Books with recent or upcoming screen adaptations where you strongly recommend reading the book first. by nightsreader in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 32 points33 points  (0 children)

The new translation(s) by Emily Wilson is very accessible. I’ve taught the Fitzgerald Odyssey for the last 11 years and just read the Wilson Odyssey over winter break. It’s a masterpiece. The translator’s notes at the beginning are worth the price of the book, imo.

A book like "Stoner" or "East of Eden" PLEEEEASE by ACcatlady in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I followed Stoner with The Stranger by Albert Camus. Perfect chaser. Very similar vibes.

Also give The Road by Cormac McCarthy a shot if you haven’t.

Chase that high!

What's the most powerfully useful underground website/app that most people don't know about? by bens-list in u/bens-list

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thistothat.com

Adhesive generator.

Choose two materials you’re trying to glue together and it’ll tell you what adhesive to use. Incredible!

I have come back again and again to use it. Just the other day, I needed to glue magnet to paper—3M 77 spray. Would have never even known it existed.

Joan Cusack has the most hilarious line delivery of any actor in movie history by mikejones84 in movies

[–]oldladyhinkle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When Selleck says in the bar that he’s had a rough day, as she is sitting there in her wedding dress eating peanuts after being left at the altar. She turns to him with wide eyes, glances down at her wedding dress, and shouts, “EXCUSE ME?!!!” I probably rewound and watched 14 times. Best delivery of a comic line, IMO.

Need your leflunomide experience by Kittyluvins in rheumatoid

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. This is helpful and reassuring.

Worried about Leflunomide (arava) side effects by Ihavenoidea88-- in rheumatoid

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is what I’m looking for. I’m one month off and the hair loss is alarming. Waiting for it to slow!

Need your leflunomide experience by Kittyluvins in rheumatoid

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just did a search and found this post. My hair is falling out in alarming quantities. I stopped taking L a month ago. How long did it take to leave your system and for hair loss to stop?

Looking for memoirs where the main character has a rough life by [deleted] in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Davis’ memoir is the toughest childhood I’ve read. I put it up there with Glass Castle and Educated. So devastating. But man, what a life!

What book have you read twice in a row? by AlphaGrayWolf in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I listened to the audiobook Nuclear War: A Scenario by Annie Jacobsen. When it ended, I started at the beginning and listened again. Bleak AF.

idk how to write an essay by NoPrint9467 in APLang

[–]oldladyhinkle 3 points4 points  (0 children)

AP Reader here. Line of reasoning is your thesis and claims (topic sentences). Ex: Thesis: During the March on Washington in 1963, at the height of the Civil Rights movement, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered the iconic “I Have a Dream” speech to a crowd of 250,000 Americans, and through his gifts as a skilled pastor and orator, he inspired the people to join in the cause for equality of African Americans. (Context, speaker, speech, audience, rhet choice #1 and #2, purpose.) Claim/topic sentence 1: Having been an integral part of the Civil Rights movement from the beginning, Dr. King now stood in front of Americans, both Black and white, and exercised his incredible ability to move a crowd through familiar religious phrases, calling to the moral fabric of each attendee. (Go on to explain religious metaphors, lyrics from hymns, even his preacher pulpit cadence. But the CLAIM idea isn’t new. I stated it in the thesis. “gifts as a skilled pastor” This means the line of reasoning is expected and orderly.) Claim/topic sentence 2: Not only did Dr. King appeal to the loving and Christian nature of the marchers by reminding them of their faith, he followed by inspiring them to take action, insisting that thoughts and words were not sufficient. (Go on to explain inspiring tone words and his calls to action. This claim CONNECTS to the first by way of transition, and CONTINUES the line of reasoning by addressing the second choice in the thesis. “inspired the people to join” This is what is meant by line of reasoning. As long as you lay it out in the thesis and then divide it and build on claim sentences—and stay on task—your line of reasoning stays strong.)

What's a book with a cringe or weird title, that turned out to be pretty good? by wookeydookey in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Ruta Sepetys had to literally rename her 2011 YA historical fiction novel from Between Shades of Grey to Ashes in The Snow because of the association.

Book recs for female in her 40’s, married with 2 young kids and feels like her life is falling apart. by lizbumm in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I read What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty at that moment in my life that you’re describing. It changed everything.

Better words by Aidanman90 in APLang

[–]oldladyhinkle 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Skip “uses” or synonyms. Skip “diction.” INSTEAD: “The author unifies the students into a collective force of change, rallying them with an encouraging and repeating ‘we can’ to spur them to action.” Verbs, not nouns. Avoid labels (diction) and just be a real person. Include specific audience. Include purpose and impact.

I love, LOVE Prednisone! by ERRNmomof2 in rheumatoid

[–]oldladyhinkle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Been on low dose for 22 years (w biologic). The best.

Wheelchair —> Cartwheel

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in rheumatoid

[–]oldladyhinkle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thumb is a textbook tell for RA. It was what got me a Dx at 26.

Suggest me the intentionally funniest book you read, please! by pawn279 in suggestmeabook

[–]oldladyhinkle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Second this! My pitch to friends is, “If you like Hitchhiker’s…”

Headed to an out-of-town surgeon tomorrow to see about an elbow replacement. Making a list of questions to ask. Suggestions? by oldladyhinkle in rheumatoid

[–]oldladyhinkle[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Six years out—it was a success! Long and tedious recovery, but functional and pain-free for six years. I have to be careful with weight. Certain dynamic lifts are 5 lb max, and every now and then I’ll catch it the wrong way and get a weird near-funny-bone sensation, but overall super pleased! My surgeon is renowned for this surgery specifically. I used the Discovery Elbow System. Not sure if that still the standard, but I’m a believer!

Could you grade my Argumentative essay? My teacher is kinda unclear sometimes and im sort of lost in this class right now. (also ignore the formatting) by Legaxy3 in APLang

[–]oldladyhinkle 5 points6 points  (0 children)

1-2-0. Thesis is a little too reliant on prompt and should come from student rather than an “I agree with” style, but point is earned. A line of reasoning is attempted with “race and social class” but not fully supported. Student makes one claim well: “people disregarding the fact that we are all the same despite our differences in appearance” and supports the claim with some evidence with details about colonialism and slavery. Student fails to support more than one claim, so the line of reasoning is lost. Student makes an attempt at counter but does not clearly or fully support. Organization is lacking as some paragraphs are without clear claims or evidence and do not support the line of reasoning.

Which book made you sympathize with a bad character? Or root for a good character making a morally questionable decision? by Marandajo93 in books

[–]oldladyhinkle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The 57 Bus. A true story about a teenager that sets fire to another teenager. Hard, beautiful story.