Dell Dell question


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Dell
Milkweed Augustine Milkweed Nov 15, 2012 03:48PM
'Dell" was a graphic tale, which I as the sole autor, suspected it would find a place among bookshelves, but sadly it had not, and I don't quite know why. A sci-fi really like no other, mainly due to the fact of these people being part human and part computer. The child called Dell, nothing having to do with the computer giant, in fact, Mr. Michael Dell has a copy, was supposed to represent many things to me in my own personal life.

The tragic fact I don't have anyone in my life, so obscured, and has faced a myriad of terrible and tragic medical afflictions and catastrophic illnesses of the body only. The very realistic thought processes experienced when a terminal sibling is in the family, and is a child, certainly is the perverbial 'bow" that pulls across the strings of one's very spiritual senses. I was hoping, like the very character himself, that my words of a depthful inclusion would touch people in unorthodoxed ways, especially where these mentioned words of mine have a specific power all their own; to often bruise the reader's very mind and heart, but simoltaneaously stroke the same heart with joyful love, and gloriosu mysteries which have been discovered by forever seeing through a child's little eyes; my own, which are a child's litle eyes.

Gentleness and compassion are slathered generously throughout all of this different kind of science fictional book filled with humanity-not the opposite-although these people of "walking logic," are "living computers."
Something I myself created back in 1978 at the age of eleven.

Lama Milkweed L. Augustine PhD DD



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