Rocket Summer Week 4 Wrap: Invaders of Space

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024

Комментарии • 10

  • @michaelk.vaughan8617
    @michaelk.vaughan8617 2 месяца назад +1

    Roy reads anything…of Space! Awesome stuff. Thanks for joining along for the Rocket 🚀 fun!

    • @royreadsanything
      @royreadsanything  2 месяца назад

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 Brilliant event 👏 👌 🙌

  • @duanespurlock5879
    @duanespurlock5879 2 месяца назад +1

    "Jeopardy and a bit of romance . . . " Not necessarily mutually exclusive occurrences.
    Nice cover art. Great sort of story to read on the bus.
    I love nefarious plots! Especially when they include Edgar Rice Burroughs-ish coincidences (such as the target spaceship also includes the hero's fiancé).
    Nice Rocket Summer reading! Thanks for sharing these fun books.

  • @arronjameshook
    @arronjameshook 2 месяца назад +2

    I reckon it's because they're Swiss. I mean a country that invented cuckoo clocks and fondue is going to produce strange 'uns!

  • @GenreBooks23
    @GenreBooks23 2 месяца назад +1

    We need a video of what the correct pronunciations are: “Leinster”, “Leiber”, “Dunsany”, “Aaron Read a Book”…

    • @royreadsanything
      @royreadsanything  2 месяца назад

      @@GenreBooks23 ..."Crowley" and "Cabell"...

    • @GenreBooks23
      @GenreBooks23 2 месяца назад +1

      @@royreadsanything there appeared a bit of verse by Bert Leston Taylor in his Chicago Tribune column, "A Line o' Type or Two":
      The Seething Question
      In all literary gabble
      Concerning Mr. J.B. Cabell
      No one has yet got up to tell
      If it be Cabell or Cabell.
      To which, Burton Rascoe (himself by that time a correspondent of Cabell's) replied:
      You may slip it to the rabble
      That his name is James B. Cabell.
      This appeared in the 27 May 1918 issue of The Chicago Tribune.

    • @royreadsanything
      @royreadsanything  2 месяца назад

      @@GenreBooks23 What a supremely elegant explanation!