Johnny America

 


JOHNNY AMERICA

Is a little ’zine of fiction, humor, and other miscellany, published by the Moon Rabbit Drinking Club & Benevolence Society since 2003.

Photograph the Book of MisunderstandingsPhotograph of the Book of Misunderstandings

Our latest production is The Book of Misunderstandings, a steal at ten bucks from our online shop. It’s a tight collection of short stories by Robert Wexelblatt about the consequences of getting things wrong.

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Photograph of The Book of MisunderstandingsPhotograph of The Book of Misundersatndings

Johnny America has been bringing you fresh fiction and humor since 2003.

Our latest production is The Book of Misunderstandings. It’s a tight collection of short stories by Robert Wexelblatt about the consequences of getting things wrong.

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Neigh­bors

by

Illustration of two gas pump nozzles facing each other

The sun ris­es above a desert moun­tain range. Its gold­en glow ban­ish­es the shad­ows in front of two gas sta­tions par­al­lel­ing a lone­ly freeway.

A man, still cling­ing to the horse­shoe head of hair he has left, stoops un­der the emp­ty garage door of one of the sta­tions. He straight­ens up and breathes in the fresh morn­ing air.

A rusty red pick­up truck and a white van ap­proach from the distance.

The bald­ing man fol­lows their progress. As the ve­hi­cles ap­proach, he pass­es his tongue over a chapped up­per lip and flash­es a yel­low-tinged megawatt smile.

Both ve­hi­cles turn in­to the gas sta­tion across the street. The man’s smile dis­ap­pears quick­er than shad­ows in sun­light. He looks at his gas prices and glances at the sta­tion across the street. They are three cents low­er than his. With a slump of the shoul­ders, the bald­ing man re­treats to his garage.

A man with a thick han­dle­bar mus­tache limps out of a small snack shop at­tached to the gas sta­tion across the free­way. He looks at his two un­oc­cu­pied pumps and then glances up and down the road. He sighs and leans back against the sta­tion wall.

A truck engine’s roar prompts the mus­ta­chioed man to take a stag­gered step forward.

The mus­ta­chioed man gives a friend­ly wave to an on­com­ing truck, but the truck ig­nores the wel­com­ing ges­ture and turns in­to the sta­tion across the street.

The man’s hand falls limply to his side. His neigh­bor’s fresh­ly cleaned gas price dis­play sparkles in the sun­light. It reads five cents cheap­er than his prices.

Across the street, his bald­ing neighbor’s yel­low smile flash­es. The mus­ta­chioed man limps back to his garage.

The bald­ing man takes a rag from his back pock­et and wipes the top of his head. He smiles at the red pick­up and the white van re­turn­ing from their jour­neys and watch­es them dri­ve back to­ward the moun­tains. A shuf­fle and clang from across the street di­vert his attention. 

His neigh­bor limps to­ward his gas price dis­play, hold­ing a lad­der. The neigh­bor gives him a fee­ble wave, and the bald­ing man an­swers the ges­ture with a wa­ver­ing smile.

The mus­ta­chioed man pulls his wool-lined coat tight with one hand and grips a clip­board with the oth­er. He limps across the de­sert­ed night­time high­way. A lone bulb from his neighbor’s garage casts a dimmed light out­side the station.

The bald­ing man slumps at a desk, star­ing at a gas price ledger with red-rimmed eyes. At the sound of a shuf­fle, he cranes his neck to­ward the garage en­trance and no­tices the clip­board in his neighbor’s hand.

Their eyes meet. The bald­ing man stands up as the mus­ta­chioed man limps over. They each raise a hand and grasp the other’s in a warm embrace.

The sun ris­es in the val­ley, ban­ish­ing the last ten­drils of night­time from the front of the sta­tions. The bald­ing man and the mus­ta­chioed man wave at each oth­er. Their gas prices are iden­ti­cal, ten cents high­er than they first were the pre­vi­ous day.

In the dis­tance, the red pick­up and the white van ap­proach, slow­ing down as they reach the stations.

Both ve­hi­cles stop in the mid­dle of the road. The mus­ta­chioed man and the bald­ing man step for­ward with a friend­ly wave to­ward the vehicles.

The pick­up turns in­to the bald­ing man’s sta­tion, and the van turns in­to the mus­ta­chioed man’s sta­tion. Each man steps for­ward with a smile to at­tend to their re­spec­tive customer.

As the men ap­proach, the red pick­up and the white van rev their engines.

