Finished Telephone by Everett this morning. It had some corny moments but also some more emotionally disturbing moments, and moments which hit the right narrative beats for fiction. I'd describe it as a minor American classic.
Just started African American Art and Artists by Samella Lewis this morning after finishing the last one, quite interesting so far.
@BlAcK_Sw0rDsMaN I'll add both Telephone and James to the reading list! I Love a great art book, that one looks great. Enjoy!
@MightyDemon82 Excellent. Hope you enjoy.
@BlAcK_Sw0rDsMaN @MightyDemon82 I’d be curious to see if you end up reading the same version or not.
@Jimmer-jammer Yeah, it's definitely cool how there are three different endings to it. How are you anyway, my friend? Read any good books lately yourself?
[Edited by BlAcK_Sw0rDsMaN]
@MightyDemon82 Sorry to hear that; that's a rough deal. The book is added to my to-read list...
@BlAcK_Sw0rDsMaN… as is Telephone (James was already on there)
I’ve has a digital copy of the Disaster Artist that I lost access to due to region lock which is pretty goofy. But luckily I have other means to get back to it.
And Angie finds herself facing a jewelled head, a thing wrought from platinum and pearl and fine blue stone, eyes of carved synthetic ruby. She knows this thing from the dreams that were never dreams: this is the gateway to the data cores of Tessier-Ashpool, where the two halves of something warred with each other, waiting to be born as one.
Angie, one of the world's biggest simstim stars, finishes a bout of detox in her Malibu home and decides to return to work, while Kumiko is sent by her powerful father to stay with an associate in London as pressing business concerns in Tokyo may prove dangerous for her. Slick Henry needs to care for a rather special package as an owed favour comes due and Mona's boyfriend Eddy may have finally closed the deal that will take them out of a life of squalor and prostitution, thanks to Mona's close resemblance to one of the
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