He has you taken into the machine room. "Allow me to introduce our programmer, Sheila."Before you, in a white smock buttoned up to the neck, you see Corinna-Gertrude-Alfonsina, who is tending a battery of smooth metallic appliances, like dishwashers. "These are the memory units that have stored the whole text of Around an empty grave. The terminal is a printing apparatus that, as you see, can reproduce the novel word for word from the beginning to the end," the officer says. A long sheet unrolls from a kind of typewriter which, with machine-gun speed, is covering it with cold capital letters.
Prices are often absurdly inflated, up to the many hundreds of dollars. While, on Amazon, you can't peek inside any of the books, the product descriptions read like prose recycled from free government business or health leaflets (stuff that usually feels like it was written by a machine anyway). There seem to be a few dozen tropes which are repeated with slight variations ad nauseum. A few sample titles:
— The 2007 Report on Wood Toilet Seats: World Market Segmentation by City (330pp., $795)
— The 2007-2012 Outlook for Lemon-Flavored Bottled Water in Japan (140pp., $495)
— Avocados: A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research Guide (108pp., $28.95)
— Brain Injuries - A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research Guide to Internet References (244pp., $28.95)
In fact, there's a whole trope of titles that are guides to "internet references," which makes me wonder if Parker's machine is just scraping the entire Web for content.
Odd. (VIA) & via GREYLODGE the GREAT


