-
Archives
- April 2026
- March 2026
- February 2026
- January 2026
- December 2025
- November 2025
- October 2025
- September 2025
- August 2025
- July 2025
- June 2025
- May 2025
- April 2025
- March 2025
- February 2025
- January 2025
- November 2024
- October 2024
- September 2024
- August 2024
- July 2024
- June 2024
- May 2024
- April 2024
- February 2024
- January 2024
- December 2023
- November 2023
- October 2023
- September 2023
- August 2023
- May 2023
- March 2023
- February 2023
- January 2023
- December 2022
- November 2022
- October 2022
- September 2022
- August 2022
- July 2022
- June 2022
- May 2022
- April 2022
- March 2022
- January 2022
- December 2021
- November 2021
- October 2021
- September 2021
- August 2021
- July 2021
- June 2021
- May 2021
- April 2021
- March 2021
- February 2021
- January 2021
- December 2020
- November 2020
- October 2020
- September 2020
- August 2020
- July 2020
- June 2020
- May 2020
- April 2020
- March 2020
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- October 2019
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
-
Meta
Fallout
Posted in Artwork, Poetry, Uncategorized
Tagged angels, chinese ink, Chua ek Kay, ink, John Biscello, Literary, Poetry, singapore
Leave a comment
Boy
At the time he didn’t know it,
but stalking the radiant specter of morninglight
as he sprinted down a cobbled alley,
he left part of himself behind
in a jigsaw piece of puddle
that later, years later, he would reflect upon
and fit into his lifewash of memories.
He would cross that puddle again, this time slower,
and with deliberate intent, gazing upon
the boy running in place, his treadmill Innocence.
The boy was in no hurry,
his youth a portal to cloud-eating and sky-grazing.
He wanted to reach out to that boy, wanted to palm the mirage
for the briefest of flickers, but he knew that as soon
as his hand touched the water the image would dissolve
and the boy would be gone forever,
so he bore the exquisite agony of prolonged staring
from an immeasurably near distance.
Posted in Artwork, Poetry, Uncategorized
Tagged boy, boyhood, Bresson, french, John Biscello, Literary, photograph, Poetry, youth
Leave a comment
Next?
A dancer’s sad dream–
flight, short-lived,
returning to earth, sharp teeth.
Posted in Poetry, Uncategorized
Tagged art, ballet, dance, dream, John Biscello, Literary, Poetry
Leave a comment
Sculpting Fire
An excerpt from Nocturne Variations:
It is like closing your eyes and trying to connect the dots.
This is what Piers is thinking as she sculpts fire onto the blondegirl’s breasts.
Her hands work over the cotton-knit sweater, and then under, fingers skimming bra as if it were runway Braille.
Piers and the blondegirl, whose name is Tracy, are at Tabanid, a nightclub on Sunset. Specifically, Piers and Tracy are in the coat-nook, a place where Piers often takes the girls she meets at the club.
Piers and Tracy’s mouths are grafted together in animal wedlock,
their tongues like forked lightning, flashing pearls of saliva.
Because Piers, at 5’2, is shorter than Tracy, 5’7, there is a furious incline to her kissing, to her desire.
Outside the coat-nook, a rapping on the door, followed by a voice—Piers. Fucking Piers. It’s time to go on. Get yer ass out here. PIERS.
The voice belongs to Trink, Piers’s shadow-show partner.
Piers disengages her mouth from Tracy’s.
The two girls are panting, inflamed.
Piers steps back, allowing her perspective to widen.
Tracy tucks stray bits of hair behind her ear.
Piers can’t tell if Tracy’s eyes are blue or green. She asks.
They change depending on the light, Tracy responds with obvious pride in this quality.
They change according to the light, Piers repeats, smiling, relishing the prickly sensation just below her navel.
Piers draws nearer to Tracy, isolating her perspective to Tracy’s face.
(Trink: Put your tongue back in your mouth and get yer ass out here.)
You’re so fucking beautiful, Piers smooths her hand over Tracy’s cheek.
Tracy, in turn, runs her fingers over Piers’s fuzzcoated scalp—I like your shaved head. The way it feels. And I like your tongue piercing.
Piers sticks out her tongue and wags it, modeling the ribbed silver stud bobbing on pink.
Then she springs forward, tongue lancing Tracy’s sealed lips.
Again the kissing, the groping, connecting the dots.
(Trink: I’m leaving Piers. You hear me? Bye!)
Piers withdraws—Guess I gotta go.
