
Douglas macdaniel
Remember the old label with the text: "Children have been seen and heard and believed? Theme for forty days by the fire, was forty days of rain by Douglas McDaniel described as follows:" The world has seen and heard and believed. "
Forty days is neither fish nor fowl, neither the political or poetry comment, but a semi-autobiographical mixture of both - and more - Beat classic style. Beatrice, who in the style of mid-twentieth century beatniks, as Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Anne Waldman. This may seem a strange idea of a book "A lively novel and borderline blog during the Bush years, but it works for McDaniel. (If you have not yet been introduced as to type, you have to experience it. Like Jazz, it is a unique window into the American soul.)
McDaniel describes the book as "... this story is not much enlarged as to why these allegations are true or living prophet. The chaotic whirlwind of observation, metaphor and paranoid theory, in a fairly linear fashion, and mixed through hyperlinks, myth and caffeine-induced step overdrive. "In the caffeinated blend is reflections on William Blake, lost dogs, global warming, technology, died Journal career (all journalism, really, as McDaniel's request) and salamander man living under the bed. The end result is a kind of twenty-first century Walden with Freudian puns.
Douglas McDaniel has written Myth Ville blog since 2004, sharing poetry and observations, as they are collected for forty days. He is editor of the American Myth Ville Literary Review and has more than ten other volumes, including overturning Ginsberg, wrote William Blake in cyberspace and the Godz, automobiles, and Cannon.
You have no excuse to not forty days after the fire to read the Forty Days of Rain, which McDaniel is the e-book is to give away for free, and gives permission for the copied book and shared with other readers written. You can reach him via his blog on MySpace or Facebook.