
VOICES FROM THE FIRE: R. Keith
Posted byMike ZonePosted inUncategorizedTags:1961, anarchy french canadian style, are you sure you're seeing what you are seeing, are you there?, art, art of loving, artist, artistry, artists that cut faces, artwork, atomic energy, Canadian pulp fiction, challengers of the unknown, childhood's end, cosmic destruction, death by punk, death by punk: black and white, death in the homeland, DFP, DFP unbound, dumpster fire, Dumpster Fire Press, explosions in the sky, flaming dumpster, Go gullibly after the symbol, Honeydew, honeydew the corrected text, I know a place, indie press, inner space, Joshua Martin, language older than words, love and death, meaning, meaningless war, Mihaela Melnic, Mike Zone, non binary deathtrap, one giant leap for mankind, one step for man, play dumb, poetry, R. Keith, Roz Washington, Samir Karimo, small press, space race, sugar, sugar bowl, survival, survive the death of meaning, symbol minded, there's going to be a lot of death, Twilight of the Superhumans, United States, valkiria, vispo, Visual poetry, voice, voices, voices for the voiceless, Voices From the Fire, VOICES FROM THE FIRE #1, voices from the fire #3, voices from the fire #4, Voices From the Fire Black & White, voices from the fire#2, voices from the fire#5, waiting for lucy, word files, words, words on the page, writing between fiction and reality

Published by Mike Zone
Mike Zone is the former Editor in Chief of Dumpster Fire Press and managing editor of Concrete Mist Press. The author of Screaming in the End: Poems and Stories, Fuck You: A Fucking Poetry Chap, Shedding Dark Places (almost), One Hell of a Muse , as well as coauthor of The Grind and Razorville. A frequent contributor to Alien Buddha Press and Mad Swirl. His work has been featured in: A Thin Slice of Anxiety, Black Shamrock Magazine, Horror Sleaze Trash, Better Than Starbucks, Piker Press, Punk Noir Magazine, Synchronized Chaos, and Cult Culture magazine. View more posts