The Book of A Deed
From Plastic Tub
Stimso Adid's Colossal Novel written during the years he served in the marines during World War II. The Works examining the similarities to Moby Dick and The Egyptian Book of the Dead are extensive, exhaustive and exemplery. Stimso's great undertaking took the better part of a decade to create and the uglier part of a year to read. The novel is a fanciful experiment in style and patience.
Stimes Addisons lengthy skelton treatment of Adid's masterpiece was destroyed in a fire in Addison's Mexico Retreat before it was to be published. Scholars agree that the literary world may have lost the Rosetta Stone to this incredible work. It is rumoured that Addison, Adids one time best friend and two time worst enemy (and Rumoured Best Man if a wedding were to break out) sat on an apple crate beneath a mango tree and drunk himself silly from dawn to dusk sobbing uncontollably.
The novel is historical in scope, fantasticaly lyrical and famous for its inpenatrable mid-section. The story begins during the morning cofee break of the Big Bang and unravels through time towards the final battle between the insignificant and the unexceptional while winding down rivers Nile and Mississip, Conquering mountains both Olympus and Ararat, Destroying Cities from Babylon to Babylon and generally raising all kinds of hell inbetween.