The fourth installment of tweets from novels: Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky’s The Letter Killers Club.
Libraries crushed the reader's imagination, professional writings of a small coterie…have crammed…heads to bursting #LetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) November 28, 2015
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"Man is a free being. Even madmen have the right to their madness." #TheLetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) December 1, 2015
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His tirades about 'free will' were several centuries too late and faintly risible in an age of scientific determinism #TheLetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) December 1, 2015
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It was vital that the mentally ill…be given not freedom of will, but freedom from will. #TheLetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) December 1, 2015
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Having consigned all lunatics, they decided to immunize the sanest people 1st–themselves–against possible activation #LetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) December 1, 2015
Gni needed neither words nor kisses, his bulging cheeks were stained w grease, while his mouth suckled a…mutton bone #TheLetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) December 1, 2015
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Words are spiteful and tenacious–anyone who tries to kill them will sooner be killed by them #TheLetterKillersClub
— Joshua Nudell (@jpnudell) December 1, 2015
Previously in this series, Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Orhan Pamuk’s The New Life, and Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Demons.