After they were separated by the outbreak of war in September 1939 Granny decided to keep this album of photos to show Grandpa. It's of their daughter, Eve, and Granny. The album shows Eve as she grew up apart from her father. This is a tribute to Granny's careful hope and the photographic story ends up with her in the arms of her husband and the family on the beach in South Africa. But the last pictures of all the story are of Lisa with Eve together in 1943 and 1943. The petals of an old wild flower were pressed between the leaves of the album, but they were delicate, and I inadvertently crushed them. This is the first part of the album.
FLASHING THE GUARDIAN -- A BOOKS BLOGGERS' REBELLION : The unheroic censor with a death wish Part 1: In which Norman Mailer stars in an experiment in search engine optimisation By ACCIACCATURE 3 February 2009 When Norman Mailer died in 2007, informed opinion – in the blogosphere, people who had read at least two of his books – was split. The army of readers who saw him as one of the most despicable misogynists writing fiction in the 20th century was perfectly matched by warriors on the other side, who raged that the label wasn’t just unwarranted but tantamount to heinous calumny. Before commenters returned to bitching-as-usual, tempers were lost on literary sites all over the net in debating temperatures high enough to bring to mind tiles burning off space shuttles re-entering Earth’s atmosphere. After I'd agreed to a spontaneous suggestion by our good friend Sean Murray -- a pioneer and stalwart of the comments section of The Guardian’s books blog – that we re-...
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