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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: genetic coding, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 2 of 2
1. There's a Closet in my Nightmare -- a poem about nightmares/a nightmare poem

THERE’S A CLOSET IN MY NIGHTMARE
By
Gregory K.

There’s a closet in my nightmare
With a door that’s open wide.
It gives a perfect view of all the scary things inside.

My hangs-up hang on hangers.
Anxious thoughts dart left and right.
A case of nerves up on a shelf grows bigger every night.

My worries clump in giant groups.
Each fear sits all alone.
Lurking in dark corners is the scary, great unknown.

I used to try to stay awake –
I’d play or read a book.
I didn’t want to fall asleep and have to take a look.

Still, every night my eyes would shut.
I’d drift to sleep and then…
My mind would soon be staring in that closet once again.

But then one night I realized
I could choose to close the door….
Now that closet in my nightmare just can’t scare me anymore.


The Poetry Friday roundup is over at the Well-Read Child this week. Meanwhile, I'm posting an original poem each day in April in celebration of National Poetry Month. Links to this and other poems here on GottaBook (and I post all year round, because poetry is NOT just for April!) are collected over on the right of the blog under the headline "The Poems".

If you want to get all my new poems (and only the poems) emailed to you for freeee as they hit the blog, enter your email address in the box below then click subscribe!

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2. Invasive Procedures by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston

I have to admit I wasn’t expecting much when I picked this one up (then why read it you ask; because I always read Orson Scott Card’s new books).  I figured Card hadn’t even really written it, but merely come up with a vague storyline, passed it off to some rookie, and then put his name on it to sell more books.  I know I sound jaded, but Robert Ludlum anyone?  I mean the man is dead! How the heck is he still writing books??!?!?!? Ok, back to this book.  It took me a little while to get into it, but it was a decent book.  It reminded me of a Michael Crichton type book.  There is a crazy scientist creating mutant DNA not to hurt anyone, but to reverse genetic mutations.  Unfortunately, the mutant DNA is actualyl a virus that is so virulent it will kill anyone it comes in contact with within 5 minutes (except the person it was made for of course)  Enter government agencies, a kidnapped doctor, and a crazy plan to rid the world of disease and you have an action packed thriller.  The big selling point is that it is not typical and the lines between good and evil are a little more blurred than in most books of this nature, which gives it a new twist.  I feel like there could have been a better ending because it kind of left my a creeped out, but I think they wanted to do that.  SO if you are in the mood for a medicalish thriller I would kinda recommend picking this one up. 

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