Which Books Could You Substitute for Loo Roll?
Discussion
To be contrary to our other great threads - and going on from something I just heard on the radio....
What would you nominate to fulfil a secondary important roll/role should this stock-piling and shortages continue?
From another thread - I immediately thought of the end of books in Fahrenheit 451 (Bradbury) - and then thought how terrible a thought that was...
Anyone else with better ideas?
What would you nominate to fulfil a secondary important roll/role should this stock-piling and shortages continue?
From another thread - I immediately thought of the end of books in Fahrenheit 451 (Bradbury) - and then thought how terrible a thought that was...
Anyone else with better ideas?
FunkyNige said:
At the risk of taking this game too seriously...
The Dune books after Dune were all long and boring.
Catch-22, also long and boring plus everyone seems to have a copy
Good calls.The Dune books after Dune were all long and boring.
Catch-22, also long and boring plus everyone seems to have a copy
À la recherche du temps perdu runs to seven volumes in French. The paper in the old NRF edition is pleasingly tough but absorbent. By far the best use for dear Marcel's utterly pretentious and ballsachingly dull work. And, yes, I have read three of the volumes which is four too many.
FunkyNige said:
At the risk of taking this game too seriously...
The Dune books after Dune were all long and boring.
Catch-22, also long and boring plus everyone seems to have a copy
I can accept 'boring' as a valid ground for criticism (even if Catch 22 is anything but) but 'long ' ? If it's a good book , such as Donna Tartt's sublime The Goldfinch , even its 784 pages was too short . The Dune books after Dune were all long and boring.
Catch-22, also long and boring plus everyone seems to have a copy
psi310398 said:
FunkyNige said:
At the risk of taking this game too seriously...
The Dune books after Dune were all long and boring.
Catch-22, also long and boring plus everyone seems to have a copy
Good calls.The Dune books after Dune were all long and boring.
Catch-22, also long and boring plus everyone seems to have a copy
À la recherche du temps perdu runs to seven volumes in French. The paper in the old NRF edition is pleasingly tough but absorbent. By far the best use for dear Marcel's utterly pretentious and ballsachingly dull work. And, yes, I have read three of the volumes which is four too many.
robm3 said:
I really didn't like George W Bush's Autobiography Decision Points. Just poorly written. And usually I love political biographies.
But you undervalue the curiosity value of a publisher thinking that the notion of GWB writing at all was remotely credible. On a more realistic level, I'd love to know who the poor ghost writer was who had to turn Bush's oral gibberish into publishable text. I'd buy him a drink - he'll need it.Gassing Station | Books and Literature | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff