.
1960-1969 1970-1979 1980-1984 1985-1989
1990-1994 1995-1999 2000-2003  

This is a list of Gerald Locklin's work from 2000-2003.

B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K-L   M   N   O   P   Q-R   S   T   U-V   W   Y

A

"across from where we're sitting," LiqO 2000 Sum p12

AELBERT CUYP: THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT, Coagula #49 2001 Jan p32, Life p173

AESTHETIC JUDGMENT IS NOT ARBITRARY, Art & Life p12

"after numerous unsuccessful phrasings,", Mystical p33

"after the doctor in charge of," LiqO #33 2003? p25

"after years of consuming," Silt #2 2001 p3

AFTERNOON: TEN TO SIX [prose], Storie #42/43 2001 May/Sept p72

"l'air, l'oxygène, et la lumière coexistaient encore," Gros #30 2001 Sept p34

"air, oxygen, and light still co-existed," BS#6 p57, Gros #30 2001 Sept p34

AKHNATEN'S TOWN, Familiarities p38

ALBRECHT DÜRER: ADAM AND EVE, 1504, Ambit #169 2002 Sum p68

ALEXANDER CALDER: BIG RED, ROXBURY FLURRY, AND THE ARCHES, Cerberus #49 2003? p39

ALFRED STEIGLITZ: FLATIRON (REPRISE), Author p15

ALFRED STEIGLITZ: THE FLATIRON BUILDING, 1902, Life p148

ALICE NEEL: ANDY WARHOL, 1990, ZZZ #37 2002 p45

"all music is religious,", Duke p17

"all our cats love my wife," Penniless #11 2000? p35

"all stars are six-pointed.", Life p135

"all the food critics hate iceberg lettuce.", Iceberg p13

"allora, se hanno assolutamente deciso," Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p33

Almeida, Sérgio

BUKOWSKI MUDOU A FACE DA LITERATURA [GL interview], Jornal 2002 Dec 11 p28

ALMOND BLOSSOM, Life p17, Rattle #13 2000 Sum p54

"almost as flat as hockney's," Slip #22 2002 p54

ALMOST SYMBIOTIC, Pearl #29 2000 Fall/Win p59

ALTE DRECKSÄCKE UND DIE NEUE DOPPELMORAL, Hommage p29

AMERICA FIRST, Mystical p21

"america was not quite ready for," Henry's p31

"and it troubled him that his brother, theo, named," Life p17, Tears #28 2001 Spr p38

AND SOMEDAY THEY WILL UNDERSTAND, Iceberg p34

AND WHO KNOWS WHAT GOES ON IN THOSE PLACES?, Bender #3 2000 p30, Life p201

"and yet if it's an," Life p12

ANDRÉ DERAIN: BÂTEAU À COLLIOURE, 1905, Mystical p18

ANDRÉ DERAIN: WINDOW AT VERS, 1912, Cider #1 2000 p116, Life p153

ANDY AT THE TATE, FiveA #18 2003 p22

ANDY WARHOL: TWO MARILYNS, 1962, Henry's p10

"the anima must,", Duke p21

ANOMIE, Life p197

ANSWERED PRAYER, Author p10

THE ANTI-EXPERT, Coagula #54 2001 Nov p40, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p44

ANTON BRUCKNER: SYMPHONY NUMBER 9, Tears #32 2002 Sum p81

"apparently he had to either," Henry's p26

LES APPARTEMENTS DE WALDEN/WOODSTOCK, Recueil p12

"the aqueduct flows," Ambit #169 2002 Sum p68

ARE THE SOCIAL POLICE MISREPRESENTING THEIR CONSTITUENCY?, Life p190

"are there mountains at the north pole?, Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

"argenteuil, giverny, auvers," Art & Life p9

Armstrong, R. D.

PROFILE OF GERALD LOCKLIN [interview], Lummox 6(11) 2000 Nov cover & p11

ART & LIFE by LOCKLIN [rev], Lummox 7(3) 2001 Mar p11

ART AND LIFE, Life p125

ARTHUR DOVE: THAT RED ONE, Author p20

ARTHUR STREETON: THE PURPLE NOON'S TRANSPARENT MIGHT, 1896, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p54

"as a kid i had," LiqO #33 2003? p25

"as a writer you get to seek," Life p82, Reater #4 2000 p16

"as many times as i looked it up,", Life p197

"as the finale of his set,", Tears #32 2002 Sum p84

"at a party for a young artist," Bender #3 2000 p30, Life p201

"at death valley you encounter visitors," Familiarities p35

"at his toilet.", Life p183, Slip #20 2000 p101

AT LEAST SHE WAS SMILING, Brobd #20 2001 Sum np

AT OUR LITTLE BRANCH LIBRARY, NerveC #12 2001 Fall p19

"at sim's coffee shop on the corner," Iceberg p20

AT THE ABSTRACT EXHIBITION, Life p195

"at the carpenter performing arts center," Lummox 8(4) 2002 Apr p22

"at the ellsworth kelly exhibition," ZZZ #31 2001 Feb p36

"at the end no one can tell," Ambit #160 2000 p81

AT THE END OF THE EUROCENTRIC CENTURY, Pitch #3 2000 p6

"at the fall exhibition," IB&AB p97

"at the fancy saturday night performance," Home #47 2001 Spr p17

"at the gala poetry reading," Iceberg p27

"at the jazz bakery," Life p92

AT THE OPERA, Hell p19, Life p139, Staplegun #10 2000 Fall p24

AT THE SCORE, Henry's p5

"at the start of the fall semester," Bender #3 2000 p20, Life p165

"at the table across from mine," Pitch #3 2000 p7

AUGUST RODIN: TESTA MOZZATA DI GIOVANNI BATTISTA, MARMO, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p33

AUGUSTE RODIN: SEVERED HEAD OF JOHN THE BAPTIST, MARBLE, Life p180, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p32

THE AUTHOR IS NOT QUITE DEAD, Author p3

 

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"back in the fall of 1964 or spring of '65,", Takes p4

BACK TO THE FUTURE, Takes p7

"the backyards of brooklyn," Big H #6 2003 p65

THE BARD OF AMPHIBIA, Mystical p37

"the bar-snack display," Mystical p34

Basinski, Michael

THE FIREBIRD POEMS by LOCKLIN [rev], BlueB #16 2000 Apr p53

GERALD LOCKLIN: THE HOBGOBLIN OF AMERICAN POETRY [prose], Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p122

GO WEST, YOUNG TOAD by LOCKLIN [rev], BlueB #16 2000 Apr p53

"the bassist must be strong," PressT 2002 Jan 10 p.A2

"baudelaire said, 'be drunk always,", Life p46

THE BEAT GOES ON. PROLIFIC LONG BEACH POET-WRITER GERALD LOCKLIN WILL READ FROM HIS LATEST BOOK TONIGHT AT BORDERS [prose]

Stevens, Joe, PressT 2000 May 25 p.C1

BECALMED, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p373

BECALMED [prose], Candy p199

"because i write a lot of jazz poems,", Coagula #57 2002 June p34, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p16

"because i'd read his jazz described as," Takes p16

"because my daughter's eighth-grade teachers," Iceberg p2

BEER, BlueB #16 2000 Apr p54

"being a cat means," LiqO #33 2003? p25

UN BEL DI, Iceberg p2

BELLA WITH WHITE COLLAR, Life P139

BERGAMOT STATION: 10-28-00, Coagula #50 2001 Mar p41

BERTHE MORISOT: THE SISTERS, 1869, Cerberus #43 2001 p4

BETTER GIT IT IN YOUR SOUL, Duke p17

THE BETTER PART OF VALOR, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p21

"between sets at a jazz club," FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9

BIÈRE, Recueil p3

BIG DRINKER, Joey #37 2002 Spr p29

THE BIG EASY, Cerberus #44 2001 Nov p26, Rising #22 2001 Spr p32

BIG KIDS, WordP #3 2000 Fall p2

BIG MOMMA AT MOMA, Coagula #46 2000 Sum p48

"bird-chested kid with bad teeth,", Life p59

THE BIRTH OF TRAGEDY FROM THE SPIRIT OF MUSIC, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p134

"the black of death," Luna #2 2000 Spr p26

BLAST FROM THE PAST, Bender #3 2000 p21, Life p166

BLOOMSBURY, Art & Life p1, Life p127, Tears #31 2002 Spr p9

BLUE IN GREEN, Takes p5

BLUE LESTER, Duke p1

THE BLUE NUN NOTICES, Takes p10

BLURB [to DO NOT LOOK DIRECTLY INTO ME by CROCKER], DNLDIM back cover

"boats are surface-fish that," Mystical p18

BOB THOMPSON: VENUS AND ADONIS, 1964, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p51

BONE MUSIC, Takes p4

BONNARD: LA FENÊTRE OUVERTE, 1921, Gros #30 2001 Sept p34

BONNARD: THE OPEN WINDOW, 1921, BS#6 p57, Gros #30 2001 Sept p34

THE BONNARD-VUILLARD SYNDROME, Art & Life p10

"borough of continuous town houses," Coagula #54 2001 Nov p40

THE BOTTOMLESS LINE, MainS 5(1) 2000 Spr p18

THE BOULEVARD DE CLICHY, Life p32, Reater #4 2000 p19

Brantingham, John & Haven, Mick

GERALD LOCKLIN'S INFLUENCE ON CHARLES BUKOWSKI'S PULP [prose], Notes 30(2) 2000 Mar p4

Brantingham, John M. & Haven, Mick

WISH THEY ALL COULD BE CALIFORNIA WRITERS [prose] [re: GL], Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p112

BRAUTIGAN'S PSYCHOMACHIA [prose] [GL cited]

Hume, Kathryn, Mosaic 34(1) 2001 Mar p75–92

"brian garfield wrote the novel," Life p74

BRIDGES, Art & Life p16

BRUCE NAUMAN: RAW-WAR, 1971, Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

"build a yellow house," Life p25, NerveC #10 2000 Fall p58

BUKOWSKI, Tundra #2 2001 Sept p96

BUKOWSKI, CHARLES HENRY [about], Art Surv p174 184 190 213 221

Locklin, Gerald & Stetler, Charles, Art Surv p191–192

"bukowski hat gut daran getan, sich," Hommage p29

BUKOWSKI MUDOU A FACE DA LITERATURA [GL interview]

Almeida, Sérgio, Jornal 2002 Dec 11 p28

"bukowski was right to," Brobd #24 2002 Sum, Life p189, Lummox 2000 Aug 6(8?) p23

BUK'S BEGRÄBNIS [prose], Mr. Buk cut 9

THE BULLET TRAIN, Takes p9

THE BUMMER [prose], Candy p229

"bumping in the oakland," Bender #3 2000 p21, Life p166

"a bunch of us ex-jocks," Familiarities p28

Burns, Jim

THE LIFE FORCE POEMS by LOCKLIN [rev], Ambit #170 2002 Aut p67

BUT PLEASE, NO THOMAS KINKADES, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p16

BUT PLEASE: NO THOMAS KINKADES, Coagula #57 2002 June p34

"but some days i'm happy.", Mystical p10

THE BUTT-BUTT WALL, Art & Life p13

BUTTERFLY, Life p68

 

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"Ça prend du temps pour en arriver là, mais ça ne peut mal de vous tuer.", Recueil p3

"the cabbie from the oakland airport to," Iceberg p22

Calanis, John

CHICANO POET GAMBOA DIES AT 66 [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 Dec 16 p.A3

CANDY BARS by LOCKLIN [rev], BlueB #4 2000 p45, PW 247(35) 2000 Aug 28 p56

Armstrong, R. D., Lummox 7(12) 2001 Dec p15

Dersley, K. M., Tears #28 2001 Spr p92

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

Santo, P., LJ 125(15) 2000 Sept 15 p117

CANDY BARS [prose], Candy p167

THE CANOPY (HUPPA), 1912, Life p141

CARAVAN, Duke p11

THE CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION CLASS, Author p16, Shrimp 2000 Fall p18

CARMEN, Life p87

CASPAR DAVID FRIEDRICH: TWO MEN CONTEMPLATING THE MOON, 1830, Henry's p24

CAT POEM, LiqO #33 2003? p25

"the catalogue views it as a," Life p29

"ce poème-ci s'intitule 'que dalle.'", Recueil p8

CELL PHONE [prose], Pearl #32 2003 Spr/Sum p81

CEMETERY GATES, 1917, Life p136

CEREBRAL ACUPUNCTURE, MainS 5(1) 2000 Spr p19

CÉZANNE, Art & Life p15

CÉZANNE: SELF-PORTRAIT: 1878-80, Life p168, Minot #36 2000 p46

CHAIM SOUTINE: HANGING TURKEY AND HEAD AND CARCASS OF A HORSE, Life p187

CHAIM SOUTINE: HILL AT CÉRET, Life p112

CHAIM SOUTINE: LANDSCAPE AT CAGNES, Author p19

CHANGING OF THE GUARD, Staplegun #14 2002 Sum p16

CHARLES BUKOWSKI, A SURE BET [excerpt], Art Surv p164 & 170–171

CHARLES BUKOWSKI [about]

Locklin, Gerald & Stetler, Charles, Art Surv p191–192

CHARLES MINGUS: MINGUS AH UM, Duke p12

CHARLES SHEELER: CLASSIC LANDSCAPE, 1931, Life p60

CHASING THE TOAD: GONZO INDEXING AND GERALD LOCKLIN [prose]

Thomas, Joy, Tears #33 2002 Fall p101

Cherin, Patricia H.

