GAS: Poetry, Art and Music
Video Variety Show and Journal with Interviews, Reviews, Performances, and Readings
Thursday, May 28, 2026
GAS Featured Poet: Rita S. Spalding
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Essay by Su Zi: Citizens’ Alert
Many of us have already survived the rising tides of climate catastrophe. Current predictions do not include a return to paradise, and, in fact, are fair warning of future fiascos. Perhaps, it might be wise to consider that which has been written about such events to enhance, at least, personal preparedness.
Published accounts vary widely; however, a memoir of a storm by Riza Oledan-Ramos/ Walt FJ Gooding called Drinking Seawater, which was acquired at a bookfair, contains a scene of evacuation:
This wasn’t your typical storm. This was something entirely different—something of a completely different nature than I or anyone else had ever experienced. It was as if it were alive. It sounded and felt as if it were a living thing—a conscious, breathing, thinking being with an intention, and on a mission. It was trying to get to us. First it tried the front door, then it tried the side walls; then the windows, finally the roof [...] it pounded and howled and screamed at the roof[...]the howling never stopped. It pounded and shook and finally it got its way. It tore our roof off and flung it into the night as it raced inside after us (12)
The arc of the narrative is that of aftermath, personal and specific enough to include both photographs and a survival checklist.
There are professional published accounts as well, and now, although time has passed, the possibility of Gulf storms has not. While myths about storms not coming ashore was disproven by Asheville, North Carolina, aftermath can take a generation for some healing. It has been a generation, now, since the storm that directly hit New Orleans, but mention of the storm among locals is a demarcation in time. Professional accounts of Katrina include that of New Orleans journalist Chris Rose 1 dead in attic (2005), also a memoir. In this case, the protagonist returns to see what is left and return to work.
And I’m telling you: it’s hard
It’s hard not to get crispy around the edges. It’s hard not to cry. It’s hard not to be very, very afraid.
[...]
We have a generator and water and military food rations and Doritos and smokes and booze. [...] Some of these guys lost their houses -- everything in them
[...]
And they stink. We all stink. We stink together (22)
Rose also makes mention of celebrity journalists, “The satellite trucks stretch for eight blocks on Canal Street. [...] I saw Anderson Cooper interviewing Dr Phil, Dr Phil’s camera crew filmed Cooper, and about five or six other camera crews [...] filmed all of that “(26).
Anderson Cooper included a chapter about Katrina in Dispatches from the Edge (Harper Collins 2006), along with accounts of Tsunami, Iraq and Niger. That an American city would be in the same celebrity catastrophe accounting ought to serve as warning as well. Cooper begins his account by counting corpses:
[...]the searchers find a body lying on a sidewalk in an empty-cul-de-sac.I think it’s a woman; at first, it’s hard to tell. Water wipes away identity, race, even gender. I think she’s African American, but her skin appears white, translucent almost.
Someone has covered her face and part of her body with a dirty bedspread. Her feet and hands stick out.
[...]
The team takes pictures—Click, Click—then records the woman’s GPS coordinates
[...]
I never thought I’d see this here, in America—the dead left out like trash. None of us speaks. (138)
Cooper’s narrative is interspersed with personal recollections of the city, as he tells us of individual moments of aftermath. Yet, lest someone take sole hope in evacuation centers, Cooper interviews Dr Greg Henderson, who arrived at the evacuation point, “discovered that there was no medical team there, just evacuees. Thousands of them.” (161). Cooper describes the interview site as “standing on a garbage-strewn street outside the Convention Center one week after the storm” where Dr Henderson says, “This is where hell opened its mouth” (160). As for the evacuation point itself:
They were packed in everywhere, all the way into to the street, and pretty much the other side of the street; it was just one mass of humanity. No air-conditioning, just people crying and dying. Crying and dying (161)
Cooper witnessed the Katrina aftermath for a few weeks. He makes a remark that ought to be useful for us in preparation, as he asked officials questions: “Demanding accountability is no game, and there’s nothing wrong with trying to understand who made mistakes, who failed. If no one is held accountable for their decisions their actions, all of this will happen again” (191).
These three accounts of once-rare, now frighteningly possible, super storms, must give sane people pause, especially as the northern American continent is already beleaguered with drought, fires and heat in the wake of some devastating arctic storms. Whether or not we want to consider the weather might be keystone to community, if not personal, survival. Perhaps we ought to take some consideration time while we still have it.
Su Zi is a writer, poet and essayist who produces a handmade chapbook series called Red Mare. She has been a contributor to GAS from back when it was called Gypsy Art Show, more than a decade ago.
Check out her author page on Amazon.
