Nine Figs in the Flapjack, 12-19-14

 

 






Nine Figs in the Flapjack

Well, this is it.  Ever since "Doodlenose" folded, I've been floundering around, trying to find the right format to do what I want to do.  "Nine Figs in the Flapjack" is a graphic novel.  This is what I've been groping for.  From here on out, unless otherwise indicated, all posts will be pages (or panels, whichever you prefer) of this graphic novel.  You can probably just read it like a comic strip.  
The above image is the TITLE PAGE.

As a Medicinal Starter the Additional Metal

 



As a Medicinal Starter the Additional Metal

            No traditional globe can accurately display Kigathega without distorting all of the other land masses of the earth into horrible shapes like 1970’s Rock’n’Roll revivalists packed into European mini-cars.  As a side note, I apologize to my wife for acting so rudely the day she took me to the mini-car museum.
            …
            The waffle talks to me.  As a subset of the basement breakfast batter, it and its pancake brethren are capable of interbreeding, yet precluded from doing so by taboos of mutual apprehensions of the other’s primitive nature.
            “Both the word taboo and word tattoo come from the Polynesian language group,” the waffle tells me.
            “If I could afford a tattoo I’d get one,” I reply.  “But I’d have to come up with an image that I could live with the rest of my life, something I could identify with without ambiguity or shame.
            “Have you thought about a pretzel?” the waffle suggested.  “One with human facial features?  I’ve always admired pretzels,” he added with a wistful tone, much as I might sound if I was overheard talking about coyotes or something.
            …

Her Favorite Color Was Lavender

 

 

 
Her Favorite Color Was Lavender

            Even after the newly built capital city of Prusk had been officially declared open for business, hardly anyone came to Kigathega.   The climate was the main reason given for the lack of either colonists or tourists.  Except for a brief period in the summer, most of the new continent was uncomfortably cold.  And even then it was only on the small peninsula on which Prusk had been located that the temperature reached an average of 50º F.
            “What’s that in centigrade?” Elaine wondered as she stared up at the Prusk city hall clock tower.
            “I don’t know,” Dirk replied.  He glanced around the empty central square.  “Why did they stop called it ‘Celsius?’”
            …
            After I metaphorically close my eyes I see that I am in a room much like the back of a small store in a strip mall, only the room isn’t full of balloons awaiting inflation, each emblazoned with best wishes for a happy birthday, but cardboard boxes stacked to the ceiling, approximately ten feet high.  These boxes can be cut up into shapes for gluing onto other pieces of cardboard for making artistically satisfying prints.  In order to reserve the boxes for my own use, I write my name on them.  I always have a couple of markers with me for such purposes.  The stylized tofu press drawn on the back of my right hand was done with one of these.  One of the giraffemen standing guard asked me earlier if I was ambidextrous; I told him that, technically speaking, I approach true ambidexterity, but would never be fully accredited as such.
            …
            After I had glued together a vague depiction of one of the lost temple complexes far to the north, I left the piece in a safe place to dry.  I see that the chunks of tofu in my stomach are making me sick.  They are stacked like boxes up to the ceiling, each printed with best wishes for a satisfying bowel movement, but the symbol stamped on their bottoms urges me to vomit.
            I leave the store (or shop, for those of you in the UK).  My giraffemen follow me outside, where the walking car awaits.  Dr. Seuss called these vehicles crunk cars, but, as this term is quite possibly under copyright, I use the generic.  I don’t want his greedy family suing me.
            “Because his family did money crave,” one of the giraffemen quotes, “Dr. Seuss is spinning in his grave.”
            I nod in acknowledgement, but do not chuckle; it is not good to become too familiar with one’s employees.  They will only take advantage of such familiarity in the long run.
            Standing on the manuscript, which is huge, like something a village elder would read from while standing at a lectern in the renaissance, I climb into the cockpit of the walking car.  The giraffemen cannot join me, big as they are.  I can barely fit inside myself.  In these cold, cramped conditions, my knees will soon begin to hurt.  We must reach our destination soon.  I signal to the giraffemen to climb aboard their lizard-camels.
            …
            “Where are they going?” Elaine asked Dirk.  Standing in their heavy winter garments in the depopulated square they looked like Russians waiting for the next strongman to come along and bring them much-needed guidance.
            “North,” Dirk decided.  He shielded his eyes with his gloved hand and watched my entourage and me gallop away.
            …
            “Jesus,” Elaine swore with the freedom of the newly transplanted.  “In this weather?  Who’d go north?”
            I see them having sex in their palatial quarters in the Kumquat Building.  His body is disappointingly flabby, his penis on the small side of average.  Her body is not spectacular, but it is his that drains the scene of any erotic value.  Still, they are relatively young and fuck with the deliberation of people unsullied by pornographic falsehoods.  I see the intercourse unwind to a satisfactory display of companionship over a late breakfast and an old movie on the large screen provided by the Kigathega Company as an inducement to colonization.
            …
            The movie is called Barely Enunciated Summons for Help.  Humphrey Bogart is a wonderland of Christmastime savings.  His best friend, played by Frank Sinatra, is a clown with a drinking problem.  Depressed about Sinatra’s upcoming trial for murder, the two decide to jam their olive forks into an electrical socket simultaneously.  The socket, being necessarily schizoid, debates aloud with itself over the merits of suicide.  Albert Camus, in muppet form, holds up a mirror so that the two equally muppet-crafted faces of the socket can see each other.  Later, during a musical interlude in which the singer for Eyehategod and Page Hamilton try to kill each other, Lauren Bacall rummages through Camus’ pants looking for his muppet penis.  Robin Williams’ corpse, hanging by a pair of rainbow suspenders, swings in time to the music.
            “I think this song was written by James Taylor,” I tell Elaine and Dirk, “But this isn’t him performing it.”
            “No, it’s the Fox News Nativity Choir,” Dirk explains.
            “I thought you left town,” Elaine exclaims, gathering up a couple of cushions to cover her nakedness.  She glances around wildly, trying to discover how I got in.
            “Town,” I repeat in a sarcastic bark.