INTERVIEW WITH GERALD LOCKLIN, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p138

CHICANO POET GAMBOA DIES AT 66 [prose] [cites GL]

Calanis, John, PressT 2000 Dec 16 p.A3

"children should not smoke cigars.", Art & Life p19, First #14 2000 p25

"the chilean jazz ingenue," Four Jazz p8

CHINESE CHECKMATE, FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9

"christ, what great costumes!", Mystical p12

CHRISTIAN HEEB: NATIONAL GALLERY, TRAFALGAR SQUARE, PHOTO, 2000, Henry's p14

CHRISTIAN HEEB: SOUTH KENSINGTON, PHOTO, 2000, Coagula #54 2001 Nov p40

CHRISTIAN HEEB: TOWER BRIDGE, PHOTO, 2000, Henry's p19

CHRISTIAN HEEB: VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, PHOTO, 2000, Henry's p20

CHRISTIAN HEEB: VIEW FROM ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL, PHOTO, 2000, Henry's p16

CHRISTIAN HEEB: WESTMINSTER ABBEY, PHOTO, 2000, Henry's p17

CHRISTOPHER BURKETT: FIR AND SNOW, IB&AB p96

CHUCK CLOSE, Mystical p14

CHUCK CLOSE: ELIZABETH, 1989, ZZZ #31 2001 Mar p16

CHUCK CLOSE: ROY II (1994), Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

CINDY SHERMAN, Henry's p7

CIRCUITRY [prose], Candy p193

CITY OF POETS [prose]

Manly, Richard, Beach R #1 2001 p12

CLAES OLDENBURG, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p44

CLAES OLDENBURG: FRENCH FRIES AND KETCHUP, GIANT FAGENDS, AND SOFT TOILET, ZZZ #38 2002 p20

CLASSIC ANECDOTE FROM A CLASS ACT, Staplegun #11 2001 Spr p27

CLAUDE MONET: WOMAN WITH A PARASOL: MADAME MONET AND HER SON, 1875, Art & Life p17

CLAUDIA ACUÑA, Four Jazz p8

THE CLOCK DOES NOT GO CLICKETY-CLACK, Dockernet #31 2000 May p1, Jeté #8 2001 May p34

"the clock on the wall," Dockernet #31 2000 May p1, Jeté #8 2001 May p34

CLOSING THE BOOK, Life p49

COFFEE-LESS BREAK, Familiarities p28

A COMER: CARLOS McKINNEY WITH ELVIS JONES, Life p95

COMMENT BIEN S'ENTENDRE AVEC CHARKES BUKOWSKI [prose], Recueil p20

A COMMERCIAL FOR DIE-HARD BATTERIES, Iceberg p7

THE COMMON READER, Pearl #31 2002 Sum p11

THE CONDEMNED MAN'S LAST SUPPER, Iceberg p25

CONNECT THE DOTTED LINES, Life p75

CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI: MADEMOISELLE POGANY, 1912, Author p11

CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI: SLEEPING MUSE, 1909-10, FiveA #17 2002 p21

CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI: SLEEPING MUSE, 1909-1910, Coagula #57 2002 June p34

CONTACTS, Iceberg p14

THE COOLEST CATS ON THE CHOPPING BLOCK, Life p100

THE COTTAGE, Life p37, Tears #28 2001 Spr p42

THE COTTON PICKERS, Henry's p31

COUNTERPARTS, Tears #32 2002 Sum p82

THE COUNTRY SCHOOL, Henry's p29

THE COURTESAN, 1887, Life p27

Cowles, Joseph

PROLEGOMENON [prose], Simpler p.iii

CRAB ON ITS BACK, Life p29

"the creator was the first calligrapher;", Art: M #24 2001 p37

"the critic says this photo," Life p117

CROQUE M'AMSELLE, Staplegun #11 2001 Spr p26

THE CRUELEST HOMOPHOBE, Tears #31 2002 Spr p15

 

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A DAB OF PATERNAL SELF-PITY, Iceberg p24

"'daddy,' my daughter asks, 'why do doctors," Mystical p22

"dancer, crowned and silk-", Heel #7 2000 p34

DANNY BOY [GL singing], Albuz track 16

"Dans un poêle, cruisez à l'etouffée un livre de," Recueil p15

DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI: BOCCA BACIATA (LIPS THAT HAVE BEEN KISSED), ZZZ #33 2001 Nov p25

DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI: MY LADY GREENSLEEVES, Shoes #2 2001 March p55

Dathorne, O. R.

HEMINGWAY COLLOQUIUM: THE POET GOES TO CUBA by LOCKLIN [rev], JoCS 16(1/2) 2001 Fall/Sum p124

DAVE ALVIN, A MAN FOR ALL AGES [prose] [cites GL]

Douglas, Theo, PressT 2000 Aug 24 p.C1

DAVID HAMMONS: CONCERTO IN BLACK AND BLUE, 2002, Coagula #61 2003 Mar p8

DAVID HOCKNEY: A LAWN BEING SPRINKLED, Mystical p9

DAVID HOCKNEY: GARROWBY HILL, 1998, Cider #1 2000 p117, Life p153

DAVID HOCKNEY: THE ROAD ACROSS THE WOLDS, Life p196

DAVID HOCKNEY: THE ROAD TO YORK THROUGH SLEDMERE, Life p163

"the day that toad came home," Rising #20 2000 Sum p14

DAY TRIPS, Art & Life p20, Life p141

THE DAYS GO AWRY, Iceberg p41

de Géa, Béatrice

GERALD LOCKLIN [art], PressT 2000 May 25 pA2

DE KOONING IN DEMENTIA, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p45

DEATH AND THE FEMALE ORGASM [prose], Simpler p161

"death in venice,", Life p75

"the death of anne morrow lindbergh," Home #49 2003 Spr p20

DEATH WISH, Life p74

DECISIONS, DECISIONS, Life p56

DECONSTRUCTION, DECENTERING, DEMYTHOLOGIZING, Life p75

DÉGAS BETWEEN BALLETS, Art & Life p9, Louis R #3 2001 Sum/Fall p162

"delft was blue or white," Coagula #54 2001 Nov p40

Dersley, K. M.

CANDY BARS by LOCKLIN [rev], Tears #28 2001 Spr p92

"desert dome bio-", Heel #7 2000 p33

"desire is its many meanings;", Hell p22, Life p114

DIANA AND HER COMPANIONS, Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

DID YOU ENJOY YOUR CANDIED YAMS, SCARFACE?, XRay #8 2001 np

DIFFERENT GENES/SAME RESULT, Author p18

DIMENSIONS, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p18

"the director, zeffirelli,", Life p70

DIRTY OLD MEN AND THE NEW DOUBLE STANDARD, Brobd #24 2002 Sum, Life p189, Lummox 2000 Aug 6(8?) p23

DIVORCÉE, Recueil p6

DO NOT BEND, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p371

DO NOT GO GENTLE INTO THOSE GOOD BOOKS, NerveC #10 2000 Fall p59

"Do you consider sex dirty?", WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p373

"the doctor who swims at the same pool," Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p14

DOES THIS SORT OF THING HAPPEN TO ONLY ME?, MainS 6(1) 2001 Spr p64

"does this word-analysis," Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

"the don juan story," Hell p19, Life p139, Staplegun #10 2000 Fall p24

"don't believe them:", OneT #6 2001 p13

DOUBLES, First #18 2001 p35

DOUGLAS GORDON: THE SEARCHERS, VIDEO INSTALLATION, 1999-2004, Coagula #45 2000 May p32

Douglas, Theo

DAVE ALVIN, A MAN FOR ALL AGES [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 Aug 24 p.C1

PEARL OF WISDOM [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 Nov 24 p.W8

THRILL RIDE ON A HIGH-SPEED GRAMMY [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2001 Feb 27 p.C1

DOWN AND OUT: A NOVEL FOR ADULTS by LOCKLIN [rev]

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

"dr. gachet is pensive. he rests," Iceberg p11

DUET: JUNE CHRISTY AND STAN KENTON, Duet, Four Jazz p10, FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9, Life p97

DUKE ELLINGTON: MONEY JUNGLE, Duke p4

DUKE, LESTER, CHARLES by LOCKLIN [rev]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2002 Jan 10 p.A2

"during my daily swim yesterday," Staplegun #9 2000 Spr/Sum p15

 

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EAGLE HEAD, MANCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTES (HIGH TIDE) [sic], Henry's p28

"the early days of be-bop," Life p110, Tears #31 2002 Spr p12

"the earth's a charnel house.", Life p112

EASIER THAN SWIMMING LAPS, Iceberg p10

"eat shit bark.", Staplegun #10 2000 Fall p25

ED RUSCHA: HOLLYWOOD, 1968, Life p188

ED RUSCHA'S BOOKS, Rattle #15 2001 Sum p124

EDGAR DÉGAS: COTTON MERCHANTS OF NEW ORLEANS, 1873, Life p63

EDGAR DÉGAS: FOUR DANCERS, 1899, First #16 2001 p26

"an editor sends back," Pearl #31 2002 Sum p11

EDOUARD VUILLARD: WOMAN IN A STRIPED DRESS, First #16 2001 p27

EDWARD HOPPER: CAPE COD EVENING, 1938, Life p190

EDWARD HOPPER: COMPARTMENT C. CAR 293, 1938, Life p154

"an egghead.", Coagula #57 2002 June p34, FiveA #17 2002 p21

EIJA-LISSA AHTILA: THE HOUSE, VIDEO INSTALLATION, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p20

"elegant legs, gracefully crossed.", Life p155

ELIE NADELMAN: TANGO, 1919, Life p58

"an emergence from the ," Takes p10

"en sixième on nous a donné une nonne belge.", Recueil p1

"england is a field of fields.", Life p196

"the english and the European bridges," Henry's p19

THE ENGLISH GIRL [prose], Candy p69

THE EPIDEMIC MENTALITY FILTERS DOWN, LiqO #32 2002 Fall/Win p16

ERIC FISCHL: A VISIT TO/A VISIT FROM/THE ISLAND, 1983, Cerberus #48 2002 p24

ERIK SATIE AT THE ERWIN RANCH, SUMMER-FALL- WINTER, 1987, To Life p86

EUGENE VON GUERARD: NORTH-EAST VIEW FROM THE NORTHERN TOP OF MOUNT KOSCIUSKO, 1863, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p53

