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The museum of lost objects

Lost and found

lost property

the biography of a lost object

lost please help

lost please find

broken

lost forever

Cobra Mist

Dead end

Cul de Sac

No ‘phone line

Fortune telling with objects

voodoo

souvenir

the secret life of an object

the life of other peoples’ objects

the hospital for objects

the tidal wave of crap

storage

return of the killer object

the inventory

the family inventory

jumble sale

the biography of a jumble sale

the tale of an ornament

the atlas of objects

the family museum

the family crypt

homeland

nostalgia

the dollshouse

the tale of an object

the hospital of lost objects

the family hospital

the receipts

the lists

the lost journey of an object

the story of an object

the avalanche of objects

corona (eye & planet)

the aura of an object

the prescription of objects

the compendium of objects

the bible of objects

the Jane’s defence manual

crazy paving

marble memorialsmall memories of a found object

found and lost

anatomy of an object

broken objects

parts of an object

objects of another era

fragment

part

Argos

Foundling museum

love tokens

foundling tokens

agents of change

the palm reader

gleaning

leftovers

stock

gleaning for fun/pain

the museum of rubbish

the remnant museum

the story of the glaneuse

filing an object

scanning

inventorising

documenting

describing

empty/gone/lost/disappearance

a long history of objects

Bermuda Triangle

Woolly bears

Micro stories-of objects

The lost biography of objects

The family logbook

Ornaments

The collector’s logbook

Frost in July

Frost in May

The collector of foreign objects

North south east west

Objects of August

Fortnum & Mason

Plastic objects

Rigby & Peller

Stereoscope

Kaleidoscope

Telescope

Opera glasses

Periscope

Binoculars (horses)

The tunnel of things

Total eclipse of the object

The parlour

The larder

Remedial objects

Store room

Necropolis

The objects domain

The dream life of objects

The house

Genesis of an object

x-ray

Map

Graph

Medical history

Coroners report

Autopsy

Diorama

Subtitle

The beauty contest of objects

The wrong turn of an object

The fragment of a story

Hair

sisters

planetarium

planisphere

skeleton


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Dear Harri, Caro and liz

I know you are all very busy.

I wondered how you would feel about writing about any of the houses that we/you lived in…Africa/Geneva/Friary Lodge/Paddocks/Overstrand/Lane End( or Brookfield/Westward Ho)

or if that’s too horrific anywhere you have lived since.

Thank you thank you
Annabel xxxxxxxxxxxxxx


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switzerland & Africa

Dear Harri & Liz
Sorry to bombard you with writing requests. I wondered if you have any memories from childhood (or more recently-Harri) of Africa(the bits where you lived when you were young) and in particular Switzerland. I want to write a brief (again anonymous) Atlas of Switzerland-mums version my version both of yours and of Africa too. Did Caro ever live in Switzerland?

Lots of love
Annabel xxx


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Officers are still to identify the body they found near to the defunct Marazion railway station on August 15 at 8.50pm.

The victim is described as between 30 and 45 years old, 5ft 8in tall, of a thin to medium build, with grey hair and blue or green eyes.

He was wearing a black leather motorcycle jacket and black Belstaff motorcycle gloves.

He was also dressed in beige trousers, dark brown desert-style boots and, unusually for the time of year, he was wearing three tops underneath his jacket.

In his rucksack, police found a Duracell torch, a Casio LCD portable TV and radio, and a pair of sunglasses.

The bag also contained a plastic cheque-sized wallet which contained an old £1 note, an unwritten postcard of New York, a multi-tool and a small key.

The man also had a gold Bucherer watch with a black face and black leather strap.

A copy of the Motorcycle News magazine, dated August 12, was found nearby.

The station closed in the 1960s and only an abandoned station building surrounded by weeds and grass remains.

Anyone with information is asked to call 0800 405 040.


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Just before the Revolution, Charles X threw wild parties in the catacombs of Paris. During World War II the French Resistance set up its headquarters here. Today modern troglodytes again have parties in the underground. There are raves and underground cinemas.

Regular patrol of the police is futile, as there are hundreds of kilometres of underground tunnels,the present day special Catacombs police are colloquially called cataflics.


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