All Comments on 'The Imprint Ch. 11: Tête-à-Tête'

by thomas_dean

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Dr_James_Davies_DFDr_James_Davies_DF5 months ago

Into the Mists of Time

In Tete A Tete Mr Dean brings us into the mists of time. We're sent back in the 1970s, when the concept of equality molted into preferential treatment, a form of reverse discrimination. Dr Barton is called into a private tete a tete in the sauna of the Hospital without explanation. There's a pending malpractice action in which Dr Barton figures as a principal figure in a tragic comedy of errors. Also Dr Barton has a little secret she's been carrying around.

Can Dr Barton pull off a command performance and keep her secret? The Literotic form is skillfully employed to discuss real world problems recently visited by the US Supreme Court only a few months ago on June 29, 2023 in STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS, INC. v. PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS

AnonymousAnonymous4 months ago

Using Latin term while explaining every single one immediately in parentheses. It's ridiculous and so annoying. It doesn't make ANY sense.

Just choose one or another and use only one.

thomas_deanthomas_dean4 months agoAuthor

Thank you Anon for your input. The narrator of IMPRINT is Dr Rebecca Barton. She speaks in an incomprehensible medical babble, so much so even her colleagues at University Hospital in Capitalland don't understand her. Her secretary translates her memos into English for the benefit of the Hospital President and other doctors. The story is about equal opportunity. Everyone is afraid to criticize this particular shortcoming, much less the actions which led to a malpractise case against the hospital. .

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