[bookshare-discuss] Re: characters that make you smile

  • From: "Jim O'Neill" <jimoneill1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 13 Mar 2008 15:58:15 -0400

I remember them as well.

They came out in a book, and were done in order.

I will look around and see if I can find the book.



-----Original Message-----
From: EVAN REESE [mailto:mentat3@xxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2008 3:49 PM
To: bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bookshare-discuss] Re: characters that make you smile


There was a great set of stories published in Analog back in the eighties by

George R. R. Martin about a guy named Havlin Tuff. They were collected in 
one volume called Tuff voyaging. Tuff was kind of like Nero Wolfe in some 
ways, with a great fondness for mushrooms if my memory isn't failing me. He 
traveled around in this huge ship which he acquired by means I  forget at 
the moment, and getting into various troubles.

Evan

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "duane iverson" <diverson@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 10:05 PM
Subject: [bookshare-discuss] Re: characters that make you smile


>A little Science Fiction.
> For characters you can't beat the Hokah. Meter-tall teddy bears who 
>like
> to imitate other cultures. The Old Star Trek episode where Kirk and 
> company land on a planet much like 1920's Chicago is a pale tribute to 
> Poul Anderson and Gordon Dixon's stories. The complete Hokah stories are 
> collected in The Sound and The Furry up on Bookshare. I am luckey enough 
> to have preserved The Many Worlds of Pooul Anderson read by (who else) 
> Robert Donley. In there is the Sheriff of Canyon Gulch Which will roll you

> on the floor. even when you have read it before. Also try the High Crusade

> by Anderson.
> If you can find Double Star by Heinlein. Good but not as good as the 
> version read by Allen Hewitt. (Eat your hearts out people!
> I believe there is a good anthology on NLS edited by Stan Schmidt on 
> humorous Sci Fi.
> Also Charles Sheffield's The Complete McAndrew is good. He wrote a number 
> of stories about an attorney named Waldo who was always getting in to 
> scrapes, but I don't know if they were ever collected. They were an old in

