- dogcrash truther
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post here
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Dec 6, 2014 23:44
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- Adbot
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ADBOT LOVES YOU
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May 10, 2024 07:02
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- FluffieDuckie
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i'm gone less than 24 hours and dct has succumbed to peer pressure and is posting call out threads
Thank you for the beautiful sig Machai!
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Dec 6, 2014 23:46
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- dogcrash truther
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you werre the one keeping my worst instincts in check
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Dec 6, 2014 23:47
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- Gone Fashing
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KEEP POSTIN
I'M STILL LAFFIN
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a byob poster waiting to blossom if i've ever seen one
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Dec 6, 2014 23:48
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- drilldo squirt
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a beautiful, soft meat sack
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I like his name.
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Dec 6, 2014 23:50
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- FluffieDuckie
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you werre the one keeping my worst instincts in check
that was practically my job title
Thank you for the beautiful sig Machai!
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Dec 7, 2014 00:11
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- Scaly Haylie
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Dec 7, 2014 01:03
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- Rick
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When I was 17, my father was so stupid, I didn't want to be seen with him in public. When I was 24, I was amazed at how much the old man had learned in just 7 years.
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Magic Man, are you Jim The Magic Jumper?
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Dec 7, 2014 02:26
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- polishthunder84
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You feel it too, don't you?
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every body should post in BYOB
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Dec 7, 2014 04:22
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- literally this big
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Here comes
the Squirtle Squad!
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let's see what Magic Man has to offer:
Yeah, I love Akutagawa too, especially Hell Screen. I think the two are fairly different both in style and content, however. I think Akutagawa tends to favor minimalism in his language a lot, and most of his focus is given to the psychology of his characters rather than the places they inhabit. Kyoka's writing is more similar to Blake or Keats, he places a lot of focus on natural scenes using extremely vivid and flowery prose. Kyoka also usually doesn't place too much emphasis on character development as he basically rewrites the same characters for all of his stories. What he felt was most important was the language itself rather than world building. A writer you might try if you like Akutagawa is Naoya Shiga, his stories also employed very minimalist and sharp language on issues of the human condition. He was also a contemporary of Akutagawa and also one of his favorite writers. He differs from Akutagawa in that most of his work is taken from his own personal experiences (Shiga is credited as one of the pioneers of the "I-Novel" style in Japan) but it's still very interesting stuff. At Kinosaki is probably my favorite story of his, it's about a man who travels to the countryside for reasons of his health and ponders death as it's presented to him in nature. Han's Crime is also good, I think it's very similar to Akutagawa's In a Bamboo Grove both in style and content.
ok I could go for more of this kind of thing
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Dec 7, 2014 07:15
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- Scaly Haylie
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boy that guy sure likes japan or something
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Dec 7, 2014 09:22
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- Adbot
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May 10, 2024 07:02
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