charming yellow house
seen from Germany
seen from United States
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seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Switzerland
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seen from United States
seen from United States
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charming yellow house
“Flowers Sold on Jan. 24,” Kingston Whig-Standard. January 28, 1942. Page 2. ---- A record was established Saturday, Jan. 24, when flowers were sold on the open market in Kingston. Christopher. “Buddy." aged 10 years. son of Mr and Mrs. C. M. Baiden, Portsmouth, is seen in the picture admiring a primula which his father was offering for sale at the stand near The Whig-Standard office. Mr Baiden told a Whig-Standard reporter that he could not remember flowers being sold on the open market on Jan. 24.
Because Philippine literature is not always about cooking rice and carabaos
From a paper I wrote for an English class, c.2014
Local Colour
Peter Lemer Quintet
CD8307
I hate reading stories set in places I know. Like, "Family Furnishings" is great, but as soon as I see the words "Dundas" and "Adelaide" it pulls me right out of the story.
I think it draws a lot of attention to the fact that the story is fiction. Dundas and Adelaide are real streets that are not far from where I live, but the stuff in this story never happened.
I don't know... I don't like it.