            …

The Gullet, pt.4


“The key is to not worry so much about proper sequence or the officially recognized framework,” I tried to explain.
            “We know that,” Schama laughed.  He nodded as the guitarist, a medium-sized paper sack of cleaning products with forgotten brand names like Mr. Scourer and Expunge, played the opening chords to “Gore Vidal’s Ignorance.”
            “What key is that?” I asked.
            “The key of Trower,” the guitarist answered.  Only his grim mustachios could be seen under the drooping eaves of his hat.  I liked him immediately, and resolved to show him up on the guitar at the first opportunity.

            …

The Gullet, pt. 3


“We think Peter Gabriel is right,” Schama admitted.
            If only I wasn’t so sleepy all the time.
            He worked at a grocery store.  A small grocery store in a strange town.  At night.  You could smell the refrigeration units.  Men’s adventure series paperbacks, numbered dubiously into the upper reaches of a lifetime, sometimes it took so long to get the brain working, even in such herky-jerky fashion (and willy-nilly), that it was time to put away the paper just as the first good words came to him.

            …

The Gullet, pt.2


The band had chosen as their symbol a powdered mini-donut.  Unknown to them, I had been the artist responsible for the depiction of this donut, although some hack at the record company had sanitized my vision, removing the donut-creature’s blatant genitalia and non-humanoid facial features.  Scamdam Schama, the singer, assured me that he preferred my original drawing, but that, as my brain didn’t always function properly, having been trained to see the absurdity in everything, the Enfeebler bore us up the mountain.

            …

The Gullet’s Tenebrous Backwash, as Impatient as the Tongue Itself


The Gullet’s Tenebrous Backwash, as Impatient as the Tongue Itself

            Riding along with the Vegescriptions in their private compartment in the side of Enfeebler’s tongue, I found myself thinking that I, too, could have been in a band, a real rock back, if only I had been either more sociable or more willing to compromise.
            “Or both,” I added in a voice of reprimand.  Reprimand and regret, sewn to my back like the murdered corpse of my enemy.  That’s the reason for my weight gain, not prosaic overindulgence.
            “Who are you anyway?” one of the Vegescriptions asked, as if suddenly realizing I wasn’t a guitar case.

