Without the daily rotation of day and night I am unaware of how long, exactly, I have been in the belly of the whale. With only the glaucous glow of phosphorescent seaweed to provide light, circadian cycles break down more quickly than you’d expect. Early on, I found an old crate and, for the period
Day: September 4, 2010
The old Seashank Hotel always reeked of mold and seawater, creaking continuously as the wind changed, keeping everyone on edge. A burnished bell and musty leather sign-in book kept her company at the front desk. The paintings on the opposite wall shed a dour cast, her grandparents frowning and judging her with their dumb, unmoving
by Teodor Reljic Unidentified journal fragment, found off the coast of North Carolina, 22 November, 1718. Rattling cages; the place is about to explode from the noise and I feel my body: naked and grimy from this animal hole. Captain Blackbeard is dead. I can feel it in the Navy’s sneers and jeers: they descend
by Noel Tanti I am terrified of the open sea. I can think of few situations that make me feel so exposed and vulnerable; that gargantuan mass of water pregnant with an unseen universe, simply unnerves me. Surely, the reason behind this (sometimes) irrational fear stems from a nasty childhood episode that is cosily repressed
by Joshua M. Reynolds The shore was cold in the morning, and the sea was loud. The sun drizzled down through the ever-present wall of clouds that hugged the English coastline, glancing off the dark water. Just the way Otto Felton liked things for his morning jog. He was a thick man, in waist and
What does one think when asked what they think lurks within the depths of the world’s oceans? From a typical Schlock reader, one would assume mentions of the likes of sea serpents, gigantic man eating sharks, merfolk. Octopi of immense scale, lovingly dragging divers to their lairs. Squid of similarly colossal sizes, locked in combat