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12:26 AM
Become a Charter Subscriber to our publication that is by, for and about Native Peoples http://buff.ly/2rJ7H3A https://t.co/uX33x55gZa
No scifi novel of the 1900s or early 20th century predicted the unthinkable: the death of the mandatory hat. https://twitter.com/silentmoviegifs/status/868519447434276867
.@TinaMakereti on the power of creative texts: They ask us to imagine. They ask us to dream.… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/868551963960459264
 
 
1 hour later…
1:38 AM
Presenting "Moebius Library: The Art of Edena!" @moebiusofficiel http://bit.ly/2o14dTZ #Moebius #MoebiusArt https://t.co/e0MkZptAhH
 
1:53 AM
@Hamlet I'm curious why you deleted your answer to your Seeker question (literature.stackexchange.com/q/2593/481). It seemed okay to me (but I can no longer see it).
...and if you intend to leave it deleted, I'll edit my answer so that it no longer references yours.
 
yesterday, by Hamlet
(Deleted my Harry Potter answer because I think I oversimplified it.)
 
@BESW Thank you.
Hamlet, do you intend to rewrite it, and undelete it? Please do let me know if I need to edit my answer. Thanks :)
 
It is time. I hereby announce that the fourth Supervillain book is out! If you were waiting, come and get it! https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071SJ27PC/
 
2:35 AM
@Shokhet I'm planning on getting a copy of Strand's essay and, if I'm still interested in doing so, writing a new answer
Don't worry about removing the link, I don't mind at all
 
Okay.
@Hamlet It's more for me; it makes my answer look funny if it references something that isn't there (and will confuse all <10k equivalent users).
<2k users
Hey, I'm not so far from being able to see deleted posts. Only 113 points to go! :)
 
 
6 hours later…
8:27 AM
@Gallifreyan you up to posting something about the next topic challenge?
 
 
1 hour later…
9:27 AM
0
Q: Help Identifying Short Story

LockjawI would like to identify a comedic book that was recommended​ to me some time ago. I don't remember much, but here is a brief description: The work is either 1 short, or a collection of short stories. The cover had clocks in it (perhaps they were warped in a surreal way). This copy appeared ...

 
9:55 AM
@Mithrandir Too lazy. Want to do it?
 
 
3 hours later…
12:50 PM
0
Q: Why is desire "a commodity [Lucifer is] short on"?

GallifreyanIn The Sandman Presents: Lucifer - The Morningstar Option #3 (written by Mike Carey and drawn by Scott Hampton), Lucifer tells he needed Rachel Begai to channel her desire to destroy the Velleity, as he himself is short on desire: At tat point Lucifer has his hidden agenda, namely getting the ...

 
1:04 PM
I miss @Shokhet's Sandman questions :(
 
@Gallifreyan I think they're a bit busy right now - I know I haven't been able to think of new questions for a while (that would be well-received here)...
 
 
2 hours later…
2:52 PM
^I just ended up on the 15th page of Google results.
 
@Mithrandir I've been to some dark places, but never the 15th page. Sorry for your phone, by the way :)
 
I'm just trying every singe Google result for that do not meddle thing...
I did find out that it made an appearance in XKCD, though.
 
2
Q: When did men dressed as women stop being the norm in theatre?

Rand al'ThorThis excellent answer by Joshua Engel draws a comparison between men dressed as women in Shakespeare-era plays and perspective jumps in modern cinema: The audience would, of course, have been aware that these characters were portrayed by boys. [...] It worked only because the audience was ful...

 
3:12 PM
...every single site I find says 'nobody knows where it's from'. >.<
 
 
3 hours later…
5:58 PM
The next topic challenge with probably be the anthology The Sea is Ours
To get the book from a local library, try the following two links:
 
6:13 PM
0
Q: Do we want to tag questions by the titles of books (part 2)?

HamletEarly in the beta, community member Beastly Gerbil started a meta conversation titled Should we be tagging questions with the names of specific books?. So far, we generally have been tagging questions with book titles, but that has caused several problems, and has the potential to cause problems ...

 
6:40 PM
@Hamlet Someone's got to post the announcement.
@Mithrandir ^ ?
 
6:55 PM
@Gallifreyan I'll see if I can get around to it.
Without my phone, my time on here took a severe drop o_o
 
user15026
7:09 PM
@Mithrandir Did your phone die? :(
 
@Ash worldcat question: why are there two pages for the same book
worldcat.org/oclc/952457016 and worldcat.org/oclc/951964024
 
user15026
@Hamlet Different editions, more than likely
 
user15026
Yeah, the ISBN's are different, so they're different editions. Either different printings, or different formats (hard vs soft cover), or something like that
 
user15026
@Mithrandir oh no :(
 
7:12 PM
Yeah, so now I have to replace it. I think my brother has an old one that I can use temporarily, so hopefully I'll be (on) mobile again soon.
 
user15026
Here's hoping :)
 
7:29 PM
@Ash thanks!
 
8:13 PM
@Gallifreyan Lol. Wait till finals are over.
@Mithrandir Ouch. Good luck!
 
HNQ:
5
Q: When did men dressed as women stop being the norm in theatre?

Rand al'ThorThis excellent answer by Joshua Engel draws a comparison between men dressed as women in Shakespeare-era plays and perspective jumps in modern cinema: The audience would, of course, have been aware that these characters were portrayed by boys. [...] It worked only because the audience was ful...

@Shokhet thanks.
 
8:43 PM
Who said that Allingham “polished her prose until it shone over-bright,” and where? Can you answer? https://literature.stackexchange.com/q/358/58
 
9:27 PM
Blood for Oil: Book Explores Osage Murders http://buff.ly/2s4cTfK https://t.co/Z0JNrg0xBv
Reading @UrsulaV 's Jackalope Wives collection, and loving the little old ladies protagonists and their brutal, poetic justice. Recommended.
 
10:05 PM
0
Q: Why did Samuel Coleridge metaphorise 'work without hope ' as 'nectar in a sieve'?

Canada - Area 51 ProposalSource: An Explication of "Work Without Hope", by Amy Edwards, ’02 West Chester University The last two lines of this poem are the turning point, and make it all come together. Coleridge writes, "Work without hope draws nectar in a sieve, And hope without an object cannot live." [1.] The man ...

 

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