244 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
244 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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From Rhode Island: Where Quahogs Outnumber Humans -- it's
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********************
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ASTRAL AVENUE
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********************
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Number 2 December 1986 Sycophant Sam Sez: "Keep on Trucklin'!"
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Surf Forecast: Waves of Hyperbole, Followed by Resounding Crashes and Froth
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PUBLISHER'S NOTE
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Much to our chagrin, our independence was not able to survive for more
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than one issue before we were taken over by Mysterious Forces. The source of
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our distress is the Organization of Apocryphal Power. (Readers desiring more
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information on this group are advised to turn to Italo Calvino's IF ON A
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WINTER'S NIGHT A TRAVELER. However, be forewarned that CALVINO DID NOT DIE
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OF NATURAL CAUSES....)
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The permanent representative of the OAP now lives beneath our kitchen
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sink, and demands final right of censorship over all material herein. What's
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worse, he won't tell us if he's working for the Wing of Shadow or the Wing of
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Light. Still, we persist....
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HOW I ALMOST SPENT MY SUMMER VACATION
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One day this summer, I received an unusual piece of unsolicited mail.
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At first, I thought it was one of those slick inducements to purchase a
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time-share in some vacation condo. A quick scan of the glossy brochure turned
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up boilerplate phrases like "one of these prizes has been registered in your
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name", "quiet retreat", "luxurious surroundings", "easy terms", and
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"congenial company."
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I was ready to toss the third-class mailing into the trash, when I
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noticed a boldface injunction at the bottom of the text:
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ONLY SF WRITERS NEED APPLY
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I was bemused. Was this some kind of inclusive self-segregation, the
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obverse of the warning NO IRISH NEED APPLY, earlier in this century? What
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kind of "community" was this brochure advertising? Reading more closely, I
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was astonished to discover --
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But let me jump directly to my firsthand experiences at SHARE-A-WORLD
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KAMPS, INC. (a wholly owned subsidiary of Bigg & Slymi, Korporate
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Publishers).
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I pulled up in my rented car to the locked gate in the razor-wire-topped
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fence surrounding the sylvan acreage high in the Adirondacks. Beyond the
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chainlink barrier, I could see scattered rustic buildings, reminiscent of
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those in a Boy Scout camp. As soon as I stepped from my car, a woman emerged
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from the security booth outside the enclosure. She wore a coiled whip at her
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belt.
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"Hello," she said pleasantly enough. "Can I help you?"
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I flourished the ad that had drawn me there, and explained that I was
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interested in seeing the accomodations and activities described therein.
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The woman scrutinized me closely. "Are you an SF writer? I don't
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recognize your face."
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I recited my modest credits.
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"Oh, I suppose you'll do," she grudgingly conceded. "Just leave your car
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there -- no one will bother it."
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I could easily believe that: the place seemed deader than the latest
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Heinlein novel. Still, I pocketed my car keys.
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Once inside, the woman locked the gate behind us. I thought then to ask
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her name. She introduced herslef with the name of a Famous Editor, which I
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won't use here. Let's just call her "The Dominatrix."
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"So," I said, trying to ingratiate myself, "this is the place where all
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those shared-universe anthologies and novels come from. It seems hard to
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believe -- "
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"This is the place," she replied. "We do everything right here, from
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brainstorming the parameters of the shared universe -- characters, locales,
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physical laws, whatever -- right down to fabricating the actual wordage
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required to fill up a volume. We can turn out something as big and glossy as
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MEDEA, or as cheap and tinny as HEROES IN HELL."
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"Fascinating," I lied. The absence of visible activity was starting to
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get on my nerves. The place seemed suddenly less like a summer camp and more
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like a POW camp. I imagined I could hear chipper Limeys whistling "Bridge on
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the River Kwai."
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"What would you like to see first?" she asked.
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"Uh, how about the Parameter Fabrication Plant?"
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The Dominatrix led me to a log building without screens or doors.
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Inside, chained to wooden benches, sat a corps of failed Ph.D's from various
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disciplines, whose duty it was to concoct hare-brained anthropological,
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botanical, sociological, mythological, stellar, etc. gimmicks which could
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form the basis for a Shared World Series. All were typing busily into
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networked word-processors.
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"We use only the latest equipment," said the Dominatrix. "And if their
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ideas aren't stale enough, we can even run them through special software that
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will mix in a few old proven concepts from the days of Twayne Triplets."
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"Wonderful. And the writers can tap into these guidelines from their
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own terminals -- ?"
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"You've got it. Let's peek in on them."
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In a similar building, under similar conditions, sat dozens of writers,
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laboriously pecking away. Not one bothered to look up when we entered, so
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apathetic were they, so eager to achieve the Kamp Kwota, which the Dominatrix
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informed me was set at a modest 10,000 words per day. Over the hunched
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shoulders of the scriveners, I read snatches of Shared-Universal Prose:
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endless tedious lines about thieves, rock 'n' roll elves, fuxes, dead heroes,
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and wizards.
