Where 43˚F is a Heatwave

Mar 09, 2015 11:13

I awoke to the cawing of a crow, waking from a nightmare that somehow involved radiation poisoning. A few minutes ago, we watched chickadees cavorting just outside the window. In Providence, on the West Side, we're lucky to see a pigeon ( Read more... )

facebook, walter crane, bad teeth, providence, jigsaw puzzles, twitter, not writing, grrm, birds, anxiety, laura j. mixon, lost days, labels, ichnology, awards, museums, dinosaurs, depression, nightmares, dreams, birding, equality, trolls, procrastination, new york

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The Drowning Girl ext_1285666 March 9 2015, 16:38:15 UTC
I get the Centipede newsletter and they have one dinged book of The Drowning Girl limited Edition for $100. My money is too tight to get it but maybe one of your Blog readers will shoot over to Centipede Press and snap it up.
It's a good deal.
Peace

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Shakespeare kiki60 March 9 2015, 18:34:30 UTC
People believe they live in either a small world, or a big world. A small world is one that is definable, and knowable. A big world is place of mystery, where no matter how much we know, the world is just beyond our grasp. Currently, there is to much debate on whether Shakespeare actually wrote what he's credited with. They imagine it must be a royal, a scientists or some such over nonsense. The thing is, writing is always more than author, more then the reader too. Yes, a grain merchant by the name of Shakespeare wrote what he was credited with. No insult intended, but your work is greater than you. Any limiting definitions will always be failure. We live in big world, and your work will be bigger than you.

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