This post of Seth Godin's,
The Places You Go talks about how, very often, emotions are like rooms in our mental houses -- they are places we seek out because we want to be in that state, rather than something that happens to us.
Being a marketing philosopher, he of course connects it to brands, and mentions that the best brands figure out how to
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Four strangers are bound together in adventure, love and occasional sorrow in this parable from Tiptree winner Valente (The Orphan's Tales). The city of Palimpsest exists somewhere outside our reality, accessible only during the sleep that follows sex. The immigrants to Palimpsest, marked forever by the tattoo-like impression of a map on their skin, seek out one another for real-world sexual adventures that function as passports to new otherworldly quarters. In outstandingly beautiful prose, Valente describes grotesque, glamorous creatures sometimes neither human nor animal, alive nor dead, and mortal travelers who pursue poignant personal quests to replace the things (and people) they've lost. Valente's fondness for digression at times makes for a difficult read, and her fable of quest and loneliness is less an engrossing fairy tale and more a meticulous travelogue of a stranger's dream.
- PW's review
It's not tap dancing and swinging from the chandeliers, but it's an honest well written review. So perhaps you're thinking of another review?
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EDIT: Ah, I see you've edited. Still, while I agree that transparent prose isn't a standard to be applied to science fiction as a whole, I personally have a strong preference for it.
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As for transparent prose, sure, lots of people have a preference for it.
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