I’m just glad you guys put up with my undimmed John Barrowman love. He’s just a pile of awesome that keeps getting better.

I was tagged by ladysaucebox and it’s books, so sure:

In a text post, list ten books that have stayed with you in some way. Don’t take but a few minutes, and don’t think too hard — they don’t have to be the “right” or “great” works, just the ones that have touched you. Tag [ten] friends, including me, so I’ll see your list. Make sure you let your friends know you’ve tagged them

  1. Ender’s Game – Orson Scott Card
  2. Canticle for Leibowitz – Walter M Miller
  3. The Crystal Cave Trilogy – Mary Stewart
  4. Trask – Don Berry
  5. Time Enough for Love – Robert Heinlein
  6. Imzadi – Peter David
  7. The illustrated Man – Ray Bradbury
  8. Les Miserables – Victor Hugo
  9. The Ship who Sang – Anne McCaffery
  10. The Outline of History – HG Wells

(I could have listed more Heinlein, Card and Bradbury stories)

I’m going to tag reclusiveq, awabubbles, jazzforthecaptain, type40consultingdetective, willietheplaidjacket, willow555, practicefortheheart, aquart1999, amalgamads, amphigoricsymphony

gloucesterroad:

i was reading some of those one sentence horror stories and one of them was “hello passengers this isn’t your captain speaking” and i just thought wow that is exactly something Arthur Shappey would say and then the passengers would be startled and Carolyn would be like “good grief” and Martin would freak out and Douglas would probably cut him off like “your pilots would like to assure you that this aircraft is not being hijacked.”

thecumbercollective:

Sherlock and John buying ‘that mirror’ together and having an argument in the middle ikea because Sherlock wanted the one with lightbulbs around it and John wanted the plain and simple one.

They bought both.

Sherlock keeps ‘his’ mirror in the bathroom. He likes to get ready in front of it every morning, as though he is actor about to go on stage.

Sherlock Holmes, the drama queen