C/D: Rick Perlstein

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the cultural-panorama sections in bridge are the weakest he's ever been -- endless "turn to page five, and a woman had hacked her kids to death -- it must have seemed the culture was spinning out of control" stuff. jefferson cowie's stayin alive gives better focus on the same period imo -- has a better analysis of jaws too. but i love the reagan-bio sections of bridge and its telling of watergate is a strong contender in a choked field.

his baffler piece from a few years ago about richard viguerie (sp?) and right-wing advertising culture was extremely good, as acknowledged by pareene the other day. suspect it will get cited in the future like it was in a journal.

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:20 (six years ago) link

i find it very strange that the dude who wrote 3 fat tomes about American conservativism, including one about Goldwater, who constantly got compared to Trump during the campaign, and who many people have said "you've GOT to read Perlstein if you want to understand our present moment", would choose this time to issue a mea culpa saying he doesn't understand Trump and you won't find the answer in my books. like, dude. sell your shit!

flopson, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:23 (six years ago) link

"i spent two decades researching and writing almost three thousand pages about contemporary conservatism. But reading them won't help you understand this Trump fellow one lick, he really came out of left field." how do you not kill yourself after writing that?

flopson, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:26 (six years ago) link

Our old friend miccio, who hasn't read any of Perlstein's books, got into a FB discussion w/me a couple weeks ago based on that very point, i.e. "if this guy is so smart, how can he not have predicted this?"

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:28 (six years ago) link

My only response, a feeble one, is that the NYT magazine is not The New Republic or The Nation -- he has to write these rehashes and mea culpas.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:29 (six years ago) link

yeah i didn't get that piece. if there's one major takeaway from his whole series so far it's that the liberal_commentariat keeps saying this stuff is done forever right before it comes back to crush them. he doesn't mention that at all now which i guess is very gracious.

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:29 (six years ago) link

funny that the piece was online the same week as pareene's "confused about trump? read this four-year-old rick perlstein article"

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:30 (six years ago) link

Why are historians supposed to be great prognosticators? I would never assume that. Peoples is not meteorology

Anyway absent few thousand votes and the flukiness of the electoral college, Trump isn't Perlstein's to have to explain, is he?

The Jams Manager (1992, Brickster) (El Tomboto), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 22:04 (six years ago) link

Agreed, but historians don't have to and shouldn't have to write these mea culpas, but I get that the NYT Magazine probably pays quite well.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 22:11 (six years ago) link

Thanks for the heads up on that article, Morbs. I'd just about tossed last weekend's paper.

I wouldn't say I'd have expected Perlstein to predict the Trump phenomenon specifically, but he ended Before the Storm on such a pointed note of anti-Goldwater peeps thanking their lucky stars that right-wing extremism died alongside Barry's candidacy that I would have at least expected him to see the signs of liberal hubris that wenteth before our fall.

Lipbra Geraldoman (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 22:53 (six years ago) link

Or what dlh just said, basically.

Lipbra Geraldoman (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 22:54 (six years ago) link

Perlstein was actually more prescient than many, at least once the Trump train got rolling. From September 2015:

Reagan, and now Trump, reveal our own tendency to repress our fear of demagogues by dismissing them. And ultimately, it's all about us. Follow the bouncing beach ball. Take demagogues seriously. Voters love them. And they're only a joke until they win.
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/what-ronald-reagan-teaches-us-about-donald-trump-925

Ari (whenuweremine), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 23:41 (six years ago) link

reagan and nixon both have a lot more to do w trump than goldwater does, even tho the goldwater campaign was where a lot of now-apotheosized technique was born. this--

Goldwater, who constantly got compared to Trump during the campaign

--is true but there was a lotta wishful thinking in it.

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 23:50 (six years ago) link

("technique" admittedly covering a lot there including the beginnings of the southern realignment -- but goldwater himself wasn't a ball of insecurity and rage nor a weird half-there monarchical cypher, whereas trump is both and also an idiot)

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 23:54 (six years ago) link

(and a winner)

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 23:55 (six years ago) link

I rewatched Game Change the other night. I know that's got nothing to do with Perlstein, but it's relevant to what you're talking about. This one exchange, between Palin and Steve Schmidt, was (apocryphal or not) made to order.