> the Old Galaxy Magazine back in the 70's.
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "susan l. gerhart" <slger123@xxxxxxxxx>
> To: <bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 6:47 PM
> Subject: [bookshare-discuss] Re: characters that make you smile
>
>
> amanda cross  byc.  heilbrun.
> drinking english  ny prof dic.  Wed, 12 Mar 2008 19:20:11 -0400, 
> Estelnalissi wrote:
>
>
>>Dear Booksharian Friends,
>>
>>Junie B Jones, Kindergartener and First Grader  always makes me smile. 
>>I'm validating Junie B. Jones Is Captain Field Day this afternoon and 
>>Bookshare will soon have all of the books in both of the Junie B. 
>>Series.Junie B. is right up there with Ramona.
>>
>>Amelia Peabody is funny and Emerson, Father of Curses, such a blow 
>>hard, is no slouch, either!
>>
>>Agatha Raisin, who calls her female competition, "Old Trouts," Cheats 
>>in contests, bites off people's heads and gets her feelings easily 
>>hurt, cracks me up in the cozy mysteries by M. C. Beaton.
>>
>>My dear soft hearted Hagrid, in Harry Potter, who mops up his tears 
>>with tablecloths, knits and makes excuses for all creatures, even when 
>>they draw blood, lightens the mood and is my kind of hero.
>>
>>Touchy, self important, Hercule Perrot is mildly funny. I don't laugh 
>>out loud at him, but have to smile.
>>
>>Nero Wolfe and Archie are funny. Archie thinks he's such a babe and 
>>Nero is so spoiled. Archie is about the only person alive who would 
>>dare be sarcastic about or to Nero, but he thinks his boss has 
>>cornered the market when it comes to brains, and is ever loyal.
>>
>>And Stephanie Plum, that whole series makes me laugh out loud. Janet 
>>Evanovitch Rocks. Grandma Mazer, fan of funerals and grabber of high 
>>caliber weaponry, and Lula the ex hoe, diet queen, and the one who 
>>eggs people on in dangerous situations from her safe hiding place 
>>behind a couch which is big enough to conceal her, or from behind a 
>>mop where everything hangs out but she still thinks she's hiding. I 
>>may never get over Stephanie and Lula at the Elvis impersonators 
>>convention in Las Vegas!
>>
>>Can anyone remind me of the southern widow's name who is funny, too. 
>>She's in books like Blank takes a stand. Her dead husband left her 
>>well off and she took in his mistress and her young son. She lives 
>>across the street from a church where she terrorizes the minister. To 
>>raise money to save a trailer park she rides in a motor cycle rally 
>>practically kicking and screaming the whole way while I, the reader, 
>>was jealous.
>>
>>I admire authors who write humor. I'm impressed when they pull off a 
>>little humor. When they write series  sustaining humor throughout 
>>entire novels I'm agog! When I think about it, it seems successful 
>>writers of the humor fiction genre are the rarest. Any thoughts about 
>>that?
>>
>>Always with love,
>>
>>Lissi
>>
>>
>>----- Original Message -----
>>From: rita weyler
>>To: bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 4:40 PM
>>Subject: [bookshare-discuss] characters that make you smile
>>
>>
>>Hi all
>>Their are certain books that are always good for a smile.  I love the
>>Mrs. Pollifax books.    I can just picture this feisty grandmotherly
>>character taking on theCIA .
>>I like Ellis Peter's irrasible Amelia Peabody too.
>>What characters can you  turn to for a guaranteed smile?
>>Rita
>>Dear Booksharian Friends,    Junie B Jones, Kindergartener and First
>>Grader
>>always makes me smile. I'm validating Junie B. Jones Is Captain Field 
>>Day this afternoon and Bookshare will soon have all of the books in 
>>both of the
>>Junie B. Series.Junie B. is right up there with Ramona.     Amelia
>>Peabody is funny and Emerson, Father of
>>Curses, such a blow hard, is no slouch, either!    Agatha Raisin, who
>>calls her female competition,
>>"Old Trouts," Cheats in contests, bites off people's heads and gets her
>>feelings
>>easily hurt, cracks me up in the cozy mysteries by M. C. Beaton.     My
>>dear soft hearted Hagrid, in Harry Potter, who
>>mops up his tears with tablecloths, knits and makes excuses for all
>>creatures,
>>even when they draw blood, lightens the mood and is my kind of hero.
>>Touchy, self important, Hercule Perrot is mildly
>>funny. I don't laugh out loud at him, but have to smile.     Nero Wolfe
>>and Archie are funny. Archie thinks he's
>>such a babe and Nero is so spoiled. Archie is about the only person
>>alive who
>>would dare be sarcastic about or to Nero, but he thinks his boss has
>>cornered
>>the market when it comes to brains, and is ever loyal.     And Stephanie
>>Plum, that whole series makes me
>>laugh out loud. Janet Evanovitch Rocks. Grandma Mazer, fan of funerals
>>and
>>grabber of high caliber weaponry, and Lula the ex hoe, diet queen, and
>>the one
>>who eggs people on in dangerous situations from her safe hiding place
>>behind a
>>couch which is big enough to conceal her, or from behind a mop where
>>everything
>>hangs out but she still thinks she's hiding. I may never get over
>>Stephanie and
>>Lula at the Elvis impersonators convention in Las Vegas!    Can anyone
>>remind me of the southern widow's name
>>who is funny, too. She's in books like Blank takes a stand. Her dead
>>husband
>>left her well off and she took in his mistress and her young son. She
>>lives
>>across the street from a church where she terrorizes the minister. To
>>raise
>>money to save a trailer park she rides in a motor cycle rally
>>practically
>>kicking and screaming the whole way while I, the reader, was jealous.
>>I admire authors who write humor. I'm impressed
>>when they pull off a little humor. When they write series  sustaining
>>humor
>>throughout entire novels I'm agog! When I think about it, it seems
>>successful
>>writers of the humor fiction genre are the rarest. Any thoughts about
>>that?
>>Always with love,    Lissi    ----- Original Message -----   From:  rita
>>
>>weyler   To:  bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx   Sent:  Wednesday, March
>>12, 2008 4:40
>>PM  Subject:  [bookshare-discuss] characters
>>that make you smile   Hi all  Their are certain books that are always
>>good for
>>a smile.  I love the Mrs. Pollifax books.    I can just
>>picture this feisty grandmotherly character taking on theCIA
>>.   I like Ellis Peter's irrasible Amelia Peabody
>>too.  What characters can you  turn to for a
>>guaranteed smile?  Rita
>
> To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank Email to
> bookshare-discuss-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>  Put the word 'unsubscribe' by itself in the Subject line.  To get a list 
> of available commands, put the word 'help' by itself in the subject line.
>
> 

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank Email to 
bookshare-discuss-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Put the word 'unsubscribe' by itself in the Subject line.  To get a list
of available commands, put the word 'help' by itself in the subject line.

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank Email to
bookshare-discuss-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Put the word 'unsubscribe' by itself in the Subject line.  To get a list of 
available commands, put the word 'help' by itself in the subject line.

Other related posts: