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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Game of Thrones Daily

izzy's playlists!
art blog(derogatory)
taylor price

gracie abrams
trying on a metaphor

Andulka
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sade Olutola
Cosmic Funnies
$LAYYYTER
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
NASA
wallacepolsom
d e v o n

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@tullyisat-blog
For the Internet screen has always been like the palantír in Tolkien’s ‘Lord of the Rings’—the ‘seeing stone’ that let’s the wizard see the entire world. Its gift is great; the wizard can see it all. Its risk is real: evil things will register more vividly than the great mass of dull good. The peril isn’t that the users lose their knowledge of the world. It’s that they can lose all sense of proportion. You can come to think that the armies of Mordor are not just vast and scary, which they are, but limitless and undefeatable, which they aren’t.
—Adam Gopnik - “The Information” from The New Yorker (Feb. 14 & 21, 2011 issue)
[David Foster Wallace] struggled for years to get to grips with the work and, says Franzen, who was a close friend, “If he’d finished it, I think he’d be alive today. Boredom is a tough subject to tackle in a novel and, arguably, Dave died of boredom.”
Breaking: Franzen still a huge asshole. From “The Rich Literary Afterlife of David Foster Wallace.” (via michellelegro)
The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it.
James Bryce (via libraryland)
I love that I Am Legend, Farenheit 451, and A Clockwork Orange made the cover of this book. In fact, it's the art throughout that really makes this book
Underwood St near circular quay in Sydney has several giant underwood typewriters adorning buildings
Canberra has Book Tourism
Movable Books: An Illustrated History by Peter Haining looks at "Pages & Pictures of Folding, Revolving, Dissolving, Mechanical, Scenic, Panoramic, Dimensional, Changing, Pop-Up and other Novelty Books"
Watch as the student desperately tries to cling to the notion of truth.
Mr Eternity's graffiti
Between his conversion to Christianity in 1930 and his death in 1967, Arthur Stace was compelled to inscribe the word 'Eternity' in chalk or crayon more than half a million times on various public surfaces around the city of Sydney. He was dubbed Mr Eternity. See his entry in Wikipedia for more.
books as bar code
Arrived at the bookshop, Alice browsed without pleasure. The books conveyed both intimidation and overabundant presence. They lined up like the immense bar code of some key to all mythologies.
Gail Jones, Dreams of Speaking (2006), p. 80.
Women and Books in Art
Forbidden Fruit: A History of Women and Books in Art by Christiane Inmann looks at the way women with or near books have been depicted in art. For example, this one 'Laus Veneris', by Sir Edward Burne-Jones.