            …

Tepid, pt.4 (conclusion)

It saddens me that, as I sit here listening to Caspar Brötzmann and feel a bellyful of corn chips dragging me inexorably down to stark staring stupidity, I couldn’t come up with anything better to write than this dreck.  Perhaps the accompanying drawings will provide this piece with the aesthetic context which I so desperately crave for my own satisfaction.  Perhaps a greater depth of meaning will be brought forward by the unforeseen interaction of the two aspects of the overall work.

            …

Tepid, pt.3


But these are commonplaces.  You didn’t come to me to hear such things.  You came to hear and see silly absurdity (or absurd silliness, depending on which direction the wind was blowing when your fashionable kite took to the sky).  That is not to say that my work is necessarily humorous; one day I’ll create something that is directly, sequentially autobiographical.  Then you’ll get not only straightforward narrative, but the biggest joke of all.

Tepid, pt. 2


I wanted to get a tattoo for a long time, but then everybody started getting them.  Now it is a statement not to have one.  I’m not a follower of Anton LaVey, but he did say a couple of wise things, among them, “Avoid mass amusements.”  If everybody else is doing something, do the opposite.  You might wind up a Christ-like figure yourself one day, but at least you won’t have wasted big money on a permanent image that may not reflect your mindset twenty years down the road.

            …

The Tepid Aspects of His Technical Hunching,pt.1



The Tepid Aspects of His Technical Hunching

            We begin with male nipples and their uselessness; they are an obvious proof, not only of evolution, but of the non-existence of any cosmic intelligence working behind the scenes to guide the universe and the design of its multiform structures.  Understand, I hate religion in general and Christianity in specific.  I hate Jesus and everything he stood for.  He wasn’t just a misunderstood teacher of peace and love; he was a madman who said, “I am god—obey and venerate me.”  The fact that so many have killed in his name only gives me more reason to abhor him and disassociate myself from his cult.  I would have my nipples removed, but for the weird fantasy that some Christian familiar with science and yet fearful of its ramifications might misinterpret my actions.

            …

Parrots, pt.4, (conclusion)


Here’s another question: how many times has Metal been declared dead?  I remember in the late 1980’s when critics were talking about the “resurgence of Metal” as if it had ever went away!  Then Nirvana came along and all the Metal bands were swept aside by some bean counter in an office somewhere.  All these “Rock journalists” breathed a collective sigh of relief and said, “Well, now that that’s over…”  But it didn’t go away, did it?  No, Metal keeps growing, expanding its empire and the diversity of its expression.  Lemmy says he doesn’t like the multiplicity of genres, decrying this-metal and that-metal, but, as blasphemous as this is to say, I don’t give a shit what Lemmy has to say about Metal.  Or Henry Rollins or Chuck Klosterman or Sam Dunn or any of the other usual commentators.

            …

Parrots, pt.3


How many times have you heard some pundit say that the guitar solo in a song should only be long enough to open another beer?  I say guitar solos should not only be as long as necessary, but they should be paid attention to.  Wouldn’t it be great if audiences heeded Hendrix’s words and sat down with their eyes closed and actually listened to the music?  Unfortunately, Metal concerts seem to be exercises in screaming and violence.   One more reason I don’t go see many bands.

            …

Parrots, pt. 2


Metal has always been misunderstood, sometimes by its own proponents.  Chuck Klosterman, who has dubiously been anointed as some kind of expert on Metal, doesn’t see the value of guitar solos.  Yet appreciation of instrumental virtuosity has always been one of the primary elements of the metal scene.  People who think that the defining characteristic of Metal is the celebration of gore and perversion are dead wrong.  Metal has a great deal in common with Jazz.  Maybe that’s why Springsteen-loving critics of the Rock-will-save-the-world school can’t stand it.  As John Lennon once said of Jazz: “I’ve been trying to avoid it all my life.”

