DruidO’Casey Review: Sean O’Casey’s Trilogy Is a Tragic Vision of Working-Class Dublin Life
it will sometimes give you better ones.
When language is in this hyperalert state—the most ready image is a boxer hopping from foot to foot—you can see every gesture.shes doing all this weird stuff with temporal inversion and weird slips of address in The House in Paris.
I remember reading it in grad school and being struck by this part: The message of the minds passions is passion.Did it cross your mind at any stage to use these notes for something more weighty and analytical? Im so glad you didnt! It means as a reader I get to have those thoughts.I couldnt help but imagine that with age they had developed a fear of leaving the earths surface and descending beneath it into the ground.
Your point about gendered generalizations is a good one—you are so good on vegetables and cottage life in Pond.Its hard to access the right mental state during a commute to appreciate other peoples idiosyncrasies.
The way they managed to be practically omnipresent yet not really here at all was continually disquieting.
is composed of short diaristic notes that she made on her phone while traveling twice weekly to her university teaching post in Paris between 2014 and 2015.New York City is undoubtedly one of the most sought-after destinations for travelers across the globe.
From the oldest operating apothecary in the United States to an abandoned subway station dating back to 1904So-called “spite houses” are purposefully awkward or impractical—they’re meant to snub a pesky neighbor
If its misinterpreting you.Jackson is dressed as if hes going to a Steampunk convention.
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