by Richie Smith | Apr 8, 2020 | Covid-19
I try to envision this entire scenario, the scenario of the pandemic as something much lighter, like a short scene from a comic book. It’s a short, light read. Something not even entertaining, and when we are finished, we can tear it up, and throw it out in a...
by Richie Smith | Apr 3, 2020 | Covid-19, Poetry
The lone ranger wears a mask. He came out of retirement, put aside his silver sneaker gym membership. Instead of riding a horse named Silver, he has silver at his temples, his thinning hair covered by a surgical shower cap. He has wire-rimmed glasses and a square jaw...
by Richie Smith | Mar 31, 2020 | Dreams
I follow my wife into the city streets I have to keep my distance I assume because I’m ill. I watch her walking through the village downtown as if she’s comfortable in a new neighborhood, as if she already lives there. I follow her through the village...
by Richie Smith | Nov 25, 2019 | Memoir
RICHIE SMITH About Writing Blog Media Links Contact Search for: About Writing Blog Media Links Contact Fair Memories of Two Fairs I remember my father telling me about the 1939 world‘s fair. He was only five years old back then. It was only a year or so after his...
by Richie Smith | Oct 28, 2019 | Curbside Consults
RICHIE SMITH About Writing Blog Media Links Contact Search for: About Writing Blog Media Links Contact Abstraction from Zona G In nuclei of your target cells, I saw the aldosterone man. He nodded slowly and then they blindfolded me and brought me into his lab, made me...