Misstace Were Made
Posted by Lizzie on 07/11/05
As is pretty much ceaselessly the case, we liked a joke so much, we got everything else in the universe wrong. The so much classier than we are it’s not even funny author Wesley Stace, whose Misfortune is reviewed somewhere to your bottom left there, informs us that we have misfortunately told you that the main character is a hermaphrodite (WRONG; read the book) and that the drop caps are the work of artist and lithographer Sylvie Covey (WRONG; new wife Abbey Tyson did them, although you have to give us a break there and admit that those names sound very similar and may in fact be anagrams).
We are very sorry, but what can we do? We were eating a baby.
Filed under: Lit-ish |





England has always reveled in its drawing-room dramas, from Jane Austen’s social minefields to E.M. Forster’s Howards End to Upstairs, Downstairs — and yes, the blockbuster Downton Abbey. John Lanchester’s brilliant Capital, set on a once-ordinary London block whose housing prices have skyrocketed, has the distinction of being the first brick-and-mortar novel set squarely in our current times.
I have nothing constructive to add, but I just want to say: Wesley Stace is TEH HOTTNESS!!11!11!
I hope that baby was served with a side order of puppy.
[...] * We would just like to point out that we, in our deeply finite short-term wisdom, actually pitched one of the panel members today out of the blue. They were like, Yeah, Old Hag, why don’t we discuss after THE PANEL WE’RE ON TOMORROW TOGETHER? REMEMBER THE PANEL? REMEMBER READING ANNOUNCEMENTS ORGANIZERS SEND YOU? This is worse than the hermaphrodite thing. Cross-dresser. Whatever. [...]