Filed under Fiction on January 16th, 2026

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Your Third Round Job In­ter­view with a Manatee

by

Illustration of some seashells and seaweed

Your hand­shake… Was it too tight? Your dad would say so. It was clam­my. Salt-wa­tery. Don’t think too much about the hand­shake— even if it wasn’t re­al­ly a hand­shake since you were grab­bing his limp flip­per too tight­ly. You need this job. And not every­one gets past this point.

He’s wear­ing a suit, the man­a­tee. It’s tai­lored around his fat, gray neck. His tie’s got lit­tle em­broi­dered clam shells. White mol­lusks on blue back­ing. Blue — it’s a pow­er col­or. Strong, like hur­ri­cane waves or rip­tide. Like ex­ec­u­tives with leath­ery gray skin. 

You know you shouldn’t have worn the red tie to­day. You had a choice and it was the wrong one. He looks at your chest when he be­gins, hesitantly,

“This is your… Third round in­ter­view so far.”

You don’t re­ply. You sit on the chair in front of his desk. It’s moist. There’s a clump of sea­weed at­tached to one of the legs. It reeks of brine.

Three rounds of in­ter­view. Of on­ly two, the re­cruiter had lied. But not every­one can get an en­try-lev­el role do­ing front-end test­ing at a mid-lev­el West Coast SaaS start­up (with ben­e­fits). They may get past the on­line in­ter­views, but that’s on­ly be­cause most peo­ple are al­lowed to get this far, the man­a­tee. But not every­one gets past the man­a­tee. Will you? The thought makes you want to vom­it blood.

He smiles with big bul­bous jowls. “Shel­ley and her team were hap­py to pass on feed­back when you spoke with them last month. Her, ‘pod,’ so to speak,” he adds.

You don’t know who Shel­ley is. She’s a name on let­ter­head that you fol­lowed up with ex­act­ly four hours af­ter the ces­sa­tion of your in­ter­view two months ago, but be­yond that, she doesn’t ex­ist. You don’t want her to ex­ist. You just want a job. And so you nod, af­firm­ing the manatee.

“It was nice to meet her team,” you say. “Or, ‘pod.’”

He frowns. You’re not al­lowed to use that word in a pro­fes­sion­al en­vi­ron­ment like this. You should have known bet­ter. The man­a­tee looks at some­thing on his lap­top. It churns, like it’s a boat’s pro­peller, about to rip off and scar you and the man­a­tee both.

He swal­lows. Gur­gles, more like. A blow­hole dis­charges but he does­n’t look em­bar­rassed, no, be­cause it’s a pow­er­ful ac­tion for an executive. 

“I took a look at some of the ex­er­cis­es you com­plet­ed,” he says.

You don’t re­mem­ber them, the ex­er­cis­es. They may have been log­a­rith­mic prob­lems or cal­is­then­ics. That was four months ago. When you were just as poor. You’ve been liv­ing with a woman twice your age since then. You met her on­line and she owns an apart­ment in the city and you need a bed and some­where to store your mas­sive col­lec­tion of stu­pid, stu­pid red ties. She looks like the woman on the manatee’s desk, in a pho­to. The woman’s got her arm around the manatee. 

In that pic­ture, he has things you don’t. Sun­glass­es. Mar­gar­i­tas, in both fins. A blue-white Hawai­ian shirt un­but­toned to his mid-chest. An income.

The man­a­tee laughs. A bel­low sort of laugh. It goes on too long, as if he were hit with a yacht. You no­tice the batch of coral on his desk, all sharp. He’s got pens stick­ing out of the lit­tle holes at odd an­gles. And a Top Sales award next to it.

“Your re­sume is im­pres­sive,” he says. “Do you have any ques­tions on the role?”

How is a man­a­tee sit­ting at a desk?

But that’s an asi­nine ques­tion to ask in a job in­ter­view. He’s got a mas­sive, flap­ping, wet tail and an in­come and not every­one can have both of those — maybe one, but not usu­al­ly both, not in this economy.

“What is the most chal­leng­ing block­er your team re­solves on a dai­ly ba­sis?” you croak.

“Great ques­tion,” he lies. He talks at you but looks at the poster of kelp on the wall, avoid­ing eye con­tact. That’s a bad sign. You lean for­ward and smile. You try to win back the man­a­tee but it feels like an in­hu­man task, win­ning the ap­proval of an un­der­wa­ter mam­mal in ex­change for in­come. Makes you nauseous.

Ten min­utes ago you were in the hand­i­cap stall across from the women’s re­stroom, vom­it­ing in­to the toi­let be­tween hits of your vape cart. Some­thing in the bowl was red. Like your tie, the blood, red. It’s a pow­er col­or, you coped. Pow­er­ful, like your hair­cut that your fa­ther rec­om­mend­ed, as the man­a­tee doesn’t re­spect long hair. And not every­one gets past the man­a­tee, do they?

