Originally posted by Linnl: I'm going to get an Eskimo pie and feel better.
Made from real Eskimos?!
"Live Forever!"
30 December 2010, 06:05 PM
Linnl
quote:
Made from real Eskimos?!
A KLONDIKE, chocolate one, through and through. The women prefer that. And a (diet)coke.
03 January 2011, 03:58 AM
tinkerbell
Linnl. Were you being subtle or did you accidentally mention "The Women"? That's the correct answer! Your turn.
03 January 2011, 03:59 AM
tinkerbell
quote:
Originally posted by philnic:
quote:
Originally posted by tinkerbell: Another clue as I await delivery of the dreaded New Year haggis...
Good luck in catching it; they're fast runners.
Aye, but the wee beasties cannae run so fast in the snow.
03 January 2011, 06:59 PM
Linnl
originally posted by tinkerbell
quote:
Were you being subtle or did you accidentally mention "The Women"?
Um, not so subtle. Good story choice.
Well, here is the next line:
"And in an easy chair across the room would sit a Salt White Oblong seated with a copy of Nietzche open, reading, smoking a pipe."
The story is known by two different titles, so feel free to post either or both if you know them. My first reading of it was in a book edited by Damon Knight purchased at a library book sale.
07 January 2011, 03:07 PM
Linnl
A clue:
"Click."
07 January 2011, 03:10 PM
Linnl
And the back cover(note the guarantee). Cover painting "Perfect Sunset", by Eugene Berman:This message has been edited. Last edited by: Linnl,
13 January 2011, 08:52 PM
Braling II
If I remember correctly, Tomorrow's Child is wont to shout something like "Wheely!".
14 January 2011, 02:13 PM
Linnl
Wheely!!! By Euclid, Braling II, you got it! Your turn.
The fears and anxieties of parenthood are surely "other dimensional", nevertheless, Peter and Polly Horn commit to bringing the human dimension to their child, Py.
"The Shape of Things" is the originally published title of "Tomorrow's Child", and the so named title of Damon Knight's anthology. In the intro to the story, Mr. Knight wrote, "I well remember my own popeyed admiration when I read [Bradbury's] story about a woman who gave birth to a small blue pyramid; this is exactly the sort of thing that might occur to any imaginative writer in a manic or drunken moment; but Bradbury wrote it and sold it."This message has been edited. Last edited by: Linnl,
16 January 2011, 04:22 PM
Braling II
OK, here goes...
He relaxed. He felt his body become wonderfully cool and then wonderfully warm. He knew he was dropping down a long slide of stars into a darkness as delightful as wine.
There's more, of course, but isn't this just great writing?!
17 January 2011, 01:01 AM
philnic
Hey, BII, I just pasted the quote into a certain well known search engine and found the answer in a trice. Too easy! But I'll leave it for others to try.