Samuel Delany

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Dhalgren is the better and more important book, but Stars is pretty good too. I'd say read Stars as an appetizer, and if you haven't read Delany before, as an introduction to his prose style. It's too bad the sequel to Stars isn't going to happen.

Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:43 (fifteen years ago)

im reading a book of short stories by this guy and hes hella easy to find v cheap

plax (ico), Thursday, 28 October 2010 21:49 (fifteen years ago)

man when i clicked on this i was so afraid it was going to be a r.i.p. revive

bows don't kill people, arrows do (Jordan), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:02 (fifteen years ago)

btw i read 'dhalgren' first, and then 'stars...' after i was convinced and wanted more.

bows don't kill people, arrows do (Jordan), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:03 (fifteen years ago)

Just bought Dhalgren--am both looking forward to it, and intimidated by the size

buildings with goats on the roof (James Morrison), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:25 (fifteen years ago)

Thanks to all for the quick replies! I haven't read Delany before but I think I am going to try Dhalgren first. I am pretty hyped to be honest.

prettylikealaindelon, Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:28 (fifteen years ago)

I read it (Dhalgren) about 6-7 times during the 80s. I need to reread Stars and the Neveryon books next. I started rereading Nova a couple of months ago and thought it had aged very badly...gave it up after about 80 pages.

Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:34 (fifteen years ago)

...and this thread title irritates the hell out of me. It's like a film thread called "Chuck Heston."

Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:35 (fifteen years ago)

ok, I feel better now. May Julio Desouza forgive me.

Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Thursday, 28 October 2010 22:46 (fifteen years ago)

i actually like triton and stars more than i do dhalgren, not entirely sure why

thomp, Friday, 29 October 2010 12:23 (fifteen years ago)

congratulations u dont like kiddie sex

plax (ico), Friday, 29 October 2010 12:26 (fifteen years ago)

wait, what happened to the thread title?

once a remy bean always a (remy bean), Friday, 29 October 2010 12:53 (fifteen years ago)

surely the lead's relationship with an autistic character in 'stars ...' is just as troubling on that level as the fifteen year old in dhalgren? or is there something i'm forgetting. i mean, none of these books is quite hogg, i mean.

thomp, Friday, 29 October 2010 13:00 (fifteen years ago)

yeah, i feel like the quote-unquote kiddie sex in dhalgren is totally an exploration of transgression and mental/social/literary breakdown that isn't really about what it's about.

of course, that could also be the polite lie i tell myself so that i can enjoy the rest of the book.

once a remy bean always a (remy bean), Friday, 29 October 2010 13:23 (fifteen years ago)

I changed the title from "Sam Delany" to "Samuel Delany."

Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Friday, 29 October 2010 13:28 (fifteen years ago)

a regular Chip off the old block?

once a remy bean always a (remy bean), Friday, 29 October 2010 15:43 (fifteen years ago)

haw

Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Friday, 29 October 2010 15:48 (fifteen years ago)

WmC - I forgive you.

im reading a book of short stories by this guy and hes hella easy to find v cheap

Lots of Delany around but I've never seen a copy of Stars

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 30 October 2010 08:04 (fifteen years ago)

Not having read Dhalgren, Babel-17 is the best of his I have read: so joyously full of great ideas, so much bouncy FUN

buildings with goats on the roof (James Morrison), Sunday, 31 October 2010 06:40 (fifteen years ago)

two months pass...

I just finished Dhalgren, so great, thanks guys. Call me a fag, but I always get a little bit sad when I finish a big novel and this was no exception. I'm thinking of reading Stars now.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Sunday, 2 January 2011 20:51 (fifteen years ago)

call me a fag

plax (ico), Sunday, 2 January 2011 21:01 (fifteen years ago)

one month passes...

Just finished Stars In My Pocket Like Grains of Sand. Totally different pace from Dhalgren, this had me clawing for the main narrative for most of the book. As a result, I really didn't give enough attention to some of the detailed description which I feel is a really big part of this book - to realise the sensations and image of these planets, especially Velm. The relationship between Marq and Rat made me quite sick, knowing you can't help but be attracted to another being is somewhat sickening, Marq didn't complain of course, but like those couples who seem so made for eachother, as a couple they struck me as boring and corny.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Monday, 21 February 2011 15:04 (fifteen years ago)

the hands-as-parentheses bit is pretty central, iirc

i'm curious what the other half of it would have looked like: a tour of a planet from the other set of aliens (the Family?), plus a coda? i don't know. i don't remember a lot of the details but it's my favourite of his books. this is in part due to a bit which isn't particularly central to the thrust of the book in itself, that part in the opening section where rat (?) finds a mental implant that lets him read/experience the entire western canon in seconds; that hit me in a peculiar way, as a teen.

