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Meta
Graze
Posted in Artwork, Poetry
Tagged clouds, God, John Biscello, josef sudek, Literary, Poetry
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Arc
It is the mouth
birthing a blood-new kiss
that begs gravity’s pardon
and raises lips
to an impossible arc.
Posted in Artwork, Poetry
Tagged Artwork, Gustav Klimt, John Biscello, kiss, Literary, Poetry
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Claim for the Meek
I do not want to see
the face of God.
I want to see her mask,
where
and for whom it cracked,
the causal history of lines and fissures;
want to trace,
with blind mute innocence,
the light quartered and drawn
in Braille, its grooves holding,
without strain or regret,
Mercy’s hidden inheritance.
Winter, A Love Story
Winter’s brides,
wearing long white scarves of sleet and song,
touching pale sky to blue lips,
breathing memory and frost;
their sorrow
and spectral want
grows hands
that enclose me, a robust crush,
matrimonial in its grip,
until I am no more than a whiff of air,
and then, not even that, a traceless speck
unremembered to light,
and how it falls.
Claim
She, bidden
by valid tense,
unhooked a claim of stars,
and lighted her grief
inverting the symmetry
of arc.
Tatters
For many years
I asked Grief to
wait outside my window,
a peripheral guest
chancing obscure, fugitive
details, and lighted tatters.
Have I been a poor host,
stranger to my own ghost
and remnants?
Review of The Boundary Stone

Hassett’s post-apocalyptic odyssey, through a fractured world of ruins and primordial reform, doubles as a valentine coded in hieroglyphics. Compelled by the nameless firelight (his “Beatrice”) that charges his heart and functions as an inner-compass, the narrator journeys forth, a survivor and witness. Textured, sonorous, and cryptic, Hassett employs a peacock’s palette of throbbing, vivid colors to render a world in flux, teetering between the future and prehistory.
The language effects a baroque lyrical swing, a Biblical bop that spirals and whorls and echoes the schizoid rhythms of the sea (now an opiate lullaby, now an inclement rush). Also, what benefits the work as a whole, is the author’s calculated spacing between clusters of language, allowing room for the brain to breathe, for words to respire, with stanzas sometimes floating like clipped prayers upon the page’s monastic whiteness.
You flowered off, your light/Farther the bearing sparks./Winds. They’ve taken you to smoke./Your Love, embering, gone glassy and sharp,/through my heart pressed for fear it loss.
It is these luminous echoes of his beloved that drives the narrator to continue journeying, to continue what is a rebirthing process. Beneath the oblique form of The Boundary Stone lies the heart of a hymn, the promise abiding every uttered syllable and cry: Love.
Upon my second reading of the work (which was so much richer when I read the words aloud), I recalled the passage from Arthur Rimbaud’s A Season in Hell:
In the dawn,/armed with a burning patience,/we shall enter the splendid Cities.
That those “splendid Cities” exist within, has been the seed and holy grail for many an inward journey, a tradition to which The Boundary Stone pays devotional respect.
Posted in Books, Poetry, Press
Tagged Christopher Hassett, John Biscello, Poetry, Review, The Boundary Stone
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Review of Raking the Dust

“Alex is a New York native living in Taos, New Mexico. Divorced dad, jobless (except for a part-time gig dressing as Spiderman) and sleeping on couches, he is devoted to one thing above all, his writing. When Alex meets songstress DJ, his creativity takes a turn toward a more kinky variety as he becomes nearly obsessive about their sexual experimentation. Following her to San Francisco, events get stranger and Alex learns that DJ is no ordinary femme fatale.
Author Biscello seamlessly shifts dimensions and manipulates reality all while keeping the narrative moving forward into richer depths. As an added bonus, he reveals a little-known side of the famous artists’ colony, Taos, the inside jokes and seedy underbelly that only a local can know” — Johanna DeBiase, author of Mama & the Hungry Hole
Posted in Books, Press
Tagged Johanna DeBiase, John Biscello, Literary, New York, Raking the Dust, Surrealism, Taos
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The Horse’s Mouth
Posted in Audio, Poetry
Tagged Ben Wright, Dylan Thomas, John Biscello, Literary, Poetry, Spoken Word
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