Jump to content

BookJumper

Advanced Member
  • Posts

    3,610
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by BookJumper

  1. Make that 9 musicals and, I love this song!
  2. Possibly ! To be fair, my opinions are but based on the splendid job he did as Javert in the European TV Les Miserabl
  3. Favourite musicals would have to be the following 8 (awkward number, I know), more or less in order: Les Miserabl
  4. I second that - the week I was off school with a broken foot I pretty much went through every book in the house that I hadn't read already. Then, because there was nothing else left and boredom beckoned, I asked my sister to lend me those Harry Potters. Let me just say I read books 1-3 in a day and book 4 in a single sitting the day after... . It's just a shame that after such a conversion, the eagerly awaited book 5 disappointed, and 6 and 7 more so !
  5. Show Me - My Fair Lady OST I Ain't Marchin' Anymore - Phil Ochs Bring Him Home - Les Miserabl
  6. As I have this on Peak Wishlist, that's very good to know ! What was so good about it (no spoilers please)?
  7. Thanks to The Book People and Amazon I have just spent lots of money I don't have, mostly (but not exclusively), on the first wave of Christmas presents: - Foyle's Philavery, Further Foyle's Philavery & My Foyle's Philavery x 2 (one set is for me, the other for one of my Liverpool Uni friends who's coming down to London to visit at the weekend) - Doctor Who: Decide Your Destiny (12-book set, for my big sister) - Where the Wild Things Are (so that OH may relive his childhood) - This lovely edition of Jane Eyre (for the Comparative Lit thread) All really cheap and bargainful but when you chuck in a couple of DVDS and Express Deliveries, you've somehow spent over
  8. Pretty - I want to read The Thirteenth Tale even more now. Me likes web imagery (why, I even worked it into my dissertation title, it being my main metaphor for the pattern of the Shakespearean sonnet !)
  9. Hmmm. I'm not sure if we have them and if we did, I'm not about to leave the estate at 2am - it's alright as far as council blocks of flats go but I do value my limbs. That said, I will try to make it my next film-seeing experience I'm bound to be very opinionated about it when I do see it, so I'll be posting a linky to the inevitable IMBD review for your perusal.
  10. Nou ... I have always wanted to see Being John Malkovich (incidentally, an actor I find amazing) though.
  11. Ah yes, obviously.* * who ?
  12. The rest of the cinema-going year for me and OH will include: 9, Avatar, Where the Wild Things Are (I've had a deprived childhood, or so I'm told, because I don't think my mum ever read this to me I must admit the film does look ubercute though).
  13. Oooh indeed, what did you go see? My first and so far last RSC was the Tennant Hamlet (twice - long story); it was a bit of a mixed bag but when it was good, it was in another league. I mean, Patrick Stewart (who, I'm happy to say, signed my study copy of the Arden Hamlet...)!

  14. Part II (man, I'm prolific):

     

    As for new writing, it hasn't happened today - a bad book experience, coupled with a plan foiled this afternoon and an ill-advised nap that's made me all groggy have conspired against it :motz:. I don't want to force anything, the moment is delicate; particularly as it dawned on me (I that thought I had such a complete plan) last night that something pivotal which I can't tell you about needs to happen at the end of Dreaded Chapter Four. I don't want to go doing pivotal scenes a disservice by writing when I'm out of sorts, now do I?

     

    Still - the fact that I'm worrying about doing scenes a disservice is, in itself, quite probably a good sign. Is that a writing zest I see before me, on yond pomegranate tree :lol:?

  15. Awww (mit sound effect, you actually made me awww out loud with that comment :friends0:)! I'm incredibly flattered you thought that, not just because it means you're enjoying it, but because it also means that the blasted thing reads polished enough to trick the mind into thinking it is a finished product. Wahey for that :D!

     

    I'm sorry Chapter Three isn't in your voracious hands yet... I am in fact itching to send it to the speediest minions such as yourself, however I'm not sure if having done that I'd be able to keep track of who's read what :roll:! I'm simple like that. Which is a shame, as I honestly reckon Chapter Three is one of my finest compositions (oh, the modesty). Still - you may nag me if you wish. I might just cave in ;).

  16. Tee hee hee - bless you, you poor tricked (& damned, if in a royal way of course...) soul! x

  17. I shall do my utmost best not to disappoint the faith of my beloved readership :friends0: x

  18. Just to say I've only now noticed the 'here, there and neverwhere' and thoroughly approve of the reference - s, both of them ;)!

  19. Hello :blush:

     

    Writing hasn't actually happened so far (see the book activity thread... and that was just my morning; I might be silly but things like this vex me enough to rob me of my zest when it's already running low), I might give it a crack after dinner if no film is planned with OH.

     

    Incidentally, I do know you're right. If you weren't, I wouldn't have opened Word yesterday and I wouldn't have added 1k of writing to Chapter Four through "mere" editing (only I can edit a piece into one longer than itself... :roll:).

     

    I now just need to find enough inner peace for long enough to take the jump into the great unknown of the as yet unwritten... things might be slow, painful, maybe a bit awkward at first, but they will happen and I will polish them - with a little help from my friends :friends0: - and all will, eventually, be good.

     

    Thanks for your support through the highs and lows, it means a lot to me.

     

    x Giulia

  20. Location: UK Will send: worldwide Wishlist (for the love of Santa, trade not mass market paperback): Dreams Underfoot by Charles de Lint The Phoenix Guards by Steven Brust The Cyberiad by Stanislaw Lem Neverness (Voyager Classics) by David Zindell Lonely Werewolf Girl by Martin Millar
  21. Hello and welcome from someone who's just finished what you are beginning (finished, that is, unless I take leave of the last of my senses and apply for a PhD... which, on the face of it, looks rather likely) !
  22. I'd say that's one successful book you wouldn't have picked up of your own accord ! As for me... irked, irked, irked. After my inconclusive mission on Friday, I traipsed back to the sorting office in hope of finding my copy of Inkheart from BookMooch. Ironically, it's Inked... there's pen marks across the sides of the pages. OH, lovelily, tried to rub them off thinking they were pencil - guess what, the rubber stained. So now I've got red marks on there as well as the original pen ones. Yippee. On a further sour note, my replacement bank card has entirely failed to arrive at the branch, and no Jane Eyre for me until it does . As I said: irked, irked, irked.
  23. Glad to have helped, and - please do come back and tell us how it was !
  24. Thanks for the hugs hun :friends0: it still affects me as I have no doubt it does everyone who's had it happen to them - pretty much every issue I have today stems from those 16 years of cruelty (from day 1 of kindergarten right up to the last day of high school).

     

    Still, I do know that what you say is true; the people who tormented me didn't come from happy balanced homes like mine was, I know that. It just seems like a bit of an expensive price to pay for a caring family, is all.

     

    As you may have noticed however, I have not lost the tender heart :) that's one of the few things they couldn't strip from me. I don't just smile at people I think I need it, I run at them and hug them (starting from the famed Liverpool goths). It's good for the huggee, but it's also good for the hugger :friends0: you take care.

  25. Why, thank you one does try. Me too . I don't think it needs explaining per se in the same way that the thought processes behind the actions of Carrie's tortures don't need explaining - the point for me is that religious fanatics, like bullies, do exist in the real world, and that their existence and intolerance breeds suffering . Wahey !
×
×
  • Create New...