In praising Mando's core notion, what I had in mind is this, to put it in
"literary" terms: Jane Austen wrote consistently like Jane Austen. Always. Her
"style", her perspectives and perceptions, her interests, would never be
confused with George Eliot's or Dicken's.   Eliot and Dickens had their   own
virtues
to which adhered (Dickens more than Eliot, perhaps). They were consistently
themselves. They imitated no one, not in style, not in outlook. The vast
majority of published writers do not achieve that singularity of what Mando
termed
"taste".


In a message dated 10/17/08 5:50:36 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


> Is keeping taste consistent you advocate or wish?
> Boris Shoshensky
>
> -- armando baeza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The most difficult thing to do in "art creating", is to keep the
> personal
> unique taste consistent in ones attempt.  Children do it best.
> mando
>




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