What Happens When You Like Books More Than Anything Else In the Whole World
Ever skipped a party to read? Missed your train stop because your book was so good? This one’s for you.
Written just for me…
Ever skipped a party to read? Missed your train stop because your book was so good? This one’s for you.
Written just for me…
Source: abandonedporn.com
“The Doctor’s message seems to be accept life in all its forms. He doesn’t react with horror when he sees a blue, three-headed monster. He reacts with wonder, and I think that’s a very important message to send out to children.”
- Christopher Eccleston
He’s my Doctor…
Source: reddit.com
Amazon just put that “LOOK INSIDE!” thingy on SUPERMAN: THE UNAUTHORIZED BIOGRAPHY (which I cannot bring myself to refer to as STUB, for the record).
Cover, front matter, TOC, intro, first 18 or so pages of chapter 1, acknowledgments (with PCHH shout-out, because duh), bibliography, and index.
Looks like the ship date’s been pushed up a week, too.
To April 1.
Cough.
Ordered today. Not a big fan of Superman but enjoyed reading the sample with Glen Weldon’s voice in my head.
The Ocean At The End of the Lane is a novel about memory and magic and survival, about the power of stories and the darkness inside each of us.It began for our narrator forty years ago when he was seven: the lodger stole the family’s car and committed…
Adding to my to-read list.
”Most of your friends are dead, but the ones who aren’t dead are on fire. It’s complicated to explain, but it’s nice to watch from a distance. Much like friendship.”
-Jenny Lawson (aka The Bloggess), 12/26/12
When we say that love is ineffable, as Beckett knew, what we mean is that, when we love, we don’t know what the hell we are doing. We can’t stop talking through it, trying to figure it out. We think we ought to be talking about everything, doing everything, doing anything — breaking into spontaneous rage, talking about suicide, playing games, complaining about our boots — instead of just loving. We wait and wait and wait. Inevitably, boredom creeps in, terror creeps in. When you give yourself completely to another, as Vladimir and Estragon have done with each other, and you say, “Don’t leave me, you’re my only hope,” every day is a little more and a little less frightening, every day is a little more and a little less suicidal, every day is a little more and a little less. You could, like Vladimir or Estragon, easily be talked into hanging yourself from a tree by the only one who could save you from it. We must escape. We cannot. We can’t go on. We do.
Beautiful read on love in Beckett. Complement with literary history’s most timeless meditations on love.
(↬ Page Turner)
(via explore-blog)