single piece of advice: learn to spell ‘fuel’ before starting the revolution. thanks ever so much. this informative piece of graffiti got ripped off a few nights later from this superm… more →
ripple the wide open space...nutshell wrote 3 weeks ago: single piece of advice: learn to spell ‘fuel’ before starting the revolution. thanks … more →
nutshell wrote 1 month ago: Je découvre que le portugais est une langue pleine de surprises et beaucoup plus attirante que l’ … more →
nutshell wrote 1 month ago: new suns [not nuisance] at the end of june. today the tiniest breath swayed me and i wandered off. … more →
nutshell wrote 2 months ago: One A black and white arrow with a red beak landed next to my head and started whispering into my e … more →
nutshell wrote 4 months ago: ha! this is the time when you notice that the blog should, in fact, have black as a background col … more →
nutshell wrote 4 months ago: Consider the challenge to linear temporality: How is it that we have spent so little time around … more →
BK R wrote 4 months ago: “Magnificent in its breadth, it profound expression, and its tremendous sonority.” … more →
BK R wrote 5 months ago: Dmitri Vorobiev of the Chopin Project performs the Nocturne in B, Op. 62, No. 1. To hear it, Click … more →
nutshell wrote 5 months ago: C’est dans ton fleuve que je m’écoule Quand tous les ponts d’or s’écroulent C’est de ton … more →
J.S. Peyton wrote 7 months ago: NOCTURNES By John Connolly Simon and Schuster / Oct. 2007 (Paperback) $15; 496 pages There are dark … more →
J.S. Peyton wrote 8 months ago: Five days. Wow, has it really been so long since I last posted? Hmm… So what excuse could I … more →
BK R wrote 8 months ago: Arthur Greene: “Today’s entry takes us into far more familiar Chopin territory. The Nocturn … more →
J.S. Peyton wrote 9 months ago: THE BOOK OF LOST THINGS by John Connolly Washington Square Press / October 2007 Once upon a time - … more →
J.S. Peyton wrote 9 months ago: From an interview with John Connolly in THE BOOK OF LOST THINGS: I think the act of reading imbues t … more →