brerrarebit--disqus
Brer Rarebit
brerrarebit--disqus

Agree with original comment and agree even more with this one. I also never liked Wave of Mutilation much, especially the UK Surf version. That said, I love both albums and save my hate for Trompe Le Monde, which at the time it came out I thought was so bad it was another Metal Machine Music. It's grown on me as

I agree with your point about Denna. It's one thing in the book where Kvothe actually acts his age. He finds a girl who has as much talent as him at singing, the one thing he loves more than anything in the world, and she is therefore perfect. Very adolescent.

It's more like 60pp that he's in fairyland and several things transpire there. The sex is only a few pages. I think eye gouging is a bit hyperbolic but that said, it's one of the weaker parts of the book, if not the weakest.

I love Devi and it seems obvious to me that she's the woman Kvothe should end up with, not Denna. Long term relationships are better based on matching Alars than pretty singing voices.

When I was ten there was nothing in the world I wanted more than one of those splurge guns from Bugsy Malone. So cool.

Okay, how about Connor's surreptitious listening device? Where I come from that would be an illegal wiretap. That one bugged (no pun intended) me a lot because I think that particular crime is occurring more and more as smartphone technology can so easily be abused. I predict that voyeurism is going to be a huge

You're right, you didn't. And your point is a pretty good one. :) The only problem I see with it is she isn't really "getting all the information" unless she's already decided to screw her client over if she possibly can by protecting her husband at the expense of her client's defence. Otherwise trying

The problem is even if that's true she is in a complete, hopeless, unresolvable conflict of interest and is under a professional obligation to withdraw from the case immediately. This is beyond debate. And her failure to recognize this totally undermines the show's efforts to portray her as some super-lawyer.

Her character is definitely a high point. I just wish the writers would write the legal stuff a bit smarter. Like her chastising her student for telling the client that rich frat boy was going to roll on her, and that was what caused her to confess. I laughed out loud at that part (and earned myself a dirty look

I am trying to stick it out for my significant other who seems to like it. But as a lawyer (& prosecutor…you know, the kind who doesn't suppress evidence), I find it difficult to watch as they're all such awful people, and constantly act unethically. And so much that comes out of Annalyse's mouth about how to run

Pale Rider is a sequel to Shane. If by "sequel" we mean a not-so-subtle ripoff that tries to amp up the sex and violence quotient.

I did a sort of alternative mix-cd for a kids hockey team once-lots of possible choices:
1. Stigmata
2. I Will Follow
3. Sliver
4. Bullet With Butterfly Wings
5. She Sells Sanctuary
6. Seven Nation Army
7. Nitro (Youth Energy)
8. Divide and Conquer
9. Rock Music
10. Silver Rocket
11. Superman.

Stigmata was the first song that came to my mind. And if I was going for an icy cool vibe then maybe Everything In Its Right Place.

7: England, France, Germany, Italy, Austria-Hungary, Russia, and Turkey. It is a great game, but I have been unable to find the time and personnel to play it since I left school and started working for a living. Aside from excessive time requirements, my main criticism is that it can be hard to find the right people

Book 5 post dates Season 1 by about one month. Otherwise good points. And to answer the original question I enjoyed AFFC much more the second read mainly because the second time round I read all five more or less consecutively whereas the first time I read the first two, then the third came out about a year later,

"Game of Thrones' fundamental truth: a connection and reconnection to empathy and understanding, a lens that offers not just brutality, but also the assiduous follow-through of healing, grieving, and surviving"