The Pika: Difference between revisions

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== Failed expeditions into the the burrow ==
== Failed expeditions into the the burrow ==


Several expeditions have famously entered, and failed to return from, the Pika's burrow.
Several expeditions have entered, and failed to return from, the Pika's burrow.


[[Richard Tuttle]] assembled a crack team of post-Cubists and early Abstract Expressionists, paying them handsomely to "Seek the Pik", as he put it. The expedition descended in high hopes, but no one returned to tell the tale.
[[Richard Tuttle]] famously assembled the [[Tuttle Expedition]] -- a crack team of post-Cubists and early Abstract Expressionists -- paying them handsomely to "Seek the Pik", as he put it.
 
The expedition descended in high hopes, but no one returned to tell the tale.


[[John Brunner]] declined an invitation to join the [[Tuttle Expedition]], and later wrote a book about the dreams and premonitions which led to his decision.
[[John Brunner]] declined an invitation to join the [[Tuttle Expedition]], and later wrote a book about the dreams and premonitions which led to his decision.

Revision as of 14:00, 2 March 2016

The Pika (/ˈpaɪkə/ py-kə; archaically spelled Pica) is a small mammal (nonfiction), with short limbs, very round body, rounded ears, and no external tail.

Whistling hare

It is also known as the "whistling hare" due to its high-pitched alarm call when diving into its burrow.

Failed expeditions into the the burrow

Several expeditions have entered, and failed to return from, the Pika's burrow.

Richard Tuttle famously assembled the Tuttle Expedition -- a crack team of post-Cubists and early Abstract Expressionists -- paying them handsomely to "Seek the Pik", as he put it.

The expedition descended in high hopes, but no one returned to tell the tale.

John Brunner declined an invitation to join the Tuttle Expedition, and later wrote a book about the dreams and premonitions which led to his decision.

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference