Return to Website

Alvin Lee Message & Discussion Board

We invite you to use this forum to communicate with Alvin's fans around the world, but please do so with respect and goodwill. 
We reserve the right to delete any messages we deem offensive.

 Thanks for joining in the conversation!


Forum: Alvin Lee Message & Discussion Board
Start a New Topic 
  
Author
Comment
View Entire Thread
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Quote: sue
Hmmmm......Better get the book and start reading.......Reg may quiz us on it.
Ha ha...quiz, indeed. Well, if so, I'll borrow my daughter's copy of the book! I actually gave her the two sequels, among other things, for her birthday a couple months ago, 'cos I knew she was reading the thing! Her assessment: the books were OK, but she felt she could write better erotica herself! So I said "Hey, go for it!" I mean, yes, seriously, I am SUCH a cool mom, am I not?? She's certainly a chip off the old block in the perky pen department, heh heh...I used to, er, try my hand at some rather wildly artistic purple prose myself in my lost wild youth! Which is one reason I feel certain Reg was mistaken in portraying me just now as covering my mouth with my hand "in shock" as I read, or whatever it was... I think that musta been what HE did as he peeked frantically over our shoulders for a wee glimpse or three, or four, tee hee.

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Was a bit worried that the year 1999 gub would crash the universe and drag us down into a black hole of nothingness, but like with the year 2000 bug when we went in opposite direction 12 years ago, nothing happened. Of course, since it's the same one..

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Soon in the year of the Free Bird



Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Reg, finally I got you:-) They married on April 29th, not 28th. And, by the way, the most detestable man in world history was not German, but Austrian. At least he was born there.

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Dear Reg, I googled the title of the book as I had never heard of it. I rarely read anything later than the Nineteenth Century. I wonder if there is anything in here I can use. Hmmmmm.

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Reg, Reg, Reg. I mean, really. Somehow, I highly doubt our buddy Ignaz was reading about the wedding and suicides of Hitler and Eva Braun, or anything else about Nazi Germany, when out for a lark on the MHT bus. Tsk, tsk. No more than *you* were likely recently engrossed in a book about the bloody "misadventures" of the British Empire in India and elsewhere, or of the English in Scotland or Ireland, I should think-- as my quarter-Danish side helpfuly feels compelled to point out. :-) Who knows what world wars might have been fought over those scenarios, had the balance of power been different in the world, after all?? Ahem. But as it happens, I actually WAS reading about the very subjects you attributed to Iggi's perusal, and just yesterday morning, in the wee hours, in fact-- albeit scarcely for the first time. Still, I hadn't known that Crazy Eva got married in a navy dress with sequins, and killed herself in a black dress trimmed with a red rose design. Goody for her...not. Let's just say I felt truly sorry for the fate of the dog, Blondi. The ENTIRE fate, having to be the hound of Hitler, not just the fatal cyanide test. 'Twas all in the book *Endgame, 1945* by David Stafford of the University of Edinburgh (Little, Brown, & Co., 2007), which I recently obtained for info it contains about a certain personage I'm researching-- NEITHER the aforementioned bride nor groom, however, cringe. I already know WAY more than I ever care to about THEM. As for your joke about blonds having more fun, in that context, whether about the poor dog or the stereotypic "Aryan" or whatever: boo, hiss. Better luck next chapter!

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

According to the Stafford book I just cited in my last post, the native Austrian "Schicklgrubr" dictated his last will and testament at 11:30pm on April 28th. Soon afterwards, apparently on the 29th, he married the ditzy Deutsche, Eva Braun. Some "wedding night" they must have had, knowing they would both soon be dead! Too bad for them. To salvage a familiar and previously misused quote: Sic semper tyrannis!!! Some theories hold Adolf didn't kill himself but was actually "helped" to his death by some of his own SS men at the last. Oh, I do hope so!

Quote: Ignaz
Reg, finally I got you:-) They married on April 29th, not 28th. And, by the way, the most detestable man in world history was not German, but Austrian. At least he was born there.

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Robin, I love 19th century lit also, but I wouldn't want to have lived without having read Agatha Christie, Carolyn Keene, P.G. Wodehouse, and scads of others! ;-) Somehow you've missed the massive media blitz about *Fifty Shades...* and sequels, and the ubiquitous and enthusiastic displays of them in stores. It seems to be the biggest thing since JK Rowling!