Schmidt: “You can't say you were cleared of all wrongdoing.”
Palin: “Why not?”
Schmidt: “Because you weren't. The report stated that you abused your power. That is the opposite of being cleared of all wrongdoing.”
Palin: “Then why was I told otherwise?”
Schmidt: “You weren't told otherwise.”
Palin: “And why haven't you released a statement saying that Todd was never a member of the Alaska independence party?”
Schmidt: “Because that would be untrue. He was a member.”
Palin: “He checked the wrong box. He registered by accident, and rectified the error immediately.”
Schmidt: “He was a member for seven years!”

clemenza, Wednesday, 19 April 2017 23:59 (six years ago) link

palin def a prophet of rage and aesthetic liar in the way trump, reagan, nixon all in their own ways were and goldwater didn't rly know how to be -- she now seems happy as just a plain grifter tho. trump prob would have been too.

difficult listening hour, Thursday, 20 April 2017 00:05 (six years ago) link

Agreed, but historians don't have to and shouldn't have to write these mea culpas, but I get that the NYT Magazine probably pays quite well.

― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, April 19, 2017 10:11 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I think every media outlet in the world was trying to get him to opine during and after the election and he didn't seem super comfortable about it in the handful of articles he wrote in a response.. Was probably trying to wrap his head around it all.

officer sonny bonds, lytton pd (mayor jingleberries), Thursday, 20 April 2017 00:11 (six years ago) link

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/04/rick-perlstein-donald-trump-economy-right-republicans-goldwater-nixon-reagan/

one of the worst things ever written

flopson, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:05 (six years ago) link

This framing fits with Perlstein’s model of political change as the cultural-cum-psychohistory of how the mental idiosyncrasies of particular leaders interact with the public’s irrationality and innate conservatism.

this seems like a 180 degrees misread. (although i have only read the Goldwater book). the Perlstein thesis is that it's all about the sociopolitical forces and the guys doing the backroom deals and organizing and NOT about the leaders!

flopson, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:06 (six years ago) link

no article titled "Trump's Predictable Rise" should be getting submitted from anywhere but the private island you purchased after betting on his victory.

evol j, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:13 (six years ago) link

if the nyt essay were the only thing i'd read by perlstein i'd agree w that piece. it didn't make any sense.

perlstein's historiography isn't as great-man as it could be but it's also not exactly movement history; its way of finding out what was happening in the country any given week is to read all the papers, not to interview anyone for 100 hours the way caro or branch do. nixonland in particular is v interested in how nixon's particular personality interacted w the country's particular wounds, as is perlstein's reagan work. the books really are a little topheavy and the shallowness of the headline-scanning in bridge made that one more so.

however he makes plenty clear in all three books that "intellectual conservatism" was always symbiotic with another thing and that nixon and reagan's success vs goldwater's failure had a lot to do w their relationship to that thing. like you the other day i was confused to find him claiming to have missed that and if his new position really is "trump is radically new" he is wrong.

difficult listening hour, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:21 (six years ago) link

(also agree w the jacobin piece that perlstein is not very interested in economic history and that this hampers his approach to the 70s in partic)

difficult listening hour, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:30 (six years ago) link

haven't read Nixonland but i believe that (Jefferson Cowies book had same problem) but the economics of the 70s are hard and imo left never really grappled w them (in both USA and europe)

flopson, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:39 (six years ago) link

cowie book at least was immersed in the politics of economics, changing relationships between loci of power in labor+business, changing nature of union management and union membership, etc -- doesn't give you any ideas about how to construct a revised keynesianism for the 70s, but fills in the, ah, disposition of forces around the 72 election in a way that perlstein doesn't

agree that the economic left (not unanimously -- cowie book has some painfully forward-thinking quotes in it from defeated and forgotten steelworker reps) lost the plot in the 70s, and after being backfooted by an all-out political assault from organized capital never really did go back and find it. no time like the present tho

difficult listening hour, Friday, 21 April 2017 19:56 (six years ago) link

hell I still don't get stagflation, so if Perlstein can't...

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 21 April 2017 20:28 (six years ago) link

Ya right got possession on the fumble of stagflation and haven't stopped running. there was some interesting stuff in Cowie about Nixon and Carters halfhearted / ineffective attempts at economic planning necessary for their Full Employment policies, but im not sure he's the right person to tell it. I'm a big fan of Barry Eichengreen's The European Economy Since 1945 which lays bare all the pitfalls and potential of 'coordinated capitalism' but someone needs to write (1) a response from the left and (2) an equivalent book for America (BE does some comparatives but not much)

flopson, Friday, 21 April 2017 20:36 (six years ago) link

(not that Eichengreen is of the Right but i want to read someone to his left)

flopson, Friday, 21 April 2017 20:41 (six years ago) link

agree with the ppl who said that times article was bizarre. the article was just a rehash of things i first learned from his own books, with him saying that it was all new to him.

