Subtrahend


Thursday, July 29, 2004

    · Au cinéma: Killing Zoe. It's either an improbable French Type A love story, or a heist, or drug-taking in Paris. I think these things all work against each other. Maybe I misunderstood something, but the love story concerns Julie Delpy, a part-time prostitute who falls for our hero (Eric Stoltz). After they spend a single evening together, his friend comes along and brutally throws her out of the room because they have to plan the big heist, and our hero does nothing to stop it. That's endearing, isn't it? And yet we're asked to believe that she remains devoted to him. As for the heist, we don't get to see any of the planning, which is the best part of any canonical heist movie. We need to be shown how difficult it will be, what the gimmick is, and a bit of foreshadowing of the thing that will go disastrously wrong. I want to go along and case the joint too, but there's no time for that: it's the night before the heist, so in preparation our friends drink lots, smoke hash, and then go out to the clubs to ingest every other drug known to man.

    Oh yes. The mastermind is a heroin user. I think if I were a technical criminal Who Knows His Stuff, as our hero is supposed to be, I would back out of any project run by a junkie. But that's just me.

    During the course of the movie I took time off to catch up on Spongebob Squarepants, so I may have missed something. I wasn't quite clear what they intended to steal, and was dismayed to find that it was a dollyload of gold ingots! Hard to say how many. I would estimate three or four hundred, a good stack. How much would that weigh? As much as a small car? A bit more? And they would have to carry all that out, load it, speed off with it. And then what? Is it possible to fence that much gold right after a huge gold heist?

    That's another interesting question: what's the best thing to do if you happen to stumble across an aluminium suitcase full of mob money? That's dealt with a bit in A Simple Plan, with Bill Paxton, Bridget Fonda, and Billy-Bob Thornton.



     — posted by P | at 10:11 AM | |

    · I discovered the other day that the mouse on this computer was having a harder and harder time travelling up and down. I was racing it up and down like kid with a toy truck, only to have the pointer make a fitful vertical jump of an inch or two, or else zip along from side to side. Finally I took matters into my own incompetent hands. I discovered small amounts of finely-woven cat hair stuck to the various moving parts. Cat hair in the mouse. Hmm. It took me a good half hour to remove it as I don't have any computer-fixing tools (and probably shouldn't be allowed any). So apparently the cat takes it into her head, when I'm not around, to lounge about on the computer table and mousepad.


     — posted by P | at 9:26 AM | |

    · Fafblog just keeps getting better and better. (I have corrected the address in the sidebar). It's interesting to read various bloggers who are attending the Democrats' convention. Sounds like a big deal. It's hard to tell from the TV screen though. Unless you've been attempered to the idea of watching speech after speech, and then watching people try to come up with some commentary, it's a bit dry. I imagine the real stories are going on in hallways and quiet spots around the floor, people shaking hands and exchanging a few words. At least, that's my experience of conferences: nobody listens to the papers, but everyone's hobnobbing. It like people who attend church mainly for the fellowship and refreshments.



     — posted by P | at 8:59 AM | |

Wednesday, July 21, 2004

    · I ran into an old Spring Garden character on the weekend. He told me he had just turned 60. But he has a bit of that old Halifax accent: he calls me "Pwaauwl" and substitutes short "i" for "e": "I rimimbir whin" etc. There's a bit more to it than that, though. He reminded me of the "Doric Restaurant". which I had thought was on the first block after South Park Street, but he correctly told me it was on the next block, where there is now a second-string urban mall. The site it used to occupy is now an art deco French restaurant called "Art Deco", with no customers. I wonder whose dumb idea that was? The food is pretty good, but it's not anything you couldn't make at home. But what people really want is another Greek family restaurant that serves rice pudding with their cheap specials ("It comes with") and also hands out the odd free coffee and snack to the indigent.



     — posted by P | at 12:26 AM | |

Thursday, July 15, 2004

    ·Here's a note that used to appear on Columbia LPs in the 1950s:

    Music by the hour

    "Lp", Columbia's registered trademark, denoting the Long-Playing, 33 1/3 rpm system, was first introduced in 1948. The invention of the "Lp" has contributed immeasurably to the realization of High-Fidelity sound, to the ease of playing and storing records and, even to the form music itself is assuming, for with up to thirty minutes or more of uninterrupted music on a single side of a modern Long Playing record, the performer, as well as the listener, has inherited new freedom and new musical dimensions.

