Eric Carle, better known as the great E. Carle is one of the greatest literary visionary's of our modern era. There is much to be learned about Western
society and its fundamentally consumo-capitalist greed which he unveils and unmasks beautifully in the voracious
genius of his through a brilliant Animalia metaphorical example present in his magnum opus, The Very
Hungry Caterpillar.
His great debacle is truly unmatched in its sheer literary prowess, in which it dives into great depth of the intricacies and problems of our Western civilization. Its on par with the subtle themes and implications present in the works of the late Jojor Wel and his debacle, 'Fahrenheit Farmer
1984 Scholarly edition'.
I wouldn't expect a
peasant non-consumer like you to be able to voraciously devour such literary prowess as the works of E. Carle
Truly though, as great a writer as E. Carle is, he simply doesn't hold a candle to the likes of Brando Sando
arrWriting unpublished author: "Brando Sandoβ
s worldbuilding is so much better than
Eric Carle's. Where did the caterpillar get all the fruits it ate? Did it do a tour of an orchard and garden? Was it in a grocery store? TVHC being set in a grocery store would make much more sense when it comes to the part where it eats one piece of chocolate cake, one
ice-
cream cone, one pickle, one
slice of Swiss cheese, one
slice of salami, one lollipop, one piece of cherry pie, one sausage, one cupcake, and one
slice of watermelon, but itβs also possible TVHC raided a picnic or is dumpster diving. We just donβt know. Now I donβt want the author to write paragraph after paragraph of exposition (although while showing is better than telling, telling is better than nothing at all), but I donβt think a few lines to establish the setting is too much to ask".