Treeship, Saturday, 22 April 2017 18:24 (six years ago) link

Our old friend miccio, who hasn't read any of Perlstein's books, got into a FB discussion w/me a couple weeks ago based on that very point, i.e. "if this guy is so smart, how can he not have predicted this?"

this misstates my beef with the piece quite a bit. he ends sayingFuture historians won’t find all that much of a foundation for Trumpism in the grim essays of William F. Buckley, the scrupulous constitutionalist principles of Barry Goldwater or the bright-eyed optimism of Ronald Reagan. They’ll need instead to study conservative history’s political surrealists and intellectual embarrassments, its con artists and tribunes of white rage. what i don't get is how an allegedly astute writer could put buckley, goldwater and reagan on one side and "political surrealists," "intellectual embarrassments," "con artists" and "tribunes of white rage" on the other.

da croupier, Monday, 24 April 2017 23:20 (six years ago) link

i never suggested it's weird he couldn't predict president trump. all you needed to not predict that is optimism.

da croupier, Monday, 24 April 2017 23:23 (six years ago) link

I reread the article on a plane last night and yeah you're right

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 April 2017 23:48 (six years ago) link

btw my post looks more snarky than I intended

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 April 2017 23:49 (six years ago) link

"if this guy is so smart, how can he not have predicted this?"

ask miccio how many smart people he knows. let him go on a while. then ask him how many of them can accurately predict the future.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 24 April 2017 23:59 (six years ago) link

The simple point, though, which I missed as a Perlstein partisan, is that he has spent his life writing about this shit and, while no one gets everything right, I don't expect this person to write an article explaining how Trump's lineage wasn't obvious.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:06 (six years ago) link

Historians not understanding what seems obvious in the present is the origin story of most practicing historians.

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:16 (six years ago) link

Ref: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/04/25/the-possibilian

Eagleman is pretty annoying but his anecdotal insight from this piece has stuck with me because it contains a strong nugget of truth:

Although Eagleman and his students study timing in the brain, their own sense of time tends to be somewhat unreliable. Eagleman wears a Russian wristwatch to work every morning, though it’s been broken for months. “The other day, I was in the lab,” he told me, “and I said to Daisy, who sits in the corner, ‘Hey, what time is it?’ And she said, ‘I don’t know. My watch is broken.’ It turns out that we’re all wearing broken watches.” Scientists are often drawn to things that bedevil them, he said. “I know one lab that studies nicotine receptors and all the scientists are smokers, and another lab that studies impulse control and they’re all overweight.”

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:24 (six years ago) link

Buckley and Goldwater aren't intellectual embarrassments or con artists (Buckley is a propagandist and good at making conservatives feel intelligent, but that's not quite the same thing as a con artist, andTrump a pure snakeoil salesmen--and an intellectual infant), and i'm not sure i'd call them surrealists either, Goldwater is just a boring old pilot from Arizona and Buckley a verbose middlebrow pseud. as no book jacket can go without a quote attesting to, Perlstein is perhaps unique on the left in being able to put aside ideological differences and, at least as as strategists, 'admire' the right; whereas most of us can't leave any invective un-lobbed, he can patiently catalogue them. as much as we want to tar the Buckley-Goldwater-Reagan tradition of GOP with Trump and vice versa, it's obvious that Trump is a break with that tradition in a way that Cruz, Rubio, Bush or any other of the nominees wouldn't have been

flopson, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:37 (six years ago) link

it's "the bright-eyed optimism of Ronald Reagan" that strikes me as the most false to say trump has nothing to do with

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:47 (six years ago) link

but again you'd never get the impression trump has nothing to do with it from his books.

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:47 (six years ago) link

maybe he literally means only the bright-eyed optimistic parts of RR's shtick and not the snarling disciplinarian parts -- but even behind the former, masquerading as it, is the usual shit

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:50 (six years ago) link

agree that goldwater wasn't a con artist or an embarrassment. maybe a political surrealist. for buckley any and all invective will do but that's just me

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 00:53 (six years ago) link

trump has dead-eyed optimism

flopson, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 01:06 (six years ago) link

lol

the path (one path) goes nixon-reagan-trump imo -- deeper into the image, deeper into fantasy, flatter, crueler, madder. looks more like an actual ruling "dynasty" than the bushes or clintons: the paranoid emperor --> the vapid ceremonialist --> the syphilitic monster. on this continuum the difference between trump and his "serious" primary opponents (not including ben carson and probably some others i've just forgotten) is that trump takes the next step down it.

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 01:14 (six years ago) link

sorry, flopson, but Buckley was an embarrassment. The publicity over the purported expulsion of the Birchers obscured how white supremacist NRO was in the sixties.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 01:21 (six years ago) link

And I think that's the thing it ultimately all comes down to. I feel like there's a pretty obvious connection between the historical stewards of white supremacy and Trump, whatever cosmetic differences may exist between them.

