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Why is it HRAR and not HWAR?
I deleted the synopses from the short stories, and while I understand the revert, I really dislike their inclusion in the article. Writing the plot like that not only spoils most of the stories' endings but is also incredibly overstated, cheap, and superficial. Literary fiction, like Eggers', is about form and style, and, above all, giving away the stories misses the point. KyleGarvey 04:23, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
===>My thinking I wrote them, so I simply didn't want them to be deleted without any apparent reason. After reading your comments and furhter edits, you were concerned about spoilers. I'm fine with a spoiler tag if you are; makes sense to me. - Justin (koavf), talk, mail 05:52, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
===>Whatever I don't really care enough to argue about it, Kyle. If you want to go to Gravity's Rainbow, or A Tale of Two Cities and just write articles like "X is a book by Y and it is good," then go ahead; delete all of the fiction synopses if you want. I don't know why someone would be opposed to synopses on principle, and then want them to be more detailed and essentially reveal more information about the stories themselves. I'm also not sure how these are exaggerated in any way. - Justin (koavf), talk, mail 01:05, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
A hippogriff -- like a griffin -- has the head of an eagle, claws armed with talons, and wings covered with feathers, while the rest of its body being that of a horse. A chimera has the body of a goat, the tail of a snake or dragon and the head of a lion, in the alternative, the chimera had heads of both the goat and lion, with a snake for a tail. An examination of the cover indicates the animal is a hippogriff.
Perhaps the hippogriff is symbolic of something like "love conquers all" or "anything is possible," as griffins are traditionally regarded as having an antipathy for horses. Since the hippogriff -- being the offspring of a horse and a griffin -- was a doubly impossible being, pehaps the reader of HWAH will find among the stories the same magic that brought together the horse and the griffin. Just a thought D-Looth 22:54, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
In response to Koavf's comments here, what can I say, except to tell you that you are wrong? Pictures of authors provide no "context" whatsoever for articles about their books. What Dave Eggers's face looks like tells readers nothing at all about his book How We Are Hungry, and it is foolish to pretend it does. The overwhelming majority of articles about books do not contain pictures of their authors, and nor should they. I challenge Koavf to explain how the appearance of this man's face shows anything about his book. FreeKnowledgeCreator ( talk) 22:18, 26 April 2014 (UTC)
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