Esquire Theme by Matthew Buchanan
Social icons by Tim van Damme

13

Mar

08

Jan

(Source: sativachiquita)

⌐ Reasons to love Lucille Ball
#8 → Her wit (What’s My Line, Jul 27th, 1965) (x)

(Source: uppishwhore)

28

Jul

suicideblonde
Writing is so much more problematic than drawing, full of moral pitfalls, ambiguity, public responsibility. If you record a day of your life, does the decision to do so change the shape of the day? One of Doris Lessing’s days in The Golden Notebook is fifty-four pages long. It’s complete; the rest are summaries - the “impression” of a day foisted artfully upon the reader by providing a few details. Fiction is made this way - as lineal perspective gives the illusion of three dimensions in drawing. But does the selection of a day - that you begin by knowing you must remember and observe - really affect it? Do you change the balance, distort the truth? The period itself, its choice and selection, does that not in itself constitute a kind of misconstruction, and the rest follow subconsciously?
Sita by Kate Millett (via bohemea)