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/fa/ - Fashion

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>>10799217
29)
The Hearing Trumpet by Leonora Carrington
(Exactly what you are looking for, I promise!)

Leonora Carrington is neat as neat can be; I'm glad she appeals to you - I'm taking that as a good sign. So another great (and relatively unknown) book that cannot fail to fill your heart with love and optimism is Jaime de Angulo's "Indian Tales." I won't say much about it other than, "Please, please buy it." Again, you won't regret this one either.

There's another one I'm thinking you might like, but it's not quite as top-shelf as de Angulo and Carrington. It's called "A Book of Surrealist Games." A long lost friend and I once found a copy at BookBuyers. Anyway, I think it's semi-commonplace now, 'cause it was reprinted five or ten years ago. I don't know, I found it fun.

http://www.amazon.com/Indian-Tales-Jamie-De-Angulo/dp/0865475237
http://www.amazon.com/Book-Surrealist-Games-Alastair-Brotchie/dp/1570620849/

30)
The Man Who Planted Trees, by Jean Giono (1953). Hell, just watch the incredible animated adaptation:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTvYh8ar3tc
It's fiction/allegory, but it's one of the truly inspiring works I know.

31)
The Collected Rumi. Nothing comes close.

32)
The Importance of Living by Lin Yutang

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