the "ask crazychemgirl a question" thread

No questions lately? You can ask them even if I'm not online and I'll get to them when I log back in... This is always the first thread I check.. :)
 
I reserve all further questions until redirect, your honor.

oh come on zuke... I know you've got some good ones saved up. ;)

Well, of course I do! But I'm saving them up for the last five minutes of the show when I'll spring them on the witness and force him to confess that HE, not my client, committed the murder. Hamilton Burger will lose another case to me; it's amazing that he's managed to stay district attorney all these years.

Question: What am I talking about?
 
Well, of course I do! But I'm saving them up for the last five minutes of the show when I'll spring them on the witness and force him to confess that HE, not my client, committed the murder. Hamilton Burger will lose another case to me; it's amazing that he's managed to stay district attorney all these years.

Question: What am I talking about?

Perry Mason... my dad used to watch that show every night.

Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear?

yesteryear?

I think they were last seen about page 350 of the paperback edition.

thanks zuke
 
Perry Mason... my dad used to watch that show every night.



yesteryear?



thanks zuke


As did my dad! Well, Sunday nights, I think, or whichever night it was on. Your pater was probably watching it in re-runs, since he's likely my age or younger.
 
I am, actually.... Haven't read it in years. I need to re-read it.. Right now I'm re-reading Anna Karenina

Certainly not one for the light reading, are ya? ;) I say that as a compliment of course. My only experiences with Russian literature are Chekhov (stilted), Dostoevsky (didactic), and Nabokov (brilliant, but only when I'm in the right mood). I read "Catch-22" once when I was 18, and once later at 23, while I was in the Army and deployed. The first time reading it made me laugh; the second time only made me angry. Because it was right, and I'd been too fucking stupid to see it. Books NOT to give a bitter vet.
 
Certainly not one for the light reading, are ya? ;) I say that as a compliment of course. My only experiences with Russian literature are Chekhov (stilted), Dostoevsky (didactic), and Nabokov (brilliant, but only when I'm in the right mood). I read "Catch-22" once when I was 18, and once later at 23, while I was in the Army and deployed. The first time reading it made me laugh; the second time only made me angry. Because it was right, and I'd been too fucking stupid to see it. Books NOT to give a bitter vet.

Makes sense... I have a 5 hour commute so I read a lot
 
I said earlier im half finished Anna Karenina ... My next book is for my book club... Called "the good earth"

I should have edited the previous comment. "Planning next." Apologies. And "The Good Earth," Pearl S. Buck, I believe? I've heard good things. Let us know what you think of it.
 
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