Mmm, I need something that'll last longer than "slept on it wrong" and won't fix itself unless you count being ordered to rest and not train for a while "fixing itself," which would also work.
Nick O'Donohoe wrote an extremely obscure but fucking brilliant novel called Too Too Solid Flesh, which I think only I, Pamela Dean, and
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Mmm, I need something that'll last longer than "slept on it wrong" and won't fix itself unless you count being ordered to rest and not train for a while "fixing itself," which would also work.
Nick O'Donohoe wrote an extremely obscure but <i>fucking brilliant</i> novel called <i>Too Too Solid Flesh</i>, which I think only I, Pamela Dean, and <ljuser="coffee_and_ink"> have ever read, but which I highly recommend special ordering. It's about the last human actor in a nightmarish future in which androids modeled after the characters they play are performing <i>Hamlet</i>, and a shockingly convincing android Hamlet is a major character. It uses a lot of the themes of the play, too.
If I was you, I wouldn't both reading the sequels to <i>Crossroads</i>.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-22 01:33 am (UTC)Nick O'Donohoe wrote an extremely obscure but fucking brilliant novel called Too Too Solid Flesh, which I think only I, Pamela Dean, and
Nick O'Donohoe wrote an extremely obscure but <i>fucking brilliant</i> novel called <i>Too Too Solid Flesh</i>, which I think only I, Pamela Dean, and <ljuser="coffee_and_ink"> have ever read, but which I highly recommend special ordering. It's about the last human actor in a nightmarish future in which androids modeled after the characters they play are performing <i>Hamlet</i>, and a shockingly convincing android Hamlet is a major character. It uses a lot of the themes of the play, too.
If I was you, I wouldn't both reading the sequels to <i>Crossroads</i>.