Then, clutching a swath of coat, Piers asks Tracy—Do you like leather?
What do you mean?
Piers takes a blue leather raincoat off its hanger, places it like a shawl over Tracy’s shoulders.
Who does it belong to, Tracy asks.
I don’t know. Maybe a lady named Suzanne.
Huh?
Nevermind. It’s yours.
I can’t just—
Sssssshhhh (index pinning Tracy’s lips) it’s impolite to refuse a gift. See you after the show.
Wait, one more thing.
Piers tears the sleeve of the raincoat.
There. Now it’s perfect.
Posted in Artwork, Prose, Publications, Uncategorized
Tagged excerpt, heather ross, John Biscello, Literary, nocturne variations, noir, novel, peter pan, piers, Surrealism
Leave a comment
As the World Nocturnes

I hereby invoke the blessings of the EverGreen Muses and Lit-Minded Gods as I seek a new publisher and send my “golem-baby” of a book out into the great wide world. Fare thee well, Nocturne!
ABOUT: Dystopic Peter Pan meets surrealist noir in this cinemythical tale about love, loss and the illusions of shadow-play.
Los Angeles, December, 1989, is when we first meet the seventeen-year-old Piers—shaved head, gleaming saucer eyes, waifish frame—a runaway and a savant puppeteer. Addicted to Sike, an experimental drug which promises a surrogate return to Childhood, Piers, in an act of revenge, robs a briefcase full of Sike from her dealer and flees L.A., pursued by two hit men. Hiding out in a stark Southwestern town called Redline, where she meets and is taken in by a man named Henry Hook, Piers is soon confronted by the buried trauma of her past and the ghosts risen from old haunts.
Comprising a jigsaw synthesis of narrative, journal entries, letters, monologues, film footage, poems, photographs, and press clippings, Nocturne renders an interior world of fragments and parallels, and casts a tinted light on that neverland between dreaming and waking.
Posted in Books, Prose, Publications, Uncategorized
Tagged book, coming of age, John Biscello, muses, nocturne variations, noir, novel, peter pan, Prose, publishing, Surrealism
Leave a comment
Unfinished Nocturne

Artwork by Linda Stojak
She is the living embodiment of a nocturne,
a girl who gathers dark and silence from the cave she inhabits.
Or the cave that inhabits her.
She sits, stock-still, a fugitive Buddha quietly gathering dark.
Quietly, but not always serenely. Still waters not only run deep, but also harbor swirls of turbulence. Sometimes, when she appears most calm, or is projecting composure, she is roiling inside.
She carries the dark and silence with her wherever she goes.
There are onyx pools in her cave.
From the bottom of these shallow pools she derives silt, and then converts the silt into a salve. This salve helps her to expand and adjust her perception.
When she leaves the cave at night, she does so to engage the Onyx Priestess, a goddess-wraith that moves like dark charged wind over the landscape.
The Onyx Priestess is the patron-goddess of women psychically disfigured and internally scarred. She casts down stubby luminous tendrils,
like so much spiritual confetti,
like candied benedictions,
and women in need swallow and digest this medicine.
This is how the healing begins. It is a slow healing.
It is the hands of the Onyx Priestess growing inside them,
massaging their core wounds.
The presence of the Onyx Priestess is vitalizing for the girl, a spiritual source from which she draws nourishment.
In this respect the girl’s night-time pilgrimages, abbreviated though they are, are very important to her.
From the cave she gathers dark and silence.
From the Onyx Priestess she gathers the strength and fortitude to ably contain that dark and silence.
My relationship, if you could call it that, with her was brief.
I wanted it to be longer, wanted more, yet she wouldn’t allow me to come between her and her solitary ritual of gathering dark and silence.
The consistent intake of dark and silence was part of her spiritual diet, and necessary to her existence as a Nocturne.
Several times we left the cave for excursions into the daybright world.
As much as she luxuriated in sunlight she knew there was only so much of it she could bear, so much she was able to take in, lest she put the dark and silence at risk. There was a calculated negotiation, a conscientious balancing that went into not only being but remaining a Nocturne. If that balance wasn’t maintained, she would dissolve and fade, as if she had never been there at all. Many other Nocturnes has gone the way of oblivion. In a sense, they were an endangered species, or a breed that operated from a place of lingering peril.
There was even a reminder scrawled in pulsing neon-lime (the ink drawn from a mysterious source in the cave, which she never revealed to me) which read:
I am a Nocturne,
and it is my sacred vocation
to gather dark and silence
I asked her why she wrote that, was she afraid of forgetting?
