"Unlike many of the others, though, Faulkner liked to drink while he was writing. In 1937 his French translator, Maurice Edgar Coindreau, was trying to decipher one of Faulkner’s idiosyncratically baroque sentences. He showed the passage to the writer, who puzzled over it for a moment and then broke out laughing. “I have absolutely no idea of what I meant,” Faulkner told Coindreau. “You see, I usually write at night. I always keep my whiskey within reach; so many ideas that I can’t remember in the morning pop into my head."
Stuff I find. And like. Obviously.
When I set out to make a documentary about black women who are “transitioning”...
THICKNESS #3 cover by Edie Fake (type & logo by Michael DeForge)
Debuting at CAKE - June 16,...
From the first print of “Der Doktor Faustus” by German poet Heinrich Heine
A young Dorothy Dandridge with a group of beauty queens in the 1940s. Photo: Clyde Woods.