"ever since i joined," MainS 5(1) 2000 Spr p18

THE EVERLASTING 'RIGHT ON!', Iceberg p27

"every old town became an Old Town.", Pitch #3 2000 p6

"every time i see a david mamet film,", Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p15

AN EXCESS OF APPRECIATION, Brow #4 2000 June p13

"an exposition and a circling--", Takes p5

 

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FABLES OF FAUBUS, Duke p20

THE FACE OF CHET BAKER (PHOTO BY BRUCE WEBER, 1987), Ambit #160 2000 p81

FACES: THREE AND COUNTING, Duke p18

FAITH PARTIALLY RESTORED, Mystical p31

THE FALSE RHAPSODY OF ART, Iceberg p9, Lummox 2000 p20, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p135

FAMA FUGIT, Life p76, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p24

FAMILIARITIES by CHERIN & LOCKLIN [rev]

Metzger, Joyce, Chiron #68 2002 Spr p44

FASCIST ISLAND, Another p171

FAT MEN AT PIANOS, Chiron #67 2001 Win p10

FEAST DAY (RABBI WITH LEMON), Life p138

"features sketched from pipes," Life p52, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p55

FERNAND LEGER: LEISURE, HOMACE TO DAVID, 1948-49, Slip #20 2000 p102

FERNAND LEGER: LEISURE, HOMAGE TO DAVID, 1948-49, Life p201

"fifty years ago, the critics," Slip #21 2001 p82

FIN DE SEMESTRE [prose], Candy p157

"finally i allow myself," Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p135

"the firebird broods like yeasty dough," Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p136

THE FIREBIRD POEMS by LOCKLIN [rev]

Basinski, Michael, BlueB #16 2000 Apr p53

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

"first in tucson,", Life p147, Poetry Intl #4 2000 p40

"first, it makes me laugh out loud.", BlueB #20 2002 Oct p41, Re–Verb #1 2002 Fall p9, So Luminous p130

"first of all you have to understand," Life p119

Fishbein, Anne

GERALD LOCKLIN [art], More Takes p5

FISHING BOATS ON THE BEACH AT SAINTES-MARIES-DE-LA-MER, JUNE, 1888, Life p31

FLUEURETTE AFRICAINE, Duke p4

"the football was too fat," Author p20

"for father's day my son picked up for me," Eighty #1 2001 Dec p84, Love p10

FOR ONCE, Mystical p33

"For one who has respect for melody, even the improvisation on a melody may constitute a melody.", Takes p1

"for willie loman,", Author p21

"for years i used to rush home every night," Iceberg p24

"for years i wrote about half my poems," Mystical p20

THE FORCE, Life p85

FORGET THE FINISHING LINE, Life p69

Forgione, Mary

TRIBUTE TO A POET AND A MENTOR [prose] [cites GL], LA Times 2001 Dec part 5 p2

"a former student writes to say," FiveA #12 2000 p24

THE FORMIDABLE GEORGE COLEMAN, Life p151

"four of my best graduate students this year,", Familiarities p23

THE FOUR-DAY WORK WEEK [prose], Candy p45

FRANK MORGAN, Lummox 7(4) 2001 Apr p21

FRANZ KLINE: HAZELTON, 1957, Art: M #24 2001 p40

FREE AS A BIRD, Quercus #1 2001 p54

"french fries and ketchup,", Coagula #60 2002 Dec p44

"freud's insistence that," Life p78

Friedman, Norman

LOCKLIN, THE BEATS, AND BUKOWSKI [prose], Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p128

"fuck wally.", Mystical p32

THE FUNERAL OF CHARLES BUKOWSKI [prose], DWB p180

 

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THE GENE DOES NOT GO GENTLE, Life p77

GEORGE BELLOWS: PADDY FLANNIGAN, 1908, Life p59

GEORGIA O'KEEFE: EAST RIVER FROM THE SHELTON, 1928, Chance #15 2002 p25

GERALD LOCKLIN & FALKO HENNING ON THE CAMPUS OF THE LONG BEACH UNIVERSITY [art]

Lauterbach, Benjamin, Bjuk p82

GERALD LOCKLIN & TODD MOORE 18OCT97 [art], Zerx F p12

THE GERALD LOCKLIN ALA PANEL [prose], Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p112

GERALD LOCKLIN [art], Author p12, Chiron #63 2000 Win p10, Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6, Jornal 2002 Dec 11 p28, Lummox 6(11) 2000 Nov cover & p 11, Luna #2 2000 Spr p45, MainS 6(1) 2001 Spr p65, Who 2003 Mar 2 p18

de Géa, Béatrice, PressT 2000 May 25 pA2

Fishbein, Anne, More Takes p5

Gritchen, Jeff, PressT 2000 May 25 pA1 & C1

Locklin, Vanessa, Recueil back cover

GERALD LOCKLIN, JULY 1998 [art]

Locklin, Vanessa, Art Surv p148a

GERALD LOCKLIN: THE HOBGOBLIN OF AMERICAN POETRY [prose]

Basinski, Michael, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p122

GERALD LOCKLIN...POET, INSTITUTION [prose], PressT 2000 May 25 pA1

GERALD LOCKLIN'S INFLUENCE ON CHARLES BUKOWSKI'S PULP [prose]

Brantingham, John & Haven, Mick, Notes 30(2) 2000 Mar p4

GERALD VAN LOCKLIN, Silt #4 2003 p9

"gertrude would have loved it:", Henry's p12

GIACOMETTI'S WIFE (AFTER PETER SCHJELDAHL/ALEXANDER LIEBERMAN), Henry's p3

GIMME A BREAK, Iceberg p20

GIRL WITH RED HAT, Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

GIVING BACK, Heel #8 2001 p21

THE GLASS MONOTONY, Iceberg p24

GLASS OF ABSINTHE AND A CARAFE, Hell p21, Life p23

GO WEST, YOUNG TOAD by LOCKLIN [rev]

Basinski, Michael, BlueB #16 2000 Apr p53

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

GO WITH THE FLOW (AND END UP WHERE MOST FLOWS DO), Life p175

GOD'S MASTERPIECES, Life p200

THE GOLD RUSH [prose], Candy p237

A GOOD BOOK, Angelflesh #13 2000 p21

A GOOD CHEW, Re–Verb #1 2002 Fall p40

GOODBYE, PORK PIE HAT, Duke p21

GORDON MATTA-CLARK: PIPES, 1971, Bender #4 2001 Fall p49

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO STRUNK AND WHITE, Familiarities p27

GRANDMA MOSES: SUGARING OFF, 1943, Slip #22 2002 p54

THE GRAY HOUSE, Life P139

GRAY PANTHERS, Life p79

GREAT WEALTH MIGHT LEACH THE SWEETNESS FROM HER DISPOSITION, Mystical p26

"great white-foamed waves.", Henry's p30

GREEN CORN TAMALES, Life p147, Poetry Intl #4 2000 p40

"green is easy on the eyes.", Life p154

THE GREEN VIOLINIST, Life p137

Gritchen, Jeff

GERALD LOCKLIN [art], PressT 2000 May 25 pA1 & C1

Grobaty, Tim

DUKE, LESTER, CHARLES by LOCKLIN [rev], PressT 2002 Jan 10 p.A2

LAUDING LOCKLIN [prose], PressT 2000 May 25 pA2

MYSTICAL EXERCYCLE by LOCKLIN [rev], PressT 2002 Feb 5 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: A HIGH HONOR FOR A LITERARY LIFE. POET, WRITER & CSULB PROFESSOR GERALD LOCKLIN IS DUE FOR HONORS TODAY [prose], PressT 2000 May 25 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: BEACHFEST GETS BBQ, BIG NAMES [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2001 May 25 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: BETTING WITH THEIR BELLIES [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2002 Feb 5 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: DIGGING FOR THE NEWS [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2002 Jan 10 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: DIGGING FOR THE NEWS [prose] [re: GL], PressT 2002 Jan 10 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: HOLLYWOOD POURS IT ON PINE [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 Jan 31 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: IT'S DO-A-COLUMNIST'S-WORK MONTH [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2001 Aug 3 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: SHOOTING THE GIANTS OF JAZZ [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2002 Jan 17 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: SHOOTING THE GIANTS OF JAZZ [prose] [re: GL], PressT 2002 Jan 17 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: THE COLD DAYS OF SUMMER [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 Dec 12 p.A2

GUSTAVE CAILLEBOTTE: FLOOR-SCRAPERS, 1875, Life p185

GUSTAVE CAILLEBOTTE: PARIS STREET; RAINY DAY, 1877, Life p187

GUY BOURDIN: PHOTO OF TWO FACES TOUCHING, Henry's p22

 

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"had a face that," Mystical p24

HAIKU: 1-11-98, Heel #7 2000 p33

HAIR OF THE DOG, Life p176

HANS-CHRISTIAN SCHINK: AUTOBAHN LANDSCAPE, PHOTOGRAPH, Ambit #169 2002 Sum p69

HAPPINESS, Life p145 & 204, Lummox 6(4) 2000 Apr p16

HAPPY JAZZ AND SAD, Takes p12

Haslam, Gerald W.

CANDY BARS by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

DOWN AND OUT: A NOVEL FOR ADULTS by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

DOWN AND OUT by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

THE FIREBIRD POEMS by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

GO WEST, YOUNG TOAD by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

HEMINGWAY COLLOQUIUM: THE POET GOES TO CUBA by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

THE MYSTICAL EXERCYCLE by LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

SIX BY LOCKLIN [rev], WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

"hasn't she been told that roses," Cerberus #39? 2000 July p29

"have you checked the philosophy section," MainS 5(1) 2000 Spr p19

Haven, Mick & Brantingham, John Michael

WISH THEY ALL COULD BE CALIFORNIA WRITERS [prose] [re: GL], Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p112

"he always made it look so easy.", Cerberus #44 2001 Nov p26, Rising #22 2001 Spr p32

"he died early, aged about fifty, of a heart attack,", WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

"he holds his brushes," Life p16, Tears #28 2001 Spr p37

"he looked like a russian,", Gros #30 2001 Sept p35, Life p168, Minot #36 2000 p46

"he misses his old man, who is," Henry's p29

HE NEED REGRET NOTHING, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

"he painted a pair of clogs", Life p20, Tears #28 2001 Spr p40

"he painted himself so often," Life p13, Tears #28 2001 Spr p35

HE READS; SHE BEADS, ZZZ #35 2002 June/Aug p47

"he remembers such a dawn.", Iceberg p37

"he rushes home to be on time," ZZZ #28 2000 July p18

"he says, 'i know that so-and-so can't write but i," Familiarities p35

"he shouldn't have made her face ugly,", Henry's p10

"he sired no children, yet," Life p36

"he sure loved redheads,", Shoes #2 2001 March p55

HE THOUGHT SHE'D NEVER ASK, Rising #20 2000 Sum p14

"he wears a suit and tie,", Life p106

Headley, Robert

THE TOAD'S WILD RIDE CONTINUES: THE LITERARY ART OF GERALD LOCKLIN FROM THE 1990'S [prose], Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p118

HEALTHY FEARS, Iceberg p35

HEARING MINGUS, Duke p14

"he'd been working his ass off when,", Life p184

HEIDEGGER HAD A NAME FOR IT, Tears #32 2002 Sum p83

HEMINGWAY AND THE POETS [prose] [GL cited]

McFarland, Ron, HemR 20(2) 2001 p37

HEMINGWAY COLLOQUIUM: THE POET GOES TO CUBA by LOCKLIN [rev]

Dathorne, O. R., JoCS 16(1/2) 2001 Fall/Sum p124

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

THE HEMINGWAY PRIMER (OR: WHY YOU CAN'T BOOK A ROOM IN PAMPLONA THE SECOND WEEK IN JULY) [prose]

