Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
Jessica Rabbit
originally posted by Bwood:
I agree with Thor's comment that Fla. Jim cursing comes across as cute.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Hey, Frank . . . gives us a kiss.
Best, Jim
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Hey, Frank . . . gives us a kiss.
Best, Jim
Now he's doing Al Pacino.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
Okay, I'll own up to it. I liked the one Dugat-Py I've ever had (a 2000 Charmes-Chambertin IIRC). It was definitely new worldy in style but not so overoaked and overextracted in a Claude Dugat way (whose wines I can't stand).
I wouldn't pay the going rate but I thought it was really good.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
As soon as one thinks about it, the problem becomes whether the term designates whores with hearts of gold, women who are no better than they ought to be, women of easy virtue, all or only some of the above.
Once you get to 20th century literature, the figure starts to fall into genre fiction since modernism became uninterested in the kind of domestic fiction that made the character either comic or sentimental-tragic, depending on the plot. But she's all over hard boiled detective stuff and film noirs. You can go on from there.
That was Emilie, I think.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Generally, I agree. But there was a minor character in Liaisons Dangereuses on whose rump Valmont wrote a punning love letter to Mme. de Tourvel.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
That was Emilie, I think.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Generally, I agree. But there was a minor character in Liaisons Dangereuses on whose rump Valmont wrote a punning love letter to Mme. de Tourvel.
Mme. de Merteuil was no slouch.
And, on a different front entirely, how about Polly Peachum?