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The Rebel: An Ess...

 
Nausea
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Joleen's Recent Updates

Joleen Loh is now friends with Syaniza Nasir
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And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos by John Berger
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The Archive by Charles Merewether
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From Studio to Si -Op/057 by Claire Doherty
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Urban Voodoo by Edgardo Cozarinsky
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The Rebel by Albert Camus
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This is How You Lose Her by Junot Díaz
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Resistance, Rebellion and Death by Albert Camus
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Exile and the Kingdom by Albert Camus
More of Joleen's books…
Milan Kundera
“for there is nothing heavier than compassion. Not even one's own pain weighs so heavy as the pain one feels with someone, for someone, a pain intensified by the imagination and prolonged by a hundred echoes.”
Milan Kundera, The Unbearable Lightness of Being

Audrey Niffenegger
“We laugh and laugh, and nothing can ever be sad, no one can be lost, or dead, or far away: right now we are here, and nothing can mar our perfection, or steal the joy of this perfect moment.”
Audrey Niffenegger, The Time Traveler's Wife

Rumi
“What you seek is seeking you.”
Rumi

Alain de Botton
“Journeys are the midwives of thought. Few places are more conducive to internal conversations than a moving plane, ship or train. There is an almost quaint correlation between what is in front of our eyes and the thoughts we are able to have in our heads: large thoughts at times requiring large views, new thoughts new places. Introspective reflections which are liable to stall are helped along by the flow of the landscape. The mind may be reluctant to think properly when thinking is all it is supposed to do.

At the end of hours of train-dreaming, we may feel we have been returned to ourselves - that is, brought back into contact with emotions and ideas of importance to us. It is not necessarily at home that we best encounter our true selves. The furniture insists that we cannot change because it does not; the domestice setting keeps us tethered to the person we are in ordinary life, but who may not be who we essentially are.

If we find poetry in the service station and motel, if we are drawn to the airport or train carriage, it is perhaps because, in spite of their architectural compromises and discomforts, in spite of their garish colours and harsh lighting, we implicitly feel that these isolated places offer us a material setting for an alternative to the selfish ease, the habits and confinement of the ordinary, rooted world.”
Alain de Botton, The Art of Travel

Franz Kafka
“A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us.”
Franz Kafka

13335 Art Lovers — 795 members — last activity May 20, 2013 05:43am
To reciprocate the appreciation of different artists and discuss their lives and works.
Groups_nophoto-25x33 Oulipo — 19 members — last activity Mar 09, 2011 04:49am
Raymond Queneau, Georges Perec, Italo Calvino, Harry Matthews, etc.

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