Joe's Notes

Welcome!

This is my blog and I do whatever I want here. I write my thoughts about things and short stories, I take photos, and have lots of book reviews. Make sure to check out the PRODUCTS page to order your edgy t-shirts or the PRINTS page to get prints of my photography! Use the search bar at the bottom of this page to discover more posts. Use the ARCHIVE page to see all my posts. Categorical searches will also yield good results for those who want more of a specific group of posts such as “Photo Journal” or “Book Review”. Check out the OLD BLOG for over 270 posts that go back to 2010 and get your PRINTS at the Prints Store!

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30 Days of Heroes: Day 1 The Fitness Hero

April 05, 2020 by Joe Gray in 30 Days of Heroes, Fiction, Short Stories, Sci-Fi

I woke up with a headache and a furious anger. My prison cell was clean at least. I tried to smash my way through the door but it didn’t budge. I tried to rip the toilet out of the ground but it didn’t budge. I’m not the strongest man but I’m a big man, yet none of my rage was satisfied as everything in the little room was bolted to the ground or molded into it, save a pillow and blanket that was now strewn about the small area; sadly representing the minimal amount of chaos I could conjure.

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April 05, 2020 /Joe Gray
30 days of fiction, 30 Days of Heroes, action, blog, blogger, blogs, culture, fiction, fitness, heroes, lifestyle, pandemic, science fiction, short stories, short story, stories, story, storytelling, virus, writing
30 Days of Heroes, Fiction, Short Stories, Sci-Fi

Book Review: Dune by Frank Herbert

December 13, 2019 by Joe Gray in Book Review, Fiction, Sci-Fi

My friend recommended this book to me several times and I am very glad that I decided to take the suggestion. This book was a non-stop rollercoaster of intrigue, action, and suspense. From the very first chapter, the reader is thrown into a mysterious world where pieces to a massive puzzle are introduced through context while eluding simultaneously to a known future and an unknown present. The author introduces such puzzle pieces in a myriad of forms such as excerpts from unknown tomes that refer to unknown events, words that can only be contextualized to determine, and the names of people, cultures, and religions that will only make sense once the reader has delved deeper.

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December 13, 2019 /Joe Gray
action, adventure, blog, blogger, book review, books, Dune, Dune by Frank Herbert, dune novel, fantasy, Frank Herbert, intrigue, literature, mystery, novels, reading, recommendations, reviews, series, storytelling
Book Review, Fiction, Sci-Fi

Undulating Quantum Probabilities

August 29, 2019 by Joe Gray in Fiction, Poetry, Psychology, Rants, Thoughts, Whimsies

Someone once told me that the world is upside down but our minds correct this and we see the world right-side up. Sky side up. This is not true. The world is right-side up and our eyeballs are curved like a crystal ball that focuses light onto the retina. The resulting image is a projection of the world-oriented upside down because of curvature. The brain does not care that the image is physically disjointed from reality because it can represent the data in almost any orientation. It just so happens that the most adaptive way to represent this data is in a way that doesn't disorient us and lead to injuries; right side up.

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August 29, 2019 /Joe Gray
blog, consciousness, development, drugs, eyes, fiction, journal, observation, perception, philosophy, poetry, possibilities, probability, psychedelics, psychology, quantum, reality, thoughts, undulating, waves
Fiction, Poetry, Psychology, Rants, Thoughts, Whimsies

30 Days of Fiction: Day 30

March 11, 2019 by Joe Gray in 30 Days of Fiction, Fiction, Short Stories

It was a cold and dark night when Oliver stood outside the main gate of the palatial mansion that belonged to the CFO of the luxury yacht manufacturer Caesar's Shipyards. He attempted a deep breath but just as his lungs began to fill with the crisp New York winter air they convulsed, dispelling the air violently with each deep and gravelly cough. His face was beet red as he composed himself, then, with his hand against the cold steel of the gate, he stretched his legs. His joints were stiff and his back ached but this was nothing new to Oliver as his body had slowly been getting worse and worse for the past 5 years. While he had expected it for some time now, he wouldn't have put his money on this being the night of his last kill. 

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March 11, 2019 /Joe Gray
30 days of fiction, action, art, blog, blogger, blogging, fiction, independent, morality, murder, mystery, philosophy, serial killer, short story, stories, story, tests, writer, writing
30 Days of Fiction, Fiction, Short Stories

Jödingers Bullet

February 01, 2019 by Joe Gray in Fiction, Short Stories

Micah and Jared sat across from each other at their favorite diner. They had been coming here since they were in high school together. Now they were in their thirties. Jared was married and had two children and Micah has been divorced and has one child. They did their best to meet up once a week for lunch at the Lucky Horseshoe Diner and while Jared ate his pastrami sandwich Micah stared at him with a crooked smile and wide eyes.

"What?" Jared said after finally noticing Micah's gaze.

"Can you make me a cartridge that looks perfectly real but is actually not?" Micah asked.

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February 01, 2019 /Joe Gray
action, bullet, chance, fiction, funny, guns, luck, Russian roulette, Schrodinger, Schrodinger cat, Schrodinger's cat, story, suspense, thriller, blog
Fiction, Short Stories

30 Days of Fiction: Day 29

December 27, 2018 by Joe Gray in 30 Days of Fiction, Fiction, Short Stories

Taratumba was the smallest cheetah cub.

His brother and sister were much larger and would never let Taratumba win any of the games.
His mother would watch as they wrestled and raced.
Even though Taratumba was always overpowered and last in the races he never stopped trying.

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December 27, 2018 /Joe Gray
30 days of fiction, africa, animals, cheetah, fable, fiction, panther, short story, story, storytelling, tales, taratumba
30 Days of Fiction, Fiction, Short Stories
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