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The Monday Morning Memo

ParisTrainStation_Hugo_760

Last week I showed you the view from behind the clock inside this building.
This is the Musee d’Orsay, in my opinion, the finest museum in Paris.
I liked it better than the Louvre. The wizard agrees. The musee is housed
in the old train station that was the home of Hugo Cabret.
If you haven’t read that graphic novel, you really should.
It’s a whole new kind of experience.

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Random Quote:

“When Clark wakes up in the morning, he’s neither the symbol nor the secret identity. He’s the boy who grew up in Smallville, the son of Jonathan and Martha, the friend and colleague and sometimes husband of Lois Lane, a  journalist for a great metropolitan newspaper, an immigrant, a child of adoption who yearns for a family he never met, a person who accepts the responsibility his power implies, who tries to reciprocate the love he received to the world that took him in. Clark Kent is not a critique of the human race. He is part of the human race. In all the ways that matter, including and especially his weaknesses, he is human. He is one of us. As he says in Lois & Clark: ‘Superman is what I can do. Clark is who I am.’

Yes, I know. I just spent six thousand words refuting one fictional character’s argument about another fictional character. I should probably go outside.”

- Evan Puschak (The Nerdwriter,) Escape into Meaning, p. 184

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