$6 Artists who manage to get some exposure, at the very least, have to deal with the public. At the very worst, they end up in Hell. Hell may come in the form of smarmy agents, sycophantic students, bad film scripts or journalists with ulterior motives. There are lights at the end of the tunnel, albeit, peculiar ones: whether it is the solace that a struggling actor finds in impersonating the kind of cop he used to play on television or a philosophy based entirely on food which one ancient teacher adopts. Some manna from heaven proves to be full of worms, however, as it is with one man admitted to a 'hospital' which turns out to be a strange prison run by subterranean authorities. As bookstores around the world close and the human race stops reading, God sits in Heaven with a representative of man as they negotiate on what to do about it. Ultimately, the stories in this book form a whole which deals with what it means to be an artist in a blood-hungry world driven by its need for entertainment, pleasure and its neurotic tendency to destroy its own idols.

Artists who manage to get some exposure, at the very least, have to deal with the public. At the very worst, they end up in Hell. Hell may come in the form of smarmy agents, sycophantic students, bad film scripts or journalists with ulterior motives. There are lights at the end of the tunnel, albeit, peculiar ones: whether it is the solace that a struggling actor finds in impersonating the kind of cop he used to play on television or a philosophy based entirely on food which one ancient teacher adopts. Some manna from heaven proves to be full of worms, however, as it is with one man admitted to a 'hospital' which turns out to be a strange prison run by subterranean authorities. As bookstores around the world close and the human race stops reading, God sits in Heaven with a representative of man as they negotiate on what to do about it. Ultimately, the stories in this book form a whole which deals with what it means to be an artist in a blood-hungry world driven by its need for entertainment, pleasure and its neurotic tendency to destroy its own idols.

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