Thursday, September 15, 2016

miller at the tropics on the table.

almost as chaoitc as choosing what to eat is chooisng a book from the city library.

you never know if it's good enough.
sometimes i just borrow all three of them to make shure i have something to do bringing them back two weeks later.

like a pure activity, borrowing books, not necesarly reading them can  be helpful.

it's a cheapscake thing.
i see books in the bookstore and  my only thought  is: wait, i can always borrow it and then see if it really pays of the money.

then again, if i have to move where do i put all those  things? books included. better borrow and return. safe and comfortable.

the library is old. sometimes it's cosy other times very depressing. the bookstore is modern, with cool smelling candles and covers filled with fresh brightening ink.

why am i writting this?

i should be able to write something about miller; i started one of his books, i think it was the other tropic, and i couldn't read it. 
 my brain started to decompose a little.still, miller seems readable.
i actually enjoy it.

in this very moment i received  strange suggestion that i should press the laptop keys lighter. the opposite of this is darker, right?

dark writting, that's what you do at the tropics.
makes sense.







3 comments:

  1. If i brought you pegs, unconditionally, to your ”Undertaking” - the rotten coffin…, definitely Miller would take back your cheapskate thoughts about books, he will shut down your laptop and he will gladly reveal the Tropic ”shore” for you. by heaving your own library. If Miller's mysticism, surrealism and sex are not dark, nothing is dark. The idiot that told you to press the laptop keys lighter might have another view. For you to write. Bright writing on every shore of every ”Tropic”. That makes sense.
    same ”Anonymous” that we both like

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. dear anonymous, please understand that one's hidded identity is not actually something good, in terms of common sense

      regards

      Livy Schiopu (like the great roman hystorian), but more accurate.

      Delete
  2. Dear roman historian, dear Livy, being anonymous have nothing to do with the common sense, simplicity and sincerity is never wrong. For that, i beg you, efface, sweep my thoughts.

    Best regards

    Your known anonymous, not earl of Oxford

    ReplyDelete

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