What are talking about thomas? That makes no sense at all.
He's saying that Cyrano isn't an author and that he's fictitious just like the Santa Claus, a fact which traumatized him when learned the truth.
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What are talking about thomas? That makes no sense at all.
I'm sure I can find a link or three about that somewhere.Now let me see, what were all those reasons we shouldn't be doing this useless foolishness? I must be able to find them around here someplace. Sorry guys, couldn't resist.
And Pinocchio,was he real too?Joe,come on was he?
I'm trying to build a list of novels about real-life writers. So far I've come up with:
The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis, José Saramago (Fernando Pessoa)
Immortality, Milan Kundera (Goethe)
The Master of St. Petersburg, J.M. Coetzee (Dostoevsky)
Lotte in Weimar, Thomas Mann (Goethe)
Casanova In Bolzano, Sándor Márai (Giacomo Casanova)
Henry and June, Anaïs Nin (Henry Miller, Anaïs Nin)
The Hours, Michael Cunningham (Virginia Woolf)
But I'd like some help in finding more titles. It interests me to see how writers today portray their predecessors. Recommend me any titles you know, so long as it involves real-life authors.
It's available for free online - Mamatas is one of those weird "art should be free" people - here.Heteronym, when I can think of some more examples, I'll be sure to post them. I still reeling from the characters in Move Under Ground.
Interesting that a lot of authors get written as detectives: Poe, Austen, Wendell Holmes, Longfellow. Why do you think that happens?