“Ian van Athen, or The Art of Reading” by Iana Boukova, Trans. by Ekaterina Petrova
And from the thousands of words that define us, not a single word has just one paternity. . .
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And from the thousands of words that define us, not a single word has just one paternity. . .
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Why cotton?
Because that’s what it feels like. . .
Shifu looks at the stream behind her compound, contaminated from the mines, thin and weak, and still thinks she can drink from it. She says freedom is flight. She says water is life. . .
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Maybe Keano’s electroceutical fed the neural concerto of Aanya’s break-up into larger networks of perspective. She couldn’t decide which was better: fixation or detachment?
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