            …

Hello Parrots of the New Age Sophistry, pt. 1


Hello Parrots of the New Age Sophistry


            Many of today’s top sludge metal bands have cited Black Flag’s 1983 album My War as a primary influence on their work.  Isn’t it strange, then, how many mainstream music critics have described that album as totally without merit?  Don’t worry: as Sludge and its sisters Stoner and Doom metal continue to rise in popularity and proliferation, the day is fast approaching when new critics will appear who praise this music and its antecedents.  Just look at what happened to Black Sabbath.  I remember when Tony Iommi was dismissed as “inept.”  I remember when Ozzy went to Russia with Bon Jovi and some other lightweights and the Rolling Stone people were stunned to discover that all the Russian kids cared about was Ozzy and his connection to Black Sabbath.  Punk is much more closely related to Metal than “Garage rock.”  One day Black Flag will be categorized with the metalheads far more than with the punks.

Bricko, pt. 4 (conclusion)



            That evening at the camp, Dirk, who was Bricko’s brother-in-law, took his tin plate of beans to where Elaine was eating and sat down beside her on a disused dynamite crate.
            “Don’t take it so hard,” he advised, shoveling beans directly into his mouth from the lip of the plate.  “Once we get back home all the world will be talking about lizard-camels and giraffe-men.  Old Burnstein thinks he found a picture of Lyndon Johnson.”
            Elaine, sitting on her own dynamite crate, waited until she had taken a swig from her bottle of Pabst Blue Ribbon (provided by the Pabst Brewing Company in the interests of furthering Man’s intellectual development) before replying.
            “I’m not really upset about that,” she insisted.  “It’s just that I, foolishly perhaps, thought that I’d have more of an opportunity to utilize my creative side on this expedition.”
            Dirk nodded.
            “You should have joined Dr. Abchu’s team,” he told Elaine.  “They’re designing the capital city.”
            …


Bricko, pt. 3


“They do look like ‘lizard-camels,’” Bricko laughed, squatting before a stack of Elaine’s rubbings.  “However, I think we’d better call them B1-type images until we determine whether or not any such creatures inhabit the region, or indeed, any part of the continent.”  He patted Elaine on the shoulder as he stood up.
            “But,” Elaine demurred, “Just as a slang term—for fun…”
            “There’s no room for slang in semantics,” Bricko returned.  “Nor is semantics for ‘fun.’”
            “I suppose…” Elaine sighed.
            “Look,” Bricko tried to mollify his assistant.  “Dirk’s found something that looks very much like a giraffe-man.”  He pointed to a boulder roughly a quarter mile away.  “I’m not letting him label it as such on the rubbings.  It’s C2 and 3-types until further notice.”

            …

Bricko, pt. 2


“Elaine,” Rollins Bricko addressed one of his assistants, “Start by making a rubbing of this section here.”  The bearded researcher indicated a cluster of petroglyphs on the immense boulder before them.  Elaine, a talented artist selected from among thousands of applicants by the Smithsonian to accompany Bricko on his exploration of the area around Mounts McCartney, Snoopy, and Roddenberry, watched as dozens of animal-like figures appeared on the paper beneath her even strokes of charcoal.  She saw them as lizard-camels, but knew she should wait for Bricko’s expert interpretation.

            …

Rollins Bricko Examines Some Mysterious Petroglyphs, pt.1


Rollins Bricko Examines Some Mysterious Petroglyphs

            Among the first people to explore the continent of Kigathega following its sudden appearance was the quasi-Polish-American semantics expert Rollins Bricko.  It was he that found the so-called “Macadamian” petroglyphs on the boulders scattered over the grassy slopes leading up to Mount McCartney.
            “The possibility that these images could have been carved by humans is remote, obviously,” Bricko later explained.
            “Why ‘obviously?’” asked the fat man charged with interviewing Bricko.
            “Because,” laughed Bricko contemptuously, “No humans had ever set foot on Kigathega before Captain Roolard and his crew three years ago.”
            Of course, this remark was met with anger and derision by the conspiracy theorists and the enthusiasts of extraterrestrial meddling, but it is not within the purview of this article to deal with the merits of such people’s arguments and beliefs.  Rather, I shall attempt to summarize the story of Rollins Bricko’s discovery and examination of the mysterious carvings and highlight some of the more interesting events and ramifications of that discovery.
            …

