Writer's Block: Open book test
Oct. 9th, 2010 01:10 am[Error: unknown template qotd]
I just got up and looked over my/our bookshelves, and people would probably wonder, "Who lives here? Adults or little girls?" Sure, we've got some big thick grown-up books (Watership Down, The Red Tent, Moby-Dick) but we also have several books from each of the following series: American Girl, Anne of Green Gables, The Baby-Sitters Club (in English and French!), Calvin & Hobbes, Childcraft, Harry Potter, Indian in the Cupboard, Little House, and Winnie-the-Pooh (used to have all three Wayside School books but don't seem to anymore), as well as books by Lois Lowry and Judy Blume, several collections of children's poetry, and three old middle-school reading textbooks.
Interspersed by stuff like Guide to Getting It On, The Last Word: The New York Times Book of Obituaries and Farewells, and The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath.
Heaven only knows what conclusions they'd draw.
I just got up and looked over my/our bookshelves, and people would probably wonder, "Who lives here? Adults or little girls?" Sure, we've got some big thick grown-up books (Watership Down, The Red Tent, Moby-Dick) but we also have several books from each of the following series: American Girl, Anne of Green Gables, The Baby-Sitters Club (in English and French!), Calvin & Hobbes, Childcraft, Harry Potter, Indian in the Cupboard, Little House, and Winnie-the-Pooh (used to have all three Wayside School books but don't seem to anymore), as well as books by Lois Lowry and Judy Blume, several collections of children's poetry, and three old middle-school reading textbooks.
Interspersed by stuff like Guide to Getting It On, The Last Word: The New York Times Book of Obituaries and Farewells, and The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath.
Heaven only knows what conclusions they'd draw.