m8 in what world does On The Road reference Chekhov? Not that I think Kerouac is better than Chekhov.
Coffee aesthetic
The pic or the post?
I read The Magus and The Magic Mountain one after the other and they both featured turkish coffee. I've never had turkish coffee though. It's shit, isn't it?
Magic Mountain is comfy though, in an I've-accepted-death kind of way.
You've misunderstood me.
On the Road is a short story by Chekhov
I understood that my man
I'm this guy, just to indicate that I'm not interested in using coffee for any purpose other than drinking it.It's pretty good tbqh, my grandpa (we're not Turkish btw) bought a little metal saucer and a bag of the coffee off Amazon for a pretty reasonable price if I remember correctly. You can make it at home in two or three steps in under 10 minutes. Its texture and aroma is quite pleasing and it's mesmerizing to watch it on the stove. You'd probably get more satisfying results doing this than from a thousand dollar espresso machine.
A moveable feast by Hemmingway
Then why ask how Kerouac's work references Chekhov?
I thought OP was talking about C.'s work.
This is only true if one is primarily there to look like a pseudo-bohemian intellectual hipster. Really, cafes just have nicer seating than most libraries and are less distracting than home tends to be (unless you live alone) so they're an obvious spot to write or work at regardless of who else is there.
Thanks, sounds good, I was thinking of getting a small set for it but was worried I wasn't going to like it.