Crackers and Snacks (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 02:28 (six years ago) link

I have a hunch that Trump rather lucked into the racist constituency because so few Republicans politicians with national ambitions thought it was worth risking such open racism in 2016. They were too timid, I guess.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 04:46 (six years ago) link

Well, surely the decades of taking racist positions, loudly and publicly, and being feted for it, also factors in. Plus birtherism. It's not like he suddenly decided to go out and talk about fixing up our nation's campgrounds and discovered there was an audience hungry for it, that no one had noticed before.

✓ (Doctor Casino), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 12:55 (six years ago) link

Perlstein's premise in the Goldwater book seemed to be that there was a wave of racist white resentment just looking for a figurehead to rally around, and that Barry could've likely won if he and his people hadn't constantly fumbled the ball. You swap out 'the Civil Rights Act' with 'eight years of Obama' as the source of the resentment and the circumstances are eerily similar. It's just that the GOP has had fifty years to tamper with various aspects of the electoral process such that last year's bumblefuck candidate was able to just squeak out a victory.

Crackers and Snacks (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 13:06 (six years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIpmsIgmd_g

clemenza, Sunday, 21 February 2021 00:20 (three years ago) link

The malaise ("Crisis of Confidence") speech actually gave Carter a huge polling bump right away--17 and 11 points in a couple of polls Perlstein cites. But then he upended his cabinet (not expecting the speech to be so successful, that had already been planned), and Hamilton Jordan's Studio 54 coke scandal broke. Which turned out to be concocted by Steve Rubell as leverage against an impending tax audit.

I'm trying to remember if that was the last front-page celebrity scandal that turned out to be entirely false. Can't be--that's 40 years ago--but I'm drawing a blank. They all turn out to be true (or at least are denied but never disproven).

clemenza, Sunday, 21 February 2021 21:46 (three years ago) link

Perlstein says the paperback edition is ready and it will be free of the shocking number of typos and errors that are in the hardcover. That is something I found very distracting and mean to complain about here.

Josefa, Sunday, 21 February 2021 23:14 (three years ago) link

*meant to

Josefa, Sunday, 21 February 2021 23:14 (three years ago) link

I've noticed a few. I wouldn't say shocking--six or seven (in 600 pages)?--but maybe I've missed some. Having self-published and let mistakes creep in (favourite ever: mixing up Jack Black/White three or four times), it actually gives me some comfort that a big publisher would do the same.

clemenza, Sunday, 21 February 2021 23:45 (three years ago) link

I dunno, I started counting them and the number got really high. I would have gladly proofread the book for him for some modest fee, say $300.

Josefa, Sunday, 21 February 2021 23:57 (three years ago) link

That's the surprising thing, that there's even one or two. It's Simon & Schuster--you'd think they'd have a small team on such a lengthy book.

clemenza, Monday, 22 February 2021 00:08 (three years ago) link

the paperback edition is ready

Kinda hoping the publisher will box all four up into a set. I've read Nixonland, but none of the others, and I'd absolutely buy that.

but also fuck you (unperson), Monday, 22 February 2021 00:25 (three years ago) link

in my very very very short resume as a published historian, i have already had a couple moments of getting copy-edited pre-final proofs sent to me and only at that phase, me noticing crazy errors like "the the." this is not because the editors were bad, just a matter of them being human imho. i'm the one that sent them the crummy text in the first place and probably they burned out fixing 99 other mistakes and missed the 1.

i also have to assume (I have no real idea) that in this day and age of print media, budgets for things like this have probably been pared back - would not surprise me if one editor is now doing the work that formerly would have been three people's. i'm just grateful they caught the other 99 mistakes and gave me the chance to catch the 1! but if i ever have anything out there as long as perlstein's books, i'd be shocked NOT to find some typos!

honkin' on bobo, honkin' with my feet ten feet off of beale (Doctor Casino), Monday, 22 February 2021 14:15 (three years ago) link

One that made me laugh (not a typo): a reference to "the forty-year-old president of Canada" on page 668.

clemenza, Monday, 1 March 2021 17:17 (three years ago) link

Pg. 756; the darkness at the end of the tunnel is visible...In view of what Obama and Biden inherited, this Irving Kristol quote from 1980 that Perlstein digs up resonates: "The neo-conservative is willing to leave those problems* to be coped with by liberal interregnums. He wants to shape the future and will leave it to his opponents to tidy up afterwards."

