Full fathom five?
* See that phrase in this journal, as well as Griswold.
From this journal on Dec. 3, 2011 —
Some Weinberger-related art —
See as well the prose of Peter Matthiessen —
Related literary remarks from The Crimson Abyss
(a Log24 post of March 29, 2017) —
Prospero's Children was first published by HarperCollins,
"This is English fantasy at its finest. Prospero’s Children |
Related imagery from The Crimson Abyss —
See as well posts of June 6, 2004, and May 22, 2004.
"And as the characters in the meme twitch into the abyss
that is the sky, this meme will disappear into whatever
internet abyss swallowed MySpace."
—Staff writer Kamila Czachorowski, Harvard Crimson , March 29
1984 —
2010 —
Logo design for Stack Exchange Math by Jin Yang
Recent posts now tagged Crimson Abyss suggest
the above logo be viewed in light of a certain page 29 —
"… as if into a crimson abyss …." —
Update of 9 PM ET March 29, 2017:
Prospero's Children was first published by HarperCollins,
London, in 1999. A statement by the publisher provides
an instance of the famous "much-needed gap." —
"This is English fantasy at its finest. Prospero’s Children
steps into the gap that exists between The Lion, the Witch
and the Wardrobe and Clive Barker’s Weaveworld , and
is destined to become a modern classic."
Related imagery —
See also "Hexagram 64 in Context" (Log24, March 16, 2017).
Powered by WordPress