thomp, Monday, 21 February 2011 15:15 (fifteen years ago)

I was particularly taken by that opening section too, and was expecting the book to take off from there, to my surprise, it was not to be. Thanks for your thoughts.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Monday, 21 February 2011 16:09 (fifteen years ago)

I've bought Dhalgren, and keep picking it up, but it's so huuuuuge. Need to gather my resources.

the most cuddlesome bug that ever was borned (James Morrison), Monday, 21 February 2011 22:49 (fifteen years ago)

I read Driftglass in my early teens. Didn't get everything but got a lot. Delany for me will always represent vistas opening (yet in truth I never read much past Nova). "Night and The Loves..." was exactly what I wished a short story would do. It probably still is but I don't dare reread it.

His use, over and over, of teen-prodigy characters didn't seem realistic when I was that age, and far into adulthood, having seen a certain amount, I find it a gimmick and more about Delany (or SF) than about the world.

These days, the imaginary world of Delany that fascinates me is his lost New York, as unreachable as his distant planets.

alimosina, Monday, 21 February 2011 23:42 (fifteen years ago)

Editing issue: should be "did exactly what" and "probably still does."

alimosina, Tuesday, 22 February 2011 15:13 (fifteen years ago)

I shall begin reading The Mad Man soon, I'm expecting some of Delany's 'lost New York'.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Tuesday, 22 February 2011 15:43 (fifteen years ago)

You won't be disappointed there, as I recall.

old man yells at poop first thing in the morning (pixel farmer), Tuesday, 22 February 2011 16:36 (fifteen years ago)

And check Heavenly Breakfast, an autobiographical novel(pub. 1979). Its title is also the name of a real-life 60s NYC psych-folk band. SD was a satellite member, sort of.

dow, Tuesday, 1 March 2011 00:33 (fifteen years ago)

Also loads of 1960-1965 Manhattan in his memoir, The Motion of Light in Water.

I was just looking at the wiki for his next novel -- it's done, he's just having trouble finding a publisher. It was originally supposed to be published by Alyson Publications, but apparently they've gone under and he's back to shopping it around to publishers.

WmC, Tuesday, 1 March 2011 01:49 (fifteen years ago)

five months pass...

Man, I'm just finishing up The Mad Man(took me 5 months wtf?! I've been busy). Insane book, really, but Delany really knows how to challenge and reward I think, just as you're becoming insensitive to some bloke shitting all over another blokes face whilst a group of other guys are jacking off all over the guy who is getting shitted on, he throws you a bone. Fantastic.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Sunday, 14 August 2011 13:24 (fourteen years ago)

try hogg next, then. no thrown bones in that one.

king of torts (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Sunday, 14 August 2011 19:04 (fourteen years ago)

Finally reading Auden's Dyer's Hand, which is everything Motion of Light in Water made it out to be and more -- the secondhand quote that Delany gives from it is golden -- and really perfect for Motion..., which is one of my fav Delany books, and fav. works of literary autobiography full stop. There's so many scenes that I remember really clearly from it -- the pockets thing, for example!

s.clover, Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:12 (fourteen years ago)

a tour of a planet from the other set of aliens (the Family?)

as i understand it, the sygn and family don't exactly work like this ... you might be reading it a bit too much like star trek. the sygn and the family are names for philosophies, not rigid political groups like the federation and klingons.

i forget whether it's the north or the south where humans and evelm don't get along, but in that half of the world you might say the family philosophy is predominant - you are a human first, or an evelm first, and you find strength in that mentality.

in the sygn communities you are a free thinking subject first, and you sort of choose your family or define it as you see it, and your identity (racial, gender, cultural, whatever) comes second.

mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:45 (fourteen years ago)

never read him, should I go?

http://www.welcometolace.org/events/view/screening-the-polymath-or-the-life-and-opinions-of-samuel-r-delany-gentleman/

Jung Danjah (admrl), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:46 (fourteen years ago)

he is one of my favorite authors and i found him really tedious. i posted a thread about going to see him, it was an awful experience. he mostly talked about discovering he was bisexual, how he got into cruising times square porn theatres, and the gradual erosion of our shared times square porn theatre cultural heritage.

if you are a bicurious or a queer theory grad student you might find it highly stimulating? but as a sci fi fan, or just for kicks, no.

mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:50 (fourteen years ago)

ok

Jung Danjah (admrl), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:51 (fourteen years ago)

. this is in part due to a bit which isn't particularly central to the thrust of the book in itself, that part in the opening section where rat (?) finds a mental implant that lets him read/experience the entire western canon in seconds

this *is* central to the thrust of the book itself

mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:52 (fourteen years ago)

he's one of martin skidmore's favorite authors. the guy doing martin's funeral service today read from something martin wrote about dhalgren, which i found really moving. it was martin's favorite book.