Yes, she said.
Have you ever forgotten it?
Yes, many times. And I came close to fading. Without rituals, without mantras, it is easy to forget. The world outside is mostly made up of Those Who Have Forgotten.
When I asked her what it was they had forgotten, she said she didn’t know as she was not them.
I wondered if she considered me one of Those Who Have Forgotten, yet decided not to ask. Perhaps I was afraid of being lumped in with everyone else, a tagged collective.
During our excursions into the daybright world she seemed happy. Yet it wasn’t a complete or thorough or full-on happy, it was checked by a reserve, creased with vexation. It was happy underscored darkly. I tried to ignore it. It was like admiring the surface beauty of the sea, enjoying the rhythmical symmetry of its waves, while a part of you remained aware of a malignant undertow. Measureless beauty and mystery, coupled with spells of violence and death, that was her.
It was like dating someone who was the eternal understudy for the role of pall-bearer. Or a widow waiting to happen.
An ending was born after nine months. That’s how much time we got to spend together. Most of it was spent inside her cave. I would bring candles with me and light them.
Sometimes I would hold a candle near her face. The light not only brought her features to life but made them dance.
She didn’t smile often, but when she did, a wordless joy, a luminous underscore.
I fell in love with her even though I knew she’d never leave her cave for me. Or that the cave would leave her. The two were inseparable, a union born out of a sacred bond that I couldn’t fully understand. What I did understand: I was the third wheel, the extra part, which didn’t fit in with the long-term vision. She never said what that long-term vision was. She wasn’t much for explanations or words piled on top of words. She specialized in silences and epitaphs.
Sometimes we slow-danced in the cave.
We’d slow-dance to no music. We slow-danced to the memory of music, to the possibility of music. Occasionaly, she’d hum softly, vibrate subtly, while we slow-danced. When she hummed it was almost as if the sound wasn’t coming from her but from somewhere inside the cave, a measureless echo, a distance trying to reach itself.
A part of me wanted to stay in the cave with her forever, yet I knew this wasn’t possible. It was not my cave. It belonged to her. She enjoyed my visits, maybe even entertained notions of what it would be like if I stayed there a long long time, but in taking directions from the cave itself, she knew that could never be. The gathering of the dark and the silence was a solitary affair.
The cave was not a habitat intended for two.
Daytime was a flight of fancy, a sweet brief escape, a temporal shift . . . it was all of these things, but it was not a way of life. Not for a Nocturne.
The only ones who could ever truly understand this, she told me, were other Nocturnes.
That’s why she no longer wasted time with explanations, or tried to make herself understood through words. It didn’t work. It was an impoverished form of shorthand. Other Nocturnes understood, implicitly.
I was not a Nocturne. I fell in love with a Nocturne, and therefore indentified, experiencing deep-down resonances with certain hidden qualities. What wasn’t brought out into the light, I felt and could relate to with barbed intimacy. Yet this didn’t make me a Nocturne.
To fall in love with a Nocturne, meant sacrificing a piece of your heart to her cave. Perhaps that piece functions like a stray candle, giving the Nocturne a little more light, or at least the memory of light, in which she could revive and watch old movies to pass the time.
When I found her in the cave I was unfinished. As was she. Nine months later, when we parted, we remained unfinished.
Posted in Artwork, Prose, Uncategorized
Tagged Artwork, cave, John Biscello, linda stojak, love, nocturne, onyx, Prose, visual art
Leave a comment
Silent Voices
Review of Linda Stojak’s exhibition “Silent Voices.”
“The female subjects comprising Silent Voices seem to exist in a haunted chrysalis state, or embryonic purgatory. Their faces, ashen swabs which are kin to Di Chirico’s faceless enigmas, suggest not only the tragic obliteration of identity but also the potential for rebirth, i.e., a Bardo makeover. Who are these women? Who are they in the process of becoming? What is the nature of their shedding and reconstitution? Lyrical, understated, speculative, and lucidly incomplete, Stojak’s artwork brings to mind a passage from the 14th century Japanese text Essays in Idleness, in which Kenkō writes: “In everything, no matter what it may be, uniformity is undesirable. Leaving something incomplete makes it interesting and gives one the feeling that there is room for growth.”
Read the full review at Riot Material.
