Well, I have a book on horse training, so I’ll run with that.
Next to it is PVP: The Dork Ages.
Cripes, I gotta organize these shelves.
Well, I have a book on horse training, so I’ll run with that.
Next to it is PVP: The Dork Ages.
Cripes, I gotta organize these shelves.
Not to step on Hal’s toes, but in case anybody else is flummoxed by *PVC" teh Dork Years, on the other side of my copy of The Year’s Best Sicience Fiction is Charles DeLint’s the Onion Girl.
Every once in a while, I’m reminded to preview. :smack:
William Sleator is considered science fiction, right? I have Singularity and House of Stairs. (I know I’m really stretching it already, but if that doesn’t work I’m prepared to go to the Bradbury titles!)
thumps thread
Live, damn you!
I wanna play soooo bad, but I don’t have any of these books.
[exasperated] Don’t you people read anything besides science fiction? [/exasperated]
Maybe y’all would have a little more success if you amended the rules to allow the next participant to post if s/he has a book sharing a noun of significance with the previous poster.
Well, using the amended rules, I have The Cider HOUSE Rules, by John Irving.
Next to that is Naked Came the Manatee by Carl Hiaasen, Dave Barry, Edna Buchanan, Elmore Leonard, Paul Levine, and actually eight others, but hopefully some of the ones mentioned will do.
William Sleator! I have Interstellar Pig and Parasite Pig. Next to them is:
The autobiography of Bejamin Franklin. Somebody else has got to have that one.
Wow, I really didn’t think this thread was going to take off after it was dead for about a day after I posted it.
Well…I don’t have any Autobiographies, or anything by or about Benjamin Franklin, but I do have Twilight of the Idols, by Nietzsche. Since I’m the OP, I get to mold the rules to my liking, and damnit, it fits.
using the noun rule:
I have Crossroads of Twilight by Robert Jordan which is in between
Foundations in Spanish and
A Princess of Mars by ER Burroughs
FINALLY!
Using the noun rule, I have The Princess Bride, by S. Morgenstern, which is next to Rebecca, by Daphne Du Maurier.
The Princess Bride is between A Wrinkle in Time and Eyes of the Dragon. (yes, the lower half of that bookshelf belongs to my kids. Why do you ask?)
I have Eyes of the Dragon. It’s in a separate bookcase which contains, I believe, all of Mr. King’s published works.
Well, my copy of Eyes of the Dragon has slipped off its shelf and is currently nestling against Robert Parker’s Perish Twice and Elizabeth George’s A Place of Hiding.
(Neither of which, by the way, is where it’s supposed to be either, in the grand scheme of things.)