-- Star gaze — Cook on an open fire — Watch bats fly over head at dusk — Sleep outside on warm nights — Tell spooky
stories by candle light — Cook marshmallows and smores
Not exact matches
I realize I was merely at someone else's house for dinner on a Saturday night, not holding a
candle close to Jessica's
story of surviving a brain aneurysm, but we can relate to
stories by way of our own reality.
I love these
candles in part because of the places and
stories they take as their inspiration: The minty Balmoral is inspired
by damp and green Scottish meadows; the Carmelite
by shadows on stone walls and church
candles... a quiet cloister doesn't sound too bad about now.
As mentioned in a previous post my perfect date for Valentine's Day would have to be a date night in with my husband over
candle light dinner, but after watching the movie trailer for Winter's Tale (which appears to be the perfect love
story and just in time for love day) I'm thinking maybe we could instead go to the movie theater to watch the movie followed
by Date Night in with dinner at home.
I can?t tell you how many times I have felt better going to sleep just
by lighting a few
candles and reading an uplifting book or
story, and falling asleep wearing my signature piece of lingerie.
Sixteen
Candles, a coming - of - age tale about a high - school sophomore (Molly Ringwald) coping with a crush and her chaotic family, was sort of a proto — Breakfast Club, with a simple
story driven
by deeper characterization.
I have lit the first of seven
candles to write my
story by.
A Partial History of Lost Causes
by Jennifer duBois Amelia Anne Is Dead and Gone
by Kat Rosenfield And When She Was Good
by Laura Lippman Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk
by Ben Fountain Don't Ever Get Old
by Daniel Friedman Every Love
Story Is a Ghost
Story by D.T. Max Happiness Is a Chemical in the Brain
by Lucia Perillo HHhH
by Laurent Binet Let's Pretend This Never Happened
by Jenny Lawson Lots of
Candles, Plenty of Cake
by Anna Quindlen New Ways to Kill Your Mother
by Colm Tóibín No One is Here Except All of Us
by Ramona Ausubel Red Ruby Heart in a Cold Blue Sea
by Morgan Callan Rogers Say Nice Things About Detroit
by Scott Lasser Tell the Wolves I'm Home
by Carol Rifka Brunt The End of Your Life Book Club
by Will Schwalbe The Liar, the Bitch and the Wardrobe
by Allie Kingsley The People of Forever Are Not Afraid
by Shani Boianjiu There Is No Dog
by Meg Rosoff This Book Is Full of Spiders: Seriously, Dude, Don't Touch It
by David Wong This Is How You Lose Her
by Junot Díaz What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank
by Nathan Englander Where'd You Go, Bernadette
by Maria Semple Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
Mohammed's gold and silver nameplates commemorate those black men and women who were killed
by police in 2016, and his penchant for using votive
candles in his photographs takes aim at this loss of innocence; however, here perhaps he is looking at objecthood, and even that of a photograph, as a means to tell
stories of resistance and hope.
After a meal and private concert,
stories about the catacombs will be told
by candle light before bed beckons — making the winners the first people ever to wake up inside the Paris catacombs.