These are stone killers, little man. They ain't cuddly like me.

Jayne ,'The Train Job'


All Ogle, No Cash -- It's Not Just Annoying, It's Un-American

Discussion of episodes currently airing in Un-American locations (anything that's aired in Australia is fair game), as well as anything else the Un-Americans feel like talking about or we feel like asking them. Please use the show discussion threads for any current-season discussion.

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evil jimi - Sep 19, 2002 3:58:41 am PDT #83 of 9843
Lurching from one disaster to the next.

I've never read any C. S. Lewis. t /Not wanting to be left out of the CSL conversation


evil jimi - Sep 19, 2002 4:07:00 am PDT #84 of 9843
Lurching from one disaster to the next.

whoa, this board doesn't take kindly to faux html tags :)


Megan E. - Sep 19, 2002 4:17:24 am PDT #85 of 9843

/Not wanting to be left out of the CSL conversation

if you put a lower case t in front of that statement, it will automatically put the tags around it, like so:

t /Not wanting to be left out of the CSL conversation


brenda m - Sep 19, 2002 9:07:47 am PDT #86 of 9843
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Thanks Megan, I was trying to remember that yesterday, to no avail.


Nutty - Sep 19, 2002 9:14:06 am PDT #87 of 9843
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

It's funny -- from the look of this thread, it seems like we deal with our authors just as we deal with our grandparents: trying to mediate betwen gratefulness for what they gave us and grudges against their flaws. Okay, that's not very profound.

But, you know. I don't often think of authors as like relatives, or even, I confess, like people. They're just the secret hand inside the puppet. They give me novels, and the novels are good or bad and I'm grateful for them or try to forgive them their flaws, but it hardly occurs to me to think that way about authors.


Rebecca Lizard - Sep 19, 2002 9:15:35 am PDT #88 of 9843
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

But, you know. I don't often think of authors as like relatives, or even, I confess, like people. They're just the secret hand inside the puppet.

Wrod, Nutty. I haven't been able to articulate that.


Betsy HP - Sep 19, 2002 9:47:46 am PDT #89 of 9843
If I only had a brain...

even, I confess, like people.

Fascinating. I think of Yeats as my cranky old greatuncle. Seriously. I have that same amused and respectful affection. And I have never read a Kipling biography, even though I'd really like to, because one of his late poems goes on about how he doesn't want one to be written. Courtesy, at least, to a dead author.


evil jimi - Sep 19, 2002 3:04:01 pm PDT #90 of 9843
Lurching from one disaster to the next.

if you put a lower case t in front of that statement, it will automatically put the tags around it, like so:

cool. Ta Megan.

next time I promise to read the faq and how-to and what-not :)


Megan E. - Sep 19, 2002 3:09:25 pm PDT #91 of 9843

any time jimi. that's what we're all here for!


John H - Sep 19, 2002 5:29:00 pm PDT #92 of 9843

If we're going to do Fantasy Authors Of That Era, can we talk Peake?

I was reminded of him by this:

[CLS spent] several years at a boarding school run by a clinically insane sadist - a place so horrible he called it "Belsen" in his autobiography

Mervyn Peake spent time in both a British Public School and a Nazi Concentration Camp, but he always said the former had the greater influence on him...