Wednesday, February 07, 2007


He and she sittin’
in a tree
K-I-S-S-I-N-G
First comes love,
Then comes troubles

She is crying like someone just stuck some onion-chili paste onto her crescent brown eyes.
Remembering she is, their lovely time together: their first trip to London, him cooking her breakfasts, them giggling and chatting the nights away, her waiting for him to come home...

Narrator:
"You’re broken hearted, broke as a joke, and kicking yourself for broken resolutions. Don't worry, help is on the way.
You see, you need your confidence to shine through this tough time. Don't forget, time is ticking. You are aging. You are super agitated like a worm on a hot pan. God forbid, you are also losing your faith in your body."


This is the perfect time to reinitiate a meaningful casual-encounter with yourself. Here are some bare necessities coming out straight from our 'hot' oven:
- Bad relationship equals curable cancer. Some say laughter is the best medicine, so why not laugh your pain away.
- "Let me eat your cake too!" Show Marie Antoinette how lean you are despites of all those cure-cakes. Try these firm custom French corsets fit to your precise measurements. Don't forget to push those two pears up to top sexiness.
- Present your bottom brilliant: clean, polish, smooth, buff, adorn.
- Switch the brilliantly depressing Susan Sontag with the first chapter of James Sanders' "Scenes from the City"
- Finally, ready to take off? Let Notting Hill-based photographer GVP shoots your sexy bod for yourself to admire. Hello hello... clean up those photos of you and your psycho ex and replace them with the beautiful born-again self images.

Narrator:
"Last but definitely not the least, my Dear, everybody has someone, that's for sure. Dolce has Gabanna, Thelma has Louise, Anna has Andre, you have.. well, your loyal sexy posse. Ditch the dead weight for a cool coy boytoy from Hawaii. After all, who needs a ton-weight trouble-maker dude humpin' on top of your perky little delicate titties."

Red Hot Balloon Bag

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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Boys and girls, you know Tuesday is your day at In Casa! This week is a kiddie graphic week, so here are some visually-yummy suggestions for you:
1. Rabbit and Turtle - Yukari Miyagi
2. Tokyo and My Daughter - Takashi Homma
3. Emerald - Yoshimi
4. Untitled - Laura Owens
5. Inside - Kuniko Nagasaki

(all books can be purchased through nieves.ch)
Hand Crocheted Dolls

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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

“Now; you are a real frog, am I right?”
“Yes, of course, as you can see. A real frog is exactly what I am. A product neither of metaphor nor allusion nor deconstruction nor sampling nor any other such complex process, I am a genuine frog. Shall I croak for you?”
(Excerpt from Super-Frog Saves Tokyo)

It is an everyday-kind of story of a giant frog who is talking a man into helping him fight the bad worm from causing another deadly earthquake in Japan.
Geniusly written as always, Super-Frog Saves Tokyo is descriptively captivating through a very humble literature language. Reading it is like watching a motion medium minus all the overly-developed, complicated story-board twists.
Guaranteed at least one good laugh every two minutes, Super-Frog is a definite quake in the forever-fascinating Murakami world.
Super-Frog Saves Tokyo is a chapter in Haruki Murakami's After the Quake, 2000

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