Scratchings on the Wall is a curious thing, an oddity at once strange yet familiar. Mixing personal commentary, some pithy vignettes, and three decades worth of song lyrics, Dave Winans stakes out his own claim as an honorary modern-day member of what music critic Greil Marcus refers to as the "Invisible Republic." From the opening tribute to his sister to the fond farewell to bluegrass legend John Hartford, Winans touches upon the personal and political in his search for "common sense, a kinder faith, and a little clear-eyed understanding of the craziness around us." In between are ballads, rags, dirges, talking blues and love songs about, among other things, dogs, family, God, street musicians, women and baseball.
Dave Dion's brand new autobiography proves conclusively why he is considered the most popular Late Model driver in the Northeast. Working with long time announcer and journalist, Dave Moody, Dion talks passionately about his racing career and his family's personal struggle with alcoholism, the Vietnam War, and the pressures of decades on the road. Loaded with photography, it is the classic story of a rugged individualist who pieces together a moral code far more precious that the silver in his hundreds of trophies.
The biography of Dave Gordon, often called the Uk's Manara. Detailing Dave's origins and relationships, this is an insight into one of UK comicdoms creators.
Dave Madden, the comedian and actor perhaps best known as Reuben Kincaid in The Partridge Family television series tells all. Raised by his aunt in a small midwest town, Dave went on to success as a stand-up comic and actor in Hollywood. Regarded as one of the nicest men in Hollywood, his memoir includes behind the scenes accounts of his experiences, plus never before published photos of the popular Partridge Family "boys," David Cassidy and Danny Bonaduce.
Poetry Magazine founded in 1988, published by Iniquity Press/Vendetta Books, edited by Dave Roskos. This is issue #20. Winter 2019. Contributors include: Jen Dunford Roskos, Angela Mark, Michael Shores, Helen Hoyt, Olga Cabral, Bree, Anthony George, Joe Weil, Jim Cohn, Lamont Steptoe, Rick Kearns, D.r. Wagner, John Lunar Richey, Michael Pingarron, Matt Borczon, Dave Church, Kell Robertson, normal, Andy Clausen, Pamela Twining, Cliff Fyman, Tom Obrzut, Donald Lev, Matt Borkowski, Miriam Halliday Borkowski, Eugenia Borkowski-Sypherd, Mary Elizabeth Borkowski, Dwyer Jones, Kevin Hayes, Chris Stroffolino, Alan Catlin, Allen Johnson, Stuart N. Ross, Charlie Mosler, Andrew Gettler, Arturo Desimone, Neeli Cherkovski, Paul Sohar, Istvan Eorsi, Adolf Wolff, Hilary Krzywkowski, Tom Kryss, Alex Gildzen, John Burroughs, Joel Lewis, Bob Rixon, William Taylor Jr, Beth Borrus, Mary Dacorro, Nourish Cruz, Allison Baldwin, Emily Vogel, Rebecca Schumejda, Ingrid Swanberg, Loring Hughes, Lotus Baby, Frances Gregg, Bertha Sanchez Bello, Charles Joseph, A.D. Winans, William Wantling, Dave Roskos, Fenton Johnson, Jakima Davis, Yictove aka Eugene Turk, Christopher F. Brown, Lorri Jackson, Misa Levey, Joe Davidson, Sheryl L. Nelms, Jeff Maschi, Arnold Skemer, Joe Roarty, Marc Olmsted, Kevin Ridgeway, Henry Dunlevy, Anthony Bernstein, Seth Howard, Lonnie Monka, Larry Marshall, Helmut C. Calabrese, Jake St John, Tom Weigel, Joel Dailey, Gillian G. Hiscox, Gregory Schwartz, Jeffrey Grossman, John Bennett, Albert Huffstickler, M. Kettner, Ed Galing, Michael Estabrook, Mather Schneider, Jonathan Church, Catfish McDaris, Kurt Nimmo, Ron Androla, David S. Pointer, Doug Draime, Mike Faran, Ed Sousa, Ken Greenley, Joe Haskins, Richard D. Houff, Bart Solarczyk, Scott Silsbe, K.W. Perry, Paul Brooks, Scott Roskos, John Dorsey, Damian Rucci, Carl Kaucher, Calvin Kaucher, Brenton Booth, Bob Kaufman, Russell Salamon. A REVIEW OF BIG HAMMER #19: "Much of the poetry seems to have an elegaic quality for the passing of the human species, if not the earth as an ongoing, near-future prospect. Simple, declarative lyrics. Many full-page drawings, often fantastic or surreal--some cartoonish--as well as collages and fancy borders for some poems. There are blows against the literary establishment, the modern elites, the ruling class, their greed and heartlessness. Little tales of suffering--of love gone missing or awry. Here's one by Mather schneider: 'I watch a fly land on the counter / sucking on a drop of something sugary / I think of cute Billy Collins / buzzing around his house on espresso // then squash it flat / as the Hudson Review' Ooh. Good one." by Phil Wagner in ICONOCLAST
Dave Davies renown Freehand Artist, Writer, Entrepreneur, shares highlights of his life spanning over fifty years of Adventure, Artistry, Wit and Wisdom
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.