Posted in Artwork, Press, Prose, Publications, Uncategorized
Tagged Artwork, exhibition, John Biscello, LewAllen galleries, linda stojak, New York, painting, Review, riot material, Santa Fe, women
Leave a comment
My Grandmother, My Chaplin
Excerpt from Raking the Dust, honoring the birthdays of my grandmother (April 15th) and Charlie Chaplin (April 16th).
In times of hardship and heartache my grandmother would recite St. Teresa’s Prayer or sing Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile” in a warbly and off-key voice, what sounded like the death cries of a rare and beautiful bird being strangled.
Smile though your heart is aching
Smile even though it’s breaking.
When there are clouds in the sky
You’ll get by.
If you smile through your pain and sorrow
Smile and maybe tomorrow
You’ll see the sun come shining through
For you.
The Prayer of St. Teresa and “Smile” were my grandmother’s aural talismans, which she voiced for herself and others.
A couple of years earlier, my grandmother had been knocked into a coma by her third stroke. I flew back to New York to visit her and brought with me a CD I had made containing different versions of “Smile.” Tony Bennett, Frank Sinatra, Rickie Lee Jones, Barbra Streisand, the instrumental version which had been featured in Chaplin’s film Modern Times (for which it had been written).
Alone in the hospital room with my grandmother, I placed headphones over her ears and let the CD play all the way through. I could faintly make out bits of music coming through the headphones as I stared at the withered and shrunken woman in the hospital bed who had replaced my grandmother. Her right arm, which was slightly bent at the elbow, had coiled in toward her chest and fossilized in that position. The deep hollows of her face gave it the look of a tissue-skinned death mask. Tubes, like transparent worms, seemed to be growing out of her nostrils and arms. Yet the thing that most struck me in telling me my grandmother was no longer my grandmother: her shorn gray hair.
My grandmother was fiercely proud and diligent when it came to dyeing her hair and keeping the gray masked or to a minimum. Over the years I had seen a varying palette of colors. Brown, frost-blonde, caramel, chestnut, burnt sienna, eggplant, but gray was never among them. I remember thinking—If my grandmother awoke from this coma and was confronted with this stranger in the mirror, the first thing she’d do is dye its hair.
Before heading back to Taos I left the CD with my Uncle Eddie and told him to play it for her. He said he would and wound up doing so, every day, religiously. After nearly four months my family decided to take my grandmother off life support, and everyone was shocked when she survived another six weeks without artificial assistance. In life my grandmother had been a fragile and diminutive woman, who had suffered abuse at the hands of her husband and waged constant battle with spells of depression, but at her core she had always possessed a prizefighter’s resilience, one of those people who refused to stay down or give up the fight. My Uncle Eddie once told me—There are people who go down Alex. And stay down. They don’t get back up. Your grandmother always gets back up.
I liked to think of my grandmother, this liver-spotted spud of a woman, going toe-to-toe with Death, knowing that the fight was rigged and there was no way she could win, yet giving it all she had as Charlie Chaplin and St. Teresa urged her on.
Posted in Prose, Publications, Uncategorized
Tagged birthday, Brooklyn, chaplin, Cinema, death, grandmother, John Biscello, love, New York, Raking the Dust, smile, Taos
Leave a comment
Birth of a Nocturne

Completed draft of my new novel, Nocturne Variations.
Posted in Prose, Publications, Uncategorized
Tagged Cinema, draft, John Biscello, Literary, manuscript, nocturne variations, novel, Prose, publishing, Surrealism
Leave a comment
Spring Dusting
As part of a Countdown Deal, the Kindle edition of my novel Raking the Dust will be available for $1.99, April 11-18.
ABOUT: In this rogue’s tale, full of sound, fury, and erotic surrealism, we meet Alex Fillameno, a writer who has traded in the machine-grind of New York for a bare bones existence in the high desert town of Taos, New Mexico. Recently divorced and jobless, Fillameno has become a regular at The End of the Road, the bar where he first encounters the alluring and enigmatic D.J., a singer and musician. Drawn to her mutable sense of reality, the two begin a romance that starts off relatively normal. When D.J. initiates Alex into the realm of sexual transfiguration, however, their lives turn inside-out, and what follows is an anti-hero’s journey into a nesting doll world of masks and fragments, multiples and parallels, time-locks and trauma; a world in which reality is celluloid and what you see is never what you get.
Posted in Artwork, Prose, Publications, Uncategorized
Tagged John Biscello, Literary, magical realism, New York, novel, Prose, Raking the Dust, San Francisco, Surrealism, Taos
Leave a comment