The man­a­tee looks at you. He squints and smiles with fleshy black lips. He stud­ies you. Whiskers twitch and a bead of slob­bery mois­ture drips on­to his desk. He fi­nal­ly asks, as if he doesn’t know, “What makes this role at­trac­tive for you?”

Food, you want to say. Kelp, to be re­lat­able. And those are ter­ri­ble an­swers. The truth: you want to swim free. Like him, you want to fol­low the warm wa­ter chan­nels along the Gulf Stream and cozy in­to in­lets and mi­grate with the ones you love — and you can’t do that with­out an in­come. So for now you need an of­fice with air con­di­tion­ing and a copi­er with salt dried on top of touch­screens. You need the job and for that you need the manatee’s re­spect and love and mer­cy. But you can’t say that in a job interview. 

It’s too much. You say some­thing else. But it’s not like what you say is mem­o­rable or im­por­tant enough to get any­thing more than a smile. 

He nods. At your ex­it, he de­clines to rise. If he could, if he didn’t have a mas­sive meaty tail un­der that desk, he wouldn’t, any­way. He just hands you a limp flip­per and brays, “You’ll be hear­ing from our team soon.”

That’s a salt­wa­ter lie. Your hand­shake is wet and your tie is red. And you know, deep down, you’re not go­ing to make it past the manatee.

Filed under Fiction on January 2nd, 2026

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Mass

by

Illustration of two saints and some cousins

We whip our car in­to the round­about too fast, cut off a bus, wave sor­ry-sor­ry-sor­ry out the back win­dow to the honk­ing bus, and ac­cel­er­ate down the last ex­it curve. In the front seats, we ar­gue. Bursts of words vol­ley from the driver’s side to the pas­sen­ger side and back again about which ur­gent care clin­ic is ac­tu­al­ly the clos­est and which one will ac­tu­al­ly be open at this time of the morn­ing on Christ­mas Eve. Scrunched up on the rear bench seat, we have a fever, our head hurts, we need a pep­per­mint shake, and we are not hap­py at all about be­ing so far away from the pile of presents un­der the big tree.

The cousin mag­ic meld­ing us to­geth­er is fiz­zling out. Each Christ­mas — well, at least for a few hours dur­ing Christ­mas — the once-a-year, nos­tal­gia-fu­eled nov­el­ty of see­ing each oth­er in re­al life would ef­fec­tive­ly fuse us in­to a sin­gle per­son. The wide gaps and jagged fis­sures be­tween our gen­er­a­tions, per­son­al­i­ties, and home ad­dress­es near­ly van­ished. We be­came such a sin­gu­lar en­ti­ty that we knew what we were think­ing and feel­ing — and what we would be think­ing and feel­ing, so much so that we would con­duct en­tire con­ver­sa­tions pure­ly through body lan­guage, or, if things got a lit­tle heat­ed, by shoot­ing point­ed looks at ourselves.

Right now, though, we are crack­ing apart. On our pas­sen­ger side, we sim­mer in frus­tra­tion at our driver’s side’s lead foot, our in­sis­tence on fa­vor­ing our flawed mem­o­ry over the pre­cise map on our phone, or when that fails, swerv­ing across busy traf­fic to ask for tips from com­plete strangers in strip mall park­ing lots. On our driver’s side, we chafe at our pas­sen­ger side fre­quent and lengthy plunges in­to glow­er­ing judg­ment, a com­plete in­abil­i­ty to just for once loosen up and — 

— right then we near­ly run the lit­tle man over.

We brake hard, but even be­fore the car stops and rocks back­wards   inch­es from the lit­tle man’s wide chest , we feel a dif­fer­ent shock. The lit­tle man is wear­ing a boxy, over­sized, earth-toned plaid suit straight out of the 1970s; a 1970s that  we in the front of the car keep in scat­tered patch­es of child­hood mem­o­ry. His care­ful­ly knot­ted tie with bur­gundy and gold stripes con­trasts with his mint green dress shirt. His mus­tache is Burt Reynolds thick, and he is sport­ing a nar­row-brimmed straw hat — a hat just like the one we re­mem­bered steal­ing off the head of our grand­fa­ther be­fore church on Christ­mas Eve morn­ings. We would run away, and our grand­fa­ther would try to chase us across the red tile pa­tio in his big suit, the click­ety-click sound of our tiny dress shoes punc­tu­at­ing our laughter.

