Your writing already reminds me so much, in some ways, of Prospero's Books that I just assumed you'd already seen it, possibly as a small child on late-night PBS television or something.
Thank you: I am honored by that. I think I would have remembered something of Prospero's Books if I had seen it before, like the first few minutes of A Canterbury Tale that were instantly, unplaceably familiar when I saw them on TCM. What it mostly felt like instead were things I have so often dreamed.
(The late-night PBS WTF would be Fool's Fire (1992), which I meant to borrow on DVD from rushthatspeaks before they left. I suppose I can file it with the other excuses to scrape up the money to visit Texas.)
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Thank you: I am honored by that. I think I would have remembered something of Prospero's Books if I had seen it before, like the first few minutes of A Canterbury Tale that were instantly, unplaceably familiar when I saw them on TCM. What it mostly felt like instead were things I have so often dreamed.
(The late-night PBS WTF would be Fool's Fire (1992), which I meant to borrow on DVD from