Annie von Mainau
🐱 German Longhair
📸 Cattery von Mainau
🎨 Blue Classic Tabby
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seen from United States
Annie von Mainau
🐱 German Longhair
📸 Cattery von Mainau
🎨 Blue Classic Tabby
hey there!
do you enjoy transplanar rpg's series "GODKILLER: Last Hope"? do you have any ideas for fanfiction in that universe? I want to write for that fandom, except every time i try to think my brain simply starts screaming (/pos)
if i had ideas, however.... yeah. hit me up, my ask box is open 🫡
even if you don't know godkiller pls reblog? im trying to reach my people <3
This one is based on the 86' Dodge Omni GLH-S (Goes Like Hell, the S for Shelby) but instead of a hatchback an SUV, a compact SUV
Would be nice a bare bones small and sporty SUV 👌🏽
Maybe Plymouth as a sub-brand under Chrysler for cheaper alternatives - "Plymouth Omni by Chrysler"
#JGBDesign #DodgeOmni #PlymouthHorizon #Mopar #ChryslerCorporation #Pentastar
hey i hope ur having a good day. sorry for stealing ur idea but i made a compilation of max doing the gay hand gestures bc i wanted to see it too. some of this is just him explaining shit while waving his arms about tho lol. here are the findings:
https:// streamable . com /aelm5a
oh my GOD. here it is. the definitive GLH (gay little hands) video. his hands when daniel is driving him around the circuit in the cart... his hands as he picks up the chicken's foot for alex...... i can't breathe
Watch "max gesticulates" on Streamable.
this is GOD'S WORK
Guys, have you tried your GLH yet? 🤣🤣🤣
PMA who? @therealjacksepticeye
Work in the novels of Grace Livingston Hill
While the domestic details in GLH novels are almost always on point, let’s just say the business aspects are somewhat more . . . nebulous.
Due to the lack of an authoritative biography I’m not sure if GLH
knew nothing about business
didn’t care about business
or just realized her readers weren’t here for the business
but the result is the same: total hand-waving, don’t look over here deus ex machina nonsense. And like all else GLH, I am here for it.
In Maris (1938), the hero turns down two promising job offers to go into business with the heroine’s down-on-his luck father, whose assistant, apparently “is well meaning, I guess, but his judgment is not always as good as it should be. It is really imperative that I should be in the office for the next few weeks, unless I am willing to let my business go to the wall.”
Nevertheless, Lane “doesn’t feel any great risk.” He’s always wanted to be “in business, not just to be working for somebody else.” So he offers to put “a few thousand” into this failing enterprise, which "used, of course, to be good and thriving, but the Depression has knocked out the foundation from under it.”
This discussion takes up 3-5 pages of text, at which point I was yelling at my Kindle, WHAT IS THE BUSINESS?!?! Spoiler alert: we never find out. It’s business! What more do you need to know?
More great moments in business can be found in Happiness Hill (1932). This book actually has quite a lot to do with work, since the heroine and hero meet at the office, which is occasionally referred to as a “firm” although there is never talk of lawyers? Jane (the heroine) addressing circulars until late at night – an act that “puts them days ahead of the competition” and inspires much gratitude in her employer – is about the only detail we get about what goes on at said firm.
But perhaps the most preposterous work-related event in all of GLH’s canon (which is saying something) comes before that, when Jane’s down-on-his-luck father (seeing a theme here?) is offered a job by Jane’s boss, thanks to the machinations of the hero, who is secretly related to the business owners and has told them Mr. Arleth’s sob story (tl;dr, he lost all his money because he was too honest).
Mr. Arleth marvels that, during the interview, his interlocutors knew everything about him! Not just business-related stuff, but “stories from my boyhood.” I about died laughing wondering how in the world, in an interview, the anecdote about “That time we boys pretended there had been a murder and smeared red paint on the doorsill of a deserted farmhouse” came up. TOTALLY NORMAL.
Jim Reeves’ 1986 Dodge Omni GLH Shelby sports a boosted 2.5-liter engine and has run in the 9s on Hot Rod Magazine’s Dragweek. Watch the video here.