04-20-2012, 08:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-20-2012, 08:42 PM by Beltharean.)
If you don't know, you can find Kurt Cobain's journals online. It's two hundred and fifty pages straight out of the mind of a man that, if he weren't famous, is either outstandingly ordinary or plainly insane. I can't tell, and I've read pretty much the whole thing. There's no spiral downward, from an innocent kid into a star who killed himself. As far as I can tell, he never even changed... Regardless, I figured for those of you that were interested and didn't know it was out there, you might want to look into it. It's a great read.
A comment by Kurt on tie dye shirts:
It really isn't hard to find, but I don't want to be responsible for any viruses one might get from a filesharing site. I'm on a mac, and it came out clean for me, but I don't know about you PC users. Just throw the search in google and you should be able to find it relatively quickly.
EDIT:
I figure while I have this post up, I should throw in something from another 'star' so to speak. He is however, more concerned with -the- stars than being one. I do of course mean H.P. Lovecraft, and his little known Commonplace Book, where he kept his general ideas for his writings. It's also a rather interesting read, and great for ideas straight from a master's mouth, for those of you who write.
Lovecraft's Commonplace Book
A comment by Kurt on tie dye shirts:
Quote:"I would only wear a tie died t shirt if it were made from the blood of jerry garcia and the urine of phil collins."
It really isn't hard to find, but I don't want to be responsible for any viruses one might get from a filesharing site. I'm on a mac, and it came out clean for me, but I don't know about you PC users. Just throw the search in google and you should be able to find it relatively quickly.
EDIT:
I figure while I have this post up, I should throw in something from another 'star' so to speak. He is however, more concerned with -the- stars than being one. I do of course mean H.P. Lovecraft, and his little known Commonplace Book, where he kept his general ideas for his writings. It's also a rather interesting read, and great for ideas straight from a master's mouth, for those of you who write.
Lovecraft's Commonplace Book
"Every gun..."
![[Image: Jonah-Hex-Counting-Corpses-Flaming-Leap.jpg]](http://i238.photobucket.com/albums/ff226/joncthree/Jonah-Hex-Counting-Corpses-Flaming-Leap.jpg)
"...Makes its own tune."
~ The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly ~