Unlikely 2.0


   Deplorable, graphic violence is OK so long as nobody says any naughty words! —South Park


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Recent Articles:

The End of Unlikely 2.0

A Sardine on Vacation, Episode Sixty-Nine: Recommendations
Whispers of Arias: Music by Stephen Mead and Kevin MacLeod
Phil Rockstroh and Angela Tyler-Rockstroh document Occupy Wall Street with an essay and a 20-minute documentary
Linh Dinh finds meaning at Occupy Wall Street
Yacov Ben-Efrat chronicles the Tel Aviv protests
Robert Levin seeks the why behind proselytizing
Two Down (Europe, USA), One to Go (China): The Chinese Ponzi Scheme and the Oncoming Global Depression by Sam Vaknin
Three Poems by KJ
Three Poems by Sheri L. Wright
Three Poems by John Grochalski
Three Poems by Luke Skoza
Three Poems by Wendy Taylor Carlisle
Two Poems by Jonathan Penton
Playdate: Poetry by AE Reiff
The Rin Tin Jubilee: Poetry by Luke Marinac
Autobiography: A spoken-word film and poem by Kristina Marshall
What You Lose When You're Weak, You Take Back When You're Strong: Fiction by Jon Alan Carroll
My Sorrows and Disorders of the Psychiatric Kind: Fiction by George Sparling
Kara: Fiction by Iman Carol Fears
Living Two Wars: Creative Non-Fiction by Rita Bozi
Magalíluismil: Fiction by Paul Kavanagh
Peg's Cat: Fiction by Heidi Bell
Four Photographs by Sheri L. Wright
Five Images by Fabio Sassi
Six Sculptures by Stephen Harrison
In you, everything sank: A short film by Rebecca Freeman and Adam Fine


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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

Done trying to read off the screen? We're gamely willing to sell you a copy, complete with full-color reproductions, for $7:


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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