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 18 August 2011 19:23 (fourteen years ago)

really want to hear sam delaney monologuing about cruising

plax (ico), Thursday, 18 August 2011 21:39 (fourteen years ago)

i found it hard to follow because a lot of it was in reference to cruising scenes in post-70s delany i hadn't read.

mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 22:28 (fourteen years ago)

i really want to read some more delaney, when i was in america you could pick up cheap paperbacks by him really easily but over here he's p hard to come by

plax (ico), Thursday, 18 August 2011 22:31 (fourteen years ago)

really want to hear sam delaney monologuing about cruising

― plax (ico), Thursday, August 18, 2011

there's a whole book about this btw

king of torts (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 19 August 2011 01:04 (fourteen years ago)

yeah, baja's summary of the event sounds a lot like 'times square red, times square blue'

thomp, Friday, 19 August 2011 01:21 (fourteen years ago)

that was the book!

mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Friday, 19 August 2011 01:42 (fourteen years ago)

I haven't read Times Square Red, Times Square Blue, but his book The Mad Man features a lot of cruising, the porn theatres are involved too, the book also documents the impact of AIDS on the gay community. The way Delany describes them, those porn theatres were really home to a kind of exchange and communication that is seldom seen nowadays, I'm not a queer theorist though.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Friday, 19 August 2011 11:54 (fourteen years ago)

that's the thesis of times square blue (which is the second half of 'times square red...', the first ('times square red', natch) being a memoir of them): that the sexual motivation to go into those locales actually underscored and expedited a whole raft of non-sexual contact up and down the social scale, & that in 'cleaning up' times square (& in similar efforts elsewhere) we're making movement lateral to one's class boundaries much less likely. i don't know in what form it creeps into the novel; never found a copy of 'the mad man'. (almost wrote 'mad men'.)

thomp, Friday, 19 August 2011 12:00 (fourteen years ago)

I think that argument is certainly a big part of the mad man novel. I should really give times square red, time square blue a read.

historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Friday, 19 August 2011 12:23 (fourteen years ago)

seven months pass...

http://www.thewaythefutureblogs.com/2010/11/chip-delany/
http://www.thewaythefutureblogs.com/2011/01/chip-delany-part-2-the-miracle-of-dhalgren/

Singularities Going Steady (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 31 March 2012 17:17 (fourteen years ago)

I read it (Dhalgren) about 6-7 times during the 80s. I need to reread Stars and the Neveryon books next. I started rereading Nova a couple of months ago and thought it had aged very badly...gave it up after about 80 pages.

― Unfrozen Caveman Board-Lawyer (WmC), Thursday, October 28, 2010 6:34 PM (fifteen years ago)

Rereading Nova now for my local library SF book club, really mostly listening to the audiobook, even though the LOA physical Four Classic SF Novels volume it comes in is super nice. Managing to enjoy it for the most part, but often think of this post of yours, which I basically have agreed with in the past and maybe still do.

This is the book:
https://www.loa.org/books/616-american-science-fiction-four-classic-novels-1968-1969/

Here's an accompanying article about this particular novel:
https://www.loa.org/news-and-views/1592-samuel-r-delany-portrait-of-the-artist-as-a-young-super-nova/

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 26 March 2026 19:07 (two months ago)

Maybe it's his Man in the High Castle, popular and accessible, but missing a bit of what makes the other stuff interesting.

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 26 March 2026 19:10 (two months ago)

Had meant to post here about this one:

, I'm currently going back and forth between The Brothers Mann and Babel 17, young Delany's driving ambition proving compatible w the competitive sibs'.
---dow
...Now---coming out of convalescnce, hopefully---I'm still re-reading Babel-17(1966) very slowly---had thought of Harrison's Slow Glass, even, before your mention of him----slo-mo suits thee young SD's care with each sentence, each word, which usually pays off---emotional subtext of life during extended wartime is strong throughline, though I expect to eventually have probs with some of the good-faith space opera plot-twists again (maybe not! I'm already picking up on stuff I missed the first time) ----and to proceed, this time, through the rest of The Complete Nebula-Award-Winning Fiction of Samuel Delany (80s collection w added commentaries by the author).
--dow
From an email mention---been re-reading tome, will prob post more on Sam's own thread:

... Delany's early Babel-17(1966), concerning a mysterious, mischievous language, which has something to do with new havoc in a 20-year-old space war. (Most deeply, lastingly corrosive weapon so far: embargo, although space rays do their thing when they can). The best parts usually involve conversations and arguments about the nature of language, punctuated by havoc, incl. unexpected, unwelcome bursts of self-insight...
― dow, Monday, January 27, 2025 6:29 PM (one year ago) bookmarkflaglink

That's a good one. Also very accessible.