In the front, look­ing at the lit­tle man, we feel a strange weight, as though a long emp­ty space with­in us is sud­den­ly and un­ex­pect­ed­ly filled. 

In the back, we feel even hot­ter, and why did we have to stop so hard, and now our head re­al­ly hurts, and did this lit­tle man have any presents and our pep­per­mint shake?

The lit­tle man ap­pears by our driver’s‑side window.

“Please chil­dren,” he says, “I will be late for Mass. Take me.”

From the pas­sen­ger side, we shift the heav­i­ness for a mo­ment. We know we can’t be see­ing this, can we? How could we be here, the smell of burn­ing rub­ber from our tire skid marks waft­ing in through the vents, stopped in the mid­dle of a ran­dom street af­ter near­ly run­ning over a very spe­cif­ic, high­ly de­tailed, and Nixon-era fam­i­ly phan­tom who is ask­ing us for a ride to church? Ridicu­lous. Im­prob­a­ble at best. Ac­tu­al­ly im­pos­si­ble. We can see that it is clear­ly a stranger, some odd­ball with co­in­ci­den­tal­ly ac­cu­rate body pro­por­tions, taste in vin­tage cloth­ing, and, fine, maybe the voice was dead on, but we need to get mov­ing be­cause our fever in the back seat is not go­ing to break on its own, we need to get an­tibi­otics, and, come on, it’s Christ­mas Eve and ghosts do not exist.

“Get in,” we say from the driver’s side.

The lit­tle man shuf­fles to the rear door, fum­bles with the han­dle, and gin­ger­ly stoops to get in be­hind the driver’s seat. He pulls the door shut and ex­hales con­tent­ed­ly. “Bless you, children.”

In the pas­sen­ger seat, we feel stretched be­tween dumb­struck and apoplec­tic. How, we won­dered, did any part of us in the driver’s seat think this was a good idea? Our face flush­es with heat, our eyes grow wide, and our head turns to un­veil our most lethal glare to­wards the stun­ning­ly id­i­ot­ic part of our­selves in the driver’s seat. Yet, in the mo­ment we turn to un­leash un­re­lent­ing eye­beams of con­dem­na­tion, we feel the strange weight in­side of our­selves set­tling, find­ing its way in­to old con­tours and crevices, and ra­di­at­ing a fa­mil­iar warmth. Stop it, we think, this is not our grand­fa­ther, and a mem­o­ry can’t just mag­i­cal­ly come alive, pop in­to re­al life, slide in­to the back of our car, and make that ache go away, and — 

— in the driver’s seat, we feel the rays of ex­as­per­at­ed rage blast through us and we are un­able to look away from the in­can­des­cent eyes from the pas­sen­ger seat locked on­to our own. How­ev­er, a calm shields us from the worst of the ra­di­a­tion. The strange weight has trans­formed quick­ly in­to com­fort on our side of the car, fill­ing the empti­ness in­side our­selves be­fore the lit­tle man had even asked for a ride. A smart part of our­selves knows that what we are see­ing is a fluke and not a phan­tom, but that part of our­selves shuts up as we think that maybe, just maybe, this is a chance, if on­ly for a mo­ment, to feel like a hap­py kid run­ning across a pa­tio again, and, hey, the least we can do is give a friend­ly ghost a ride to church because — 

“It’s Christ­mas,” we say from the driver’s seat.

This inar­guable  and in­fu­ri­at­ing­ly smug  fact hangs in the air be­tween us.

In the driver’s seat, we shrug.

In the pas­sen­ger seat, we turn to the lit­tle man. “We need to take her to a doc­tor now. She has a fever and —”

“My child,” says the lit­tle man. “I will show you the way.”

When the lit­tle man had got­ten in the car, we had scoot­ed across the rear bench seat as fast as we could and scrunched up tighter in the cor­ner. He wasn’t car­ry­ing any presents, or our pep­per­mint shake. We looked at our­selves in the front seats and frowned hard when we said, “it’s Christ­mas.” We want­ed to say this is dumb re­al­ly loud and maybe cry re­al­ly, re­al­ly hard, but we didn’t be­cause up front we looked kind of sad and hap­py at the same time.

“Please, child, dri­ve,” says the lit­tle man. “Mass be­gins soon.”

We ac­cel­er­ate down the street. The lit­tle man leans for­ward, anx­ious­ly look­ing out the front window. 

“You are a Christ­mas kind­ness, my chil­dren. A kind­ness that has left my life,” says the lit­tle man. “I awoke to­day as I do every morn­ing. I dressed, pre­pared my hum­ble meal, and sat by my­self at the kitchen ta­ble. While the sun rose, I won­dered how I would get to church.”

