No one here has hit on you in a memorable enough fashion, bt? I'd offer to do something about that, but Daniel will be up in just a little while, so I'll be to busy to follow through.
Jayne ,'Jaynestown'
Spike's Bitches 27: I'm Embarrassed for Our Kind.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
No one here has hit on you in a memorable enough fashion, bt? I'd offer to do something about that, but Daniel will be up in just a little while, so I'll be to busy to follow through.
Hee. Nah, it's just that - as Bec also noted - it's different in person.
Good point. Also, the speed of the follow-through is generally better IRL, as no one has to budget for airfare and hotels.
Good point. Also, the speed of the follow-through is generally better IRL, as no one has to budget for airfare and hotels.
True. It remains a booty call, rather than a booty extradition.
Also, the speed of the follow-through is generally better IRL, as no one has to budget for airfare and hotels.
Well, damn. And here I was, all ready to put the pass into passport.
sighs.
Stop making me 'ship you two, Fay. *shaky fist*
Yesterday, Julia (first grade--six and seven year old children) came home with an assignment for Holidays around the world. She has to find customs, traditions, etc., for the holiday and culture of her choice.
Her choice? Christmas in Egypt.
When I explained that she'd find much more material if she either picked another holiday (that was RIGHT OUT--she wants Christmas) or another country, she cried her heart out. I almost sent you a big "EMERGENCY--CHILD IN TEARS" email, Fay.
If she were older, and reading more proficiently, I'd let her go for it with the Christmas in Egypt. The Coptic Christians may have some interesting customs. But a lot of this project, like most of the projects this year with this teacher, will end up being largetly researched by me.
This morning, thank goodness, she woke up determined to study Christmas in Spain, instead.
(Sail, there may be an "EMERGENCY--PLEASE FOR TO HELP ON PROJECT" email, in your future.)
G'morning.
Weatherbug gives a very precise -5.2˚F this morning.
ETA: Who set the outdoors to "January" this week?
Everybody suggest one book they love that was published before 1923.
Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie. Jennie Gerhardt, not because it's his best but because it's less well known. I'd also recommend (even more highly) An American Tragedy, but I think that was 1925 or so.
Anthony Trollope, just about anything. Maybe The Warden because it's (1) fairly short, and (2) the first of the Barsetshire novels. Or Can You Forgive Her?, less because it's one of his best than that it's the first of the Palliser novels, which I prefer as a series to the Barsetshire novels. (Mainly because I lean more toward the political than the religious.) Oh, also The Way We Live Now, because the Gilded Age representation echoes so well today.
Charles Dickens, Dombey and Son.
It's one of the Barsets rather than the Pallisers, but I've always loved Framley Parsonage; the heroine is such a lovely snarky little wiseass.
Yes yes yes to Dombey and Son, so very good, so underappreciated.
Also, George MacDonald's Phantastes and Lilith.
G'morning!
Favorite book published before 1923? North of Boston by Robert Frost.