He lives like someone who never talks to people, someone who prefers the company of electronic noise and images over that of human voices, faces.

His walls are stacked with records, CDs, cassettes, videos, narrow boxes of slides; he has two stereos, three TVs (and as many VCRs), four different computers, a laser printer, and various kinds of projectors she can't identify.

There are no books in the apartment ...


TV