    Enjoy recorded music more on Long Playing records. And look for the symbol "Lp" on the record jacket--the exclusive trademark of Columbia, originator of the Long Playing record!

    Isn't that strangely awkward? Why is it awkward? "...even to the form music..." All the commas and asides, and finally the alien adspeak exhortation at the end: "Enjoy music more". Since this text was intended to appear on thousands of slipcases, why did they not polish it up a bit? But maybe there's something interesting here. The wandering syntax shows it to have been composed by a committee, rather than an individual, while the unnecessary talking points reveal the committee's mandate. And then late at night the boss probably had the big idea of adding the word "immeasurably", and no one felt like objecting. "Gee, that's great, J.B. 'Immeasurably' sort of naturally goes right after 'contributed'."


     — posted by P | at 3:04 PM | |

Thursday, July 08, 2004

    · Tom Ridge promises another big attack by al-Qa'ida, according to CNN.cm. I do hope it won't be as bad as the previous monthly alerts. I haven't read the story because I am stupidly going about my business, but I imagine there has been some "chatter". To be serious, though, what's the point of these alerts? What can US citizens do any differently? Be more vigilant? Would that help, given that there are full-time professionals doing that very thing? This isn't crimestoppers they're talking about, but some kind of big disastrous attack. In the movies, whenever the country is threatened by asteroids or alien invasion, the government usually takes the line that it's best not to tell their citizens, to avoid panic and chaos. Sometimes the hero of the movie chastizes the government for this. But here we see Ridge taking the other route: publicize this vague threat against, which there seems to be no remedy, in the hope that people will do--what? Pray? Put their houses in order? Contemplate their final end? Well, no doubt I'm missing something. But then I'm not paying attention.


     — posted by P | at 3:16 PM | |

Sunday, July 04, 2004

    · If you've enjoyed the work of Bruce Campbell, then you're sure to like Bubba Ho-tep, a remarkable achievement in the world of strange movies. Campbell plays an aging Elvis, and he has "major bug problems" and has to use a walker. Also his best friend is John F. Kennedy, brilliantly disguised as a black man. There is a Bubba Ho-tep site to look at. And here are some reviews. But it's about the best Elvis I've seen -- natural, restrained. By all accounts Elvis was a very polite, thoughtful man.


     — posted by P | at 10:45 AM | |

Saturday, July 03, 2004

    · It seems Marlon Brando has died. My mother, who died in April, was his biggest fan -- oh, let's be honest, she positively adored the man. She liked manly neurotics, and that's why she married my father. But it does seem as if a whole generation is passing away. The whole period of James Dean, Elvis, Streetcar, Ed Sullivan. It's all gone. Well, now I'm watching Bubba Ho-tep, a sort of alternate Elvis story.


     — posted by P | at 8:23 AM | |

    · I think not enough is known about Roch Carrier, this country's chief librarian.

    He is the author of "Le Chandail de Hockey", about a rotten kid who gets the wrong hockey sweater, which causes wackiness to ensue, and a short novel, La Guerre, Yes Sir!, in which wackiness breaks out among the life-affirming Québec villagers during World War II, hugely droll. But he also had a hand in the famous Canadian kids' movie, Le Martien de Noël, about a Martian (played by Marcel Sabourin) who visits a Québec village at Christmas. Imagine that, a Martian!! He floats around and leaves green footprints and giggles like a pederast. Will the wackiness not stop? Anyway, that's our chief librarian. He is highly thought of.


     — posted by P | at 7:33 AM | |

Friday, July 02, 2004

    · "The Editors" at "The Poor Man" quote a news source that says: top officials "exaggerated what the available intelligence said about Iraq's nuclear, chemical, biological and missile programs and left out important caveats." That's good, isn't it? "Left out important caveats", maybe it could be "failed to not lie their heads off".

    · Much to think about this week. Apparently Canada had an election, with the usual results. Probably another election soon. What the Conservatives ought to do, if they would win next time, is actually have real conservative policies and at least pretend to be aware that places like Québec and the Atlantic Provinces exist somewhere out there.

    · There were lots of ants in my house the other day, so I'll have to shop around for a can of cholinesterase inhibitors. One thing about ants: they're dumb. They run around in circles, aimless, clueless. "What am I doing? Oh yeah. What am I -- Oh yeah", etc. Then one will come out of the hole and meet another coming in. They lock antennae and apparently the first one has said to the second, "No; go back", which he does, for about three seconds. Then it's back to running around in circles.

