I like your Block B posts anyway XD I knew it hehehe~ I like it >3<
hihihi. thankyou amy. i feel much better now. <3
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I like your Block B posts anyway XD I knew it hehehe~ I like it >3<
hihihi. thankyou amy. i feel much better now. <3
IKR? I don't get why people think they can say stuff about what we post/reblog, take it with all its crap or leave lmfao. AND BTW, IS YOUR DP WHAT I THINK IT IS? O3O
i know. but its their opinion so i'll accept it. :3 anyway im still going to spazz over block b. lol. no one can stop me. xD
my dp? :)) min tights. haha
It's just ridiculous, really. I once had an anon saying she actually didn't want SHINee to make their comeback because she likes my blog for SJ and not SHINee lmfao. Nonsense ;A;
HAHA. that is funny, if they dont like what you are posting, just UNFOLLOW no one is stopping them. otl.
It's so odd how people just can't accept how you like more than 1 group. Guys, this is her blog and she's the one who should be regulating it, not you. :)
not everyone can understand this, thankyou amy. /hugs
Nice! They look great on you :3 - maketheamy
Thank you ;O; you're too kind!
you look adorable! o3o I like your earrings too haha, did you buy them today? - maketheamy
Yes! I bought them today and I'm so in love with them. I've been searching for these kind of earrings for forever ;~~;!
Amy!! maybe you should look through book reviews!
Lemme post some random ones:
I liked this book. It's fun, it's well written (um... well-translated, as I read it in Romanian), and although the subject isn't new (children turning into adults and vice-versa), the way it was handled was much more interesting than (let's say) the well-known Hollywood movies. It's not just the fact that it happens, there was a whole philosphical purpose behind it, as we find out in the end what was that drove the children's teacher (Mr. Crastaing) to impose, on all the generations of pupils that he taught the art of writing, the subject of family and childhood, over and over again, always shouting above their heads: Imagination does not mean lies! Somewhere in the book there is a passage on people who have lost their childhood and people who have never been children because the rigours of society have stripped them of what was rightfully theirs: childhood. We also find out what adults do when they discover they're back to being children again. Quite understandable, really :) On a technical note, the characters are well-developed, diverse and lovable, dialogues are good and everything is constructed so that it seems very believable. The author touches on the subject of multi-culturalism and racism, mocks a bit the cultural "integration" that immigrants have to face and not only that, as we have a motley range of characters that allows many issues: a half-Jewish boy whose father is not accepted by his father-in-law on account of being Jewish, a half-Moroccan boy and his desperate-to-integrate sister, and a half-Italian, half-Russian boy whose dead father speaks to him in spirit form, although he himself never believed in ghosts, afterlife or the supernatural, while he was alive. The whole story is beautifully told, there are hints here and there and the author allows the readers the pleasure to guess and discover themselves certain developments and secrets, such as why is the teacher regularly visiting the prostitutes and why are they afraid of him :p I also liked that sometimes dialogue is replaced by theatre-like replies, just as James Joyce did in his "Ulysses" (read it, loved it, absolutely have to read it again, but this time in English ;) ). I also liked the fact that it ends on a happy and luminous note, all this extreme experience leading to new beginnings.
and
Briefly, Messieurs Les Enfants is about three school boys who are given a composition to write as punishment for having misbehaved. The title they're given is something like, You and Your Parents Swap Places; What Happens? The teacher's moto is Using your imagination doesn't mean lying, but quite honestly I didn't get far enough to know where that would take me.
or
The next morning, the three twelve-year-old boys realise to their amazement that...they HAVE BEEN transformed into adults! As for they parents they have become...KIDS!
and
It's not so much the fact that kids turn into adults and vice versa that makes it interesting, it's the characters themselves. They always having the perfectly witty reply, and the way they relate to one another is more than entertaining. One of the children involved speaks regularly to his dead father, and the discussions - contrary to what we would believe - are quite funny and fetching. Also, the school teacher, M. Castraing, is a man who lacked childhood experiences, and is living family life as a child through the eyes (and homework assignments) of his students. This teacher is a remarkably interesting character, and the idea of getting to know him (as well as why he teaches the way he does, and why he goes to prostitutes - no, it isn't for sex) is very exciting.