― James Carr Thief (James Redd and the Blecchs)


Lots of v favorable mentions by lots of posters turning up in search---looks like an ILB Bookshelf winner (maybe we should do a thread on those)(incl. faves to argue about, such as Stoner).

dow, Thursday, 26 March 2026 23:47 (two months ago)

But, getting back to

the rest of The Complete Nebula-Award-Winning Fiction of Samuel Delany (80s collection w added commentaries by the author)
, most (not quite all) of the subsequent stories seem to have much promise, but then there's a non-compelling, very extended philosophical conversation, or monologue, sometimes a lecture can appear in either of those---despite keeper elements, suitable for framing and tattoos---mynd you, I haven't re-read any of these, like I did Babel-17---and if I were 19 (when I finally started smoking weed)(and/or if I hadn't retired from smoking it, long ago), who knows---but, um, as is, makes me wonder who and what his rivals for the Nebula were in those years and categories---

dow, Thursday, 26 March 2026 23:59 (two months ago)

most (not quite all) of the subsequent stories seem to have much promise, but
what I meant was: at least one of these is actually good as a story-story, I think! Not too plotty, but good momentum and reveal: blanking on title, but it's the one about special breeds come back to old Earth for a lil carousing, swapping tales of previous such encounters with goofy landlubbers (also in The Big Book of Science Fiction, where I first read it, and started wanting to get back into Delany).

dow, Friday, 27 March 2026 00:18 (two months ago)

Not to be rude, but if you don’t like the philosophical conversations or monologues or lectures in Delany, he might just not be for you? That’s exactly what I like about his work, it avoids many of the pitfalls of most scifi and fantasy, which frankly is mostly utter garbage

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Friday, 27 March 2026 00:52 (two months ago)

Wouldn't, um, Chip himself disagree with you on this last point?

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 00:57 (two months ago)

Story in tBBoSF is "Aye, and Gomorrah," (also the title tale of his short story collection), which more than one person seems to think is in dialogue with Cordwainer Smith's "Scanners Live in Vain."

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:04 (two months ago)

Originally appeared in Dangerous Visions.

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:06 (two months ago)

https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/titlecovers.cgi?68754

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:07 (two months ago)

YPBG - [Hidden text. Click to view]
Wouldn't, um, Chip himself disagree with you on this last point?

Actually, no! He hated a great majority of scifi and fantasy

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:09 (two months ago)

Or, hates

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:09 (two months ago)

or at least the typical plotting devices etc of the genres

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:10 (two months ago)

....and I'm back after just spending a wasted minute or two checking on– and then immediately forgetting– the contents difference between Driftglass and Aye, and Gomorrah

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:20 (two months ago)

Feel like you are misrepresenting his take, since his criticism usually seeks to find ways to discuss sf on its own terms rather than just consign most of it to Sturgeon's 90% Off Junkyard.

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:22 (two months ago)

Anyway, it seems to me almost every possible position on him has been enumerated outside of and especially inside of ILX, on this very thread and related ones.

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:24 (two months ago)

Boils down to: clearly he is some kind of beloved big-hearted genius, but because of his various stylistic tics ymmv as to which novels and stories you like or whether perhaps you mostly prefer just to stick to his criticism.

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:26 (two months ago)

dow, I believe the concept of Slow Glass comes from Bob Shaw's "Light of Other Days," unless there is another Slow Glass, perhaps on the far side of the Jonbar Point.

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 27 March 2026 01:42 (two months ago)

Boils down to: clearly he is some kind of beloved big-hearted genius, but because of his various stylistic tics ymmv as to which novels and stories you like or whether perhaps you mostly prefer just to stick to his criticism.

true!

