Your what?
Is it any better with "howcatchem"-type detective shows (e.g., Columbo movies)? Or the "what really happened?" style that was the basic pattern of Banacek movies?she's convinced who did it the moment they're introduced, and a good 90% of the time she's right.
Oops sorry, my mom.Your what?
Edit: I'd like to add that I like it when an author begins each chapter with a quote that has something to do with that part of the story. Watership Down did that, and two authors I've been reading recently (Julie Klassen and Laura Frantz) do, too.
Have any of you ever done this? How do you choose your quotes? Past experience reading them in situ, or consulting a memorable quotes book? (Trek seems to like lit quotes as episode titles, too)
You asking anybody in particular, or everybody on the thread? And are you asking authors about their own works, or readers about the works of others, or all of the above?What's your favorite chapter heading quote?
This at the head of a chapter that has nothing to do with astronomy, and everything to do with outside-the-box problem-solving.For any problem, the simplest solution that actually works is usually the best, and unnecessary complexity is usually the result of assumptions that are completely intuitive, yet completely wrong. Copernicus, Kepler, and Newton each challenged wrong assumptions about the Solar System, and in so doing, they gave us models of it that were progressively both simpler and more accurate.
Which makes perfect sense, if it's still the one that's rather closely connected with the Purim story.The book I'm currently reading quotes Bible verses at the top of each chapter.
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