Locklin, Gerald & Stetler, Charles, Lummox 7(9/10) 2001 Sept/Oct p29

"henry denander has done it again;", Takes p14

HENRY'S GIFT, FiveA #16 2002 p10, Henry's p1

"her lips are too red,", Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

"her vulvic skulls and flowers," Chance #15 2002 p25

Hernandez, David

untitled art, Recueil cover p4 11 & 21

"he's a strong man,", Life p151

"he's away on business at a hotel," Iceberg p32

"high concept and well," ZZZ #38 2002 p20

HILLARY AND JACKIE, Life p72, Reater #4 2000 p18

THE HIPPIE SHIRT [prose], Candy p205

"his beard is as black as the air," Life p138

HIS EYES MUST HAVE REMINDED HER OF MT. ST. HELEN, Revolt #1 2001? p5

"his paris has the gaul/gall,", Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p16

HIS SANITY, Life p11, Reater #4 2000 p23

HOLISTIC MEDICINE, Mystical p22

"the hollywood sign on the horizon.", Life p188

HOLY THURSDAY, Life p102

HOORAY FOR KURT VONNEGUT, Life p54

"horace greely did not say,", Mystical p29

"L'horloge au mur," Jeté #8 2001 May p34

L'HORLOGE NE TICTAQUE PAS, Jeté #8 2001 May p34

"the horoscope this morning," Quercus #2 2002 p23

THE HOUSEHOLD GODS HE'S ALLOWED, Life p193

"how free are birds anyway?", Quercus #1 2001 p54

"how have i managed to miss it?", Life p24, Reater #4 2000 p22

HOW TO GET ALONG WITH CHARLES BUKOWSKI [prose], DWB p1

Howland, Richard

POEMS WITH PUNCH LINES BECOME FAMILIARITIES [re: GL], PressT 2001 June 10 p.J3

Hume, Kathryn

BRAUTIGAN'S PSYCHOMACHIA [prose] [GL cited], Mosaic 34(1) 2001 Mar p75–92

"hung horizontal,", Art: M #24 2001 p40

HYDROTHERAPY, Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

 

I

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"i almost talk myself out of," Takes p7

I ALSO GATHER STEM CELLS FROM THE LILAC BUSHES, LiqO #33 2003? p25

"i always commit suicide at dawn.", Mystical p11

"i always liked vitebsk best," Life P139

"i am lecturing my class," LiqO 2001 Fall/Win p4

"i am only on page 6 of timequake", Life p54

"i arrive home to find,", Mystical p37

I CAN IMAGINE HIS ACCEPTANCE SPEECH, Lummox 2000 Aug 6(8?) p23

"i can't respect an artist," Coagula #46 2000 Sum p48

"i come out of teaching a four-hour," MainS 6(1) 2001 Spr p64

"i couldn't begin to identify," Coagula #49 2001 Jan p32, Life p172

"i decide for a change to read," Familiarities p27

"i do not dream of history.", Mystical p17

I DO NOT HAVE HERPES [prose], Candy p119

"i don't believe in astrology, but," Familiarities p25

"i don't have the painter's eye.", OneT #6 2001 p10

"i don't hear the famous anger here.", Duke p20

"i don't know whether to attribute this," PressT 2001 June 10 p.J3

I DOUBT THAT I COULD, Revolt #1 2001? p6

"i enjoy the vengeance motif," Familiarities p22

"i envy those," Iceberg p40

"i finalized a big move today:", ZZZ #29 2000 Nov p37

"i finally got the difference between," Shrimp 2000 Fall p16

"i first heard of her at the hickory house," Four Jazz p1

"i go to a piano duet concert," Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p18

"i go to hear," Life p102

"i go to see evita", Bender #3 2000 p25

"i got to thinking about," Life p100

"i had this dream that i was," Rising #21 2000 p6

"i have altered my name slightly," Silt #4 2003 p9

"I have obtained from my dog's vet," Ambit #170 2002 Aut p67

"i have obtained from my dog's vet," Life p176

"I hereby predict that the world will end," P&P #7 2000? p63

I HOPE HE DIDN'T LEARN HIS TACT FROM ME, FiveA #12 2000 p24

I HOPE THEY GET THE POINT, Pearl #29 2000 Fall/Win p59

"i keep hearing about collaborative learning," Author p3

"i knew he had just gotten over a," Cerberus #37 2000 Jan p20

"i know this guy who is," Familiarities p32

I LIKE CATS THAT CATCH THINGS, Iceberg p19

"i like inspector morse," Life p178

"i like it.", Coagula #45 2000 May p32, Life p64

"i like looking at the building,", Henry's p20

"i like this laying bare of the," Bender #4 2001 Fall p49

"i love the democratic realism," Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

"i make a mildly amusing wisecrack," Brow #4 2000 June p13

"i must have kissed them, then,", ZZZ #33 2001 Nov p25

"i never discourage a cat's natural instinct," Iceberg p19

"i never thought of us as at our," Pudding #43 2002 Apr p31

"i never watch movies on planes,", Angelflesh #13 2000 p21

"i never wear bright colors,", Life p53, Quercus #1 2001 p15

"i overhear a man about my age say," Life p122, Silt #3 2002 p6

"i paint portraits because," Mystical p14

"i read in tony hillerman's," Life p121

"i remember a woman," Henry's p7

"i rode the german equivalent," Takes p9

"i say to my son over spaghetti,", Life p55

"i see it misused even in," WordP #2 2000 Jan p2

"i show up at ferrara's ristorante," So Luminous p128

"i swim one saturday," Bender #3 2000 p26

"i think i would demand an exact replication," Iceberg p25

"i think if i go nuts," Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p20

"i thought i was bad because,", Re–Verb #1 2002 Fall p34

"i thought i was the only one," Life p190

"i tread the gobi," Heel #7 2000 p34

"i used to be impressed by," Cerberus #49 2003? p39

"i used to feel that the themes," Life p77

I WAS BORN BEFORE HOMOGENIZED MILK, Iceberg p30

"i was going to write a poem," Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

"i was swimming at the y the other day," Iceberg p46

"i wasn't aware of it at the time,", Rattle #15 2001 Sum p124

"i watch my daughter learning how," Iceberg p14

"i watch this pbs special that insists," Iceberg p15

"i watched my little girl take off," Familiarities p28, Nagoya 2002 Win p17

"i wish i'd been alive," Life p22, Reater #4 2000 p20

"i would have preferred it if,", WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

"i would paint a picture,", Life p108, Rising #20 2000 Sum p2

I WROTE TONIGHT, Sho #2 2003 Spr p44

THE ICEBERG THEORY, Iceberg p13

IF ANYONE, Angelflesh #13 2000 p24

"if bukowski had ever won," Lummox 2000 Aug 6(8?) p23

IF I WERE A PAINTER, Life p108, Rising #20 2000 Sum p2

"if i were an art teacher," Life p195

"if you don't look closely at," Life p17, Rattle #13 2000 Sum p54

"if you ever need an illustration," Author p8, Life p66

IL ATTRIBUE ÇA À UNE MAUVAISE CREVETTE, ET JE LE CROIS, Recueil p18

"il ressemblait à un russe,", Gros #30 2001 Sept p36

THE ÎLE GRANDE JATTE, Life p24, Reater #4 2000 p22

"i'm about to check out of a hotel," Pearl #31 2002 Sum p12

"i'm always suspicious of people who say," Big H #4 2001 p5

"i'm enjoying the film and," Henry's p5

I'M FILING THIS TECHNIQUE AWAY FOR A RAINY DAY, Life p198

"i'm having lunch with my wife and kids," Staplegun #11 2001 Spr p26

"i'm naive enough," Coagula #45 2000 May p32

"i'm reading joan didion's depiction," Revolt #1 2001? p5

"i'm reading the liner notes,", Chiron #67 2001 Win p10

"i'm reading this review of," Life p175

"i'm telling my wife and son," ZZZ #27 2000 Spr p5

THE IMPRESARIO, So Luminous p128

"in a grave above the harbor," Tundra #2 2001 Fall p96

"in a roomful of prints,", Art & Life p12

"in an interview, my former student,", Ambit #160 2000 p81, Life p45

"in california women's," Tears #31 2002 Spr p14

"in his journal of the years," NerveC #10 2000 Fall p59

"in my fair lady henry higgins," Author p10

IN OUR BLOOD, Chiron #68 2002 Spr p31

"in rituals, by cees notebloom,", Cerberus #46 2002 p18

IN SEARCH OF ABSOLUTE CORRECTNESS, ZZZ #27 2000 Spr p5

"in spite of the current reign of terror,", Life p190

"in the high ranch desert valley,", Life p80, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p24

"in the lobby of the musical theatre,", Life p194

"in the locker room of the y," Tears #31 2002 Spr p15

"in the locker room of the ymca,", NerveC #13 2002 Spr p25

"in the next life,", Iceberg p10

"in the showers the talk," Cerberus #47 2002 p26

"in the stage directions for," Iceberg p40

"in the waiting room of the lab," FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9

INCOMPLETE REFORMATION, Bender #3 2000 p18, Life p167

INCOMPLETE WORLDS, Lilliput #129 2003 Mar p10

"the inspiration of his early years," Life p28, Tears #28 2001 Spr p43

INTERIOR OF A RESTAURANT, To Life p74

[interview] PROFILE OF GERALD LOCKLIN

Armstrong, R. D., Lummox 6(11) 2000 Nov cover & p11

INTERVIEW WITH GERALD LOCKLIN

Cherin, Patricia, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p138

INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE, Author p17, Shrimp 2000 Win p3

INTOXICATION, Ambit #160 2000 p81, Life p45

INTRODUCTION [to LATE NIGHT IN THE PSYCH WARD by SUBRAMAN], Late p1

"iris murdoch's novels always get me," Mystical p39

IRVING PENN: CHANNEL FEATHER HEADDRESS, NEW YORK, 1944, MainS 6(1) 2001 Spr p65

"is a 'classic' car," Heel #8 2001 p21

"is a woman an egg on," Author p11

"is all art either," Luna #2 2000 Spr p26

"is even the face metaphysical?", ZZZ #31 2001 Mar p16

"is the world reducible to rectangles?", Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

"it arched above us," Ambit #160 2000 p80, Life p192

IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE, Revolt #1 2001? p5

"it closed at six in winter but," Henry's p14

"it does not matter where you break your lines," WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p371

"it doesn't matter that the terrain," Coagula #49 2001 Jan p32, Life p173

"it had been two months," Sho #2 2003 Spr p44

"it may very well be,", Mystical p25

"it must be a comfort to," Mystical p16

"it occupies the three-foot canvas," Coagula #48 2000 Nov p18, Life p174

"it occurs to me," Life p75, Reater #4 2000 p17

"it was always a great-tasting fish,", Hell p20

"it was always too cluttered with," Henry's p17

"it was only a few months after," Bender #3 2000 p22, Life p157

"it was still a landmark in the 1940s," Life p148

ITO JAKUCHU: VEGETABLE PARANIRVANA, Brown #5 2001 Jan p1

"it's a beautiful southern california day:", Iceberg p41

"it's a shame these guy's didn't own," OneT #6 2001 p11

"it's all the rage now," Life p58

"it's amazing how few young poets," Life p182, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p22

"it's been a week now since," Tears #32 2002 Sum p83

IT'S READERS. NOT WRITERS, WHO ARE IN SHORT SUPPLY, Familiarities p35

"it's the first time in years," FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9

"it's the sort of shopping center," Another p171

"it's too late now.", Life p16

IT'S WHAT, IN HIS TIME, HEMINGWAY ACCOMPLISHED, Author p4

"i've never been to africa,", Duke p4

"i've walked the roads," Life p163

"i've written hundreds of art poems," Coagula #54 2001 Nov p40, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p44

 

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"jackie de shannon sang,", Big H #6 2003 p65

JACKSON POLLOCK: BLUE POLES, NUMBER 11, 1952, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p47, Life p120

