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PS I do donate my relatives's books to charities (for them).... can't be having too many hoarders in one family..... mind thats prolly how I got the duplicate... :D

:) ;)

Now I have two book cases. One is permanents. Books I read over and over and over again. Contains favourite one off books, my Mary Renault's, Kerry Greenwood's, Ben Aaronovitch's. The other is full of books that will be read once and then go to a) the Salvation Army b) the Australian Red Cross or c) by left in a public place with a note on saying 'Free Book'.

Mine were really old paperbacks in bad condition..some still from my mother ( who during her long illness read only awful bestsellers) and my father, who when young read wagonloads of war fiction...all of them quite crumbly. Not in condition to be gifted, kept just for sentiment toward my parents.

I felt like I'd actually cleansed my life. I still feel it a couple days later.
I was standing in front of my last bookcases last night before bed, looking at them and feeling really good about things. Like I got a monkey off my back. Like it was a fresh new beginning.
Like you, Simona, I had heaps that were hand me downs from Dad. His old paperbacks ended up my old paperbacks because he had a book cleanse and I couldn't stand to see them thrown out.
I'm not a hoarder with any other objects, it was only with books, so it feels like I actually beat my obsession with book hoarding.
Now that I have only a few bookcases full of beautiful, clean, good condition books I plan on using the 'book in, book out' principal.

It's also for this that I often opt for digital books..

:) ;)"
Nope, don't agree. I give ones I didn't like that much or that I know I won't reread to library so other may get pleasure from reading them. I weed several times a year.

There are no words.


There quite an experience Happy, I think some folk "chase" them after having experienced one.
We had one a few years back now (1999) & I (along with thousands more) stood on a cliff top & watched the darkness/dusk rush towards us across the sea which was quite something..... what struck me was the total silence as all the animals/birds went silent as it fell dark which made it earily quiet in seconds felt by everyone in the crowd to many a gasp & then the eruption of sound (birds squawking & rushing from their roosts) as it suddenly became bright again. Quite spectacular really!

There are no words."
What the....?

I saw my first when I was in school. Thought it was over rated and wouldn't chase another one. :-D Got a bit bored with it all. No shadows coming across the sea where I was.




http://www.deseretnews.com/article/86...

I saw my first when I was in school. Thought it was over rated and wouldn't chase another one. :-D Got a bit bored with it all. No sh..."
Got lucky to be sure, it was more about the darkness rushing in & the sites, sounds (lack of) & the animals/birds reactions - the actual blocking out the sun bit was a bit..... oh yeah is that it?? It was the rest of it which was a real rush & almost mystical if you like


A small tribute I found to Jerry lewis who always made me laugh as a child
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkUa-...

The Generation Game was a major part of my TV watching as a child. His cries of "Nice to see you. To see you... NICE!" and "Give us a twirl" still remain in my vocabulary.

Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin. What a duo.




Yes, some of the Blackadder episodes could have been better written. I have left the room to have a ciggie out the back a few times, " oh no, it's ok honey, no need to pause it".

I the same wrt American comedians....... Its the slapstick bit that I remember him for & he was great for kids & as Terri mentioned was a great duo with Dean martin


I'm American but I found Jerry Lewis annoying. I don't like slapstick anyway, excepting maybe the Marx Bros.

Aldgate is probably the creepiest station I have visited. I really don't want to use it again if I don't have to.
Bank is horribly confusing with all the exits and entrances. I got lost in there for about 15 minutes until a nice TFL worker helped me find the exit I needed.
They missed the best fact about Russell Square. It was the setting for a low budget horror movie in the 1970s starring Donald Pleasance about a tribe of cannibals living in the Underground. Can't remember the name, but it became a cult classic.


I did like Night Court. :D

He is a part of my childhood. The very young childhood. Jerry Lewis, Doctor Dolittle, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, The Great Race.
Those are the movies of my childhood.

He..."
I watched CCBB this last year jus gone & its still quite watchable whilst The Great Race is jus shear class..... I'll raise yer Bedknobs & Broomsticks :)

What about Mary Poppins and My Fair Lady? I was probably a little older for these two though.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igQ-_...
Off to bed, ttfn

I couldn't sit through any of these movies now. They are for kids. :)"
Bugger that! Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is still one of my favourite movies. Along with Mary Poppins, The Jungle Book, and Disney's animated version of Robin Hood.

I think I need to watch CCBB again. I always remember it fondly from my childhood. Maybe that child is still in me somewhere and I'd still enjoy it.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Berry Pickers (other topics)Fortune's Child (other topics)
Hild (other topics)
Sharpe's Command (other topics)
Edenglassie (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Amanda Peters (other topics)Nicola Griffith (other topics)
Bernard Cornwell (other topics)
Bernard Cornwell (other topics)
Allan Hands (other topics)
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Ghastly!
And not an inch of space for MY books anyway....