As the lit­tle man speaks, we no­tice that his cologne is our grandfather’s brand.

“Where I sit at Mass there are still scratch­es in the pew from when my own chil­dren were young and care­less. I run my fin­gers through those grooves.”

The lit­tle man leans for­ward fur­ther, grip­ping the tops of each front seat. “My chil­dren are grown now and far away. Per­haps they have scratch­es in their pews from their own children.”

On the pas­sen­ger side, we un­clench our teeth. The back of our neck tin­gles, and we try to sti­fle a hitch in our breath. We imag­ine the lit­tle man sit­ting alone in the mut­ed light of the nave, gen­tly trac­ing those weath­ered lines in the pew, and we have to bite our lip to keep it to­geth­er, be­cause no way we were go­ing to give the driver’s side one bit of sat­is­fac­tion in this mo­ment. Fine, we ra­tio­nal­ize, we’re do­ing a good thing by giv­ing the Ghost of Co­in­ci­dence Present a ride, and maybe his rot­ten chil­dren will feel a wave of un­ex­pect­ed shame roll over them wher­ev­er they were ly­ing on a beach. Hon­est­ly, how  shit­ty are this guy’s kids? we think on the driver’s side. The in­dig­na­tion we feel on the lit­tle man’s be­half is a re­lief, be­cause oth­er­wise, there was no way the pas­sen­ger side would let us live this episode down. We think about the lit­tle man in church, shak­ing hands and say­ing peace be with you to the fam­i­lies around him, and we have to bite our lip to keep it to­geth­er. We sneak a look at the pas­sen­ger side. Over there, we aren’t frown­ing, so maybe we have warmed up to our sur­prise ex­per­i­ment in Christ­mas good­will. In the back, how­ev­er, our cheeks are bright red, and we are look­ing quizzi­cal and a lit­tle bit pissed off.

“LEFT,” says the lit­tle man. “It is very close.”

“You said the doc­tor is on the way?” we ask from the pas­sen­ger side.

“RIGHT. Yes, my child, we are very close.”

We zig-zag through the down­town, pass­ing long blocks of store­fronts that ap­pear less and less pros­per­ous the far­ther we dri­ve. On the driver’s and pas­sen­ger side, the grungi­ness of the con­sign­ment stores and pay­day loan of­fices make us even more sub­dued and pen­sive. This lit­tle man is not our grand­fa­ther, but we are do­ing a good thing to­day. We will get him to where he needs to be. Where he will be em­braced and where he will be loved.

“STOP,” says the lit­tle man.

We hit the brakes. With alarm­ing speed, the lit­tle man opens the rear pas­sen­ger door, hops out, scam­pers across the street, and skips over the curb, mak­ing a straight line to a large faux-Me­dieval look­ing door with flaky paint. A red neon sign clicks alive and blinks OPEN from the door’s tiny arched window. 

We low­er the pas­sen­ger side win­dow and stare. Next to the door, two scruffy old­er men stand laugh­ing as the lit­tle man yanks on the han­dle and bolts inside.

“Right on time,” says one.

“Save us a spot in the pew,” says the oth­er, call­ing af­ter the lit­tle man.

The two men shuf­fle inside.

We look up. Above the door and a chipped plas­ter gar­goyle bolt­ed in­to the grimy stuc­co wall, a large, fad­ed sign says “St. Chester’s Abbey” in hand-paint­ed goth­ic let­ters. “Di­vine Spir­its. Heav­en­ly Com­pa­ny. Ser­vices Dai­ly, 7AM to 2AM,” the sign says. A car­toon saint, lit­tle bub­bles ris­ing through his ha­lo, rests his el­bow on the “Y” in “Abbey,” cradling a jum­bo chal­ice of foamy beer, and laughs. 

In the back, we are frus­trat­ed. We pull our legs up to our chest. We want to not be so hot, our head to not hurt so much, to get presents, and get our pep­per­mint shake right now, but when we look at our­selves in the driver’s seat and the pas­sen­ger seat, we feel dif­fer­ent, kind of like we are heav­ier all of a sud­den. We have not seen ex­pres­sions like that on our faces be­fore. Our mouths are open, and we aren’t sure if we are re­al­ly con­fused, or em­bar­rassed, or su­per mad, or that we are about to say some­thing, or laugh crazy hard, or that we are go­ing to cry.We don’t un­der­stand what has just hap­pened, and that makes us a lit­tle sad, too.

Filed under Fiction on December 19th, 2025

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