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Published: 2012-03-06 15:05:47 +0000 UTC; Views: 13092; Favourites: 327; Downloads: 82
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Description
Dr. Prometheus Evergreen was a struggling french mathematician that was fascinated with biology. He created a formula that could be introduced to a person's blood and would allow the cells to intake more oxygen. It also gave the body miraculous abilities. Heightened sight, hearing, strength, speed, and the ability to heal rapidly. Abilities that the human species was not able to handle, for these abilities are within others from far away that are far more advanced and evolved.Dr. Prometheus was hit with a sense of fear, for if the military got their hands on this, it would surely be used in the field.
His fear was fueled by the fact that forty-one attempts to perfect this serum had ended with side-effects that transformed his body into a disfigured creature. He hides this behind his clothing during the day, but as night falls, the remainder transforms into something from another world.
This 6x9 leather journal I present, is the forty-second serum sample. It is the final journal that contains the perfected serum. He gave this book to his youngest daughter Odessa and pleaded with her to never reveal it to another soul.
He had cured his disfigurement and now, was more advanced. Unfortunately, the heightened senses eventually drove him mad. He could not distinguish between fantasy and reality and never gained control of his own strength. The abilities began to multiply and now turned to ailments. Two months after he gave his daughter the journal, he took his own life.
This journal was found in a top secret file hidden away on a military base one-hundred and forty years later. How ironic that Odessa would join the military as a nurse and work her way up to top secret clearance. She worked on some of the most secretive biological experiments during World War I & II.
Lot NO.42 was one of them.
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Comments: 31
MorningMelon [2012-11-21 20:51:45 +0000 UTC]
Jekyll & Hyde, anyone? Anyhow, I love the journal and the story, fascinating how you've related the two, I'd never seen something similar.
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BCcreativity In reply to MorningMelon [2012-11-21 22:17:52 +0000 UTC]
Thank you so much. If you like this one, try reading the back story to the Sir George McFiggle's wandering Journal
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AnotherOddity [2012-04-04 10:12:22 +0000 UTC]
This storyline, this picture, it's fantastical. Do you write more about the Dr? I think it would make a great story, and I'm sure we'd all love to see more.
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BCcreativity In reply to AnotherOddity [2012-04-04 21:19:39 +0000 UTC]
Thank you for your kind words. I have only wrote this because it is the back story that supports the theme of this book.
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AnotherOddity In reply to BCcreativity [2012-04-04 22:46:46 +0000 UTC]
That's awesome. Let me know if you post anything similar, I'd love to see.
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Peanutshellz [2012-03-07 05:25:24 +0000 UTC]
It's so beautiful! I wish they still made books like these. Exellent work! And the backstory adds to its awesomeness.
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Citty-girl123 In reply to BCcreativity [2012-03-06 23:28:15 +0000 UTC]
You're very welcome.
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Aneue-Hebi [2012-03-06 22:27:59 +0000 UTC]
This book is awesome, and the back story is pretty cool. <3
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BCcreativity In reply to riv15grlz [2012-03-06 21:46:25 +0000 UTC]
Thank you. That is so kind to say.
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skiesofchaos [2012-03-06 17:44:43 +0000 UTC]
Very nicely done. Excellent work on the book itself, its a stunner, and a marvelous back story for the creation.
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BCcreativity In reply to skiesofchaos [2012-03-06 18:02:50 +0000 UTC]
Thank you for the kind words.
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GemaStarlight In reply to BCcreativity [2012-03-06 17:33:36 +0000 UTC]
My pleasure
I really want one of them. If I had money
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Gorphia [2012-03-06 16:31:13 +0000 UTC]
Excellent, excellent, work and presentation! Someone is going to steal this idea from you!!
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WixkedLovely [2012-03-06 16:23:03 +0000 UTC]
This is beautiful. Did you make it yourself and is it for sale?
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BCcreativity In reply to WixkedLovely [2012-03-06 17:17:49 +0000 UTC]
Thanks. To answer your question, yes I created this journal and yes it is for sale, but not until friday.
It will be in my Etsy shop then.
Cheers
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Ochiru [2012-03-06 15:52:30 +0000 UTC]
Wonderful-looking book with a nice backstory! There's a lovely depth and richness to the leather in this one.
I have a question for you, as usual, if you're inclined to enlighten me: at the ends of the french groove running up between cover and spine, the leather dips down where it wraps round the top and bottom of the book. I saw a lot of historical leather-bound books with this feature at a book fair the other week, and was wondering what the significance was? I can't quite tell from your photos whether the leather is turned inward at that point (so that it doesn't wrinkle because of the different lengths it has to cover inside and outside the cover?) or whether it is sinking down into a notch of some kind. I'm just curious as to how it works.
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BCcreativity In reply to Ochiru [2012-03-06 18:03:22 +0000 UTC]
The leather is tied down. The hemp cord is wrapped around the head and tail of the spine before continuing on to forming the cords on that spine.
The purpose is to conceal and protect the headbands of the book.
Thank you so much for your kind words. I really do appreciate it.
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