Page 95
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
"The Almost in Literature" compresses drinking, nausea, and failed expression into a few lines that sound half-spoken and half-collapsed.
The fragment centers on bodily disgust: beer lines the belly "of a worm," and thought immediately sinks toward quitting or vanishing inside "forty bottles." The Pittsburgh woman, Hungarian radio, and distant bookshelf briefly sketch a room full of culture and noise, but none of it becomes usable speech. "Impossible to repeat" feels like the governing fact, not just about memory but about making art from this condition.
Second placement of 'The Almost In Literature' from page 41, with OCR variance in the letterforms.
The page is the same poem, which is the point — 'impossible to repeat' is precisely what it is doing. The book is being honest about its failure to keep something from recurring. The slight artifacts of the second pass (the stray 'r' and 'P' glyphs) are part of the evidence that this is a retype.