i will never understand why more people in their 80s don't commit felonies. you reach that age and surely there's something illegal you always wanted to do but didn't bc Consequences
dammit, GO FORTH GRANNIES!!! rob an armored car! hold up that bank! tunnel your way into fort knox! what are they gonna do, sentence you to 20 years? good fuckin luck with that
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Eddie just started a live-stream so like, twelve people are watching when Steve sticks his head into the room like, “Hey, Robin and I are going to the mall. Wanna come?”
Eddie: Can’t, I got a thing
Steve: You want anything? We’re going to the bookstore because Robin says I have to ‘buy her a new book.’ *rolls eyes*
Eddie: Uh, yeah, Steve. You destroyed the book she let you borrow
Steve: It’s still in one piece!
Eddie: Baby, you did not so much as crack the spine of the book as much as you shattered it like you were Bane and it was Batman
Steve: I don’t know what that means, Eddie.
Eddie: In the comics, Bane-
Steve: I cannot handle a nerd-planation right now. I’m buying you a notebook with a mom quote on it and some stickers, okay?
Eddie: Okay.
Also Eddie: *a couple weeks later, photographed by paparazzi walking out of a studio with a ‘Live, Laugh, Read Books notebook*
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Deutsch intensiv_Wortschatz B1 (German Edition)-Klett Books Download free in PDF format
Deutsch intensiv_Wortschatz B1 (German Edition)-Klett Books Download free in PDF format.
Elke Burger, Sarah Fleer, Arwen Schnack – Deutsch Intensiv Schreiben A1-Klett (2018)
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Christian Seiffert – Deutsch intensiv Schreiben A2-Klett (2019)
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Arwen Schnack – Deutsch intensiv_ Wortschatz B1 (German Edition)-Klett (2019)
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Arwen Schnack – Deutsch Intensiv – Wortschatz B2 (ALL NIVEAU ADULTE TVA 5,5%) (German Edition)-Klett (2021)
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Stefan Kreutzmüller…
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I like to think that we all be at nursing homes still talking about fictional dick
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But did we ever forget how Isreal said, 6 weeks ago: “We would never bomb hospitals, it was a misfired Hamas rocket” to “Now we totally bomb hospitals everywhere and brag about it now.”
A calculated attempt to normalise an unspeakable act.
At what point did bombing hospitals become okay?
Was there a point this happened? Can you take me there?
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Hana: Aya Kadoi Art Works (Page 41)
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(Not So) Steamy Saturday
"The times had brought changes to Whitebridge. Could Jane Weaver, R.N., take up her old life and duties. . . ?"
"'Jane, I'd like you to meet Dr. Boyd Daves. . . .' It took all of Jane's poise to cover her surprise. For the handsome man smiling politely at her from behind the wheel was black."
"A new black doctor had introduced the racial question . . . and Jane found not the threads of her old life but a new challenge to her heart."
Of the 500+ nurse romance novels from the 1940s to the early 1970s in our collection, it is rare to find one with African American main characters, let alone having them depicted on the cover, and even rarer are interracial relationships. In our collection, the nurse romances that do were all published after Civil Rights legislation of the mid-1960s. Such is the case this pulp novel, Homecoming Nurse by Rose Dana (one of the many pseudonyms for prolific pulp-fiction writer W.E.D. Ross, 1912-1995), published in New York by Lancer Books in 1968.
With the novel showcasing many of the social taboos of the time -- divorce, a small New England town forced to come to terms with contemporary racial issues, racially-exclusive country clubs, interracial relationships, mental illness, the village ice queen chasing after a married man -- we thought it would have the makings of a fairly steamy plot. But, alas, its narrative is plodding and pedestrian with barely a wisp of steam. Disappointing. To its credit, however, with the entire town fretting over the potential of miscegenation, the story does culminate in an interracial engagement (between the main character Jane's friend Maggie and Dr. Boyd, not Jane herself). Getting there, however, is tedious and about as exciting as an ice cream parlor on a sleepy New England main street.
View other nurse romance novels.
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