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My guide had stepped away to crack her whip over a writer who had slowed
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up from exhaustion. I took the opportunity to question one of the poor
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wretches.
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"Don't you hate and abhor with all your soul the idea of subordinating
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your own imagination and skills to some marketing concept aimed at
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twelve-year-olds?"
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"Say wha?" he replied, and I knew the pitiful drudge was nearly
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brain-dead.
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The Dominatrix returned and led me outside. "So, are you interested?"
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I stalled for time as I strolled back toward the gate and freedom.
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"What's the advance and royalty rate?"
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"Advance? Royalties? There's nothing like that. Room and board is it.
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You're doing this to establish your name in the public eye, and for the
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'fun.'" She looked me up and down witheringly. "And believe me, someone of
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your insignificant bibliography could really benefit by this."
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We were now at the gate. "Uh, great, I'll sign on. But I left my
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favorite fountain pen in the car -- "
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A tremor in my voice must have betrayed my real intentions. "That's
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okay," she countered, "I've got a pen."
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I hit the fence four feet up, clawing for the top.
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I lost the seat of my pants on the razor-wire, and one earlobe to the
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Dominatrix's whip, but I was roaring off down the alpine rutted road before
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she could stop me.
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I counted myself lucky to escape at all.
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IT'S A WYLDE, WYLDE LIFE
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Among all the new writers receiving extravagant praise, I have yet to
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see the name of Thomas Wylde. His stories in ASIMOV'S and F&SF which I have
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had the pleasure to read have been gonzo fantasies exhibiting humor, wit and
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sharp invention. Check out "Magic Cookies" (F&SF, 12/85) and hope someone
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convinces Mr. Wylde to write a novel.
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INVASION OF THE FEMALE POP STARS
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Take a close look at the Giger illustrations for Jack Dann's story
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"Tattoos" in the November OMNI. Is it borrowed from the cover of Debbie
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Harry's KOO KOO, or am I missing something? And isn't that a portrait of
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Annie Lennox on the cover of SKEEN'S LEAP by Jo Clayton? What next? Barbra
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Streisand for a Connie Willis story?
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AMERICA AS JOYSTICK
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One must always replenish one's figures of speech from new technology.
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It is with this tenet in mind that I propose the simile above, in the light
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of the recent November elections and the precipitous drop in Reagan's
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popularity due to the Iran-contra mess.
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Joysticks boast a feature known as "defeatable self-centering." They
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may be pushed to the right or left, but they always spring back to the
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center. Thus America. We learn once again, as we did when the 'Sixties died,
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that mo matter how far right or left the country is pushed, it always returns
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to the Great Sane and Mediocre Center.
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Now if we could just keep everyone's finger off the firing button....
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FIRST-NAME BASIS
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And while we're on the topic of politics, what about a lesson we could
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learn from the Philippines? I'm referring, of course, to how everyone from
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peasants to ministers calls the Aquino administration "the Cory government."
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This shows an admirable lack of respect for all politicians, which we
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could well emulate. I, for one, plan to refer only to "the Ronnie
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government" from now on. (Locally, I will speak of "the Joey city government"
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and "the Eddie state government.")
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Exercise your right to nicknames now!
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BEST GRAFFITO OF THE MONTH -- DOUGLAS HOFSTADTER SELF-REFERENTIAL CATEGORY
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"Graffiti is a political act!"
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ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS (Replies to Many Queries of General Interest --
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Valuable Suggestions from Readers)
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T.E.D. KLEIN, on my Stephen King essay: "...a courageous piece of work." --
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Well, Ted, I was just spouting off, but thanks anyway. I was guided by that
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famous folk-saying, "Even a Krazy Kat may look at a King!"
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CHARLES PLATT, on ditto: "...there have been some stories of his, such as
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'Apt Pupil,' which I feel bring to life certain aspects of the human psyche,
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and unpleasant qualities in American culture, better than almost any writer I
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have ever read."
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-- I don't deny King an occasional shining moment, I guess. What I
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object to is calling his work "art." There are plenty of beautiful natural
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objects -- seashells, spiderwebs -- which can not be called art because they
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are simply blind expressions of their creators' genes. King's work strikes
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me as much the same, only he fails more often than he succeeds. I resent
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plowing through piles of crap -- a la the output of the writing program
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RACTER -- just to find the rare gem.
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WHEREIN I SHED 96 TEARS
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Okay folks, I realize this issue is coming out less than a month after
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the first (to avoid the Xmas postal glut), but still and all, I received no
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correspondence other than the above, after a couple of weeks. All you
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SLUGABEDS and PROCRASTINATORS out there, lissen up: if you have any interest
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in this VANITY PROJECT of mine, please respond. (If you hate it, a simple
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LETTER BOMB will suffice....) Your missive doesn't even have to be
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COMPREHENSIBLE. A simple POSTCARD with your THUMBPRINT will do. Or emulate
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the two PARAGONS OF EPISTOLARY VIRTUE cited
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above....
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ASTRAL AVENUE Paul Di Filippo
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2 Poplar Street
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Providence, RI 02906
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