norookie wrote:QUICK! for me anyway, another "The end of wall street as we know it" -Dave Kansas! initially, a good addition to an individuals financial literacy.Chaz reads to much.
chaz wrote:norookie wrote:QUICK! for me anyway, another "The end of wall street as we know it" -Dave Kansas! initially, a good addition to an individuals financial literacy.Chaz reads to much.
I enjoy reading books and surfing the internet since retiring - better than working.
Sometimes, just as it seemed a sale was imminent, Griffin's mother would sigh and say "There's a hole...." Griffin remembered one old guy who said, after his parents had rejected a dozen trees, "Lady, maybe there's something you don't understand. Those holes you keep seein's the space between the g*****n branches. Wasn't for the spaces, the tree would be solid f*****' wood....
Once the tree was upright, Griffin's father would pick the lock on the closet where the owners stored the stuff they didn't want ruined or broken, see what they had by way of Christmas decorations and berate their bad taste.
nisiprius wrote:That Old Cape Magic, by Richard Russo. ...The passage where he remembers his picky-picky academic parents--always renter of housing from other academics on sabbatical--shopping for a Christmas tree:Sometimes, just as it seemed a sale was imminent, Griffin's mother would sigh and say "There's a hole...." Griffin remembered one old guy who said, after his parents had rejected a dozen trees, "Lady, maybe there's something you don't understand. Those holes you keep seein's the space between the g*****n branches. Wasn't for the spaces, the tree would be solid f*****' wood....
...
'I am astonished that you should never have tried such an interesting experiment yourself,' said Arthur to Oliver Haddo.
'I have,' answered the other calmly. 'My father lost his power of speech shortly before he died, and it was plain that he sought with all his might to tell me something. A year after his death, I called up his phantom from the grave so that I might learn what I took to be a dying wish. The circumstances of the apparition are so similar to those I have just told you that it would only bore you if I repeated them. The only difference was that my father actually spoke.'
'What did he say?' asked Susie.
'He said solemnly: "Buy Ashantis, they are bound to go up."
'I did as he told me; but my father was always unlucky in speculation, and they went down steadily. I sold out at considerable loss, and concluded that in the world beyond they are as ignorant of the tendency of the Stock Exchange as we are in this vale of sorrow.'
nisiprius wrote:...
Jack London hired Sinclair Lewis to write plots for him. ...
Jack London apparently had a lot of trouble with plots, and admitted that "Expression, you see—with me—is far easier than invention." He was accused of plagiarism or at least stealing ideas on a number of occasions. I think most creative people "borrow" ideas to some extent, and work and rework our great cultural commons; it's part of what Pete Seeger calls "the folk process."Fallible wrote:I didn't know that and it sounds a bit like Shakespeare's plays using plots from various historical and other sources. I wonder how common this is in fiction, but I suppose it doesn't make that much difference since it's mainly what you do with what you borrowed that counts. Interesting though and I'm glad you mentioned it.nisiprius wrote:...
Jack London hired Sinclair Lewis to write plots for him. ...
ruralavalon wrote:Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, by Richard P. Feynman.
nisiprius wrote:Jack London apparently had a log of trouble with plots, and admitted that "Expression, you see—with me—is far easier than invention." He was accused of plagiarism or at least stealing ideas on a number of occasions. ...Fallible wrote:I didn't know that and it sounds a bit like Shakespeare's plays using plots from various historical and other sources. I wonder how common this is in fiction, but I suppose it doesn't make that much difference since it's mainly what you do with what you borrowed that counts. Interesting though and I'm glad you mentioned it.nisiprius wrote:...
Jack London hired Sinclair Lewis to write plots for him. ...
Default User BR wrote:ruralavalon wrote:Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, by Richard P. Feynman.
Did you get to the part about the dollar?
Brian
ruralavalon wrote:Default User BR wrote:ruralavalon wrote:Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, by Richard P. Feynman.
Did you get to the part about the dollar?
Huh? I must not be that far yet.
nisiprius wrote:Which is the book in which he relates an incident in which agrees to accept a speaking invitation at a state university, on condition that he will not have to sign his name more than thirteen times, including the check?
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