
by Erin Nicole
I was driving down a country road when it started raining. I stopped the car and I took this picture. Despite the storm, the sky was blue.

by Erin Nicole
I was driving down a country road when it started raining. I stopped the car and I took this picture. Despite the storm, the sky was blue.

by Erin Nicole
Whenever I go to the Dallas Arboretum, I see this house sitting on the other side of White Rock Lake. Usually, there’s a Texas flag flying from the flagpole. I don’t know who lives there but I do feel like I know their home.
In the world of the comics, there were many costumed heroes during World War II. Everyone from Superman to Captain America to Captain Marvel did their part for the war effort, battling Nazis abroad and traitors at home. However, one of the first costumed heroes was unique because, in an age dominated by super-powered men, she was a woman who simply decided that she could better aid her country by wearing a costume and fighting its enemies. By day, she was Joan Wayne, a stenographer. But, when America’s enemies needed a good beat down, she became Miss Victory!
With this being Independence Day weekend, it seems appropriate to take a moment and pay our respects to one of the first female super heroes of World War II, Miss Victory!

by Erin Nicole
Every July, these ribbons are tied to every street sign in our neighborhood.

Artist Unknown
Atlantis being found sounds like a big deal but I’m more interested in pet telepathy. It would explain so much. This cover is from 1953.

by Harry Sheldon
Humor is in the eye of the beholder.

by Darrell Greene
That’s a strange place to put a chair.

by Greg Manchess
This cover is a part of the Hard Case line of pulp reprints. Obviously, this was written a long time before Jurassic Park.

by J. Oval
I love that cover blurb. Stay away, prudes!