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Friday, 27 March 2026 11:07 (two months ago)

Philosophical conversations can be a vital resource of stories---Dusty does it---but in most of Delany's Nebula-winning apprentice fiction, it's more of a derail. Fiction aside, a lot of the musings, lectures etc. just aren't that interesting in themselves.
There is, at the end of a fairly groovy, slick-sexy cultural tour, a fab reveal of a species' aspiring backstory, backdrop---the end. It's a fine idea, but even with the new power of suggestive hindsight we've been gifted, it's not that discernible as part of the preceding story; we just have to take the narrator's word that they're related, that the "reveal" is more than a ruse in and of what we've already seen is a very sales-consumption-dedicated culture (okay, that one kind of works, come to think of it).

dow, Sunday, 29 March 2026 20:39 (two months ago)

(Sorry for "gifted," but I was being facetious.)

dow, Sunday, 29 March 2026 20:41 (two months ago)

Back in 2015 I started reading Dhalgren. Since this is the Delany-devoted thread I'll copy here what I wrote at the time on I Love Books. I stand by it. I think I gave the book a fair reading, but won't bother defending it from anyone who wants to disagree with it:

Aimless wrote this on thread Die Welt ist alles, was der Fall 2015 ist. What Are You Reading Now? on board I Love Books on Nov 10, 2015

So, I've read about 100 pages of Dhalgren and I've seen enough of it to see what Delany finds interesting about his story and hopes to put across to the reader, me.

The overall effect Delany appears to want is a kind of texture. By this I mean he pays loving attention to the surfaces of things and describes them at length and with many convolutions. Surfaces of objects, buildings, landscapes, people, seem to occupy a good 90% of every paragraph. Actions are described in terms of surfaces, too.

The prose is furiously stylized in most of the book so far, so that all these surfaces are deliberately detached from one another and form no mental picture other than a confused jumble. Delany also seems to subscribe to the school of thought that if you pepper your prose with enough highly colored verbs, you'll impress your reader with your dynamism, even if they can't puzzle out what imagery your verbs are meant to convey, and your dynamism is in the service of little discernable activity.

By contrast, his protagonist is extremely blurry. He has almost no thoughts and his few thoughts are vague and disconnected. He is a drifter and his entire persona is so effaced and vagrant as to be nearly nonexistant. No one he meets is more than a crayon drawing of a person.

I 'get it' that this effect is what Delany was seeking. I am meant to be adrift in this book. He is dropping hints like breadcrumbs, one every half dozen pages, sprinkled in among the long disjointed descriptions of a chaotic, drifting world, that may eventually assemble themselves into some kind of a story. But story is not what interests Delany. It is the texture of this world adrift and how to write it into the reader's mind.

The one thing this book has done admirably so far has been to remind me strongly of my own drifting years, in poverty, not quite homeless, but living on the very edges of organized society, among equally poor, confused and undirected drifters, in the waning days of the hippie era, the era when this book was written. Delany nails it. This book is what that hippie-bohemian backwater twilight world felt like.

It's not enough. The texture is right, but everything else has been subsumed to the demands of that single effect. My mass market paperback copy is almost 900 pages long. In 100 pages so little has happened (other than some overwritten sex scenes, which like all sex scenes that extend beyond two paragraphs, are just head-shakingly awful) that I have no patience for assembling whatever tiny scraps of story Delany buries amid his endless textural and stylistic effects.

I wouldn't say Dhalgren is badly written. More that it is written specifically to do a couple of things very well, but unless you are the rare reader who can't get enough of this sort of highly impressionistic and paradoxically static prose, those couple of things do not justify my reading 900 pages of it.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Sunday, 29 March 2026 21:12 (two months ago)

Came back to say that the reaction of more than one person last week was "I mostly enjoyed this, but kept reading and reading and asking myself 'When are they going to get to the nova?''"

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 March 2026 02:16 (two months ago)

Sometimes I think people here are too invested in the idea that every book needs to be for them.

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Monday, 30 March 2026 10:38 (two months ago)

Prism, Mirror, Lens

Galactic Poetaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 March 2026 12:07 (two months ago)

If your mind has a mind to, maybe check one or even two of the threads about said book--both started by thomp, come back thomp:
dhalgren
STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND, then DUNE and now, the major novel of love and terror at the end of time: DHALGREN, by Samuel Delany, four-time Nebula award winner (ilx book club #Y8554)

dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:20 (two months ago)

I don't remember what I said about it, but I know that I enjoyed reading it in the early 80s, though wasn't surprised to further read that author and come back to it every now and then between other things, and now I wonder if it might be best read or re-read the same way, maybe at random, for a while anyway (maybe I'll try that). It's where I got off the bus (after digging Nova and Triton), missing a lot of good stuff, but now I'm starting to catch up, slowly.

dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:29 (two months ago)

author *had* come back to it

dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:29 (two months ago)

Did you finish it, Aimless?

dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:32 (two months ago)

A: those couple of things do not justify my reading 900 pages of it.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 30 March 2026 22:04 (two months ago)

Oops, sorry I didn't finish reading your post (not because it was boring; yours never are).

dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 22:12 (two months ago)


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