The almond and the apple and the sugar from the maple
Some days you go into a used book store and you do not leave with anything, which is fine.
And some days you go into a used book store and you leave with the first full English translation of Sholem Aleichem's Wandering Stars (1909), a pocket edition of H.D.'s Kora and Ka with Mira-Mare (1934), a new trade paperback of Theodore Sturgeon's Some of Your Blood (1961), and the Complete Plays of Sarah Kane (2001), which you were just discussing on Friday halfway up a mountain with
schreibergasse's brother.
The latter is to be preferred.
And some days you go into a used book store and you leave with the first full English translation of Sholem Aleichem's Wandering Stars (1909), a pocket edition of H.D.'s Kora and Ka with Mira-Mare (1934), a new trade paperback of Theodore Sturgeon's Some of Your Blood (1961), and the Complete Plays of Sarah Kane (2001), which you were just discussing on Friday halfway up a mountain with
The latter is to be preferred.

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Nine
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That is most excellent.
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I started to write that in the wrong language. I wish I'd been able to take Ancient Greek in a fashion that would've involved me successfully learning the language, so I'd be able to say it to you in the same. I actually was talking about Homer with someone today, briefly, which made me think of you.
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Mostly divided between Raven and the Harvard Book Store.
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It got ridiculous. I found a limited edition of something called Oh! A Mystery of Mono no Aware with rice-paper pages and full-color illustrations. I found novelizations of The Piano and The Wicker Man written by the original screenwriters (Jane Campion, Robin Hardy and Anthony Shaffer). I hadn't even known those existed!
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I hadn't even been particularly looking for anything. Of course that's when they turn up.
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Thank you.
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If any of those three are still in the store the next time I am, I'll get them for you.
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I don't think so. According to Dan (who is a dramaturge and director), Blasted wasn't even performed here until a few years ago; there was a staging of Phaedra's Love at Yale in 2005, but I don't know what that means for professional productions. 4.48 Psychosis seems to be the one everyone's heard of. The jumping-off point for Friday's conversation was my complaint that I couldn't find her collected plays in this country.
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(I still have a couple of books for you from a while back, I just fail bitterly at bringing them to Readercon. Clearly, I need to come up and visit.)
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"The rats carry Carl's feet away."
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I could deal with that.
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And who sends you cladistic e-mails.