Sphene Community Tools
Community
Copyright © 2007-2018 by
Herbert Poul
Home
Downloads
Documentation
Forums
Users
Issues
You are not logged in.
Login
Register
Change Language:
German
English
French
Polish
Korean
Russian
what drug class is levitra
Sandbox
/
Hehe
[
Edit
]
Back to Snip
Warning:
You are editing an old version: By Anonymous at 2014-02-18 04:08:43
Title:
Body:
Thanks for the comments, all.Eric: Keep me<a href="http://kqkidc.com"> ptsoed</a> on the progress of the novel.David: "Sadness of the Executioner" is a Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser tale written from the point of view of the Newhon god, Death. It's not Leiber's best, but it's a good example of how swords-and-sorcery doesn't have to be written over the shoulder of the lone, strong hero.Taranich: I haven't seen a lot of Disney films, or the Brave Little Toaster, but the ones that spring to mind feature villains that are evil for evil's sake. I'm thinking specifically of Ursula from The Little Mermaid and Gaston from Beauty and the Beast, two of the Disney films with which I'm more familiar. Both are presented as unredeemably evil (in Gaston's case, more of a stupid/vainglorious version of evil) and we're expected to dislike them from the get-go.The difference with Lots-o' in my opinion is that his dark half is explained, and a reason is provided for his wickedness. Woody hears his story from the clown and sympathizes with him. I at least expected Lots-o' to accept Woody's helping hand, and to realize that his abandonment was a cruel twist of fate, not a reason for ultimate despair. My older daughter was surprised he didn't accept, either.Yeah, strapped forever to the front of a garbage truck... yikes. I actually recoiled a bit from that.
Tags:
Comma separated list of tags.
Captcha:
Please enter the result of the above calculation.
Change Message:
*
See
WikiDocumentation
on how to format your input.