The Strange Attraction


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Strange Attractions


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Highschool dropout and unrepentant heartbreaker Charity Wills is eager to get an education any way she can. So when she's offered a chance to go to college for free, she jumps at it. There's just one little catch: she must travel to the estate of B.G. Grantham, a reclusive physicist who likes to play exotic sex games. B.G. is obsessed with the unattainable: the meaning of life, the mysteries of desire and the thrill of being refused the one thing he craves. Charity has more than enough spirit to provide a challenge, especially with Eric Berne - her sexy keeper - to lend a hand.




The Strange Attraction


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Another Roadside Attraction


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“Written with a style and humor that haven’t been seen since Mark Twain.”—Los Angeles Times What if the Second Coming didn’t quite come off as advertised? What if “the Corpse” on display in that funky roadside zoo is really who they say it is—what does that portend for the future of western civilization? And what if a young clairvoyant named Amanda reestablishes the flea circus as popular entertainment and fertility worship as the principal religious form of our high-tech age? Another Roadside Attraction answers those questions and a lot more. It tell us, for example, what the sixties were truly all about, not by reporting on the psychedelic decade but by recreating it, from the inside out. In the process, this stunningly original seriocomic thriller is fully capable of simultaneously eating a literary hot dog and eroding the borders of the mind. “Hard to put down because of the sheer brilliance and fun of the writing. The sentiments of Brautigan and the joyously compassionate omniscience of Fielding dance through the pages garbed colorfully in the language of Joyce.”—Rolling Stone




The Attraction of Things


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Stunning fragments that offer an epiphany of grace and beauty The Attraction of Things concerns the entirety of beauty and the possibility of grace, relayed via obsessions with rare early gramophone records, the theater, translation, dying parents: all these elements are relayed in a dizzying strange traffic of cultural artifacts, friendships, losses, discoveries, and love. Roger Lewinter believes that in the realm of art, “the distinction between life and death loses its relevance, the one taking place in the other.” Whereas Story of Love in Solitude is a group of small stories, The Attraction of Things is a continuous narrative (more or less) of a man seeking (or stumbling upon) enlightenment. “The Attraction of Things,” states Lewinter, “is the story of a being who lets himself go toward what attracts him, toward what he attracts—beings, works, things—and who, through successive encounters, finds the way out of the labyrinth, to the heart, where the bolt of illumination strikes. This is the story of a letting go toward the illumination.”




The strange attraction


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Strange Attractors


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The Nation


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The Argosy


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A magazine of tales, travels, essays, and poems.