Dark Matter eLiquid

Enjoy the wonderful flavor of our latest VapeSafe eLiquid - Dark Matter.

Dark Matter tastes like German chocolate cake. For those of you who have not had the fortunate to try a piece German chocolate cake recently, this is a great way to experience the flavor without getting any of the calories. German chocolate cake is a layered cake filled and topped with a coconut-pecan frosting. Traditionally sweet baking chocolate is used for the chocolate flavor in the actual cake. The robust filling and topping is a caramel made with egg yolks and evaporated milk. Once the caramel is cooked, coconut and pecans are stirred into the mixture. Finally, rich chocolate frosting is spread around the sides of the cake to hold in the filling.

Dark Matter eLiquid by VapeSafe captures the essence of German chocolate cake. Dark Matter eLiquid delivers plumes of vapor and rich chocolatey flavor that you'll want to enjoy again and again. Try Dark Matter today!


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Damselfly

Damselfly

Product Type: eBooks

Product Price: $14.99

Manufacturer: P Elliott Doherty

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Description

Damselfly is a novel of literary fiction. Best friends Percy and Ben find their lives disintegrating in coastal California and make separate moves to their one time university home of Lake Plenty, Wisconsin. Percy’s marriage endures an absurd dissolution and Ben seeks the unrequited hand of his school-time sweetheart as a returning Errant Knight with a stolen bankroll. The story is essentially Crossing to Safety in reverse throttle, exposing what becomes of men who are orphaned by the university culture. The prose of Damselfly is poetically naturalistic, and the dialogue is impassioned and cogent. This story is about betrayal and the answers that arrive in the aftermath.

Reviews

Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-07-23
Summary: "A good read for anyone younger than 40. Or older. Or there."

This book captures the angst that many Gen Xer's feel as they move towards middle age. The characters demonstrate that they have gotten over the twentysomething issues that were initially captured in popular culture, such as "Friends," (e.g. Will I get a job? Will I get married?, will I still have the same friends afterwards?), only to discover a whole new set of uncertainties.

Watching the main characters deal with these new challenges by attempting to return to their initial "launching pad" again confirms that one can never "go back home again," but, as those of us who grew up on Atari will recognize, it also reminds us that life is never too short to hit the "reset" button.