JACKSON POLLOCK: ONE: NUMBER 31, 1950, Life p81, Reater #4 2000 p15

JACOB VON RUISDAEL: THE GREAT OAK, Life p174

JACOB VON RUISDAEL: THE GREAT OAK, 1652, Coagula #48 2000 Nov p18

"j'ai emmené mes deux filles que j'avais en visite,", Recueil p17

"J'ai envoyé ne copie d'un article que j'avais écrit," Recueil p19

'j'ai vécu longtemps au-dessus d'un garage," Recueil p9

JAMES ABBOTT McNEILL WHISTLER: SYMPHONY IN WHITE, NO. 2: THE LITTLE WHITE GIRL, Life p181, Sheila #14 2000 p83

JAMES ABBOTT McNEILL WHISTLER: SYMPHONY IN WHITE, NO. 3, Life p180, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p34 & 35, Sheila #14 2000 p84

JAN VAN HUYSEM: BOUQUET OF FLOWERS IN AN URN, Coagula #49 2001 Jan p32, Life p172

JASPER JOHNS: FLAG, 1967, Henry's p12

JASPER JOHNS: FOUR UNTITLED WORKS: 1975, -84, -91, -91-94, Henry's p13

J'AURAIS SOUHAITÉ DIRE ÇA ET UN JOUR JE LE FERAI SANS DOUTE, Recueil p13

JAZZ AND THEORY, FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9

JAZZ AS ATHLETICISM, Familiarities p30

"jazz is a journey;", Duke p11

"jazz--since louis armstrong anyway--", Takes p12

"je me suis toujours efforcé d'améliorer," Recueil p16

"je viens de recevoir une offre de souscription," Recueil p14

"je viens just de commencer l'avante-dernier poème," Recueil p18

JEAN ANTOINE WATTEAU: L'ACCORD PARFAIT, First #13 2000 p17, Life p198

JEAN BAPTISTE GREUZE: THE BROKEN EGGS, Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRAY: EAGLES ATTACKING SWANS, Coagula #52 2001 Sum p58

JEAN-BAPTISTE-CAMILLE COROT: INTERRUPTED READING, OneT #6 2001 p10

JEFF KOONS: LOOPY, 1999, Coagula #46 2000 Sum p48

JEFF KOONS: THE NEW, 1981-1987, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p44, ZZZ #38 2002 p20

JOCASTA, Mystical p24, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

JOHANN MARTIN VON ROHDEN: THE GROTTO OF NEPTUNE IN TIVOLI, First #20 2002 Nov p32

JOHN GLOVER: THE LAST MUSTER OF THE ABORIGINES AT RISDON, 1836, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p52

JOHN JAMES AUDUBON: WHOOPING CRANE, Life p161

JOHN SINGER SARGENT: ENA AND BETTY, DAUGHTERS OF ASHER AND MRS. WERTHEIMER, Author p8, Life p66

JOHN SINGER SARGENT: REPOSE, Tears #31 2002 Spr p14

JOHN SINGER SARGENT: SCUOLA DI SAN ROCO, 1903, Coagula #61 2003 Mar p8

JOHN SINGER SARGENT: STREET IN VENICE, 1882, First #17 2001 p25

JOHN SINGER SARGENT: THE DAUGHTERS OF DARLEYBOIT, 1882, First #13 2000 p16, Life p66

JOHN SINGLETON COPLEY: MARY AND ELIZABETH ROYALL, Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

THE JOHNNY APPLESEED OF POETRY, Familiarities p36

JOSEPH NOEL PASTOR: THE QUARREL OF OBERON AND TITANIA, Life p119

JULES OLITSKI: PINK DAWN, 1996, Iceberg p37

THE JUNE GLOOM HAS DEPARTED [prose], Rising #24 2002 p15

"just as straights find the things," Angelflesh #13 2000 p24

JUST WHEN I NEEDED SOMETHING TO LOOK FORWARD TO, NerveC #13 2002 Spr p25

 

K

KAREL TIEGE: THE LETTER 'H,' FROM ALPHABET, 1926, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p43

KISSING THE HAND THAT FEEDS THEM, Penniless #11 2000? p35

KLEIN'S PARIS, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p16

KONSTANTIN HATZISARROS: PHOTO, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p17

"kurt weill is still," Takes p12

 

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Lachnit, Carroll

PACK YOUR BAGS FOR DON'T-MISS TRAVEL ADVENTURES [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 May 21 p.J3

LARS JANSSON: BALLADS, Takes p14

THE LAST META-POEM?, Rising #21 2000 p6

"last night a man camped," Mystical p19

"lately, i seem to sleep all the time.", Mystical p35

"the latin jazz men," NerveC #11 2001 Spr p31

LAUDING LOCKLIN [prose]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2000 May 25 pA2

Lauterbach, Benjamin

GERALD LOCKLIN AND FALKO HENNING ON THE CAMPUS OF THE LONG BEACH UNIVERSITY [art], Bjuk p82

LAVENDER MIST REVISITED, Life p70

"lead, south dakota, is not," Mystical p30

LEARNING FROM NOSTRADAMUS, P&P #7 2000? p63

LEAVING HOME, Bender #3 2000 p20, Life p165

LEE KRASNER, Life p170

THE LEFTY, Life p16, Tears #28 2001 Spr p37

LESTER YOUNG: BLUE LESTER, Duke p1

LETHE, Staplegun #9 2000 Spr/Sum p15

LET'S CUT THE HORSESHIT, GUYS AND GIRLS, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p128

"the letter 'H' is a flapper," Coagula #60 2002 Dec p43

LIFE EXCEEDS ART, Mystical p27

THE LIFE FORCE POEMS by LOCKLIN [rev]

Burns, Jim, Ambit #170 2002 Aut p67

LIFE FORCE [prose] [re: GL]

McCabe, Christopher, LA Weeky 2000 June 9 p0

"like gerald haslam's story,", Life p73

LIKE SON, LIKE FATHER, Iceberg p16

"like sprinters in their starting blocks.", Life p185

LIKING ORNITHOLOGY, Henry's p8

"lips and eyes like ours,", Heel #8 2001 p22

A LITERARY PEARL [prose] [cites GL]

Stevens, Joe, PressT 2000 Oct 2 p.C1

"the little girl is not so little anymore.", Life p181, Sheila #14 2000 p83

"the little kid on congas,", Four Jazz p13, Genre #21 2000 p81, Life p149

"little more than," Life p37, Tears #28 2001 Spr p42

LIVING WITH ONE'S CHOICES, ZZZ #29 2000 Nov p37

Locklin, Gerald & Stetler, Charles

BUKOWSKI, CHARLES HENRY [about], Art Surv p191–192

THE HEMINGWAY PRIMER (OR: WHY YOU CAN'T BOOK A ROOM IN PAMPLOMA THE SECOND WEEK IN JULY) [prose], Lummox 7(9/10) 2001 Sept/Oct p29

LOCKLIN, GERALD [about], Art Surv p15 21 63 74 78 82 83 189–191 & 202–203, CA Online 2001, DAPFW 2001 p46, GoodF p338, LA Times 2003 Apr 20 Fest. sect. p21, LLA p67–68, WD 2000 p942, WD 2001 p936, Who 2003 Mar 2 p18, WWW 27th p375

LOCKLIN, GERALD [quoted], LA Times 2001 Dec 31 sect. 5 p2, LLA p68

LOCKLIN, THE BEATS, AND BUKOWSKI [prose]

Friedman, Norman, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p128

Locklin, Vanessa

GERALD LOCKLIN [art], Recueil back cover

GERALD LOCKLIN, JULY 1998 [art], Art Surv p148a

"the loneliest of instruments," Duke p10

"look at her on the cover of this album," Duet, Four Jazz p10, FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9, Life p97

"look at me lift one foot.", Life p161

"the losers' club is on la cienega,", Duke p18

LOUISE BOURGEOISE: SELF PORTRAIT, 2001, Coagula #57 2002 June p34

LOW-TIDE FLOODTIME, Dockernet #33/34 2000 July/Aug p2

LUCIEN FREUD: GIRL WITH ROSES, 1947-48, Cerberus #39? 2000 July p29

LYNN DAVIS: PYRAMID, PHOTOGRAPH, Cerberus #42 2001 p23

 

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MA RECETTE, Recueil p15

MAGIC WORDS, Iceberg p33

"mainly a matter of holes," Coagula #57 2002 June p34

A MAJOR FLAW IN MY NARRATIVE ARSENAL, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p15

MAJOR RELOCATION, Tears #31 2002 Spr p15

MAKE OF THIS WHAT YOU WILL, ZZZ #31 2001 Feb p36, ZZZ #35 2002 June/Aug p47

"the man at the table next to me," Bender #3 2000 p26

"man is an uneven parallelogram,", Coagula #52 2001 Sum p58, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p46

"a man needs many arms.", Life p162

MAN RAY: BLANC ET NOIR, Life p117

MAN WALKING, 1918, Life p138

"a man walks back upon himself,", Life p138

"a man with his arm around," Eighty #1 2001 Dec p83

Manly, Richard

CITY OF POETS [prose], Beach R #1 2001 p12

"many years ago i was lying," Tears #32 2002 Sum p81

"the many-masted, canvas-bosomed warships," Coagula #48 2000 Nov p18, Life p173

MARC CHAGALL: A SEQUENCE OF POEMS, Life p135

MARCO POLO BROUGHT BACK SPICES; I GUESS SIR WALTER RALEIGH DIDN'T, Iceberg p43

"marcus printup says,", Takes p13

THE MARCUS PRINTUP SUITE, Takes p7

MARIKO MORI: BURNING DESIRE, 1996-98, Heel #7 2000 p34

MARIKO MORI: ENTROPY OF LOVE, 1996, Heel #7 2000 p33

MARIKO MORI: PURE LAND, 1996-98, Heel #7 2000 p34

"Le 'marine' noir s'est approché dy bar," Recueil p13

"mark burns me this CD," Duke p1

MARSDEN HARTLEY: MOUNTAIN OF THE NORTH, 1932, Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

MARTINUS RORBYE: VIEW FROM THE ARTIST'S WINDOW, 1825, Mystical p15

MARVIN MALONE (WHO KNEW A POEM WHEN HE SAW ONE), Life p203

"the masculine, feminine, and neuter endings," Duke p12

MATHÉMATIQUES L'ANCIENNE, Recueil p16

MAYBE ITS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BEING AN INTELLECTUAL AND SIMPLY BEING INTELLIGENT, Life p177

MAYBE SHE WAS JUST AN ASSHOLE, Iceberg p22

McCabe, Christopher

LIFE FORCE [prose] [re: GL], LA Weeky 2000 June 9 p0

McCOY TYNER TRIO, Life p92

McFarland, Ron

HEMINGWAY AND THE POETS [prose] [GL cited], HemR 20(2) 2001 p37

ME, FLOYD, 'N' HONEYBOY, Tears #32 2002 Sum p84

"the mediterranean skeleton," Coagula #61 2003 Mar p8

A MESSAGE GONE AWRY, Life p122, Silt #3 2002 p6

Metzger, Joyce

FAMILIARITIES by CHERIN & LOCKLIN [rev], Chiron #68 2002 Spr p44

MICHAEL SERRA: TORQUED ELLIPSE, Hell p24, Life p116

MIGHT HELP; COULDN'T HURT, NerveC #13 2002 Spr p25

MILKING TIME, Henry's p31

MILLET: MEN DIGGING, 1856, OneT #6 2001 p11

MINGUS AH UM, Duke p12

THE MISSING INGREDIENT, Staplegun #14 2002 Sum p17

"monet's argenteuil,", Art & Life p14, Louis R #3 2001 Sum/Fall p162

"money is the root of dissonance.", Duke p8

MONEY JUNGLE, Duke p8

THE MONEYCHANGERS IN THE TEMPLE WERE A GOOD START, Mystical p25, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

"the monolithic marble building,", Coagula #45 2000 May p32, Life p61

THE MONOPOLY STORY [prose], Candy p219

MONTMARTRE, Life p22, Reater #4 2000 p20

"more than their beauty, youth, and health,", Henry's p6

THE MOST THREADBARE CLICHÉ IN THE MARRIAGE BUSINESS, Life p184

THE MOTIVE, Life p82, Reater #4 2000 p16

"my buddy stuart at the ymca," Life p69

MY DAUGHTER AND THE FIREBIRD, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p136

