don't judge a book by its cover i don't wanna miss a thing lirik I believe the novel relies on the imaginative participation of its readers, in much the same way Marcel Duchamp believed the spectator completes a work of art. This synergy is also worth defending. Even a novel that deconstructs the novel requires its readers to step into a voice, ideas, desires or fury that might be nothing like our own
don't judge a book by its cover In the story, the reference is to a physical book when the character, Mr. Tulliver, uses it to discuss Daniel Defoe’s The History of the Devil: “and there’s a lot more of ’em, sermons mostly, I think, but they’ve all got the same covers, and I thought they were all o’ one sample, as you may say. But it seems one mustn’t judge by
chord i don't wanna miss a thing A side effect of the way we listen to music in the streaming era is that it's harder than ever for new stars to break through. Or it was until 2024, anyway. This year, it felt like a page turned, the skies parted, the windows were flung open wide: Mainstream pop, a field dominated by artists decades