[story] the grace affair
Jul. 2nd, 2008 12:16 amauthor: claudia (
iseepurplehair)
email: midorikumori [at] gmail.com
( For my late friend Sameritan Grace, for whom I am writing this essay, I had nothing but the deepest respect. )
email: midorikumori [at] gmail.com
( For my late friend Sameritan Grace, for whom I am writing this essay, I had nothing but the deepest respect. )
[story] the engineers' elephant
Jul. 1st, 2008 11:08 pmauthor: xahra99 (
xahra99)
email: xahra99 [at] yahoo.com
'And there were strange prodigies in that place-men with the heads of animals, and animals that spoke like men, and marvelous mechanical wonders that counterfeited life, and sang, or moved, when they were spoken to.'
Ramadan, Neil Gaiman
( 'All right,' said Thomas. 'This is the last time we build anything this big.' )
email: xahra99 [at] yahoo.com
'And there were strange prodigies in that place-men with the heads of animals, and animals that spoke like men, and marvelous mechanical wonders that counterfeited life, and sang, or moved, when they were spoken to.'
Ramadan, Neil Gaiman
( 'All right,' said Thomas. 'This is the last time we build anything this big.' )
[story] the windskipper
Jul. 1st, 2008 10:35 pmauthor: flamebyrd (
flamebyrd)
email: flamebyrd [at] gmail.com
artist: llyse (
llyse)
email: xanedrian [at] gmail.com
( 'So you say you worked with Samuel Clayton Mills?' )
email: flamebyrd [at] gmail.com
artist: llyse (
email: xanedrian [at] gmail.com
( 'So you say you worked with Samuel Clayton Mills?' )
[story] the right-hand rule
Jun. 30th, 2008 11:59 pmauthor: chris (
aefallen)
email: edgeofdawn [at] gmail.com
artist: susie oh (
susieoh)
email: susie000 [at] gmail.com
( At the turn of the century, a man from Lancashire invented what he called the right-hand rule, a principle for determining the result of a meeting of two forces so simple that you could remember it with nothing but your right hand. )
email: edgeofdawn [at] gmail.com
artist: susie oh (
email: susie000 [at] gmail.com
( At the turn of the century, a man from Lancashire invented what he called the right-hand rule, a principle for determining the result of a meeting of two forces so simple that you could remember it with nothing but your right hand. )