"my daughter is leaving for three weeks," NerveC #9 2000 Spr p23

"my daughter, who turns twenty tomorrow,", Life p48

"my fall booklist for english 390: fiction now", Familiarities p34

"my friend and former student,", Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p17

"my last aunt died this fall,", Life p49

"my little girl and little boy," LiqO #32 2002 Fall/Win p16

"My neighbor from the office next door," Everyman 2001 p14

MY SIX-MONTH OLD DAUGHTER, BlueB #16 2000 Apr p55

"my Swedish friend,", FiveA #16 2002 p10

"my swedish friend,", Henry's p1

"my wife and i go to museums," Art & Life p20, Life p141

MY WIFE'S TWO TOADS, Mystical p20

THE MYSTICAL EXERCYCLE by LOCKLIN [rev]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2002 Feb 5 p.A2

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

MYSTICISM-PISSTICISM, Mystical p39

 

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"the narrow and elongate window,", Cider #1 2000 p116, Life p153

"nature is imitating jackson pollock this december.", IB&AB p96

"near her death, under the influence," Iceberg p16

"nearly identical,", Cerberus #43 2001 p4

NEITHER RAIN NOR WHATEVER..., Familiarities p23

THE NEW BOUGALOO, Takes p13

THE NEW HISTORICISM, Life p194

"the new state-of-the-art jukebox in 'the interval'", Iceberg p3

"new words for," Life p75

NEW YEAR'S EVE AT DR. YEE'S DONUT SHOPPE [prose], Pearl #30 2001 Sum p24

"new york city provides,", ZZZ #32 2001 p31

"the new yorker says the installation celebrates," Coagula #61 2003 Mar p8

Newman, David

A SIMPLER TIME, A SIMPLER PLACE by LOCKLIN [rev], BlueB #17 2000 Oct 15 p22c, SmPrR #330/331 2000 July/Aug p11, Tears #26 2000 Sum p101

"the newspaper guide to saturday night," Author p5

"the newspaper headline reads,", WordP #3 2000 Fall p2

THE NICHOLAS PAYTON QUINTET AT THE JAZZ BAKERY, Life p106

NIGHTMARE, Familiarities p31

"the ninth bridge might, by," Art & Life p16

"no.", Author p7, Shrimp 2000 Fall p17

"no danger of that:", WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p371

NO HEARTBURN THOUGH, Silt #2 2001 p3

NO LONGER A TEENAGER, Life p48

NO OFFENSE INTENDED, CFAD p192, Life p181, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p34

"no one can live at," Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p53

"no one had an eye like walker evans.", Big H #6 2003 p64

NO ONE SINCE ROCKY MARCIANO HAS RETIRED UNDEFEATED, Iceberg p18

"no one sleeps in the sun.", Sho #2 2003 Spr p44

NO, TOTO, WE'RE NOT IN ARIZONA, Iceberg p40

NO WONDER THEY'RE NEARLY EXTINCT, Mystical p34

NORMAN ROCKWELL, Slip #21 2001 p82

"not, at first, his wife and son,", Art & Life p17

NOT CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN, Author p14

"not the tourists' london," Henry's p16

NOT TO WORRY [prose], Candy p247

A NOTE FROM HOME, NerveC #13 2002 Spr p24

NOTES TOWARD THE FUTURE OF BUKOWSKI CRITICISM: BATAILLE AND BAHKTIN [prose], Bjuk p80, BukRe #1 2001/02 Win p45

"nothing's more concrete than concrete.", Ambit #169 2002 Sum p69

"now we return to that house which," Cerberus #46 2002 p18

 

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O TANNENBAUM [prose], Candy p147

THE OBSERVER, Art & Life p11

AN OCCASIONAL COYOTE, Life p80, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p24

OCTOBER 27, 1993, Mystical p19

"odesso le donne vanno a zonzo, annoiate.", Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p35

OF ALL PERSUASIONS, Big H #6 2003 p65

"of course i loved the film:", Life p72, Reater #4 2000 p18

"of the seventy paintings," Life p11, Reater #4 2000 p23

OGDEN M. PLEISSNER: BACKYARDS, BROOKLYN, 1932, Big H #6 2003 p65

LES OISEAUX, Recueil p9

"the old man ascends the stage," Lummox 7(4) 2001 Apr p21

"old paul recently celebrated," Author p14

THE OLDEST INTERN IN AMERICA, Bender #3 2000 p28, Life p164

"on thanksgiving evening," XRay #8 2001 np

ON THE BEACH, Henry's p30

ON THE DEATH OF A GREAT COMEDIAN, SPRING 1994, Cerberus #37 2000 Jan p20

ON THE EVE OF THE SECOND GREAT DEPRESSION, Iceberg p3

ONE FOR TOAD

Winter, Don, ZZZ #28 2000 July p6

"one of my sons, who used," Iceberg p33

"one of the fringe benefits," Life p200

"one of the good-natured doctors," NerveC #13 2002 Spr p25

"one of the simple pleasures," Life p14, Tears #28 2001 Spr p35

"one of the swimmers at the 'y'", Author p4

ONE SCREEN TOO MANY, Bender #3 2000 p25

ONE TO WHOM IT IS NOT A JOKING MATTER, Iceberg p5

"the only drawback is," Author p16, Shrimp 2000 Fall p18

ONLY THEN DO WE UNDERSTAND, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p23

OPENING DAY, LA Bards track 15

"The opening day of the baseball season," LA Bards track 15

OPERATIC COSTUME, Home #47 2001 Spr p17

OR MAYBE HE'S TALKING HIMSELF OUT OF BUYING THE PICTURE, Iceberg p11

OSCAR SCHLEMNER: BAUHAUS STAIRWAY, 1932, Cerberus #40 2000 Nov p4

OSCURO SANS CHIARA, Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

"our cats become very cautious," Quercus #1 2001 p69

"our century would be the," Art & Life p15

"our dog lives in the backyard," Pearl #29 2000 Fall/Win p59

OUR SIDE, LiqO 2000 Sum p12

"outside the obloid portal," First #20 2002 Nov p32

"the outside was just that,", Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p56

"over the phone, gerry haslam and i," Chiron #68 2002 Spr p31

"owner of a base-model hyundai excel,", Iceberg p5

 

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PABLO PICASSO: INTERIOR WITH A GIRL PAINTING, 1935, Cerberus #41 2001 Spr p3

PACK YOUR BAGS FOR DON'T-MISS TRAVEL ADVENTURES [prose] [cites GL]

Lachnit, Carroll, PressT 2000 May 21 p.J3

LA PAGE POÉSIE, Recueil p19

PAGLIACCI, Life p70

PANIC BUYING, Re–Verb #1 2002 Fall p34

"the paper runs a picture," Iceberg p24

PARIS AND ITS SUBURBS, Art & Life p9

PAUL CÉZANNE: AUTO-PORTRAIT, 1878-80, Gros #30 2001 Sept p36

PAUL CÉZANNE: MONT SAINTE-VICTOIRE SEEN FROM BELLEVUE, 1882-85, Bender #4 2001 Fall p48

PAUL CÉZANNE: SELF-PORTRAIT, 1878-80, Gros #30 2001 Sept p35

PAUL CÉZANNE: THE ALLE AT CHANTILLY, 1888, Cerberus #46 2002 p18

PAUL CÉZANNE: WOMAN WITH A COFFEEPOT, 1895, Bender #4 2001 Fall p49

PAUL GAUGUIN: THE SIESTA, Sho #2 2003 Spr p44

PAUL KLEE: ARCHANGEL, Life p52, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p55

PAUL KLEE: LITTLE ROOM IN VENICE, Life p53, Quercus #1 2001 p15

PAUL KLEE: SCHOOLGIRLS, OUTDOORS, 1939, Art & Life p19, First #14 2000 p25

PAUL KLEE: THIS STAR TEACHES BENDING, Luna #2 2000 Spr p26

PAUL KLEE: WITH THE SINKING SUN, Luna #2 2000 Spr p27

"paul klee's rausch,", Life p47

PAUL MELANIE: SELF PORTRAIT, 1875, Nagoya 2003 Win p36

PAUL STRAND: WALL STREET, 1915, Coagula #45 2000 May p32, Life p61

PEACH BLOSSOMS, Henry's p31

PEARL OF WISDOM [prose] [cites GL]

Douglas, Theo, PressT 2000 Nov 24 p.W8

PÉDAGOGIE, Recueil p1

PEDIMENT: KHMER, CIRCA 967, Heel #7 2000 p33

A PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS, Life p80

"people like to pretend," Iceberg p35

"perfect accord? perfect harmony?", First #13 2000 p17, Life p198

THE PERILS OF THE POETRY TEACHER, LiqO 2001 Fall/Win p4

PERIOD OF ADJUSTMENT, Author p13

PESCADO VERACRUZ [prose], Tears #27 2000 Aut p14

A PETAL, Life p28, Tears #28 2001 Spr p43

PEUT-ÊTRE M'ONE-ILS CONFUNDU AVEX EZRA POUND, Recueil p14

"a phrase from ondaatje's english patient:", Iceberg p9, Lummox 2000 p20, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p135

PHYSICIAN, KNOW THY FETISH, IB&AB p97

PICASSO 2000, Hell p22, Life p114

PICASSO: THE DREAM, OneT #6 2001 p13

PICASSO: THREE MUSICIANS, Mystical p12

PICASSO: WOMAN WITH A MANDOLIN, 1925, First #20 2002 Nov p31

PICASSO: WOMAN WITH BERET AND COLLAR, 1937, Mystical p10

PIERRE BONNARD: NUDE, 1927, Pudding #43 2002 Apr p31

PIERRE BONNARD: SELF-PORTRAIT, Life p183, Slip #20 2000 p101

A PINCH OF SNUFF, 1912, Life p135

"the pines of provence are not," Bender #4 2001 Fall p48

THE PIPE, Life p14, Tears #28 2001 Spr p35

"play no background music.", Cerberus #42 2001 p23

PLEASE MAKE THINGS SIMPLE FOR ME, Shrimp 2000 Fall p16

POEMS WITH PUNCH LINES BECOME FAMILIARITIES [re: GL]

Howland, Richard, PressT 2001 June 10 p.J3

"a poet writes to the los angeles times", Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p128

POETIC DICTION, Everyman 2001 p14

THE POET'S HELPMATE, Bender #3 2000 p29, Life p165

POMERIGGIO: DIECI MINUTI ALLE SEI [prose], Storie #42/43 2001 May/Sept p72

THE PORTRAITS OF SELVES, Life p13, Tears #28 2001 Spr p35

"ports make promises.", Mystical p15

A PRACTICAL AND PRUDENT FATHER, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p14

PREFACE [to ART, SURVIVAL & SO FORTH by SMITH], Art Surv p11

PREFACE TO ART, SURVIVAL AND SO FORTH [prose], Bjuk p84

PREFERRED BORROWER, Familiarities p36

PREUVE DE CARACTÈRE, Recueil p17

PRIMARY COLORS, Coagula #54 2001 Nov p40

A PRINCE OF A GUY, Author p21

"the print by keisai eisen," Life p27

PRIVATE SCHOOL, PUBLIC SCHOOL, Author p5

PROBABLY, Iceberg p22

THE PROBLEM WITH FLOPPY EARS, Author p6

PROFILE OF GERALD LOCKLIN [interview]

Armstrong, R. D., Lummox 6(11) 2000 Nov cover & p11

PROLEGOMENON [prose]

Cowles, Joseph, Simpler p.iii

PROPOSAL: TWO MAVERICK POETS: CUMMINGS AND BUKOWSKI [prose], Bjuk p84

PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF THE AFTER-DINNER NAP, Mystical p34

 

Q

QUALITY OF LIFE OR LIFE ITSELF?, Life p79

QUE DALLE, Recueil p8

 

