b3ta.com board
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Messageboard » XXX » Message 8865326 (Thread)

# In a dark dark town there was a dark dark street
and in that dark dark street there was a dark dark house....
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:00, archived)
# in the dark dark house there
was a dark dark crack whore?
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:01, archived)
# \o/
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:02, archived)
# 3rd best childhood book
after "where the wild things are" and "The hungry, hungry catterpillar"
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:03, archived)
# Have you ever read "The Snail and the Whale"?
It brings a lump to my eye, I can tell you
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:03, archived)
#
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:14, archived)
# i like room on the broom
the worst is the smartest giant in town :(
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:19, archived)
# Conveniently forgetting Fungus the Bogeyman, I see.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:04, archived)
# he's also forgotten anything by Anthony Browne....
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:05, archived)
# read as a teenager, not as a child.
therefore it comes in that category for me.

Plus the skelingtons in the dark dark house are 12.2% more ace on the Michaelson-Butcliffe scale.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:06, archived)
# :O
no. Noness. Lots of no piggies in your farm of possibleness.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:07, archived)
# *imagines being possibility farmer*
that would be the BEST life ever, perhaps.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:09, archived)
# You'd never have to be overly sure of anything.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:12, archived)
# I had Enid f Blyton and CS Lewis.
and I am not unhappy at that fact. The wishing chair and the faraway tree are some of the happiest memories of my childhood. I also liked the naughtiest girl but I think that might be a bit weird.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:09, archived)
# I read Enid Blyton when I was tiny
but Fungus the Bogeyman will always be dear to me as my dad read it to me (and happened to look quite like Fungus at the time, except with a comedy 80s Tosh Lines tache as well)
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:10, archived)
# sadly I have
no idea what you speak of. My reading was very advanced and I was well through TLOTR by the age of 11 so my teen years were mostly spent reading Sci-fi / fantasy classics and encyclopaedia brittanica.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:13, archived)
# It's Raymond Briggs, not some sort of 'reading for the empty of skull' prescribed toss.
Funnily enough, my reading was also very advanced, but I still enjoyed having my father read to me.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:15, archived)
# I enjoyed having my father
in the same country, but that was a rare occasion. having him read to me never happened once.
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:17, archived)
# Its tongue-in-cheek existentialism
is unusual in a children's book.
What are we frightening them FOR?
Does it do any ULTIMATE GOOD?
Or even any ULTIMATE BAD?
(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 16:18, archived)