The Case of the Waylaid Wolf--by Erle Stanley Gardner
Goose Chase--by someone I can't remember, but I really loved this one.
The Lady in the Tower--I enjoyed this, but would have liked more conversation and less narration. I didn't feel like it ended either, but I still liked it.
I probably won't ever write full reviews on these books, but I wanted to get them up here. When I start reading again I'll probably start writing reviews diligently once again, but I make no promises.
Books #26, 27 and 28 of '09
1 comment:
I love you, Gal. Let's roam the stars together.
High, girl!
While I realize my penname is quite morbid, yet,
you shall find in our blogs a lotta (subliminal) moxie
which has taken this sinfull mortal yeeeeers to compile:
I lay it ALL out for you, dear, with All-Star-Oxygems:
Wouldn’t ya love an endless eternity
of aplomBombs falling on thy indelible cranium?
An XtraXcitinXpose with no
zooillogical-expiration-date?
An IQ much higher than K2?
An extraordinarily, anti-establishment victory
with a sardonic, satirical wit Who’s savvy??
Here’s what the exquisite, prolific GODy sed
(with a most excellent detector of bull§ht):
“Faith, hope, and love,
the greatest of these is love -
jump into faith...
and you'll see with love”
Doesn’t matter if you don’t believe (what I write);
God believes in you.
Meet me Upstairs, girl, where the Son never goes down
from a passionate, lucrative iconoclasm where you’ll find
nonillionsXnonillionsXnonillionsXnonillionsXnonillionsX…
of deluxe-HTTP [<- pi] opportunities for excitement BTW.
Do it. Do the deed, dude. Sign into the Big House.
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