    · Paul Krugman, in The New York Times (some registration required), describes Michael Moore: "Mr. Moore may not be considered respectable, but his film is a hit because the respectable media haven't been doing their job." I thought the movie quite powerful for a boring old documentary. People in the theatre where I was applauded at the end, something I've never seen before.


     — posted by P | at 2:41 PM | |

Thursday, July 01, 2004

    Whom Do You Like among Tyrants?


    · I can remember all kinds of big leaders warmly kissing and fondling L. Brezhnev and others. So how did this relatively small fry, Saddam Hussein, get to be a bugbear? I think he just blew people off. He's the Fredo of the big family, sitting in a *flat in some lake with his executioner. He went too far, invited the wrong people, gabbed about stuff, made the wrong deals. Or perhaps I'm wrong and he's the Antichrist. (The problem with that is Hussein's stubborn refusal to meddle in Christian countries by supporting gay marriage or drugs or other Un-American activities. The guy was just way too lazy.)
    *Somebody asked me: a "flat" is a tiny flat-bottom boat for getting around to do maintenance on normal boats.


     — posted by P | at 1:52 AM | |

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The Subbasement


Bibliography


  Old Books
... without the dust

 

 


· Ors, Eugenio d', 1882-1954. Oceanografia del tedio; Historias de las esparragueras. Madrid: Calpe, 1921.

Eugenio d'Ors was born in Barcelona in 1881, studied law and philosophy, became an art critic and essayist, and gradually developed his own peculiar ideas, exemplified in this delightful, short work, which he wrote in Spanish (rather than Catalan) around 1919. The Spanish Civil War caught him in Paris, where he remained for the duration. Though not an activist, he would have been unwelcome at home because of his Catalan sympathies.

The author, or a character referred to throughout as "Autor", opens his story by explaining that his doctor had instructed him, for the sake of his health, to do absolutely nothing. He's not even alowed to think about anything. "Ni un movimiento, ni un pensamiento!", the doctor says. He therefore spends all his time in a lawn chair looking at clouds, wondering about scents that waft past, in short, doing nothing. And yet everything, in a way. It's a wonderful story about inaction, just the sort of thing for someone who spends a lot of time looking at weblogs.

· Tabori, Paul. The Natural Science of Stupidity. Philadelphia: Chilton Co., 1959.

The author, who was born in 1908, discusses stupidity. He explains how the Yap people of the Pilau Islands use stone disks, some of them the size of millstones, as currency. The largest stones are more like real estate: you could buy one, and your wealth would be ensured. Then he goes on about King Solomon's mines, which he connects with this passage in Kings I, 9.

He has a lot to say about popular beliefs, crazes, and things. It's a shame he wrote long before conspiracy theories really came into their own.


   
  

  Georges Duhamel
Select Bibliography

 

 


Duhamel, Georges, Le desert de Bièvres. Paris: Mercure de France, 1930.

—, Biographie de mes fantômes, 1901-1906. Paris: P. Hartmann, 1944.

—, Chroniques des Pasquier. Paris: Mercure de France, 1933-

—, Essai sur le roman. Paris: M. Lesage, 1925.

—, Fables de mon jardin, suivi de Mon royaume. Paris: Mercure de France, 1961.

—, Israël, clef de l'Orient. Paris: Mercure de France, 1957.

—, Les plaisirs et les jeux, mémoires du cuib et du tioup. Paris: Mercure de France, 1946.

—, Récits des temps de guerre. Paris: Mercure de France, 1949.

—, Souvenirs de la vie du paradis. Paris: Mercure de France, 1906.


   
  

Annals of Public Neurosis


  Peace Tricks
April 2002

 

 


"The month-long standoff at Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's Ramallah compound looked to be nearing its conclusion as U.S. and British security experts arrived in the region to implement a U.S.-brokered plan."
—CNN, April 29, 2002.

The current talks between the U.S. and everyone else seem to be even more impenetrable than usual, probably because it's difficult to imagine what they might possibly have to talk about. Surely they have exhausted every topic, scoured every useless path many times over, checked and re-checked even the most unpromising approaches? In which case these talks most closely resemble a kind of obsessive-compulsive behaviour, enacted in the curious privacy of public life. We've no idea what they're saying, or what they really want, but we get daily, even hourly reports of this activity of theirs. We don't get the details, or even the gist, of what was discussed, but we are assured that some talking is going on, and that there will be more talking later.

