Cutting a fine figure

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In childhood, I would have hungered for the Kammit action figure. In my twenties, I would have been quite mad for the Jane Austen action figure, and even now I admit a pang; I could hide her in my bonnet, where she would whisper the most deliciously prim gossip.

I can think of one friend who knows a hawk from a handsaw, and very likely can tell a doll from an action figure. Another friend would ponder, weak and weary, over this, or possibly bury it under the floorboards.

The only action figure I have ever owned was given me by a fellow geek in the early stages of courting, and an astonishingly successful gesture it was. That Elsa had twelve points of articulation, her own electrode, and a fully replaceable head, just like me! (A few years later, the same geek swiped my Bride while I was packing my things. Ah, love.)

But even my lost Elsa pales when I gaze upon the wonder, the horror, that is Hieronymus Bosch action figures. My hands actually clench and grasp at the empty air, so potent is my desire to possess them.

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2 Comments

sgazzetti said:

Would the Jane Austen action figures be anywhere near the "Remains of the Day" lunchboxes?

Elsa said:

Yes, and just next to the "House of Mirth" jokebooks.

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This page contains a single entry by Elsa published on August 29, 2005 5:22 PM.

50 book update: I read dreck! was the previous entry in this blog.

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Elsa: Yes, and just next to the "House of Mirth" jokebooks....

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