Mister X: The Brides of Mister X and Other Stories Radiant City’s utopian design and futuristic architecture should have made it the City of Dreams. Instead, a flaw in the city’s psychetecture caused an epidemic of insanity among its resid
Open Library Books
| Title | : | Mister X: The Brides of Mister X and Other Stories |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.70 (151 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 1595826459 |
| Format Type | : | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages | : | 320 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2011-06-21 |
| Genre | : |
After revolutionizing the worlds of design and storytelling in 1984, Dean Motter’s Mister X reinvented alternative comics.Radiant City’s utopian design and futuristic architecture should have made it the City of Dreams. Instead, a flaw in the city’s psychetecture caused an epidemic of insanity among its residents. After years of exile, one of Radiant’s original architects, Mister X, is given a chance to redeem himself and the city when he is asked to redesign the skyline in hope of a cure. But some of the originally designed structures that were never built have begun appearing — with subtle changes — and Mister X must find the secret behind this mysterious urban renewal before Radiant City’s inhabitants tear the city apart!
Editorial : About the Author Jeffrey Morgan is the authorized biographer of both Alice Cooper and Iggy Pop & The Stooges.
One might ask, if that is true, how a truly spiritual man could allow such a thing Part of the answer may possibly be that K may have seen the institution of marriage as a man-made fabrication of possession which is, to a great degree, part of a social structure that can, without error, change away or from certain practices that are not at all written in stone; if they are written in stone, then perhaps one need not go to pieces if someone breaks them down unless, of course, the observer is the observed! (kidding here some) i would not stop reading K because of Sloss' book. Of the many highlights I could share, here are a few:
"Here is what I do know: I hate industrial civilization, for what it does to the planet, for what it does to communities, for what it does to individual nonhumans (both wild and domesticated), and for what it does to individual humans (both wild and domesticated). (As a quote beneath one of the chapter headings puts it, “The fates lead him who wi
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