This forum is for talking about non-music-related stuff that the DBT fanbase might be interested in. This is not the place for inside jokes and BS. Take that crap to some other board.
Got in a big GNR mood last week and picked this up. I was more into the Crüe than GNR. I will say that the first 80 pages are pretty eye-opening...Axl taught Sunday school, Slash was born with a silver spoon and his mom dated Bowie during "The Man Who Fell To Earth", Adler apparently received service from gay prostitutes because it was all the same, and Izzy...everyone agrees he's the coolest member.
4sooner wrote:"emotional pron" Do not mess up porn with emotion!!
Well said.
that and dime's comment are the funniest shit i've seen in days. that's not counting texts, but still funny as fuck. i've never read twilight books or seen the movies. i do have a guatemalan/mexican-american friend who likes em though. I guess she and NGB broke that older white pron thing now didn't they ?
Flying Rabbit wrote:Good luck, PL. Its a treat once you get through it, but its a task.
i've tried to read it for years....i feel like it'll really enlighten me but it's PAINFUL
i might just get the cliffs notes.
With that sentence, Pynchon begins his infamous work Gravity's Rainbow . . . one of the most controversial, most discussed, most debated, and most frequently started-and-then-put-down works of the twentieth century. It is hard to bring up Gravity's Rainbow in literate company and not elicit some sort of a response. I have even found the mere mention of it to be like the punch line in some tacit academic joke: "oh, so you're reading that, eh? heh heh heh. . . ."
Flying Rabbit wrote:Good luck, PL. Its a treat once you get through it, but its a task.
i've tried to read it for years....i feel like it'll really enlighten me but it's PAINFUL
i might just get the cliffs notes.
With that sentence, Pynchon begins his infamous work Gravity's Rainbow . . . one of the most controversial, most discussed, most debated, and most frequently started-and-then-put-down works of the twentieth century. It is hard to bring up Gravity's Rainbow in literate company and not elicit some sort of a response. I have even found the mere mention of it to be like the punch line in some tacit academic joke: "oh, so you're reading that, eh? heh heh heh. . . ."
Gator McKlusky wrote:We went to Seattle for Spring Break this year and I said lets go to the Olympic National Park so the kids can play in the snow and my wife said we can also go to Forks. I said what the hell is a Forks? The town is cashing in big time and had Twilight crap everywhere.
that truck's got potential. Cute kid, too.
I've never taken a pissbreak during a DBT show but if I had it would have been during Dancing Ricky.
So excited Preston & Child have come out with a new Agent Pendergast book, "Fever Dream"
We find out favorite southern agent, back on in LA, only to discover his wife was murdered 11 years ago, while they were big game hunting in Africa!!!! Oh, my goodness, so with his faithful friend Lt. Vincent D'Agosta, he embarks to find out who killed Helen, why and who was this woman he married !?!?!?!?
Just finished Operation Mincemeat by Ben MacIntyre, a true WWII spy story (the subject of the previous book and movie, The Man Who Never Was. Not quite "reads like a great thriller" level, but close and very interesting and well done/researched. He's apparently got an even more highly regarded book about another WWII spy called Agent Zig Zag, and i liked Mincemeat enough to get the other one out of the library. Haven't started it yet, though.
All opinions and commentary in my posts are solely my own and are made in my personal capacity.
beantownbubba wrote:Just finished Operation Mincemeat by Ben MacIntyre, a true WWII spy story (the subject of the previous book and movie, The Man Who Never Was. Not quite "reads like a great thriller" level, but close and very interesting and well done/researched. He's apparently got an even more highly regarded book about another WWII spy called Agent Zig Zag, and i liked Mincemeat enough to get the other one out of the library. Haven't started it yet, though.
Now there's a coincidence. My wife's picking this up tomorrow, we just watched The Man Who Never Was a couple of days ago, and I read a review on this book in The New Yorker last weekend. I'm looking forward to reading it myself, but she's been on a WWII history kick lately, so I'll have to wait my turn.
beantownbubba wrote:Just finished Operation Mincemeat by Ben MacIntyre, a true WWII spy story (the subject of the previous book and movie, The Man Who Never Was. Not quite "reads like a great thriller" level, but close and very interesting and well done/researched. He's apparently got an even more highly regarded book about another WWII spy called Agent Zig Zag, and i liked Mincemeat enough to get the other one out of the library. Haven't started it yet, though.
Now there's a coincidence. My wife's picking this up tomorrow, we just watched The Man Who Never Was a couple of days ago, and I read a review on this book in The New Yorker last weekend. I'm looking forward to reading it myself, but she's been on a WWII history kick lately, so I'll have to wait my turn.
You can start w/ Agent Zig Zag and then swap
All opinions and commentary in my posts are solely my own and are made in my personal capacity.
I'm reading Pride and Prejudice for class and so far it's painfully dull.
I've also got a handful of half-read books that I want to have finished by the end of the summer. For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Nick Adams Stories, La maison des sept jeunes filles, and Leaves of Grass.
she was all provocative and everything
until she saw what I was capable of
Emily wrote:I'm reading Pride and Prejudice for class and so far it's painfully dull.
I've also got a handful of half-read books that I want to have finished by the end of the summer. For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Nick Adams Stories, La maison des sept jeunes filles, and Leaves of Grass.
YES to leaves of grass and for whom the bell tolls....for P&P, maybe you can skip to the movie, mr. darcy is HOT.