I'm assuming he was joking about that last part.joviwan wrote:I feel like there's a step or two missing from this chain of logic
I really don't know anything about Mongolian politics, so I don't know how accurate any of the rest is either.
I'm assuming he was joking about that last part.joviwan wrote:I feel like there's a step or two missing from this chain of logic
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides and The Elephant Vanishes by Haruki Murakami. Both seem to be the usual stuff assigned in a lit class, and neither seems very interesting.Straha wrote:Which novels?
No book is interesting if you approach it with that attitudeneither seems very interesting.
This may change your mind:Darth Tedious wrote:See, stuff like this is why I prefer cats
I got an A- for that.But alas all things must come to an end, and in time the economic forces that plagued East Germany’s suzerain came to a head, leading to the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the splintering of the Warsaw Pact and the collapse of most of its client regimes. What followed was the sad old tale of the crumbling of order as a foul tide of liberalism and democracy flowed in to engulf what was once the pristine beauty of an ordered state. Free and open elections were held, and Germany was once again reunited under the auspices of the West German state in a grim reminder of the fate that awaits any regime which lacks the will to enact the Chinesische Lösung.
Because actors expect money to narrate them, which usually takes a long ass time. They're also a niche market (or were, they've been becoming more popular) and as such they can/need to charge more to make a profit.Agent Bert Macklin wrote:First World Problem time: Why the fuck are audiobooks so expensive? My plan to rent from the library and rip is not working out because of shitty citizens not taking care of free items. Now I'm looking to actually buy the things.
Oh. Well then, I guess you're kind of fucked. Rowlings can demand pretty much any price she wants and people will pay it.Agent Bert Macklin wrote:The Harry Potter audiobooks. They are only available via Pottermore, and they range from $30-$45 a piece.
Audible offers a lot of audiobooks at a huge discount if you buy the Kindle version from Amazon...Gands wrote:I figured it was to keep the paperbacks competitive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27PP3lpEKxA#t=1367timmy wrote:Pretty tempted to record a reading of Philosophers Stone as a trial