letters
to an unknown audience
A typically devastating yarn by T. C. Boyle graced The New Yorker's pages last week.
Why is it that I think it's not worth reading online, and that I could never have such a deep engagement with a story, if it were on my computer monitor instead of a page? I think it's because with a computer I'm never alone; the computer is a perpetual partner, and to die in a story I must be alone with it.
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