Patients who show signs of obsessive-compulsive behaviour typically find themselves incapable of getting important things done—or even of confronting their most pressing problems. They therefore busy themselves with something they can do effectively, often to the exclusion of all else. Tidying up the bus shelter, making absolutely sure they take x number of steps before opening the front door, and so on. Obviously, the significance of the activities performed can vary: some things are a fairly useful by-product of otherwise misdirected energies; others are of rather doubtful value, at least to the secular world. So it is with political discussions and "U.S.-brokered" peace plans. Some do produce unusual fruit, though not always the expected one, while others have a more magical quality, as if the participants were involved in some sort of Hermetic, alchemical work designed to bring about peace by causing it to be acted out in a symbolic drama.


   
  

Almost a Complete Thought


 

 

 


· Watching a movie. Wait! Is the guy screwing up my correct view of things? Or was my view untenable to begin with? Certainly he can point to his successful career as proof of some rectitude. But maybe he's so clever, so cunning, that he succeeds in the teeth of madness. A prosaic blend of fantasy and reality!


· I was watching some crime show. The crime has already been committed. Snazzy men and women arrive at the crime scene and take swabs, wear rubber gloves, pose in their outfits. Wait, is this a fashion show? Meanwhile ... let's look at this corpse really closely. Dear me. Ugh, can we stop looking at that for a bit? It's a pretty horrible crime. And so messy!

"Look, Lt. I've been examining some filth and discovered who the 'perp' is."

"Good. Let us now set our jaws grimly."


· I read somewhere that when you are watching TV, your brain is less active than when you are asleep. I find this bizarre, because I often dream that I'm watching TV.


· Most movies are much better with the sound off, so you can make up your own, more entertaining dialogue. Also, it starts to get intriguing. You end up wondering what's going to happen next, because all sorts of inexplicable things keep happening.


   
  

Stories


  A Story
Subtitle

 

 


It's too bad. If I could think of a story offhand, I would write it in this space; that's what you would be reading. Instead, there is only this inconsequential, self-regarding excuse for not being able to come up with anything.

Of course, I think the reader is doing very well so far. Remarkably well. I thing the reader comes out of this whole thing smelling like a rose. He has done his job. No, the reader is above reproach. His record is unblemished. Some readers even go that extra step and look for coded messages in the few paragraphs made available to them. That shows resourcefulness, valour — I think.


   
  

  Reveille
A Miniature Fascist Dictator

 

 


There was a miniature Fascist dictator in the departure lounge of the airport, Ted noticed. About four feet high, eighty pounds, sallow complexion, neatly trimmed black moustache, wearing a khaki uniform of some kind.

Was he planning a small Putsch? A Measure? What pint-sized dreams of conquest did he have? "Our National party is stronger - we are in no way diminished," he may have imagined himself saying. "Now, if I say to you that our Party's goal is nothing less than to revendicate that which we have lost, that which is historically our due; to reclaim our patrimony ..." Is that what was going on in his head? Was he on his way somewhere, or coming from somewhere? Going into exile, or returning from it? Escaping? Seeking?

Ted decided to follow him until he could come up with some further course of action. But the man wasn't really doing anything. Just wandering around with a container of coffee, keeping an eye on the brown satchel and shopping bags he had left on one of the naugahyde-and-aluminium benches. He paused in front of the windows that looked onto the airfield. His nostrils flared at the sight of massed passenger aircraft. Then he sauntered over to the other side of the lounge and studied some posters. Ted pretended to inspect a model lobster trap in a display case nearby.

They toured the lounge in stages and, even before the small man glanced back at him, Ted was already lost in thought beneath an departure-and-arrivals screen. "Am I supposed to do something?" he wondered. "Is there some history going on here, somewhere?" But how would one know?

Ted then discreetly followed him back to the coffee bar. Apparently he wanted another coffee. There were several customers before them, and in the time it took for them to be served, Ted was almost able to identify the small man's scent: Lancôme for Men? His choice of coffee, too, was unusual, a decaffeinated Ethiopian flavour. He went back to his original bench. Ted loitered just behind him, undecided. Unprepared. Shall I say something? What's he doing?

Looking at his ticket again.

Sipping his coffee, sucking a great deal of air between pursed lips just over the steaming surface of the coffee. Too hot.

