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Thank you so very much, Andrew-Bede, my friend! Your detailed comments are so interesting. I'm so glad to know all the reasons that you like it.
There is probably very little in the book that Eva is reading that would actually lead her to imagine this particular scene. I intended it to be a somewhat generic representation of "imagination". The bird was chosen very specifically as a metaphor for allowing imagination to soar.
The book is one of the old "Hardy Boys" series. (I don't know if they ever had those in the UK.) This one is titled "The Crisscross Shadow" by Franklin W. Dixon. In case you don't know, the "Hardy Boys" were a very large series of mystery genre books for children - primarily aimed at boys. The Hardy Boys would always come across some unsolved crime and then find ingenious ways of figuring out who the culprit was. Antal had a large collection of them and they were out because we were lending them to a little boy who is a friend of Eva's, Not thinking much about it. I just grabbed the top one in the pile for this photo. In retrospect, I ought to have gotten out an old leather bound copy of Dickens. 
I'm glad you are back from your vacation. I hope you had a great time. Looking forward to hearing all about it. 
L & P,
Endre
Benedictine wrote:
Beautiful my dear friend Endre. For me there are three things that interest me in this, apert from the overall effect which is great. Firstly I like the liminality of the edge between this world and another, the transition is superb and catches the feeling perfectly. Secondly the way the light falls onto the right side of her face, (our left as we view it) is I think masterful. But the final and to me most interesting feature of this image is the bird—that I find deeply significant. The one thing that I would love to know is what is Eva reading? I can't quite make it out, but on the other hand not quite knowing adds to the mystery but it intrigues me.
L & P
Andrew-Bede...Show more →
Edited on Oct 28, 2009 at 03:24 AM · View previous versions
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