books, once they are written, have no need of their authors.
- Elena Ferrante
morning boy's letters on serious matters and commentary on funny things aplenty
books, once they are written, have no need of their authors.
The facelessness of spending time with written works. Something must happen coz of that.
In writing, I discover great unknown people without seeing their faces. Movies thrust the same faces at you.
Huh! So finally it occurs to me that I can have an emoji keyboard for Chrome on my laptop. Emojis surely make it easy.
For some preposition-challenged readers like me, punctuated staccato-like framing may work better, punctuations standing in for a prepositions.
How taut, uncomfortable and teasing, Mr. Henry James!
Content and the order of content are 2 separate matters!
Am writing very messy notes. With a lot of rings peppering the notes. Terrific feeling. And the mobile handset amidst all the notes. Side by side, mobiling and writing.
To know thyself,
To know thyself,
Note thyself!
Email wasn’t quite designed for mobile screens. It was meant to retain some magic of letter writing. Mobile has no traces of letter writing.
That word. Discombobulation.
State of discombobulation. Any writer putting that to use has to be amazing.
The idea is to write so that the invisible and accidental are in the records.
The Count of Monte Cristo! Dialogue writing like that.
Written non-chalantly, every little episode in a Graham Greene work, is mighty.
They write the introductory section of the book after writing the book, right?
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