reading P. G. Wodehouse’s letters, which are collected in Performing Flea.

Obviously, what I really want is more Blandings Castle and Jeeves and Wooster stories, but this is definitely the next best thing!

He wrote his letters in exactly the same style as his books and some of the stories are hilarious.

I also found out that he fancied trying out some different material, including a rather more lurid version of his early “schoolboy” stories under the name of Basil Windham.

This is from 1908 and won’t be for everyone. As a taster, try this bit of early dialogue:

“Is he dead, Master Jimmy?”

“I don’t know. He looks jolly beastly.”

🙂 If you enjoyed that, then you can read the rest of “The Luck Stone” right here!

The included letters to the editor are also worth their digital weight in gold for the inclusion of the phrase “playing the old gooseberry”.

Playing/being a gooseberry is acting as a chaperone/being a third wheel when two gentlefolk wish to spend time together.

Playing the old gooseberry, however, means making mischief or causing havoc because “the old gooseberry” was an archaic term for the devil.

Now you know, and my New Year’s Resolution is to work that expression into a story!

Listen!

The Joseph Boys have released their second album, Reflektor, and it confirms they are Germany’s pre-eminent proponents of Deutschpunk.

I’d normally link to Bandcamp, but it’s €13 there, which is a bit steep, so I’m linking to 7Digital instead, where you can get it for €10,49, if you’re happy to accept 320kbps MP3 files.

Steve Albini wouldn’t approve, but it’s good enough for me!

The album has disappeared from 7Digital, so I’m linking to Bandcamp after all.

Listen!

The Flatliners released their latest album, New Ruin, on the very same day. They’ve tried out various styles of punk over the course of their career (although never Deutschpunk).

New Ruin combines the best of all of them.

Get it from Bandcamp here!

Listen!

If that’s all too angry, then check out this newly released video of Richard Cheese’s cover version of Sublime’s “Doin’ Time”.

Watch!

Aunty Donna are back! Maybe it was the stress of that Netflix special, but it looks like their relationship has never been under more pressure. Intense!

Chapter 28 of The Squared Circle was to have been called “Unfortunately Badger”, but I had to make changes and lose the badger (unfortunately).

Without knowing more about the story, can you think of any other good adverb-animal combinations?

If you made it this far, you might like to know that the title of this week’s flash fiction comes from the song of the same name by Galactic Cannibal. Wonderfully shouty!

Filed Under: Flash fiction, Realism Tagged With: Aunty Donna, Flash fiction, Joseph Boys, P. G. Wodehouse, Realism, Richard Cheese, The Flatliners

10 Exotic Delicacies And Why You Shouldn’t Eat Them

June 16, 2022 by Morgan Delaney

Made by Morgan Delaney. Photos by Jennifer Martin and Debby Hudson on Unsplash

We’re back from a week in Georgia! The thing about Georgia is the food…or the wine… or the wine and the food. Mmmmmm.

So, inspired by a week’s gluttony, this week’s post is a killer list of things you shouldn’t eat.

As my mother always used to say: just ’cause it looks nice, doesn’t mean you should put it in your mouth!

Bon appetit!


1. The Pharyngeal Trumpet is a tall, annual flowering plant with a vivid yellow trumpet-shaped bloom and creamy white leaves. Its taste is of peppered beetroot, and the leaves are rich in both antioxidants and curcumin.

Unfortunately, they are also rich in the parasitic spores that the plant uses for reproduction.

The fine spores line its host’s throat until an opportunity presents itself—for example, when the throat dries out during sleep—to detach themselves and be inhaled into the lungs. Once there, the plant grows rapidly, expanding and crushing the host’s lungs.

2. Chipmunk spine. Long regarded as a delicacy in parts of Florida, they have since fallen out of favour, as the spine only retains its flavour (milk and earth) as long as the chipmunk is alive.

3. Dog milk. No further explanation required*.

4. Butterfly spice. Butterfly spice is nothing more than prepared and dried butterfly wings. The iridescent “spice” is tasteless and was used rather to sprinkle over dishes for its blue shimmering appearance. The link between consuming butterfly spice and a tendency to elephantiasis and incest is now well established.

5. Le concombre d’escalier. A type of cucumber native to French Polynesia. While it tastes delicious, the taste is impossible to describe afterwards until the person who wanted to know has gone away.

For this reason, it is a leading cause of fatally high blood pressure among frustrated food bloggers and chefs who continue to eat it, determined to have the perfect description ready the next time someone asks.

6. Celery. Their outward resemblance to rippled potato crisps is misleading.

7. Merscale sushi. Highly prized, these rolls consist of pure green-gold fish scale and sushi rice. These days, the fish scale is most likely to have been sourced from battery-farmed merfolk as it is no longer economic to meet the increasing demand any other way.

8. Sugar and spice and everything nice. Bad news for anyone with a sweet tooth, but you are basically eating the raw ingredients of little girls.

Expecting Roe v. Wade to be overthrown, several US states have now drafted trigger laws which will require any woman caught carrying sugar or spice on her person to continue carrying it, until such time as it is capable of looking after itself.

9. Raw fish of any kind. Scientists still don’t know where human dreams “go” after being experienced, but evidence continues to mount that fish store theirs in adipose pockets in their flesh. Cooking dissolves this fatty residue. Eating fish raw means the dream is ingested too.

A sure sign that you are consuming too much raw fish is a dream where you need to do something or go somewhere, but cannot move faster no matter how hard you try, as if wading through molasses.

This is caused by the disconnect between your subconscious mind, which accepts that the dreamer is “still” underwater, and the conscious mind, which expects the dreamer to move at its usual pace.

10. Teeth. Although mustard and curry powders are no longer made with teeth, trace elements can still be found in factories with older equipment. The teeth of anorexics were long preferred for these and other yellow spices, because of the discolouring effect of stomach acid on them.

The recent photos from Catalan of the victim of internal biting provide a graphic reminder of the effects of consuming too much ground teeth.


*On the off-chance that you do require further explanation, here’s a relevant clip from Red Dwarf.

Meanwhile, the rest of us will be bouncing along to new ska punk by Random Hand and new Deutschpunk by Joseph Boys.

Newsletter subscribers can expect to get some exclusive deep cuts about life in Kazakhstan on Saturday, I’ll see the rest of you on Thursday!

Filed Under: Horror, Killer lists Tagged With: Horror, Joseph Boys, Killer lists, Random Hand

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