Talk:An Infinity of Mirrors: Difference between revisions
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imported>Hayford Peirce (→Stuff to put into Main Article: new section) |
imported>Hayford Peirce (→Stuff to put into Main Article: info about Gitlin) |
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* page 99 preposterous trivia: Miles-Meltzer wore a pearl-gray cummerband and sapphire studs: his black satin tie was floppy, in the bohemian manner, and he wore brushed-silver spectacles with sapphire linchpins on either side. For the sixth year in a row he had been voted the best-dressed man in northern Europe -- which meant the world, he explained, because the British had slipped horribly and there was no one else. | * page 99 preposterous trivia: Miles-Meltzer wore a pearl-gray cummerband and sapphire studs: his black satin tie was floppy, in the bohemian manner, and he wore brushed-silver spectacles with sapphire linchpins on either side. For the sixth year in a row he had been voted the best-dressed man in northern Europe -- which meant the world, he explained, because the British had slipped horribly and there was no one else. | ||
* page 151 Maître Gitlin | * page 151 Maître Gitlin -- a lawyer named Gitlin also appears at the end in Any God Will Do. Apparently there was a New York literary agent named Paul Gitlin and he may well have been Condon's agent in the early 60s. |
Revision as of 13:27, 12 July 2010
Stuff to put into Main Article
- page 60 Gretel's husband, Generalleutnant Franz Heller, called Hansel
- page 82 mention of Doctor A. Weiler
- page 71 et al -- wonderful dinner
- page 99 preposterous trivia: Miles-Meltzer wore a pearl-gray cummerband and sapphire studs: his black satin tie was floppy, in the bohemian manner, and he wore brushed-silver spectacles with sapphire linchpins on either side. For the sixth year in a row he had been voted the best-dressed man in northern Europe -- which meant the world, he explained, because the British had slipped horribly and there was no one else.
- page 151 Maître Gitlin -- a lawyer named Gitlin also appears at the end in Any God Will Do. Apparently there was a New York literary agent named Paul Gitlin and he may well have been Condon's agent in the early 60s.