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I say shove a ballsac in her face and ask her how that jibes with a god that wants the best for her.
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Oh, Robbb....
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hey, I was not offering man.
;) |
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You know what I meant. Quote:
As if she wrote a Kierkegaard-infused essay herself. |
i read some poetry by edgar allan poe earlier. he is amazing. i have decided that he is one of my favorite poems. im also reading the fall of the house of usher
and some article about jewish music something like that |
so alexander anaximander, did you question her per my suggestion, or did you just throw the towel/
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It was a few months ago that she said it. I don't want to bring it up.
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Starting back Ulysses at 10:30 or 11 tonight. Need to stock up on caffeine first.
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No alcohol for you. I can't read that thing at all even if I've had one drink.
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True that. My usually reading habits following a strict course of a ton of late-night coffee, but since I have no decent coffee, I'll be forced to rely on other caffeinated drinks. |
im reading the label of a bottle of good cheap red wine that im gonna chug
holy motherfuck im burned out today |
i'm reading the stranger again. it's been 5 or so years since i last read it.
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i never felt like rereading that. he didn't cry at his mother's funeral, he killed an arab, what else is there to know? ha ha ha no, no-- but anyway i never thought it was that great. some chicks i hanged around with thought this was some kind of supreme work though. but im not good with fables, except orwell's maybe. now i'm just rambling. hurray! |
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not even. im just fucking tired. i poured myself a HUGE glass tho. its more like a bucket really. |
Just get a powerdrill and shotgun the bottle.
Watch out for the glass dust, though. |
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no i like the yummies if i was going for alcoholic stupor i'd do wild turkey shots 101 proof is not to be fucked with |
Hmmm, should I get my summer work out of the way and read the Poisonwood Bible now or later? Anyone read it and have any opinions on it? My friends from the class of 2008 said it was good...
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i havent i havent-- who? what?
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The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingsolver
![]() The Poisonwood Bible is a story told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959. They carry with them all they believe they will need from home, but soon find that all of it- from garden seeds to Scripture-is calamitously transformed on African soil. This tale of one family's tragic undoing and remarkable reconstruction, over the course of three decades in post-colonial Africa, is set against one of history's most dramatic political parables.The Poisonwood Bible dances between the darkly comic human failings and inspiring poetic justices of our times. In a compelling exploration of religion, conscience, imperialist arrogance, and the paths to redemption, Barbra Kingsolver has brought forth most ambitious work ever. |
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Kierkegaard is known as "The Father of Existentialism" and he's both a philosopher and theologian. I won't even attempt to explain further because it would go right over your impatient head, and besides you've made up your obstinate mind anyway. You're thinking* of the French (so-called) Existentialists who came later, e.g., Sartre and Camus. Quote:
*if you can call what you do "thinking" at all. |
oh that looks interesting-- a metaphor for white colonization huh?
there's a great short story by jack vance where this missionary goes to preach in a planet with several suns where they jsut can't keep times and they raise goats. funny shit. jack vance fucking rules. |
The title (Poisonwood Bible) always intrigued me, but the plot doesn't sound interesting to me. I can't explain what about it, but I don't like modern historical-fiction drama stuff. I found it under the coffee table at my apartment once, though. Weird.
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yeah i was a bit ironic by making obvious the obvious "message" i hate "message" books but i like some science fiction anyway just read what you like im still finishing BITCH-- a great little book. very fucking enjoyable. i like crazed women. |
Well either that, or Robinson Crusoe or The Heart of Darkness. I got the cheap Barnes and Noble classics editions.
What do you think? |
robinson crusoe is more of a children's book for me but heart of darkness is decent
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Heart of Darkness. I haven't read it actually, but I was very jealous when the other English class in high school got to read it. And it's fucking short, so you can move to the next one quicker.
Robinson Crusoe I remember being kinda like..."Why the hell do you know all this random shit? I'm not buying it." |
Hahah, Robinson Crusoe just seems so...classic? I'll get to it one day.
Heart of Darkness it is. |
In organizing my books, I set aside all those I've read this year in chrono order. This year's been all about fiction.
Persuasion Amerika The Trial The Castle As I Lay Dying Winseburg, Ohio Babbit Jane Eyre Wuthering Heights Sound and Fury Absalom, Absalom No Country for Old Men To the Lighthouse Sanctuary Dubliners Portrait of an Artist Great Expectations Moll Flanders Ulysses Jacob's Room Light in August Sentimental Education Lord Jim Therese Raquin Go Down, Moses Currently reading Sister Carrie, which is sucking something awful. Many are re-reads. About a fourth of them weren't particularly good. |
I love robinson cruseau. it is most definitely NOT a children's book, though it may seem that way upon surface reading.
I have read it at least 5 times since I was young. |
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well no it's not a kids book it's "victorian man against nature", and therefore an archaeological document of sorts, but i don't know, i wouldn't read it again... i guess i would if i was stuck in a desert island ha ha ha. nabokov accused conrad of writing literature for boys, actually, so heart of darkness could be considered that, but it's ok by me and these days more of an "apocalypse now" reference ha ha ha. its peculiar he hasn't read crusoe yet at 17, i read it when i was 12, but anyway, it's such a cultural touchstone, it demands to be read just as a matter of basic knowledge. you guys ever seen "man friday"? it's a 60s or 70s movie w/ peter o'toole that demolishes the original crusoe. very fucking funny. but see you need to know crusoe for that. |
Finished "Looking Backward"
fucking awful boring |
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how come you finished? i usually drop those. |
actually read half of it than skimmed through the rest
school reading I hate utopian stories. Especially one that puts in a love story for no fucking reason. Oh, and sexist. |
school-- eww...
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fuck I hated reading Dickens in school.
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we were not taught that one, just great expectations Oliver twist and copperfield.
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well you lucky dog you lucky dog you dog. good for your teacher. put him/her in your will. then yeah i'd said check out crusoe and treasure island! and no it's not long DONG silver! ha ha ha ha! on the subject of juvenile stuff i also recommend jules verne-- voyage to the center of the earth is being made into a movie actually so it would be nice if you get the original story. and then 20,000 leagues under the sea and the mysterious island and around the world in 80 days and from the earth to the moon-- all classics of the imagination and pioneers of science fiction. he wrote a shitload of books though, not all so famous, but these i think are like suppa-classix. michel strogoff was cool too, today it probably reads a bit racist ha haha. anyway many of these books can probably be found under dover thrift editions for $1 or $2 new-- the print isn't the best but the price is right. good summer reading, i mean-- if you like anime and comic books and shit like that (i do) these books should be perfectly fine entertainment. |
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