Unlikely 2.0


   History, n. An account mostly false, of events mostly unimportant, which are brought about by rulers mostly knaves, and soldiers mostly fools. —Ambrose Bierce


Join our mailing list!


Google Custom Search


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


Bookmarks:

Goodreads
del.icio.us




Janet Snell

E-mail this article

Janet Snell is a graduate, magna-cum-laude, of the Maryland Institute College of Art, where she studied painting with the late Ed Dugmore. She has shown her work in New York City, Baltimore, Washington, D. C., Cleveland and other cities, and is the author of two books of art with poems: Flytrap (Cleveland State University Press Poetry Center, 1990) and Heads (March Street Press, 1998). Snell publishes regularly in the small magazines and paints commissioned portraits.


Comments

No comments yet
*Name:
Email:
Notify me about new comments on this page
Hide my email
*Text:
 
Powered by Scriptsmill Comments Script