Lectures on Faith, by Joseph Smith, page 14
Two or Three Things I Know For Sure, by Dorothy Allison, page 70
Writing with Style, by John R. Trimble, page 25
Reading Rhetorically, page 118
Botany of Desire, by Michael Pollan, page 86
Modern Korean Literature, edited by Chung Chong-Wha, page 28
Hallowe'en Party, by Agatha Christie, page 2
The Missouri Review, page 44
Writing as Reflective Action, page 258
Dracula, by Bram Stoker, page 360
The Milionaire Next Door, by Thomas J. Stanley, Ph.D. and William D. Danko, Ph.D., page 20
The Tale of Genji, by Murasaki Shikibu, page 231
Great Books, by David Denby, page 278
5 comments:
i hate you and i think you know why.
I LOVE "The Millionaire Next Door." Also, this post.
(And my mom saw your comment about Kevin Costner and wrote me back to say "he shouldn't be on the list - he's creepy.")
A completely genius post. And comforting to know someone whose BYU ID card rivals my own. (I left mine out in the sun one summer and it curled up. Rather than get a new one, I ironed it flat.)
For the modern Korean literature bookmark, I'm assuming BYOB stands for Bring Your Own Bulgogi?
Suppose I sent you some exciting new bookmarks, and you sent me those Cafe Rio cards... How 'bout it?
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