Consulting the contents of his satchel once again, just to verify that he had everything he would need for his trip. Ted, peering over his shoulder, caught sight of a volume of Pablo Neruda, Jane Eyre, and a stuffed toy rabbit.

Putting his coffee down, digging with both hands in one of the shopping bags, the one that had some sort of environmentalist logo on it. Nous recyclons!

Recovering a pair of sunglasses. Putting them on! Expensive ones!

"Excuse me - okay if I sit down?"

"Eh? Oh, please. Yes, yes - you are quite welcome."

Ted sat down wearily. "I've been travelling all day, I hope you don't mind."

The other nodded rapidly. "It is very tiresome, all this travelling," he said. "I myself have been up since very early, making connecting flights. And still my day is not over."

Ted seized the thing roundly. "What sort of business are you in, if it's no harm to ask?"

"I am a consultant. Specialising in pharmaceutical trade." The little dictator removed his sunglasses and began to polish them on his handkerchief.

Well, at least he wasn't a jack-booted thug!

"I am not used to talking to fewer than five thousand people at a time", he continued, "for fear of being misunderstood. However, I shall make a beginning.

"It is horrifying to think of the consequences of chance. One man begins a great career as an officer in the European Theatre; another, no less gifted, has his head blown off as soon as he steps out of the landing craft. Why does that happen? Who is to blame? Who will account for it?"

Here the little man swigged his coffee. Ted noted that his hair, seemingly dark brown, was really an artificial boot-brown colour. Ted formed a reply: "Well, I suppose it would depend how you look - "

But the other man was not to be denied: "It is no accident that the corporate hegemony of a small group of - "

Ted sprang into action. More on that next week.


   
  

  Fun at Home
A Pious Memory

 

 


When Chris heard God had invited Himself to the party, he thought it was all over. There was probably no getting around it, though. "What they do on tv", said Bill, "is invite a Catholic priest, a Rabbi, and a minister as well. To sort of get their collective spin on it."

"But this isn't a tv show", said Chris, "it's a party. A little get-together for a bunch of friends, some of whom are leaving in a couple weeks. And anyway, that approach always comes off as a tired, unfunny joke, predictable, you know...I don't know why everyone acts as if tv meant something."

"Yeah. I had this dream I was watching tv last night. But then I realised dreams are kind of like tv, only not as good. We'd better go to the liquor store."

"Just let me get my coat."

God phoned around 8:00 to say He would be along soon. "Want me to bring anything?" he asked.

"Just yourself, man," said Chris. People always brought too much junk. There was always a surplus of snack-food bags and dip the next day.

"Okay", said God. "After all, I am That Am, you know."

People started turning up a little later:

"Sheila!" said Chris, greeting one of his guests, "So you managed to find the address."

"Yeah - sorry I'm late, but - "

"No problem. So, are you excited about your new job?"

"Yes, it's - "

"Dirk!" said Chris, greeting another guest, "Glad you could make it, are you excited about the new job?"

"Well - it's kind of not what I'm looking for, but it's in the right area. And I didn't want to have to move to - "

"And your girlfriend? Is she ...?"

"In Norway." And he began to look as if he would like to scowl, but instead turned to the consuming business of installing some cans of beer in the fridge. Other people skulked around the kitchen. A party had erupted.

A little later Chris noticed God levelling a tequila shot and saying, "I'm gonna have a wicked case of the guilts tomorrow."

God put cucumber slices over his eyes and said, "Look at Me. I am become weird."

Around 2:00 am God hooked up His guitar and started playing "Stairway to Heaven" really loud. Most of the people who had fallen asleep woke up and staggered back to the party. He played pretty well. Then He segued into "Born to be Wild", which He played rather better. The sheer noise was an audial colossus, making the dishes tremble even in the kitchen.

"Get Him out of here, the man's an animal," said Bill.

Chris looked at God from the door into the kitchen. "Oh, I don't know. I don't think he's going to do anything too serious."

"No, I mean the noise. The neighbours'll be like - "

"Any problem?" asked God. He was coming to get some more wine. Since He was no longer playing the guitar there didn't seem to by any need to admonish Him.

A little later something happened. But was that before or after the police dropped by? And later still, God was found lying in the driveway. They carried Him into a bedroom.

Is He ok?

Did He hurt himself?

In the morning they opened the bedroom door to find He had gone.

"Now what do we do?" asked Chris.