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R. B. KITAJ: THE JEWISH RIDER, 1984-85, Mystical p17

RAILWAY STATION, Ambit #160 2000 p80, Life p192

RAVE, Gluestick #5 2000 Win np

"reading alan warner's powerful novel,", Gluestick #5 2000 Win np

THE REAL, Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

THE REAL McCOY, To Life p89

"recently one of my wife's cats," Pearl #29 2000 Fall/Win p59

RED, Life p12

RED-ORANGE RELIEF FOR DELPHINE SEVRIG (ELLSWORTH KELLY), Cerberus #47 2002 p26

THE REEL, Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

REJECTION SLIPS AND SLIP-UPS, Familiarities p25

"the representative vegetables," Brown #5 2001 Jan p1

RETURN OF THE HIPPIE SHIRT [prose], Candy p255

"the revolutions of the warlords," Life p136

"the rich are different from," Mystical p9

RICHARD DIEBENKORN: FREEWAY AND SNAPSHOT, 1957, Ambit #169 2002 Sum p68

RICHARD DIEBENKORN: GIRL SMOKING, Life p155

RICHARD DIEBENKORN: WOMAN IN A WINDOW, 1957, Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p56

RICHARD PHILLIPS: ALIEN, Heel #8 2001 p22

RICHARD SERRA: SWITCH, Coagula #46 2000 Sum p48

THE RISE AND FALL OF SHARK, Hell p20

ROBERT POLIDORI: PHOTO OF THE L.V.M.H. BUILDING, Coagula #52 2001 Sum p58, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p46

ROBERT POLIDORI: THE ROSE CENTER FOR EARTH AND SPACE, ZZZ #32 2001 p31

ROBERT THERRIEN: NO TITLE (BLUE PLASTIC PLATES), Coagula #50 2001 Mar p40

ROOFS IN PARIS, Life p39

"the rooftops of paris,", Life p39

ROY LICHTENSTEIN: ARTIST'S STUDIO, 'DANCERS,' 1974, OneT #6 2001 p9

ROY LICHTENSTEIN: I. . .I'M SORRY, 1965-66, Henry's p11

RUTH PRICE, Life p94

RUTH SCHÄCHTEROVÁ: PAYSAGE AVEC TROIS MAISONS, Life p56

 

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SALVADOR DALI: SOFT CONSTRUCTION WITH BOILED BEANS: PREMONITION OF CIVIL WAR, 1936, Coagula #52 2001 Sum p58

SALVADOR DALI: SOFT CONSTRUCTIONS WITH BOILED BEANS: PREMONITION OF CIVIL WAR, 1936, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p46

SALVADORI DALI: SEATED GIRL SEEN FROM THE BACK, 1925, Mystical p13

SALVADORI DALI: THE FIRST DAYS OF SPRING, 1929, Mystical p16

SAN RAMON PASTORAL, Art & Life p4, Life p130

SANS SOUCI, Life p92

Santo, P.

CANDY BARS by LOCKLIN [rev], LJ 125(15) 2000 Sept 15 p117

"satin, filigree, and paleness.", Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

THE SAVVIEST WORDSMITH, Heel #8 2001 p20

"Scusate, me se mi svegliassi un mattino," Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p35

THE SEA AT LES SAINTES-MARIES-DE-LA-MER, JUNE, 1888, Life p30

SEDATION TIME, Iceberg p32

SELF-PORTRAIT AS AN ARTIST, 1887-1888, Life p16

SELF-PORTRAIT IN THREE COLORS, Duke p17

SENZA OFFESA, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p35

SEQUENCE OF REACTIONS TO SOUTH PARK, BlueB #20 2002 Oct p41, Re–Verb #1 2002 Fall p9, So Luminous p130

SERBIA ÜBER ALLES, Lilliput #129 2003 Mar p8

SERBIA ÜBER ALLES, Mystical p28

"she asks me what i consider," Author p17, Shrimp 2000 Win p3

"she had a face," WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

"she has a face that would stop," Ambit #169 2002 Sum p68

"she means it, she is sorry,", Henry's p11

SHE SAYS SHE HATES LIARS, ZZZ #28 2000 July p18

"shelley would have been lost here," Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p54

"she's always taken what she wanted,", Life p87

"she's been in my classes,", Life p160

THE SHOES, Life p20, Tears #28 2001 Spr p40

SHORTCHANGING THE KING OF BEASTS, WordP #2 2000 Jan p2

"shortly after my father died," Iceberg p18

"shouldn't the term be," ZZZ #27 2000 Spr p5

A SIGHT I'D HATE TO SEE, Author p9, Life p65

"the sign in the window," Wonderbreadman

THE SILENCE, Cerberus #46 2002 p18

SIMON DE VLIEGER: VIEW OF A BEACH, Coagula #48 2000 Nov p18, Life p173

A SIMPLER TIME, A SIMPLER PLACE by LOCKLIN [rev]

Newman, David, BlueB #17 2000 Oct 15 p22c, SmPrR #330/331 2000 July/Aug p11, Tears #26 2000 Sum p101

A SIMPLER TIME, A SIMPLER PLACE [prose], Simpler p1

"since wordsworth we have been," Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p51

"sink your hands into," Life p63

SIX BY LOCKLIN [rev]

Haslam, Gerald, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p370

SKINFLINTS, LiqO #33 2003? p25

"the skull is enjoying its cigarette.", Life p27

SKULL WITH A SKELETON WITH BURNING CIGARETTE, Life p26

SLIDE, Life p110, Tears #31 2002 Spr p12

"the smokestacks of the great american factories,", Life p60

SMOKING SKULLS II, Life p27

SNAP THE WHIP, Henry's p30

"so many people search for it.", Life p204, Lummox 6(4) 2000 Apr p16

SO MANY TALENTS, Author p22

"so often he captures," Art & Life p9, Louis R #3 2001 Sum/Fall p162

A SOBER READING OF DR. SIGMUND FREUD [prose], Candy p127

THE SOCCER MOM [prose], Tears #32 2002 Sum p19

"some trees outlive tribes.", Spring n.s. #9 2000 Oct p52

"somehow i don't think my wife would want," Coagula #60 2002 Dec p44, ZZZ #38 2002 p20

SOMETHING I MISSED OUT ON, Henry's p6

"sometimes for special occasions," Mystical p26

"sometimes he was red.", Life p137

"sometimes i finish my popcorn," Re–Verb #1 2002 Fall p40

"sometimes in coat and collar,", Life p14, Tears #28 2001 Spr p36

"sooner or later," OneT #6 2001 p9

"Sorry, but if i awoke one morning," CFAD p192, Life p181, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p34

SPEAK LOW, Takes p12

THE SPIRITS OF HAVANA, Four Jazz p13, Genre #21 2000 p81, Life p149

SPORTS CAMP, Familiarities p28, Nagoya 2002 Win p17

"the sprightly old man from iowa," Mystical p31

"a stack of blue plates, saucers, bowls,", Coagula #50 2001 Mar p40

"staring at the mortgage application,"', Familiarities p36

STARTING POINT, Life p75, Reater #4 2000 p17

THE STEPS, Duke p19

Stevens, Joe

THE BEAT GOES ON. PROLIFIC LONG BEACH POET-WRITER GERALD LOCKLIN WILL READ FROM HIS LATEST BOOK TONIGHT AT BORDERS [prose], PressT 2000 May 25 pC1

A LITERARY PEARL [prose] [cites GL], PressT 2000 Oct 2 p.C1

STILL LIFE WITH BIBLE, Life p36

STILL LIFE WITH BIBLE, AND STILL LIFE WITH BOOKS, Life p34

"still trim and cute," Life p94

THE STORY STORY [prose], Candy p7

THE STRAW HAT, Life p14, Tears #28 2001 Spr p35

STRENUOUS EXERCISE, FreeT 2(2) 2000 Fall p9

"a string of pearls,", Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

"a student paper reminded me of what," Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p134

"studying in the art academy," Life p26

"such hearty men,", Life p201, Slip #20 2000 p102

"suddenly we realize that this is everything:", Life p81, Reater #4 2000 p15

THE SUPERMAN OF THE SUPPORT HOSE [prose], Chiron #63 2000 Win p10

"the supposedly advanced civilizations,", Life p79

"the surface and the strings,", Life p70

SWAMP ROOTS, Nagoya 2001 Spr p8

SWING SHIFT [prose], Candy p183

SWITCH BLADE, Duke p10

 

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TAKES ON BILL EVANS, Takes p1

"talking behind closed doors," Iceberg p10

A TEACHER'S IDEA OF PARADISE, Pearl #31 2002 Sum p12

THE TEAGUES: MARMON 16, 1930, Heel #8 2001 p21

THE TECHNIQUE OF CHET BAKER, Chiron #67 2001 Win p10

TELL ME ABOUT IT, PAL, Life p55

TEMPUS NON FUGIT, Familiarities p38

"ten years ago,", Iceberg p28

TERENCE BLANCHARD: JAZZ IN FILM, Ambit #162 2000 p91

TERI'S SOCK POEM, Bender #3 2000 p22, Life p157

"that's a very large glass of," Hell p21, Life p23

"their masts as leafless twigs.", Life p31

"their slices of life," Life p72

"there always seems to be a," Takes p10

"there was a woman at the concert," Life p76, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p24

"there's an 86-year-old woman," Life p68

THERE'S NO TRICK TO IT, Pitch #3 2000 p7

"these stairs will take the children to no stars.", Cerberus #40 2000 Nov p4

THEY ARE A WISE AND ANCIENT PEOPLE, Familiarities p35

THEY BROUGHT BACK HOCKEY PUCKS, Iceberg p15

"they could be tangles," Nagoya 2001 Spr p8

"they did this endoscopy and biopsy on me,", Iceberg p43

"they face each other.", Henry's p22

"they never say what exactly it is," Heel #8 2001 p21

"they remind me of the films," Art & Life p10

THEY SAW THE CENTURY UNFOLD, Lummox 8(4) 2002 Apr p22

"they say that great writers," Life p34

"they seemed to come in pairs,", First #18 2001 p35

"they won't stop bullying the pasty kid.", FiveA #18 2003 p22

"thirty-five hundred years ago," Familiarities p38

"this famous serial killer used to drink beer," Iceberg p7

"This friend of mine had recently been arrested," Revolt #1 2001? p5

THIS GUY AND I, Iceberg p10

"this is just the briefest of pep-talks," Familiarities p25

"this is my home address,", Mystical p23

"this is the nowhere of the brothers grimm,", Author p19

"this morning a toyota pulled aside me," Mystical p21

"this saxophonist is quite young,", Life p107

"this talented, spontaneous poet i correspond," Familiarities p36

"this week's issue of esquire", Life p56

THOMAS EAKINS: PORTRAIT OF MAUD COOK, 1895, Henry's p26

Thomas, Joy

CHASING THE TOAD: GONZO INDEXING AND GERALD LOCKLIN [prose], Tears #33 2002 Fall p101

"thoreau avait raison au sujet de la," Recueil p12

"thoreau bathed every morning, the," Chiron #67 2001 Win p11

THOSE PEOPLE WHO CALL OTHER PEOPLE PARANOID, ZZZ #35 2002 June/Aug p47

THREADS, Takes p10

"the three houses have three chimneys.", Life p56

THREE MUSICIANS, Life p93

THREE SUPERNATURAL SIGHTINGS, ZZZ #27 2000 Spr p5

THREE VERMEERS, Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

THE THREE-IDEA DOG, Staplegun #10 2000 Fall p25

THRESHOLDS, Quercus #1 2001 p69

THRILL RIDE ON A HIGH-SPEED GRAMMY [prose] [cites GL]

