Here is my preface draft Jonathan...can I ask if it's interesting or not?
Brigite had long been a sufferer of a bisexual identity crisis. She was male, and is in this tale, and hir friend who she
identifies as Matthew is female, a femme fatale at that, of common origin. But the distinct 22nd Century-ness of this story is
that body dysmorphia - the ability to take on a mutated form each alternate day in a continuum - bears considerable weight over
the dementia Brigite (real name Brian, hir's a cross-dresser) also has. As for Matthew's real name, we never seem to really
find hers - without the transgender "hir" pronoun in use - out for certain.
It might be because of this ideological hotch potch of realities, criss-crossing as they do, that Brigite is so emotionally
overwrought. Or rather, confused and troubled, by a distinct breaking down of hir formative clusters of ideology herself. In any
case, hir reality is a unreality - too perpelexive to be normative, too anti to be anything in particular. The precision
instrument nature of hir interests over the years: sound about architecture, dancing about sound, and writing about dancing
around sound of the nomenclature, is perennial to a sense of egalitarian worth in Brigite. This author has often found hir to be
a complicated personality and person at that - one who exists, but doesn't, as well. In the tale, there is also a distinct idea
that Matthew only seems to exist because of Brian, to be formal, who is Brigite, to create a characterful cosplay of elements.
Based on a true story of love, loss, relocation, confusion, life as a whole, and simply, the causality of opposites, "Freeze Dry"
is Mike Robert Buckingham's first novel under his own name, foretelling a life story dredged from being empathetic with darkness.
As we shall see...it all starts, and ends, here.
Brigite had long been a sufferer of a bisexual identity crisis. She was male, and is in this tale, and hir friend who she
identifies as Matthew is female, a femme fatale at that, of common origin. But the distinct 22nd Century-ness of this story is
that body dysmorphia - the ability to take on a mutated form each alternate day in a continuum - bears considerable weight over
the dementia Brigite (real name Brian, hir's a cross-dresser) also has. As for Matthew's real name, we never seem to really
find hers - without the transgender "hir" pronoun in use - out for certain.
It might be because of this ideological hotch potch of realities, criss-crossing as they do, that Brigite is so emotionally
overwrought. Or rather, confused and troubled, by a distinct breaking down of hir formative clusters of ideology herself. In any
case, hir reality is a unreality - too perpelexive to be normative, too anti to be anything in particular. The precision
instrument nature of hir interests over the years: sound about architecture, dancing about sound, and writing about dancing
around sound of the nomenclature, is perennial to a sense of egalitarian worth in Brigite. This author has often found hir to be
a complicated personality and person at that - one who exists, but doesn't, as well. In the tale, there is also a distinct idea
that Matthew only seems to exist because of Brian, to be formal, who is Brigite, to create a characterful cosplay of elements.
Based on a true story of love, loss, relocation, confusion, life as a whole, and simply, the causality of opposites, "Freeze Dry"
is Mike Robert Buckingham's first novel under his own name, foretelling a life story dredged from being empathetic with darkness.
As we shall see...it all starts, and ends, here.