They lard their lean books with the fat of others work.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I read that book 'Fat is a Feminist Issue', got a bit desperate halfway through and ate it.
It is impossible for our working people to maintain their full strength if they do not succeed in obtaining a sufficient supply of fat, allotted to them on a proper basis.
Don't assume that all fat people are gluttons. And don't use the word 'fat.' There is a principle here. Learn from logic and experience not to associate things - especially in preaching - that don't necessarily go together.
When it's all about the work, it's clear who in the company is pulling their weight and who isn't.
I am never really surprised at the way my books take shape. They are just not as perfect as I'd like them to be.
Also, if nothing else, writing this book has really changed the way I experience bookstores. I have a whole different appreciation for the amount of work packed into even the slimmest volume on the shelves.
The writer's job is to let the books speak for themselves eventually.
If there is one thing I hope my books do always and forever, it's that they honor working people.
Americans like fat books and thin women.
Printed books usually outlive bookstores and the publishers who brought them out. They sit around, demanding nothing, for decades. That's one of their nicest qualities - their brute persistence.