No.67
It feels like I put this week down somewhere safe before promptly forgetting where that was. I've been routinely wide awake and working into the early morning (this seemed to be a sort of premonition), because surprisingly it has been the path of least resistance, and I'm still waiting to feel tired; I catch myself thinking longingly about the slow-but-fast rotation of the planets and everything else in space-time, trying to figure out what or who in the immediate universe is responsible for this awake-ness.
ON THE JOURNAL RECENTLY:
Words that didn't have anywhere else to go were made into a short story, but little else. By little else, I of course mean nothing else.
BRIEFLY:
Starting tomorrow morning, there is another 25% off everything in my Society6 store, right through until the end of Monday. I know, this seems to happen all the time, and I think it probably does, but if you are wanting to potentially get people things like untranslatable words for Christmas (I can't believe I said it either), then now is your moment.
I also have signed copies of various book editions and some original pieces in the store on my site, all of which can be shipped worldwide. They aren't listed, but I also have signed copies of the German, Spanish, Korean, Japanese, Italian, and French editions of Lost in Translation, and also a few of the Japanese, Korean, and Italian versions of The Illustrated Book of Sayings.
With regards to the above, all orders of either signed books or original pieces need to be placed by the end of November. I may have made that all horribly complicated but there we go, phew.
THIS WEEK I FELL IN LOVE WITH:
The work of London-based Russian illustrator and animator Alexandra Dvornikova.
The end.
I like to think of you, there. This seems a much more mysterious way to keep you informed of things, and I like to imagine how much we would have to talk about. As always, your replies to this newsletter are welcomed—oft-times a stranger is capable of making the most perceptive and caring of observations.
Farewell, see you next sometime.
Copyright © 2017 Ella Frances Sanders, All rights reserved.