Reblogged from Fool of a Took!

cariboufox:

sunnylorraine:

if cara wagaman sees this, she should know what its from. but i doubt she does. ;DDD

Oh, I KNOW.

I watched this last night =D

Reblogged from a day in the life
Reblogged from Three Word Phrase

fuckyeahsciencefiction:

The First Men in the Moon
H.G. Wells. Indianapolis, Bowen-Merrill, 1901.

Illustrated by E. Herring with 12 plates. (8vo) 18.5x12 cm. (7¼x4½”), original dark blue cloth, spine gilt-lettered and front cover illustration in gilt; dust jacket. First Edition, second state binding.

Exceptionally rare first edition in dust jacket. A milestone in modern science fiction. The Bowen-Merrill edition preceded the London edition by about one month. This is the Currey second state binding with “Bobbs Merrill” on the spine.

Bleiler comments, “After ‘The First Men in the Moon’, Wells’s science fiction novels are never quite the same” and that “the last and most complex [of Wells’s early scientific romances] is ‘The First Men in the Moon’. The two first men, Bedford and Cavor are well-contrasted, the civilization of the Selenites is excellent both as horror and satire; and the novel abounds with wonderful passages of unforced description at which Wells is unrivaled. This lovely book also contains much of Wells’s delightful humor; it has kept the joints of his discourse oiled to this day”.

chaosthatsquiet:

They totally got Hawkeye’s species wrong.

(Gifs aren’t mine, they’re nicked from around. You know how it goes.)

foodographies:

Insalata Capresse. Recipe!!

foodographies:

Insalata Capresse. Recipe!!

Tags: mmmmmmmmmm
Reblogged from NⒺRD in L♥VE
Reblogged from Float on,
Tags: THE OFFICE
fuckyeahsciencefiction:

Lucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury Paul French (pseud. Isaac Asimov), 1952.
First Edition. Fourth in Asimov’s pseudonymous “Lucky Starr” series.

fuckyeahsciencefiction:

Lucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury
Paul French (pseud. Isaac Asimov), 1952.

First Edition. Fourth in Asimov’s pseudonymous “Lucky Starr” series.