Elephants Rule is part of the upcoming book Capturing a Moment, published by Wrags Ink. Preorder it right now here and get all kinds of free goodies! Or order it with this original or any other!
Or just help me out 😉
Elephants Rule is part of the upcoming book Capturing a Moment, published by Wrags Ink. Preorder it right now here and get all kinds of free goodies! Or order it with this original or any other!
Or just help me out 😉
Posted in flash fiction, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1950s, art, beauty, childhood, circus, dennis finocchiaro, elephant, entertainment, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, kitsch, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, typewriter, typography, vintage
Set in Stone is part of the new book Capturing a Moment, available for preorder on my Etsy. The original is also available on etsy. Support a starving artist! 🙂
Posted in flash fiction, Typography
Tagged 1960s, 1970s, beach, book, Capturing a Moment, couples, dennis finocchiaro, fiction, flash fiction, love, people, photograph, photography, picture, published, romance, shore, starving artist, typography, wrags Ink, writing
Hopefully you’ve been following my work all this time and know all about the flash fiction pieces I type onto vintage photographs. If not, they look like this:
Well now my book is available for preorder! The WONDERFUL publishers over at Wrags, Ink have seen fit to put out a collection of around fifty of their favorites, and now for the first time it’s available for preorder! So please check it out here on my Etsy. You can also order it with a bunch of goodies here for a few more dollars.
Thank you all so much for your continued support!
Posted in flash fiction, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, art, beauty, book, childhood, children, couples, dating, death, dennis finocchiaro, entertainment, fiction, flash fiction, found photograph, kitsch, people, photograph, photography, photos, published, publishing, typography, very short story, vintage, vss, writing
A magazine for and about artists.
Hello all! Care to see my work in yet another magazine? The wonderful crew over at Racing Minds Magazine have featured me in their August issue.
The online version is here. A paper copy is also available here if you care to purchase it. Please check out all of the amazing artists, photographers and creative minds that come together in this excellent publication.
Posted in flash fiction, Typography
Tagged 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, art, artists, beauty, childhood, children, couples, dating, death, dennis finocchiaro, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, funny, hipster, humor, kitsch, life, love, magazine, magazine publishing, people, photo, photograph, photographers, photography, photos, pictures, published, Racing Minds, relationships, romance, sad, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Come back tomorrow for the finale of The Melancholy Robot!
The robot watched the man purchase a hot dog from the vendor. It mimicked the man’s actions – moving its jaw hinge up and down, chewing imaginary food. Its jaw made a grinding sound since it wasn’t created for this purpose. It knew that food would ruin its mechanisms and internal clogs, and that it had no swallowing apparatus. So the robot looked away.
Posted in flash fiction, The Melancholy Robot
Tagged art, beauty, dennis finocchiaro, eating, entertainment, fiction, flash fiction, food, funny, hot dog vendor, hot dogs, humor, Jessica Smith, kitsch, life, people, robot who wants to be human, robot who wants to eat, sad, The Melancholy Robot, writing
The robot approached a sign that said YMCA and curiosity got the better of it. Upon entering, its glass optical units fogged over and it was forced to wipe them with its robot hands. It had entered a dangerous area with one of its natural enemies, humidity, and it knew this but just had to investigate. It watched the humans, with much less covering than they usually wore, jumping into a big bluish pool of water. They laughed, smiled, exercised, it seemed to the robot to be a happy place for them. One ran and a man with a loud implement in his mouth forced the child to slow down with a piercing noise. The robot heard someone yell “Cannonball!” and as he hit the water a little sprayed the robot, and it knew it had to leave. This was no place for a metallic man.
Artwork by Ryan Vecci. Go to www.laserbaked.blogspot.com for Ryan’s website. The last two installments of The Melancholy Robot will come next week, but for now check out the old stories.
Posted in flash fiction, The Melancholy Robot
Tagged activity, art, beauty, cannonball, childhood, children, dennis finocchiaro, entertainment, exercise, family, fiction, flash fiction, friends, friendship, funny, graphic novel, humor, illustration, life, life guards, people, pools, robot, Ryan Vecci, sad, swimming, writing, YMCA
The robot reached the top of the hill and spotted a sign that said City Dump; it looked over the mounds of garbage, piled all the way to a distant river. The robot felt as close to sad as it could; it recognized humankind’s vast wastefulness, clearer now than it was in the city. It could not fathom why they refused to mulch what they could, why some ignored recycling when areas like this dump could be so easily avoided.
The robot wanted to do something about it, but what could one mechanical being do?
Today’s art is created by the talented Emily Homrok. Emily is co-editor of Pitbull Magazine and is available as a freelance artist. Email her at ehomrok@gmail.com if you wish to contact her!
Posted in flash fiction, The Melancholy Robot
Tagged art, beauty, being green, dennis finocchiaro, emily homrok, entertainment, environment, fiction, flash fiction, life, mulching, overpopulation, people, recycling, sad, saving the world, trash, writing
The robot walked through the art museum trying to understand the why behind art. Lots of small dots created a pond scene. A bronze statue of a ballerina. A can of soup. It could not fathom why humans created it. They should focus on needs: food, drink, clean air and water. As it walked, it failed to notice the child sitting on the floor finger painting as his mother copied a nearby Van Gogh. The kid looked up at it and said, “Hey!” forcing the mechanical man to look down at the marble flooring. It had stepped in the kid’s red paint and tracked its footprint onto a clean sheet of paper.
“Sorry,” it said to the child. As it tried to leave, the boy tapped the robot’s shoulder and handed over the sheet with the red footprint.
“You made it. You should keep it,” the kid said.
Today’s artwork is created by the talented Richard Holt. Click on the image for his blog.
Be sure to follow the rest of The Melancholy Robot story from last week. It continues this week as well.
Posted in flash fiction, The Melancholy Robot
Tagged Andy Warhol, art, art museums, beauty, childhood, children, Claude Monet, collaboration, creation, dennis finocchiaro, entertainment, family, fiction, fingerpaints, flash fiction, friends, friendship, illustration, kids, life, love, people, pictures, Richard Holt, robots, sad, the arts, understanding art, Vincent Van Gogh, writing
Hey all! For those of you who follow me here, I wanted to let everyone know my first short story EVER to be published in a magazine is available online today! The story, originally published here on my blog (but since taken down for publishing) is called I Heart Polka (And I’m Not Talking About the Dots). Click here to purchase the Instigatorzine issue. Here’s the cover:
Scroll to the bottom of the page to order it. They even have it for Kindle!
And be sure to check out the cool Melancholy Robot stories I’ve been doing along with many talented artists!
Posted in flash fiction, Zoey and Xander
Tagged art, beauty, couples, dating, fiction, flash fiction, friends, humor, Instigatorzine, kitsch, life, love, magazine, magazine publishing, marriage, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, polka, published, relationships, romance, short story, writing