There's a New Zealand children's book, The World Around the Corner by Maurice Gee (an excellent and often terrifying fantasy writer), that features a pair of magic glasses as a plot device: the child-protagonist finds them in a junk shop, and when she puts them on, she can see another world.
There's a New Zealand children's book, The World Around the Corner by Maurice Gee (an excellent and often terrifying fantasy writer), that features a pair of magic glasses as a plot device: the child-protagonist finds them in a junk shop, and when she puts them on, she can see another world.
When the algorithm shows me young celebrities I don't even recognise dripping with diamonds at the Met Gala, I just think 'Hunger Games'.
There's a New Zealand children's book, The World Around the Corner by Maurice Gee (an excellent and often terrifying fantasy writer), that features a pair of magic glasses as a plot device: the child-protagonist finds them in a junk shop, and when she puts them on, she can see another world.
When the algorithm shows me young celebrities I don't even recognise dripping with diamonds at the Met Gala, I just think 'Hunger Games'.