Quote: Robin
Dear Reg, I googled the title of the book as I had never heard of it. I rarely read anything later than the Nineteenth Century. I wonder if there is anything in here I can use. Hmmmmm.

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Hi Laurie, oh yes, i adore Agatha Christie, Carolyn Keene, P.G. Wodehouse, and many of the 20th Century American mystery writers, especially Ross McDonald. I also love those Lord Peter books. But still... I have read relatively little contemporary fiction.

The thing I love about the Kindle is all the fabulous stuff from 15th, 16th and 17th Century authors writing about ancient authors. You just don't get that in the average bookstore or local public library.

Yes, I definitely missed the Fifty Shades stuff. I never pay any attention to advertisements or commercials or media blitz's. I am totally out of the loop. I live in my own little world and although I am a boring conversationalist, I do find my own mind a fascinating place to be. LOL.

EDIT: Come to think of it, I have, of course, read a great deal of non-fiction from the 20th Century, mostly about art, history, philosophy and politics. And I love 20th Century plays, especially Tennessee Williams .... I guess I have read more post 19th Century stuff than I realized.

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Dear me, I couldn't live without murder mysteries, especially British! Give me a title like *Death in a Teapot*, *The Corpse Sang 'Rule Britannia'*, *Murder by Welsh*, or *The Widdnes Strangler*, and I'm a happy girl! :-)

Quote: Robin
Hi Laurie, oh yes, i adore Agatha Christie, Carolyn Keene, P.G. Wodehouse, and many of the 20th Century American mystery writers, especially Ross McDonald. I also love those Lord Peter books. But still... I have read relatively little contemporary fiction.

The thing I love about the Kindle is all the fabulous stuff from 15th, 16th and 17th Century authors writing about ancient authors. You just don't get that in the average bookstore or local public library.

Yes, I definitely missed the Fifty Shades stuff. I never pay any attention to advertisements or commercials or media blitz's. I am totally out of the loop. I live in my own little world and although I am a boring conversationalist, I do find my own mind a fascinating place to be. LOL.

EDIT: Come to think of it, I have, of course, read a great deal of non-fiction from the 20th Century, mostly about art, history, philosophy and politics. And I love 20th Century plays, especially Tennessee Williams .... I guess I have read more post 19th Century stuff than I realized.

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Quote: Laurie
Dear me, I couldn't live without murder mysteries, especially British! Give me a title like *Death in a Teapot*, *The Corpse Sang 'Rule Britannia'*, *Murder by Welsh*, or *The Widdnes Strangler*, and I'm a happy girl! :-)
Here's one that will keep us all happy for the rest of our lives - "The Hystery Bus Strangler"..

PS Reg, remember what Basil Faulty said in Fawlty Towers (aka Fatty Owls, Flay Otters, etc) - "Don't mention the war!". Not that he took his own advice, or got away with it, as he thought..

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

OMG--Borje

I have a bad feeling about this. Yikes!

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Quote: Robin
OMG--Borje
I have a bad feeling about this. Yikes!

Well, I just remembered Reg's word's when all seats were filled and the mysterious bus driver closed the doors: "No one gets on.. or off!"

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Hey, is it just me or has anyone else noticed that their waistline is shrinking as we're going back through the years?

Email  
Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Hah hah! You know, I still have those Woodstock trousers tucked away...maybe Alvin would be willing to part with them if they actually fit anyone.

Quote: Ian R
Hey, is it just me or has anyone else noticed that their waistline is shrinking as we're going back through the years?

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

i start my slimming today..

Re: The Magical Hystery Tour - chapter 17 (gradually nearing our destination).

Tee hee and a half! I was soooo skinny back then, sigh. What one calls model-thin. My figure has long since become a bit more matronly, and though I guess I shouldn't complain, the young girl that's still inside me doesn't like it one bit. She's decided I wanna be ultra-thin again for old times' sake. Looks like it's carrot cutlets and a trip to the gym for me! ;-)

Quote: Toni
Hah hah! You know, I still have those Woodstock trousers tucked away...maybe Alvin would be willing to part with them if they actually fit anyone.

Quote: Ian R
Hey, is it just me or has anyone else noticed that their waistline is shrinking as we're going back through the years?

Email