Live Breaking News & Updates on English Opium Eater

Stay updated with breaking news from English opium eater. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Hash brownies with Borges: my wild night with the great author

Hash brownies with Borges: my wild night with the great author
telegraph.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from telegraph.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United Kingdom , United States , Republic Of , West Sands , City Of , Lafayette College , Buenos Aires , Distrito Federal , North Sea , Oceans General , Fanny Haslam , Dalastair Reid , George Mackay Brown , Federico Garc , Giuseppe Parini , John Barrymore , Edward Haslam , Jean Brodie , Norah Lange , Oliverio Girondo , Chidiock Tichborne , Jay Parini , Alexander Pope , Market Street , East Neuk , George Mackay ,

A Labyrinth for Our Time


There is a House with 7,678 halls; in the House lives the eponymous protagonist of Susanna Clarke’s new novel,
Piranesi. The amnesiac narrator knows nothing beyond this architecture, which inhabits and obsesses him this mansion with great staircases, courtyards, and marble statuary, where, depending on the level reached, you could be in the domain of the clouds (Upper Halls), conversing with birds (Middle Halls), or plunged into an underwater ecosystem (Lower Halls). Piranesi cohabits this space with human remains, 13 skeletons whom he domesticates with names and attributes: the Biscuit-Box Man, whose small bones Piranesi finds stored in a red biscuit tin; the Fish-Leather Man, his relics articulated with fish skin; the Folded-Up Child, found arranged on an empty plinth with her chin on bent knees. ....

New Zealand General , New Zealand , Laurence Arne Sayles , Edgar Allan Poe , Clarke Piranesi , Franz Kafka , Giambattista Piranesi , Matthew Rose Sorensen , Giovanni Battista Piranesi , Susanna Clarke , Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak , Daniel Williams , Jorge Luis Borges , Chee Dimock , Valentine Ketterley , Piranesi Carceri , Chakravorty Spivak , Wellington Peninsular Campaign , Upper Halls , Middle Halls , Lower Halls , Biscuit Box Man , Fish Leather Man , Folded Up Child , Hugo Award , Jonathan Strange ,

Interpreter of Maladies: On Virginia Woolf's Writings About Illness and Disability


December 16, 2020
At the start of 1915, as the First World War raged around her, Virginia Woolf proudly declared in a letter to one of her friends that she had nothing to fear from the flu. “[I]nfluenza germs have no power over me,” she wrote to Janet Case, who had recently come down with the flu; if Janet permitted it, Woolf continued, she would be happy to visit her in person. It was a remarkably ill-timed statement, for Woolf would fall sick with influenza repeatedly over the next decade, at times being confined to her bed as long as eight days. Many of the infections also left Woolf in excruciating physical pain, which was only exacerbated by the extreme surgical measures, like tooth extractions, she occasionally took to alleviate the agony. And the discomfort was not temporary; her physician, Dr. Fergusson, worried that the many bouts of influenza in 1916, 1918, 1919, 1922, 1923, and 1925 had done lasting damage to her nervous system and heart. ....

United States , New York , City Of , United Kingdom , Elizabeth Outka , Viktor Shklovsky , Kaveh Akbar , Virginia Woolf , Thomas De Quincey , Lytton Strachey , Porochista Khakpour , First World War , Janet Case , Spanish Flu , Black Death , Lord Northcliffe , English Opium Eater , Viral Modernism , Mrs Dalloway , Lyme Disease , Collected Schizophrenias , Esme Wang , Ottessa Moshfegh , Camu The Plague , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , புதியது யார்க் ,