Unlikely 2.0


   While I thought I was learning how to live, I have been learning how to die. —Leonardo da Vinci


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Editor's Note
Three Poems by Steve Dalachinsky
Three Poems by Dan Raphael
Three Poems by Sara Sutler-Cohen
Three Poems by Changming Yuan
Three Poems by David LaBounty
Two Poems by Mickey C.
Two Poems by Beth Fleeson
Two Poems by Justin Hyde
Three Poems by Aryan Kaganof
Gabriel Ricard reviews CPR for Dummies and interviews the author, Mickey Z.
Right Before the Scatter: Fiction by P. H. Madore
Outside: Fiction by Kevin Lavey
Beguiled by Beef: Fiction by Dawn Corrigan
Wife's two-pronged therapy approach forestall's husband's Thanksgiving pussy jokes: Fiction by Martin Jones
Ludmila's Voyage: A Novella by Amanda Earl
Chapters Fourteen through Sixteen of sLAsH by Bill Berry
Joe Bageant on the 2008 Belizean elections
Beena Sarwar on the attack on the Islamabad Marriott
It's the Derivatives, Stupid!: Why Frannie, Freddie, and AIG All Had to Be Bailed Out by Ellen Brown Subverting Democracy Through Electoral Fraud by Stephen Lendman
The Wicked Witch Gets Her Wish: A Short Film by Cecelia Chapman and Jeff Crouch
A Live Video Recording of The Pony Gropers of 910 Noise
Kane X. Faucher reviews Sensoria by Matina Stamatakis
Nine Altered Photographs by Anna Maly
Five Collages by Shane Allison


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The First Combination Special Video Contest


Have you seen Wendy Taylor Carlisle's new page?


Moonlight on Moloch
by Luke Buckham

Unlikely 2.0 is proud to present its first chapbook, Moonlight on Moloch: 20 Redneck Symphonies by Luke Buckham. Featuring color photographs by Kelly Hoffman, Moonlight on Moloch is an imagistic, surreal voyage into the method and madness of these very surreal times. Stark and blunt, but never cynical, Moonlight on Moloch explores the violence of America's current mental illness and offers no solution but the love of creativity.

To view Moonlight on Moloch, you'll need Adobe Acrobat Reader, a free download.

Moonlight on Moloch
for screen viewing, 2.93m
for printout as a booklet, 2.92m


E-mail this article

Luke Buckham says, “Current poetry, despite the fact that people like Simic & Sapphire have published great work, has become cluttered with cowardly, cliched, unmemorable verse. One of the most admirable features of humanity is that while the general public does it's job to keep fads & advertisers comfortably alive, the counterculture usually manages to preserve superb art. We can access work by Hieronymous Bosch even though he died nearly 500 years ago. Still, the work of great poets like Micheline & Norse has gone out of print, and this is shameful. It means that the counterculture could be doing a much better job.”


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