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| Part 1 | Founding fathers and mothers | 
| Speaking of founding fathers and mothers (actually, EB sometimes calls 
those Founding Uncles and Aunts) we've noticed that EB, as a real 
post-modern prophet, admits influences only when we discover them on our 
own. Like a couple of months ago, when Amelia and myself ended up inside 
this wonderful establishment called LATIN AMERICAN CLUB. | 
|  | We made friends with this good 
looking, charming, witty blonde who 
invited us to her place on top of 
Bernal Heights. It appeared that she 
is (what else) a writer from (where 
else) Ireland, and she and Amelia 
(what else) hit it off, while I was 
left to stare at the bookshelves. As 
usual I was curious if anything was 
worth "borrowing", but our hostess 
never let me out of her sight. | 
| There were some interesting books, but also some magazines. Among those 
there were some old issues of the San Francisco Review of Books, which I 
understood was not being published any more. Why I picked up this 
particular one, the one with Sam Shepard on cover is beyond me. All I 
know is that I found out that almost half of the issue was devoted to 
some obscure 
Eastern European 
writers, and I was just about to put it 
back, when a title THE BELGRADE SCHOOL OF LIFE
caught my eye. | 
| I started reading the article, and boy was I surprised. The whole 
paragraphs sounded as if they were coming from EB himself. What little 
we know about EB is that he MAY BE from that part of the world, namely 
Eastern Europe. Just like Amelia. Also, I have the impression that the 
two of them have met, and in THIS life at that. She vehemently denies 
that, and he doesn't want to talk about it. | 
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