Hmm, well stil a good game. I would have suggested to try to play more moves of your own, but seems like you did well. I have only heard of this Sicilian, however I have never learned it to it's powers or used it in game. I like your moves and your game, nice work.
Sicilian, Dragon variation.

Thanks for the comments Brandon, but correspondence or "turn based" chess largely revolves around research for many of us, its always been that way. Personally, I'm an active OTB player and play correspondence chess in the hope that I will learn better moves/tactics/strategies through the organic processes involved therein. Often to find your own moves early on means condemning yourself to making the same mistakes game after game. It's quite a good learning tool to compare what you would have played with what the masters play. Never take a knife to a gunfight!
That is true, and I see what you mean by this. I prefer to do somewhat of both, study for things, yet learn from my mistakes, and learn how to defeat the opponent in many ways that cannot be learned out of the books. The organic way is always a more in depth way of learning, you can really feel and reapply these methods you learned this way better then you can out of the books.
Let me start by saying that I am not any sort of expert on the Dragon. I play the Najdorf as Black and until recently had met the Sicilian with the Smith-Morra Gambit, but too many drawn and difficult games OTB have left me wanting to find something else. White's first eighteen moves are taken directly from www.chess365.com's free database (times are lean). It's move 19 before I start thinking for myself and it's White's 21st move I suggest you take a good look at before you reveal my "solution". Hope you enjoy the game, short though it is, with me only playing six moves of my own. Feel free to comment, correct and suggest better moves.