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/lit/ - Literature

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>> No.23305748 [View]

>>23305363
CIORAN ES UN CERVESTA CRISTAL

>> No.22774714 [DELETED]  [View]

>>22774687
Forgot to mention I despise the digital edition for Straubinger's lol. I think it's the font. Thanks anyway, I'll look into Torres Amat.

>> No.22584782 [View]

>>22584681
The name itself is an argument
Namefag yes not a tripfag

>> No.22512287 [View]

>>22512244
>a basic skill for anyone who wants to lead a lot of people, you can't assume that people understand completely what you thought just because you said it once, you have to constantly check that out, and give them feedback based on the difference between what you are thinking and what you are seeing/they are doing.
This is true, but I would simply say why hire those people in the first place; unless you have no say in it.

What you're describing there is a leveling down rather than a leveling up; you'd be surprised, perhaps, how totally fresh people will completely "get it" when they're in the right culture, and if they're not in the right culture then they'll conform to whatsoever culture exists - ignoring what you say no matter how many times you say or it come up with new ways to phrase it.

I mean, from your description you could summarize the corporate culture of today; no doubt the owners want things to be a certain way and as if filters down and has to be repeated and forced upon a thousand employees it becomes more of a waste of time and energy: those who do initially "get it" will then become sick of it because it's being chanted at them all the time.

I think, from my own experiences of this, that if you have to say it more than once that the person really had no interest in hearing it to start with and that it makes far more sense to work with the few who are actually capable.


>I don't know, this greatly disadvantaged people are usually desperate for whatever
I'm talking more about physical ailments really (and its kind of off-topic, my bad); comparing the healthy bodied lazy sack to the physically impaired person who goes on hiking adventures, etc., as to the matter of self-motivation (autonomy) itself; the key factor in what we're both talking about, that is: people who immediately "get it" vs. people who don't.

>> No.22512256 [View]

whoops
> AND AND*
AND AN
*THE ACTIONS OF A PEOPLE AND AND INDIVIDUAL

>> No.21521675 [View]

>>21521458
cope

>> No.21521669 [View]
File: 140 KB, 1051x1360, 71tAj9BZPKL.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
21521669

>>21517964
>There Is No Cope For This!
Got you bro

>> No.21521614 [View]

>>21521600
link me up bro

>> No.21521583 [View]

>>21521470
>words
wait until you find out about symbols an signs

>> No.21521538 [View]
File: 947 KB, 1660x2560, harrah.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
21521538

>>21520018
>why did they mirror his face?

>> No.21521429 [View]
File: 33 KB, 640x480, 574890.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
21521429

>Life is just a big cope for death
To be is just a way of dying, sad.

>> No.20989649 [View]

>>20988875
anything about the Selous Scouts is pretty fucking amazing.

>> No.20985588 [View]
File: 88 KB, 509x571, pilot varsity.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
20985588

>>20985287
i am intrigued by the tradio and it has a fountain pen version... medium nib too!

i use a pilot varsity a lot and is a very smooth pen.

>> No.20961960 [View]

>>20957833
ooh...Lord Soth, how could I have forgotten him.

Keith Parkinson, Larry Elmore, and Clyde Caldwell were masterclass artists.

>> No.20961951 [View]

>>20960010
Hey, you wanna know who killed them...right?

The series has been around over 40 years. The joy is in the story telling, even if you know the outcome of one small section. It builds the anticipation.

>> No.20957530 [View]
File: 901 KB, 950x531, capeshit.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
20957530

>>20957210
I find your lack of capes disturbing.

>> No.20957498 [View]

>>20956570
Tanis had some depth to him. so did Dalamar.
Carmon and Raistlin really developed over the first two series. Tas, Flint, Sturm, and Fizban were a bit thin but very likeable.

>> No.20957480 [View]
File: 230 KB, 1000x1294, canihaveyerstuff.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
20957480

>>20956117
My mom cried when Flint and Sturm died. Most of her cats were named after Dragonlance characters, even Bupu.

>> No.20934880 [View]
File: 49 KB, 570x536, reply.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
20934880

i am real. i got captcha

>> No.20137876 [View]

>>20136904
So you just reed the bible??

MDNYH

>> No.19918778 [View]

hola

>> No.19493049 [View]

Up your butt and around the corner lol

>> No.19268553 [View]
File: 108 KB, 722x1148, 1595080560781.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
19268553

>>19268531
ok thanks

>> No.19268466 [View]
File: 641 KB, 1475x769, file.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
19268466

Edith Hamilton is recommended in the guide.

How does it differ from the three Stephen Fry books?

Should I read both or choose one or the other as a preamble to diving into the classics?

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