Douglas, Theo, PressT 2001 Feb 27 p.C1

THUS, THE MILLSTONE, Life p78

A TIGHT FIT, Mystical p23

TIM WARFIELD, Life p107

TIME AND WESTERN MAN, Familiarities p25

TIME IS THE ULTIMATE EDITOR, Mystical p29

TIMING IS EVERYTHING, Quercus #2 2002 p23

TO BE AND BE AND BE, Life p78

"to me it seems," Life p38

TO THE SHORES OF SAN CLEMENTE [prose], Candy p139

TOAD TRIES TO NEVER LET THEM DOWN, Cerberus #47 2002 p26

TOAD'S SENSE OF HISTORY, Home #49 2003 Spr p20

THE TOAD'S WILD RIDE CONTINUES: THE LITERARY ART OF GERALD LOCKLIN FROM THE 1990'S [prose]

Headley, Robert, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p118

"too much activity overtaxes the circuits.", Life p33

TOSHIKO AKIYOSHI AT THE JAZZ BAKERY, 2000, Four Jazz p1

"touts les poètes se plaignent d'elle.", Recueil p6

TOWARDS A METRICS OF THE ABSOLUTE, WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p371

"the trees sleep beneath the," To Life p86

TRIBUTE TO A POET AND A MENTOR [prose] [cites GL]

Forgione, Mary, LA Times 2001 Dec part 5 p2

TROPIQUE, NerveC #11 2001 Spr p31

"the trouble with the small press world," Lilliput #129 2003 Mar p10

A TRUE MINING TOWN, Mystical p30

TURKEY DAY [prose], Candy p17

"turn studio to slaughterhouse.", Life p187

TWO ALONE, Life p112

TWO DINERS, Bender #3 2000 p26

"two faces are better than one.", Cerberus #41 2001 Spr p3

"two frames hang above his work desk,", Life p193

"two of the great loves of my life," Familiarities p30

TWO PASSPORTS, Iceberg p28

"the two young mothers at our table," Bender #3 2000 p28, Life p164

 

U

UNCHARTED SCALES, Takes p16

"the universe is not square.", Hell p24, Life p116

"unlike a lot of beautiful women," Staplegun #11 2001 Spr p27

"unlike eugene o'neill,", Author p18

UNPUBLISHED FOREWORD TO A FOREIGN EDITION OF PULP BY CHARLES BUKOWSKI [prose], BukRe #2 2002/03 Win p21

untitled prose, Utne #101 2000 Sept/Oct p47

 

V

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"the V of the tree," Author p15

VAN GOGH DIED CHILDLESS, Life p17, Tears #28 2001 Spr p38

VAN GOGH'S VAN GOGH'S, Life p9

"variously bemused," First #13 2000 p16, Life p66

VEGETABLE LOVE, Life p36

"venice the sinister, where," First #17 2001 p25

VÉRISIMO, Life p72

THE VICARAGE AT NUENEN, Life p38

VICTOR BRUNER: SUICIDE AT DAWN, 1930, Mystical p11

"a vietnamese couple was teaching," NerveC #12 2001 Fall p19

"vincent as hick,", Life p14, Tears #28 2001 Spr p35

"vincent juxtaposes his father's," Life p36

"vincent liked bread," To Life p74

VISHNU, SIEM REAP, 9th CENTURY, Life p162

"the visitors-to are white and are" [sic], Cerberus #48 2002 p24

"voted for gay marriage," Tears #31 2002 Spr p15

 

W

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WAITING FOR DAD (LONGING), Henry's p29

"waiting for the elevators," Mystical p27

WALKER EVANS: SUBWAY PASSENGERS, Big H #6 2003 p64

"a wall of women," Art & Life p13

"walt whitman referred to alfred," Familiarities p38

THE WAR GOES ON, Life p121

"war, intrigue, contending angels.", Heel #7 2000 p33

WAS CHARLES BUKOWSKI A GREATER WRITER THAN WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE?, Author p7, Shrimp 2000 Fall p17

"was this necessary?", ZZZ #37 2002 p45

WASSILY KANDINSKY: PAINTING WITH BLACK ARCH, 1912, Luna #2 2000 Spr p26

"we all seem to want," Life p80

"we all sink with the sinking sun.", Luna #2 2000 Spr p27

"we are never more naked," Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

"we are silhouettes upon the," Dockernet #33/34 2000 July/Aug p2

"we forget how puritan America still was,", Henry's p28

WE HAVE ALL OF US BEEN SERVING LIFE SENTENCES WITHOUT BENEFIT OF PAROLE, Familiarities p22

"we love who we were.", Coagula #60 2002 Dec p45

"we need a woman to look over us," Life P139

"we need buildings whose planes," Coagula #52 2001 Sum p58, Coagula #60 2002 Dec p46

"we never outgrow the tactile pleasure," Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p14

"we see shadows also.", Cerberus #47 2002 p26

UN WEEK-END AU CANADA [prose], Recueil p24

THE WEEPING PRINCE (FOR MALCOLM X), Takes p11

"well, i guess any of us," Lilliput #129 2003 Mar p8, Mystical p28

"well, if they have their hearts set," Life p180, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p32

"well-tempered clavichord:", Heel #7 2000 p33

"were," WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p372

"were shakespeare's children," Life p78

"we've all heard plenty about the," Iceberg p26

"what a joke:", Coagula #50 2001 Mar p41

"what a novelty: someone who can," Takes p11

"what an uncharacteristically romantic," Art & Life p4, Life p130

"what can be added to what," Henry's p31

"what did the woman in the background do," First #16 2001 p27

"what did they think was," Henry's p24

"what he had:", Life p203

"what i don't like about," To Life p89

WHAT I LIKE ABOUT INSPECTOR MORSE, Life p178

"what is it about these hefty guys," Chiron #67 2001 Win p10

"what is the difference," Life p32, Reater #4 2000 p19

"what sort of man," Nagoya 2003 Win p36

WHAT WE HAVE, Life p73

"what would walt whitman have made," Life p187

WHAT'S UP: A HIGH HONOR FOR A LITERARY LIFE. POET, WRITER & CSULB PROFESSOR GERALD LOCKLIN IS DUE FOR HONORS TODAY [prose]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2000 May 25 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: BEACHFEST GETS BBQ, BIG NAMES [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2001 May 25 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: BETTING WITH THEIR BELLIES [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2002 Feb 5 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: DIGGING FOR THE NEWS [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2002 Jan 10 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: HOLLYWOOD POURS IT ON PINE [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2000 Jan 31 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: IT'S DO-A-COLUMNIST'S-WORK MONTH [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2001 Aug 3 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: SHOOTING THE GIANTS OF JAZZ [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2002 Jan 17 p.A2

WHAT'S UP: THE COLD DAYS OF SUMMER [prose] [cites GL]

Grobaty, Tim, PressT 2000 Dec 12 p.A2

WHEAT FIELD, WHEAT FIELD WITH REAPERS, WHEAT FIELD WITH CROWS, Life p33

"when are they going to," Life p170

"when i enter the exercise room," Staplegun #14 2002 Sum p16

"when i hear academics speaking of," Author p9, Life p65

"when i made the mistake of letting it slip," Brobd #20 2001 Sum np

when i think of him i don't", Life p30

"when i used to be a big drinker,", Bender #3 2000 p18, Life p167

"when i was a teenager my aunt pat drove," Iceberg p34

"when i was going back to new jersey and," Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p21

"when old paul tells toad," Author p13

"when the circuits are overloaded," Ambit #162 2000 p91

"when the good-looking 45-year old woman," NerveC #13 2002 Spr p24

"when the swat team guns down," Iceberg p22

"when toad, at sixty, saw that," Author p22

"when we pass a house with a particularly," Life p198

WHEN YOU COME TO THE END OF A PERFECT DAY, Life p73

"when you had the time to play,", Henry's p30

"whenever everyone agrees on an idea,", Life p177

"whenever it rains during the night," Author p6

WHERE WE ARE, Iceberg p40

"where were the lights?", Henry's p29

"where would the world be without," Bender #4 2001 Fall p49

WHERE'S WALLY?, Mystical p32

"while buildings had begun to," Mystical p13

"why are these dancers," First #16 2001 p26

"why couldn't i hear it at first,", Duke p14

"why do you think they want," Ambit #170 2002 Aut p67, Life p79

"why kid ourselves--she, like every child,", WeAm 37(3) 2002 Fall p371

WHY STOP SHORT?, Iceberg p26

WHY WE WANT THE WORLD A CERTAIN WAY, Big H #4 2001 p5

"will we build within buildings?", Coagula #46 2000 Sum p48

WILLEM DE KOONING: MONTAUK HIGHWAY, 1958, Coagula #45 2000 May p32, Life p64

WILLIAM KLEIN: CONTACT, NEW YORKER, PHOTO, Eighty #1 2001 Dec p83

"the wind is in the willows," Life p135

WINOLD REISS: HARLEM GIRL, 1925, Life p160

WINSLOW HOMER IN THE 1870s, Henry's p28

Winter, Don

ONE FOR TOAD, ZZZ #28 2000 July p6

"winter, i think, at first;", Coagula #60 2002 Dec p47, Life p120

WISH THEY ALL COULD BE CALIFORNIA WRITERS [prose] [re: GL]

Brantingham, John M. & Haven, Mick, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p112

"with the thinness of the," Henry's p3

"within the lushly vegetated," Coagula #52 2001 Sum p58

WLADYSLAW STRZEMINSKI: ARCHITECTURAL COMPOSITION 13C, 1929, Embryonic 1(1) 2003 Mar p14

"the woman in the iron mask, but a softer metal,", MainS 6(1) 2001 Spr p65

"a woman past her prime," Chiron #64 2001 Spr 6

"the woman who represents the river", Coagula #46 2000 Sum p48

"the woman who sits next to me," Life p112

WOMAN WITH A BALANCE, Coagula #53 2001 Sep p51

"the women lounge about now, bored.", Life p180, Offerta 15(3) 2002 Nov p34, Sheila #14 2000 p84

WONDERBREADMAN IN HIS WONDERWEAR, Wonderbreadman

"the wooden guitar,", First #20 2002 Nov p31

WOODWINDS, Art: M #24 2001 p37

THE WORDS, Life p182, NerveC #9 2000 Spr p22

WORDSWORTH, COLERIDGE, AND THE ENDORPHINS, Iceberg p46

"would any of those who have called," Revolt #1 2001? p6

WRESTLING FATHER O'MALLEY [prose], Simpler p145

A WRITER'S RESPITE, Spring n.s. #10 2001 Oct p135

"writing a poem about a whistler beach scene,", Bender #3 2000 p29, Life p165

"writing well is not enough:", Heel #8 2001 p20

"written for the cassavetes' film," Duke p17

"wrote scornfully of amateurs,", Joey #37 2002 Spr p29

 

Y

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THE YELLOW HOUSE, Life p25, NerveC #10 2000 Fall p58

"yes, art can exist in a vacuum.", Cider #1 2000 p117, Life p153

"yes, its about time that," Henry's p31

"yes, we all owe an open", Duke p19

"you begin to see that his poems"

Winter, Don, ZZZ #28 2000 July p6

YOU CAN LEARN SO MUCH FROM HISTORICAL FICTION, Familiarities p34

"you didn't have to be that talented," Art & Life p1, Life p127, Tears #31 2002 Spr p9

"you have,", Life p73

"you have to give it to him:", Art & Life p11

"you know, i actually took piano lessons," Life p95

"you know, maybe basquiat," Henry's p8

YOU MAY BE WHAT YOU EAT BUT YOU ARE NOT WHAT YOU WRITE, Familiarities p32

"you realize there's more than meets the eye,", Henry's p13

"you used to have to go to paris," Iceberg p30

"you'd think of them first," Tears #32 2002 Sum p82

THE YOUNG (AND OLD) MEN'S (AND WOMEN'S) (VERY) CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, Bender #3 2000 p26

"the young bass player,", Life p93

YOUNG CHET, Eighty #1 2001 Dec p84, Love p10

"the young jazz pianist," Staplegun #14 2002 Sum p17

YOUR ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED, Art & Life p14, Louis R #3 2001 Sum/Fall p162

"your team is one point up on the lakers.", Familiarities p31

 

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