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i always tell myself that "when im older and i have the time" i'm going to write several things.
i have two script ideas
(a love story about a certain adolf someone, and a black comedy set in a nursing home)
and a short story, which i will write, in which a man wakes up dead, but cannot move his body, so has to lie down whilst he is buried/cremated. it will be an internal monologue, set in the mind of a dead man.
there are many more i sometimes think of.
weird things. quirky little short stories with no beginning or end, just a middle. like youve walked halfway into a novel and don't really know the characters involved.
speaking of novels, i am reading brave new world right now, and i love how huxley depicts worlds without focusing too much on them. he doesnt make them the focus of the novel, just a very elaborate back drop, like a finely woven wallpaper.
what are you reading right now?
i have two script ideas
(a love story about a certain adolf someone, and a black comedy set in a nursing home)
and a short story, which i will write, in which a man wakes up dead, but cannot move his body, so has to lie down whilst he is buried/cremated. it will be an internal monologue, set in the mind of a dead man.
there are many more i sometimes think of.
weird things. quirky little short stories with no beginning or end, just a middle. like youve walked halfway into a novel and don't really know the characters involved.
speaking of novels, i am reading brave new world right now, and i love how huxley depicts worlds without focusing too much on them. he doesnt make them the focus of the novel, just a very elaborate back drop, like a finely woven wallpaper.
what are you reading right now?
brokeback mountain
i finally got around to watching brokeback mountain.
i really thought it was stunning.
there was something incredibly moving and sympathetic about all the storylines within the film.
there is dual torment in it - torment for jack and for his wife, and for ennis and his wife, and for jack and ennis together, and for ennis and his children.
i also loved that homosexuality wasnt ever mentioned. it was the "love that dare not speak its name". the audience recognises it, but i dont think the characters ever do.
even jack, who travels to mexico to find a gigolo to quench his thirst for ennis, i don't think realises it.
and that, in itself, is
how do you ALWAYS make it about this?
hello.
i am going to marry soon.
not really, but i wish i was.
good bye for now.
lets hope next time i post here i am in a comfortable relationship? yes?
what is YOUR relationship status at the moment? spill the beans.
memo to self
stop falling for straight guys.
in memory of j.d. salinger
i think you taught us all how to grow up and you were a strict father with his feet firm in some morals or another.
i think without you,
i would be more or less half the person i am today.
i remember, finishing "for esme with love and squalor" on the way to school, and feeling like i wanted to cry. even closing "franny and zooey" on route home, or reading holden's last words in a crowded bank in some part of north london.
these are my fondest memories.
you made worlds, and i lived in them for brief periods of time.
it really was a wonderful relationship.
of course, what i really loved, was all the little idosyncrasies all your men and
© 2010 - 2024 FacetiousKellyAna
Comments3
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I'm very curious about the black comedy in the nursing home. The short story reminds me a book from a brasilian writer. He wrote a book about a dead man also. This man tell the readers the history of his life, with a lot of sarcasm (he dedicates the book to the worms that ate his flesh) and a philosophy. I'm not currently reading this one, but I will.
Right now I'm reading Pride and Prejudice from Jane Austen.
Right now I'm reading Pride and Prejudice from Jane Austen.