Still, his disappointment would come out of something human and inescapable: the failure of the actual to meet the contours of the imaginary.
“Jelly and Jack” by Dana Spiotta (2015)
Still, his disappointment would come out of something human and inescapable: the failure of the actual to meet the contours of the imaginary.
Still, his disappointment would come out of something human and inescapable: the failure of the actual to meet the contours of the imaginary.
She rarely used “uh,” but it was an important wordish sound that introduced a powerful unconscious transaction.
She rarely used “uh,” but it was an important wordish sound that introduced a powerful unconscious transaction.