It's a new month... time for some new bug fixes!
While Matt is still working on harnessing the book data that we all have contributed to, and making it available for searches, he's also been rather busy fixing other things, and even adding some nifty little features. Read all about it in this Announcements forum post.My Little Blue Dress
by Bruno Maddox | Literature & Fiction | This book has not been rated.
ISBN: 0670884839 Global Overview for this book
ISBN: 0670884839 Global Overview for this book
1 journaler for this copy...
The back jacket reads:
The twentieth century was excellent. It saw major advances in psychiatry, physics and women's fashion, two stunning wars, the 1960s, the 1920s, the publication of Stephen King's Pet Sematary, the development of the internal fax modem... The list literally goes on and on.
Given these vivid and memorable milestones, you might think it would be a fairly simple task for a young man with his wits about him to, say, forge the autobiography of a one-hundred-year-old woman in a single night despite not actually being a woman, and despite having lived through only the last twenty-something years of that most action-packed of centuries.
Yes you might think that, gentle book-jacket text enthusiast, but you would in fact be wrong.
It turns out you would be wrong.
The twentieth century was excellent. It saw major advances in psychiatry, physics and women's fashion, two stunning wars, the 1960s, the 1920s, the publication of Stephen King's Pet Sematary, the development of the internal fax modem... The list literally goes on and on.
Given these vivid and memorable milestones, you might think it would be a fairly simple task for a young man with his wits about him to, say, forge the autobiography of a one-hundred-year-old woman in a single night despite not actually being a woman, and despite having lived through only the last twenty-something years of that most action-packed of centuries.
Yes you might think that, gentle book-jacket text enthusiast, but you would in fact be wrong.
It turns out you would be wrong.