   
  

  At the —
History of Painting

 

 


I am confronted with a roomful of wild canvases, one every three feet or so. I should like to be able to make something of them, of each one, I am eager to look and see. I so want this to be a happy occasion, matching the success of my haircut, clean shirt, and the perfectly-lit, high- ceilinged gallery in which I find myself. The first work is a smear of toothpaste on a background of tar. Okay, I'll come back to it. The next one is a painting of a doll with severe injuries. I would rather not look at that for too long. Next: a smear of something on an untreated canvas. This is interesting. What is that stuff? Has it been melted on? Next: a big smear on a big canvas. It is faintly s-shaped, like a meandering river of industrial waste through an indifferent wilderness. I suspect that polysaccharides have contributed to the very exciting texture. But once again we are confronted with the work.

A man behind me starts explaining the historical phonology of Tibetan, making it all a bit clearer by citing some examples from Proto-Tibeto-Burman, and a few moments later I am smoking a cigarette outside somewhere.


   
  

  Fifty Toyes
A Story for Children

 

 


Before B. retired to his room for the rest of his life, people kept coming up to him and complaining, "I've run out of ideas. I don't know what to think about any more," and he would reply, "How can I help? Why would you think I could help? I haven't had a thought in years. I have stared into space, chatted with people I supposedly know, watched tv, read weekly news magazines. I've watched grown men play with each other as a form of entertainment. I haven't really had to think. Moreover, I am retiring now because of a general lack of benevolence. Also, I can't find my umbrella, which makes my going out a non-starter, kind of. I may set fire to a bundle of words and pour a can of emotions over them later, so - drop in whenever. I would enjoy the company. You know." All this to forestall the observation that he was, himself, lazy and indifferent, or was merely hiding from something. Of course he had books and a tv, so what harm could there be in not going anywhere? However, reasonable people can no longer hope to get very far by argumentation that appeals to reason, since they are probably arguing with unreasonable people, as statistics can be made to show. And as he thought this, it occurred to him: compiling statistics was one of the innumerable things he could do now, in the freedom of his room.


   
  

  Anne of Green Gables
A Part of Our Heritage

 

 


Anne of Green Gables. Anne of Green Gables. Anne of Green Gables. Do people never tire of that? Anne of Green Gables. Based on the novel Anne of Green Gables. I assume there was such a person, once: Anne of Green Gables. I sort of wondered about her after I had heard the name for, oh, the ten thousandth time. I read somewhere that "Anne of Green Gables is a trademark and a Canadian official mark of the Anne of Green Gables Licensing Authority Inc." So you see? If you were thinking of calling your novel Anne of Green Gables, don't. You understand why that would be wrong, don't you? People would accuse you of trying to "cash in", so to speak, and that would tend to cast a mercenary shadow over the spirit of Anne of Green Gables. The argument of the novel Anne of Green Gables is as follows: some people want to adopt a boy who can help out on the farm; they are disappointed when they get a girl instead. This girl is Anne Shirley, later to be known as Anne of Green Gables and, later still, as a trademark and a Canadian official mark of the Anne of Green Gables Licensing Authority Inc. She has red hair and freckles, she is irrepressible, and she proves to be just as good as any boy, in fact much, much better. This bodes well for the whole community. That's the whole plot. Probably quicker to identify it by its children's literature motif number.

The book could have been called Anne of Green Gables Makes Her Bones, but that makes for rather a long title. It could have been more interesting, though: Anne would be the village drunk, stealing other women's menfolk, dealing drugs, and coming home in the morning to threaten her foster parents with the .22 and demand money. Eventually she gets an important job in the government through some people she used to party with. But this is not what happens in Anne of Green Gables. Nowhere do you hear of her being an alcoholic, or having her neglected children taken into charge, or her endless squabbles with social services, or her many appearances in court accompanied by a different leering car thief each time. None of that appears in the novel Anne of Green Gables, or in any of the other canonical Anne books. Why is that?


   
  
· Here you'll find rather more irrelevant mini essays, roughly categorized somehow. I wish I could be more clear.

· Bibliographical Notes
— Old Books
— Duhamel Bibliography
· Annals of Public Neurosis
— Peace Tricks
· Almost a Complete Thought
· Stories
— Reveille
— Fun at Home
— A Story
— At the —
— A Story for Children
— Anne of Green Gables
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The contents and design of this page are entirely homemade.
I copied a few things from way better pages of course.