Becuz it's a chick show, LOL!
Becuz it's a chick show, LOL!
Becuz it's a chick show, LOL!
Wait what? How?
Wait what? How?
I liked the part of the book in the modern setting (with the American jew visiting the old country). The ending especially I remember as very moving (the box of glasses!). Hated the "magical realism" part about the village, with the man with the sawblade in his head who was fucking his wife through a hole in the wall…
I liked the part of the book in the modern setting (with the American jew visiting the old country). The ending especially I remember as very moving (the box of glasses!). Hated the "magical realism" part about the village, with the man with the sawblade in his head who was fucking his wife through a hole in the wall…
Or every time Lorelai needed money for something, like horses at the new inn, and *gasp* had to overcome her pride and ask her parents.
Or every time Lorelai needed money for something, like horses at the new inn, and *gasp* had to overcome her pride and ask her parents.
Hey, where did that ocean go anyway?
Hey, where did that ocean go anyway?
I don't remember laughing out loud much even during the classic era, but they did play around with more clever ideas back then.
I don't remember laughing out loud much even during the classic era, but they did play around with more clever ideas back then.
"Homer, it's easy to criticize"
"Fun, too"
"Homer, it's easy to criticize"
"Fun, too"
Tammy could drown.
Tammy could drown.
@avclub-5a1c0dcc8243c086c74ee944052f6f0f:disqus Armin was still in Vietnam though…
Ok, you're probably not still sitting around wondering about this - but in the book he commits the crime a few days before his 16th birthday, and when he turns 18 he's moved to an ordinary prison for another seven years.
Selma's Choice is dear to my heart. I remember genuinley finding Homer fast-forwarding through Glady's reading of Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken to be thrillingly shocking.
Selma's Choice is dear to my heart. I remember genuinley finding Homer fast-forwarding through Glady's reading of Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken to be thrillingly shocking.