After evoking a noisy poison on Twitter, people who think this is a genius, those who think that it is wrong, and drivers are either wasteful or paradoxical irrespective of whether they are people or cats. Man? The New Yorker short story by Kristen Roupenian conveys the endless romantic story of Margot and Robert, and their ultimately unsatisfying relationships can be driven only by the power of SMS teasing.
In computation, this 4000 word story is a BBC short story written from Robert's point of view, a Twitter account that published answers from confused men, and more women's sneaky story, and about 10,000 Thing. The Millennial generation responded by saying their somewhat sad dating experience. Except for Brokeback Mountain of Annie Proulx (published in New Yorkers in 1997) or Shirley Jackson's lottery (page of 1948 magazine), it will be the most popular short story ever.
Now the story about cats is easier to read than the story itself, and Proulx and Jackson survived the online survey experienced by Lu Benan and her story. An angry reader is determined to win the controversy about a creative work. Here are some fronts
When they finally got quite unpaid love, Margot was dissatisfied with Robert and his stomach, "thick, soft, covered with hair", but they will have sex anyway. She decided to say, 'I will not show my capital to be fickle to the ground.' At the same time, Robert became infatuated with Margot's sexual history, invented an imaginary man to compete with her time and finished talking by calling her a prostitute (spoiler). So maybe they are both. Probably not. Based on the reaction of many women against this story, the question to ask is "Why do women try to please that woman?" Did people really notice this?
Roupenian to New Yorkers said the story was inspired by the "small but troubling encounter" that I encountered online. So it can be said that neither is correct.
In this era of sexual anxiety and # MeToo, some people claim that the story of Roupenian is about modern politics, as if the novel can not solve the modern episode, and in New York Editors do not rush from the story. During the public public conversation (surprised: this is what they did)
This is where the third episode goes to the forefront. This is not my personal story but it began when modern agriculture caused human technology and population explosion thousands of years ago. If you make a long story easy, in addition to a few scattered indigenous peoples, contemporary humans believe that certain truths are self-evident. This is mainly due to our extraordinary theory as seeds. The nihilism and arrogant belief that we are separating from other creatures has much in common with the myths of the millennium empire and they are also delusive. The Nazis forged the "other" approach to the extreme of nihilism and completely forgot about the fact that the country can not keep violent suppression of imperialist expansion plans and violence and state support for a long time. The Nazi regime spent 11 years instead of 1000 years to erode his hometown to the point of collapse.
Whether "Catman" is a wonderful short story or not, whether it is deeply destructive or not, it is exciting to see the cultural discourse expand on the stories of short stories. It reminds people how powerful and worth the novel is and pay attention to it and why learning from it is worthwhile.
Grace 's story took place one month after New York' s infamous "Catman" short story. People are not happy. It stimulated a healthy and valuable debate about sexual contact, it transcended the justification of consent and touched human dignity and happiness. It suggests that both "Catman" and the baby's article may have lost something in today's casual connection culture. The factor of absolutely old-fashioned sexual contact is not absolutely reliable. The story of Grace and Margot. We will not delegate to strangers to use our car keys, phone numbers, children or bank accounts. But in the age of casual connection with Tinder our body is not one such limited field. And this trust has not been much rewarded.