Francesca Annis was born in 1944 - she's ten years my senior. In Polanski's version of the Scots play, she was 27. And naked for sleepwalking scene, all pure skin and flaming red hair.
And to be completely shallow, a stone hottie. I'd completely forgotten she was Lady Jessica in Lynch's DUNE. Probably the last time I saw her in anything. She was still lovely.
And to be completely shallow, a stone hottie.
She's all "Unsex me now," and I'm all, "Ain't happenin'."
I am in the Francesca Annis = Stone Hottie corner. And Ralph Fiennes - several years her junior, and a man I would do in Macy's window, speaking of stone hotties - apparently agrees.
I am in the Francesca Annis = Stone Hottie corner. And Ralph Fiennes - several years her junior, and a man I would do in Macy's window, speaking of stone hotties - apparently agrees.
That's right, I knew she was romantically linked with someone interesting.
So I went to Dawn Treader to raid the stash of Christopher Pike books I saw in there the other day. I left a few I was wary of since I hadn't read them, but got
Spellbound, Chain Letter,
and
Slumber Party.
Also snagged
Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul,
which I haven't read.
Now, here's the deal. I love Half-Price Books. Love love love. Cause their policy is simple: half the cover price, no foolin'. If the cover says seventy-five cents, hell, you get it for thirty-eight. If the cover says $2.50, you get it for $1.25. That's the deal.
In Ann Arbor, books aren't cheaper cause they're old, they're
more expensive.
A book that says seventy-five cents will still run you two bucks. And these Pike books, despite being priced at $3.50, $2.50, and $3.50...all cost me $2.50 each. Where's the half-price love, huh?! Apparently it's half of the
in-print
price. LAME! God, I miss Half-Price.
Also snagged Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul, which I haven't read.
I love this book. Have you read Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency yet?
Have you read Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency yet?
I read it long ago and it confused the crap out of me. I snagged it at Half-Price down in Houston on my Rice trip, and I'm going to read it again before I hit
Tea-Time.
Whenever that is. My reading queue is a big mess.
Oh yay! I love
Dirk Gently
and
Teatime.
There's one passage in one of those books (Teatime or Gently, I can't remember) that describes some large object (a couch? a piano?) being stuck in the hallway stairs, and I swear it breaks me every single time I read it. It's not a major plot point, nothing all that important, and yet his description of it is one of my all-time favorite comic passages.
I get giddy with laughter with those books.
Oh, and based on the conversation here, I got Watership Down at the library today. I'm a few chapters in now, and loving it. Why did no one tell me about this book when I was 11?
There's one passage in one of those books (Teatime or Gently, I can't remember) that describes some large object (a couch? a piano?) being stuck in the hallway stairs, and I swear it breaks me every single time I read it. It's not a major plot point, nothing all that important, and yet his description of it is one of my all-time favorite comic passages.
It's a couch. One of my teachers at CTY read that to us the summer I was taking geometry, and that's what got me hooked on those books.