Sunday, April 15, 2012

Mood Disorder Haunts The Authors Intentions


By: Wandering One Waiting

There seems to be a major lull in the progress of the novel which is called...well...one cannot say without divulging much more than intended to you dear compatriot. All one needs to know is that the author has revealed that the tone of the novel ought to be read for shifts in mood. The novelist wanted to convey his mood in writing the novel as he suffers from a very rare mood disorder and feels that mood in word choice, dialogue, and character actions may be more telling than the plot itself. For those interested in mood and literature, there is a specific professor at SSCU who is expert in deciphering mood elements in writing. his name is Synchro Andres. The overall mood of the novel is hopeful but at times progresses from euphoric and romantic, to dark and subversive, and then to blaze and what may have been the pivotal moment in the novel is the least excited. The very moment where the title is founded is the greatest display of dreary recumbence and laziness. This is directly related to the author's mood during the writing of this portion of the novel and he insists that this is a necessary effort or lack of. He claims he is trying to exagerrate the overall sense that nothing is important and nothing really matters. This borders on existentialist despair and the author claims that resolving this sense is the main goal of the work. What seemed to be a book of gay male erotica about a fictional sex drug called "Candles" has become an all out philosophical work aimed at the complacency of moderns in their lacking a vision as they once did during the revolutionary era. The author claims to be pleased with his work and has no intention of modifying the mood for readers who want heightened experiences in a world of base stimulation.

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