This is a book that I want to buy and keep on one of my many bookshelves. Checking it out from my local library isn’t the same as owning it. Eudora Welty’s sense of humor is pretty good, but it’s nothing compared to Wharton’s. NYC to Lowell is a big move.
As much as I like Welty’s book, I want to keep Wharton’s for posterity.
Biledragon (aka Bookhoard) gets smacked by John Skipp: http://shocklinesforum.yuku.com/topic/13154/t/EAT-THIS-BOOK-SKIPP-39-S-HOLLYWOOD-ZOMBIE-WALK.html
Here’s certainly abackward glance.
Here is Daggy’s LindedIn profile.
http://www.linkedin.com/in/lawrencedagstine
What a laugh!!!!!!!!
He’s got to be joking, right?
Him? Professionaly develop a document?
Oh, go on!
Is he serious about his research skills? I couldn’t get past that without a laugh.
Jesus fucking christ.
The grammar in that sentence alone is worthy of Pacione.
Whatever that’s supposed to mean. I have visions of him picking up roadkill deer along the side of the highway, and tossing them into a trailer.
Because he’s too friggin’ lazy to look up, or verify it himself. Plus, I do not think engineering means what he thinks it means.
I could go on, but I need a refill of java before I tackle such a job. This just might be worthy of its own entry. My mind boggles.
I also just realised the marvellous contradiction between “When I am engineering your documents I use specific knowledge of your company (it is up to you to provide this information)” and “My research skills are A+”, but he won’t use them on your company lest he uncover your CEO’s trip to Tijuana with four prostitutes and a donkey named Pablo.
Though really being given some information by the company should go without being said and would be included in negotiations.
Oh and I almost missed this after laughing at his post about how Israel might have been involved in 9/11, but Mikkake admits to wanting to go mainstream in a Myspace interview.
“I’m hoping these three are mainstream enough to attract the attention of a literary agent this time round; go through the larger publishing houses.”
In the heart of every so-called “artist” wannabie is a deep desire to go mainstream.
I guess you, Philbin, are a sell-out after all.
How does it feel?
Philbin has no idea about artists.
Everyone wishes to be successful, but deliberately tossing aside your personal vision (assuming you have one) is not on the plate for a true artist.