Sujet : Re: Early Usenet appearance of Will Dockery from 1995
De : will.dockery (at) *nospam* gmail.com (W.Dockery)
Groupes : alt.arts.poetry.comments rec.arts.poemsDate : 26. Feb 2025, 02:27:46
Autres entêtes
Organisation : novaBBS
Message-ID : <423074312fb88e71c76f40034707a911@www.novabbs.com>
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Zod wrote:
Will Dockery wrote:
>
On Friday, May 27, 2022 at 3:35:34 PM UTC-4, Zod wrote:
On Saturday, May 21, 2022 at 6:35:14 AM UTC-4, Will Dockery wrote:
Zod wrote:
>
Will Dockery wrote:
>
An early Usenet appearance of Will Dockery, from May 12 1995:
>
>
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.arts.comics.marketplace/TbaNE0W5xPU/oNIVxNMLFasJ
>
On Friday, May 12, 1995 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, ROLLER 666 wrote:
>
Andrew Roller Presents
C O M I C U P D A T E
FREE! Internet Edition May 11, 1995
>
R E V I E W S
conducted by h0ly joe
>
<snipped for focus>
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Early Usenet appearance of Will Dockery:
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>
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.arts.comics.marketplace/TbaNE0W5xPU/oNIVxNMLFasJ
>
Dockery provides insight to the life and recent death of Freddy
Mercury
as a part of his regular "Like a Monkey on My Back" column in
Update.
Whether you knew or cared about this singer, Dockery's writing
(particularly in this installment of his column) struck me as
absolutely
fascinating.
>
[...]
>
But then, I'm just a newcomer. For a
cup of coffee I'll review anything, even a comic by William
Dockery.
>
Green Ringlets, 50c. Minicomic, eight pages. William Dockery,
P.O. Box
xxxx, Phenix City, AL 36868.
A chapbook, from whence the first poem provides the title. Each
book
apparently comes with a free coffee stain. (Mine did, anyway.)
Care for some disjointed images, rendered with varying degrees of
proficiency, complete with a bizarre, Egyptian pharaoh cover?
This is the
book for you. There's a poem about the south and several about
females.
I could write this thing up really good, but I'm full. I had to
feed the
hamburger Dockery threw over the bridge to me to a cat. It was
lukewarm,
anyway. If I'm to work for food, Dockery, it has to be hot.
Anyway, the
onion rings were good. For those I'll quoth several of his better
lines:
>
"Answers like seeds being dispersed into
"the breeze...
"...We stood in the marsh of reeds...
"...The Science Ladies
"wandering inside my soul (pg. 5)."
>
There ya go. Thank God Wilson quit publishing.
>
felt, 50c postpaid. Minicomic, eight pages. William Dockery, P.O.
Box
xxxx, Phenix City, AL 36868.
On the back cover of this tome is written the words, "Second
Printing."
I was going to joke that with Dockery, this means my copy is not
only the
second printing but the second copy. However, this damn thing is
actually
very well written. Maybe he did actually print more than one copy
in the
first printing, and sold out!
felt begins poorly, but picks up at the top of page four. Then
things
really get going at the bottom of page four, and the lines roll
on through
thunderous poetic crescendoes right to the end. There are amazing
images
here; Tatumville park, the memory of Tracy, the father who's "a
grey cat,"
even a lake of disappearing paths.
I highly recommend this chapbook on two counts, as a stunning
book of
poems and as a sample of the best the comics small press has to
offer.
>
[...]
>
Also included were "scandal sheet" style news items on local real
life celebrities in the Columbus-Phenix City music/art/poetry scene of
the 1990s, very similar to the impostor trolls seen at present:
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C O M I C U P D A T E N E W S
presented by holy joe
>
WILSON THE BUM
>
There are three types of homeless people in this world. There is
the
Hobo, which is a migratory worker. Then there is the Tramp, which
is a
migratory non-worker. Finally, there is the Bum, which is a
non-migratory
non-worker. This I learned recently from my researches at the
Phenix City
library. Learning this, I decided to investigate certain
personalities of
the small press, to see which category they fit into (and to
justify
peeking into Carol Horny's window!)
Rick Howe - a Hobo. Migrating from South Carolina to Columbus,
with
plans to move on to Sacramento, but working at McDonald's.
John Jones - a Tramp. Migrating from Philly to a trailer park in
Phenix
City, never gainfully employed (except by the government), and
always one
step ahead of the law due to his "art" photos.
p.d. Wilson - a Bum. Never going anyplace, and never working
either. (I
think he accidentally wired himself to his junkyard computer and
can't get
loose, but that's no excuse.)
Carol Horn - Welfare Queen, and purveyor of living room
performance art
porno shows, which she doesn't know has a nationwide audience,
thanks to
my VHS Handicam.
A. Holer - I was going to list this AOL a-hole as a Bum, but
recently he
threw away all his Penthouses and became gainfully employed! (As
the
Regional Coordinator of the Boy Love Society.)
>
NOTE: The premier issue of Comic Update is posted on
alt.comics.alternative. It is the issue for May 10th. It consists
of
three parts: COMIC UPDATE (Part One), COMIC UPDATE (PART TWO),
and COMIC
UPDATE (PART THREE OF THREE).
>
ROLLER PUBLICATIONS Founded 1972. Continuously publishing since
1986.
>
END OF TRANSMISSION
>
Interestingly, I didn't post to Usenet, or to the internet at all,
until June of 1998.
>
--
Songs & poetry of Will Dockery:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery
Long time ago....
>
Yes, and here's a photograph from that era, circa 1997:
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https://www.instagram.com/p/CdzpTcRMgWF/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
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HTH and HAND.
GROOVY.....!!
>
Yes:
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https://www.instagram.com/p/CdzpTcRMgWF/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
>
Humphrey Bogart, Christy Young, and Will Dockery at Toad's Book Store on
Broadway. Columbus, Georgia. Late 1990's (Photograph by Walter Mallard)
https://www.instagram.com/p/CdzpTcRMgWF/?igshid=MDJmNzVkMjY=
>
Astounding historical image...
Thanks again for the nod, Zod.
😏