Meme taken from
aome who got it from
pegkerr who got it from
kijjohnson.
1. Grab the nearest book.
2. Open the book to page 23.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions.
"Can't miss this, gotta go!" she whispered, and hung up. Wizard's Holiday, by Diane Duane.
Interestingly, that's also the last sentence on the page, and is only the fourth complete sentence -- the first is technically a carry-over from page 22. I don't think this meme works very well for chapter ends.
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Beautiful day today. Dealt with the assorted mail my dad brought up on Wednesday -- paid two bills, signed a few petitions for good causes, and ordered two books from my mail order book club (I love the SFBC!) -- and also remembered to write to my grandmother.
Grandma Doris (my mom's mother) is a wonderful person, very caring, and with a lot of interesting life experience. She's also very annoying. If she doesn't already know something, you can't tell her, and you'll never convince her she's wrong even when nobody in their right mind would fail to be convinced by the evidence. She also tells the same stories over and over again. And she's an unknowing snob.
Because of this, she doesn't have lots of friends. So I try to make a point of writing to her every couple weeks. According to my mom, Grandma Doris appreciates this so much she devotes at least two minutes of every phone call to describing how nice it is to get mail from me, and what pretty postcards I use, and how I write so neatly and put stickers on my mail. Which seems a little excessive to me, but hey. It makes her happy, and it's very little effort on my part.
It's certainly a heck of a lot easier than listening to her stories for the umpteenth time. If I had a dollar for every time I heard the one about the farmers and the Russian peanuts...
1. Grab the nearest book.
2. Open the book to page 23.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions.
"Can't miss this, gotta go!" she whispered, and hung up. Wizard's Holiday, by Diane Duane.
Interestingly, that's also the last sentence on the page, and is only the fourth complete sentence -- the first is technically a carry-over from page 22. I don't think this meme works very well for chapter ends.
---------------------------
Beautiful day today. Dealt with the assorted mail my dad brought up on Wednesday -- paid two bills, signed a few petitions for good causes, and ordered two books from my mail order book club (I love the SFBC!) -- and also remembered to write to my grandmother.
Grandma Doris (my mom's mother) is a wonderful person, very caring, and with a lot of interesting life experience. She's also very annoying. If she doesn't already know something, you can't tell her, and you'll never convince her she's wrong even when nobody in their right mind would fail to be convinced by the evidence. She also tells the same stories over and over again. And she's an unknowing snob.
Because of this, she doesn't have lots of friends. So I try to make a point of writing to her every couple weeks. According to my mom, Grandma Doris appreciates this so much she devotes at least two minutes of every phone call to describing how nice it is to get mail from me, and what pretty postcards I use, and how I write so neatly and put stickers on my mail. Which seems a little excessive to me, but hey. It makes her happy, and it's very little effort on my part.
It's certainly a heck of a lot easier than listening to her stories for the umpteenth time. If I had a dollar for every time I heard the one about the farmers and the Russian peanuts...