Just a Question

Does anybody know why Blogger automatically inserts an empty line between the last and the next-to-last sentences of my text?   Not that I actually expect anyone to answer: in seven years of doing this blog I have not received ONE e-mail from anyone who has read it.
Anyway, I've just gotten tired of editing the paragraphs back together and left them with the spaces, as you can see.
By the way, if you're wondering why, if I want feedback, I haven't enabled comments to be posted on this site, let me explain: comments not only strongly tend towards the highly tangential, but often degenerate into abuse. One can see this on just about any website that offers readers a chance to comment.  If someone really wants to tell me (not the rest of the world) how he feels about my content, then he can send me a personal message via e-mail.  The address is toadsgoboad@gmail.com

Green Frozen Eyes pt. 10 (conclusion)


Cash-Strapped in the Gradient of Bald

            After experimenting with a number of emollients, Fristo, the quantonium mechanism, eventually followed his mother’s advice and bought a bottle of Endemicus.
            “This is getting expensive,” he complained to a friend.

            The latter, a nocturnal black penny from the Ginflood district, asked around the old neighborhood for information on this obscure brand.

Green Frozen Eyes pt. 9


This package not labeled for individual retail sale.
            In commenting on these events I have refrained from passing judgment on the participants.  However, it must be said that Elaine’s attitude often angered people.

June is a Stalwart Vessel, Possessed of Steam

            “Will you never get it right?” Malarko demanded sourly.  I knew he was referring to the nocturnal black pennies which I had promised to explain once the moon had been filled with long, lingering guitar notes.

            “It’s a matter of duration,” I tried to make him understand.

Green Frozen Eyes pt. 8


Johnson interrupted.
            “Mr. Scientist, we actually came to take a look at the lemon processor and its attendant arposcomm.”
            Mr. Scientist put both his thumbs between his teeth and looked at each man in turn.  Despite his many years he yet maintained a British Invasion mop of hair and wore t-shirts with pictures of skulls, motorcycles, hungry beasts, and naked women on them.  The one he wore now bore an image by Commensurion’s sister Elaine on it, though Commensurion himself was not familiar enough with her work to recognize it as such.  The image referred not to any specific band, but was a tribute to the sludge metal genre as a whole.  Words to that effect floated above and were intertwined with the pneumatic tresses of some maternal überschwein pregnant with cosmic dread.

            “Oh really?” Scientist’s face went slack.

Green Frozen Eyes pt. 7


“Where’s the lab?” asked Commensurion.
            High above, set amid a series of platforms and walkways that connected most of the trees on the property, was Mr. Scientist’s compound, containing his laboratory, living quarters, and the nocturnal black pennies.
            “The most important question of all is whether or not God exists,” Mr. Scientist declared not long after meeting with the two men.
            “It is not,” Commensurion snapped.
            “Ah,” Scientist’s eyes grew wide behind his young Michael Caine glasses.  “You disagree.  And most vehemently.  Tell me,” he urged, taking a seat on a furry, mushroom-shaped stool and with a gesture inviting his guests to do the same on equally interesting furniture opposite him.  “Do you not abhor the thought of non-existence?”
            “No,” Commensurion answered scornfully.  “And besides which, I don’t see that the two topics are necessarily related.”

            “My dear fellow,” Scientist smiled thinly, “Once mankind’s digital offspring has completely incorporated this planet into its all-encompassing mind—“

Green Frozen Eyes pt. 6


“OK, first road on the left,” Johnson reiterated.  He handled the big car easily; he had driven a crippled boy around in a custom van for nearly two years.  The car’s sound system was excellent.  Johnson’s sludge metal albums sounded particularly crushing, even though the volume wasn’t so loud that the two men had to yell to be heard.  Johnson had allowed Commensurion to select the album they listened to.  He had done so based on the cover art.  Hyena Matriarch’s Curse-Smitten Earth was his choice.  Its cover was an obscure Max Ernst collage of farts in the shape of elderly snakes emerging from Emile Zola’s telescopic backside.   Commensurion was digging a song apparently titled “Cup After Cup of Your Photoelectric Sweat” when Johnson announced their arrival.
            “This is it?” Commensurion wondered, peering through the windshield.

            “This is it.” Johnson pulled the car beneath a tree the width of a filling station bathroom and shut off the engine.