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May 25, 2012 river redirect
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May 6, 2012 misremembering Walden
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April 23, 2012 the Townes we left behind
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April 23, 2012 freedom, at last
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December 29, 2011 just one more hit
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November 2, 2011 three days on the devils
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June 28, 2011 death and taxes
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March 30, 2011 the origins of alt
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December 28, 2010 writing about pictures
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November 18, 2010 mindreading McGuane
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- just a few hours left to get on board with one of the coolest film projects I know #WWI #animation kickstarter.com/projects/14869… 3 days ago
- paddling pics Rio Grande Lower Canyons #canoes #riogrande #lowercanyons http://t.co/Epj6pc7r 1 week ago
- launch of a new river blog #rivers #lowercanyons #riogrande riverpix.wordpress.com 1 week ago
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“It can be argued, then, that a book stops being unknown as soon as it enters our perceptual field, and that to know almost nothing about it should be no obstacle to imagining or discussing it. To a cultivated or curious person, even the slightest glance at a book’s title or cover calls up a series of images and impressions quick to coalesce into an initial opinion, facilitated by the whole set of books represented in the culture at large. For the non-reader, therefore, even the most fleeting encounter with a book may be the beginning of an authentic personal appropriation, and any unknown book we come across becomes a known book in that instant.” —Pierre Bayard, “How To Talk About Books You Haven’t Read”