Thursday, May 14, 2026
GAS Featured Poet: PD Lyons
PD Lyons was born and raised in the USA Since 1998 has resided in Ireland. Spent a few years before in Cape Brenton Nova Scotia where winters are great for writing. Travelled a bit worked a lot raised two wonderful children as well as horses ( Morgans, Andalusian Thoroughbred, Irish sport horse etc.) in USA and Ireland. Has worked as dishwasher, floor washer, textile mill labourer, construction worker, pesticide sprayer, fire safety inspector, toy shop manager, substance abuse councillor, women’s shoe shop manager etc currently cutting grass in a small medieval village in co. Westmeath Ireland.
Lyons received the Mattatuck College Award for Outstanding Achievement in Poetry and a Bachelor of Science with honours from Teikyo Post University Connecticut (USA). The work of PD Lyons has appeared in many formats throughout the world. Lyons published poetry collections by Lapwing Press, Belfast and erbacce Press, Liverpool. Winner of the annual erbacce-press International Poetry Competition for 2019.
Diary
Dust in the corner
Pale light through loose boards
Soft paper pages partially filled
So small
The world with all its bigness
Could have so easily passed by.
~
Will we, all of us leave the same absence?
Know the same impossible loneliness,
As if somehow shared, could we know one another ?
Each child then, freely
Hand in hand, with their mother
Walking fussing over any small thing,
~
We have all touched this world with little fingers,
As have I.
Not as some imagining or speculation
But as a human being.
Certain of my own sense of purpose.
Afraid, so many things bigger than me.
So many things I could not wait to do.
How long does it take to be a grown up?
~
Unlike you I do know the story’s end.
Unlike you I could not, not know.
Remember me this way:
Small as I was, it all fit into my life.
Varying degrees of not knowing,
All that’s left
Between us
(for Annelies)
I knew a girl afraid of the wind
it would cause her to hide in the basement
eventually after she moved
to an apartment of her own in the west end
there was no basement
she would hide in the only room without windows
with the minimum amount of intruding sounds
the bath room.
she had the position of bank manager in a local branch
one of those modern type open plan offices large panes of window walls
sometimes when on occasion I’d have business at that particular branch
we would talk then smoke a cigarette
in the complete silence of tobacco smoke
we’d forget where we were together.
Thursday, May 7, 2026
GAS Featured Poet: Jerome Berglund
Job application
if the
answer is three
I’d like
to know what
we’re adding up
making light
leaflets blow through
narrow lane
if all of them
aren’t participating none
haven’t been
aware and
condoning
copper mining
in dead of night strips
the school bare
no one
knows about this stuff or cares
about this stuff
or cares to know
about this stuff
fishnet stockings
social media
history
ethics course —
curious how many prestigious
moral relativists
argue passionately
in defense of diets
red
building
pig farming
behind
the nineteenth
hole
pinochle
championship
art history
opening papaya
with a machete
are some
nice pigs
so long as
they’re stuffed
on corpses
THE traffiCkingALL
IS COMING FROM INSIDE THE HOUSE
of representatives
of initiation: pizza
the seventh room
of Prince Prospero's abbey
lit a
deep red
business
as usual
massacre of the innocents
revelation
of the method
we too
can guide them gradually
to the coup de grâce
scooping poop
when you have a sense of smell
sleeper car
Trump has been arrested!
. . . breaking news from
the liberal
a.i. deep fake wish
fulfillment teleplays
tree frogs
all the people
hurting
if I hear
the expression blood libel
or satanic panic
ever
again
a shepherd
is not aggressive …but it’s
defensive as f***
mine shaft
it would be great if no one ever used
the term conspiracy theorist
disparagingly
ever again
this america
they may snatch
and eat me
2
If you need more support for redistribution, reeducation, decentralized power structures, transparency and accountability, here are some snuff films, human experimentation, biowarfare for purposes of population control, racialized eugenics initiatives and demonstrable caste hierarchies, widespread compromise of communications systems and educational materials, affluent people being genuinely vampiric specifically from the poorest most vulnerable populations, assassinations of beloved national treasures, suppressing of treatments and cures for the purposes of profit and to reduce specific demographics, indications of massive false flag operations resulting in enormous loss of life. Hope this will help you swing voters still on the fence.
quite a storm
out there
initiated mambo
3
New York Times
I feel like these AI detection tools are the next Theranos miniLabs. Inconvenient picture of you surfaces in flagrante sacrificio, perhaps after failing to instigate world war three? Clearly a deep state deep fake fake news a.i. parody must be, trouble yourself not our totally trustworthy a.i. tool has a "very high" degree of confidence.
holy cloth
— hey Raefipour, our realtor
found a map




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