*created by forcing through tax cuts

clemenza, Wednesday, 10 March 2021 17:38 (three years ago) link

i haven't read this yet but he has a new piece in TNR https://newrepublic.com/article/161603/john-birch-society-qanon-trump

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 10 March 2021 19:10 (three years ago) link

"john-birch-society-qanon-trump"

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 10 March 2021 19:10 (three years ago) link

Weird endorsement for Kennedy in 1980: the parents of Mary Jo Kopechne. (Would you want the reminder?) Senator Biden endorsed Carter with, Perlstein notes, "practically an apology":

"Jimmy Carter is not the finest thing since wheat cakes; he's not the second coming...He's not going to go down in the history books...but he is doing a good job."

clemenza, Wednesday, 10 March 2021 23:45 (three years ago) link

Today in REAGANLAND, an ambitious difference-splitter "endorses" Jimmy Carter, " not the finest thing since wheat cakes...not the 2nd coming...but...doing a good job." Tho, "If you're looking for an Irish Catholic Democrat to support, wait until 1984 and one of us will be back." pic.twitter.com/8E2vYNRgRA

— Rick Perlstein (@rickperlstein) April 22, 2020

Wayne Grotski (symsymsym), Wednesday, 10 March 2021 23:48 (three years ago) link

Biden, on the other hand, is definitely the finest thing since wheat cakes

Wayne Grotski (symsymsym), Wednesday, 10 March 2021 23:49 (three years ago) link

The Kopechne endorsement almost struck me like Hillary getting Monica Lewinsky's endorsement in 2016.

clemenza, Wednesday, 10 March 2021 23:52 (three years ago) link

Eh, by that point, it was probably just water under the bridge.

pplains, Thursday, 11 March 2021 04:05 (three years ago) link

I checked with Alan Alda, and he said it's okay if I laugh.

clemenza, Thursday, 11 March 2021 04:08 (three years ago) link

Finished Nixonland.

Boy, does that book go up a notch once Nixon begins recording his conversations.

pplains, Tuesday, 23 March 2021 01:00 (three years ago) link

Finished. (Reaganland). Exhausted. Possibly the longest book I've ever read.

clemenza, Saturday, 27 March 2021 16:09 (three years ago) link

I thought it a breeze -- I gobbled it. Did it bore you?

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 27 March 2021 16:59 (three years ago) link

At times, yes--when he waded into stuff like Moral Majority meetings, or anti-tax amendments and such. I found there was much more of that than in the previous three books. I like it best when he steps back and connects what's going on politically to the culture out there. And there was some of that--like how Reagan's defense of the Vietnam War was initially assumed to be catastrophic by the press, but that meanwhile they completely missed that The Deer Hunter was indicating something else was plainly underfoot.

clemenza, Saturday, 27 March 2021 17:03 (three years ago) link

Yeah. I loved those bits.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 27 March 2021 18:18 (three years ago) link

six months pass...
seven months pass...

My next book, with @littlebrown + editor @pronoydsarkar—on what has happened to America since 2000, and how it can unhappen. Short, sharp, and out in time for the 2024 Democratic and Republican National Conventions. And it will take no prisoners. Now leave me alone for 18 months! pic.twitter.com/OHbpk4dNK2

— Rick Perlstein (@rickperlstein) May 17, 2022

jaymc, Tuesday, 17 May 2022 14:37 (one year ago) link

I've read a couple of those here's-how-to-fix-things books (which this sounds like), and can think of many I haven't; wish he'd continued on with what he was doing.

clemenza, Tuesday, 17 May 2022 16:08 (one year ago) link

The "short, sharp" thing makes me wonder if he needed to give himself a "little" project break between what he was doing and the "leave me alone" bit makes me hopeful he's getting back to it. Dunno.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 17 May 2022 16:17 (one year ago) link

I thought so too. Also: cash flow.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 17 May 2022 16:18 (one year ago) link

He's already answered the question the next book would need to answer--"How did Trump happen?"--but I still want him to write it.

clemenza, Tuesday, 17 May 2022 17:21 (one year ago) link

eight months pass...

I remembered a book called "After Strage Texts" after reading about TS Eliott's "After Strange Gods" and discovered it literally un-google-able": only TS and stuff about texting. It can't even come up (without subtitle) in an Amazon search! https://t.co/XFrDEooZZx

— Rick Perlstein (@rickperlstein) February 10, 2023

True, I also get no results for "After Strage Texts"

"After Strange Texts" otoh...

INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Friday, 10 February 2023 17:49 (one year ago) link

I've looked for ASG for a couple years. Not even my uni library has a copy.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 10 February 2023 17:54 (one year ago) link


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