While awaiting his death in the Tower of London, More wrote this most unusual example of prison literature, a spiritual treatise peppered with comic stories
about nagging wives and overscrupulous donkeys.
Not exact matches
Two thoughts: 1) it's interesting that in this quote he goes from talking
about «some women» who
nag to «a
wife is just like that».
Aaron's
wife, Michelle (Regina Hall), doesn't help matters by reminding him she's ovulating and demanding he do something
about it; his mother (Loretta Devine) is also
nagging him
about giving her a grandchild, when she's not bragging
about Aaron's younger brother, the successful author Ryan (Lawrence).
No doubt in another lame attempt at shock, The Cottage is also needlessly misogynistic, as the women in it have no function beyond the role of one - dimensional ball - breaking shrew: endless references to pussified Peter's
nagging «fat pig» of a
wife are bandied
about while Tracey screams obscenities at the top of her lungs and emasculates our hapless anti-heroes at every turn.
Ana de Armas is good but she is wasted in a dull, no personality
wife role where her sole function is to
nag David
about lying.
The only I reason I stared searching for publishing is my
wife is
nagging me
about publishing my book I started back in 1984.
This happens when a
wife asks a husband to communicate his weekend plans and he interprets it as being mothered because it harks back to childhood
nagging about his whereabouts, or when a husband expresses concern that his
wife is working too much, and she sees it as neediness on his part, wanting her around more, not concern that she is exhausted.