From Act I Scene II of the play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare:
BRUTUS
I would not, Cassius, yet I love him well.
But wherefore do you hold me here so long?
What is it that you would impart to me?
If it be aught toward the general good,
Set honor in one eye and death i’ th’ other
And I will...
In accordance with our meta agreement to have topic challenges and a later meta agreement to have topic challenges lasting for two months and overlapping by one month, it is time to announce the June–July 2021 topic challenge.
Based on the number of votes in the proposals thread (+7), the sixth t...
I read this novel somewhere around 2010 (2006-2016, can't be much more precise than that). It was in English, probably an American writer. It might have been the first in a series, probably for young adults.
The main character is a young woman who's a somewhat skilled/notorious assassin. Somehow ...
http://epathshala.nic.in/QR/books/12Vistas/The_Enemy.pdf
Above is the link to the above text. (starts from Page 3)
I would like to have the detailed summary of the above text....
I'm an avid reader of cozy detective fiction (C. Auguste Dupin, Sherlock Holmes, Father Brown, &c.) and noticed naturally that certain categories exist (or that's the notion I have) even within that single subgenre (my preferred genre is: cozy quaint traditional golden age detective fiction, I'm ...
What's the etiquette for improving on an old [bug] post for meta-se? One of the bugs I found, its dupe is much less detailed than what I could write up. Doesn't seem fit for an edit and I'm not sure how an answer would go down.
@Bookworm I'm not sure what to make of this question. The "categories" they've identified aren't hard-and-fast lines - who ever said you can't have a "spooky story" when people are dying "one after another"?? - and the overlap and subjectivity over what counts as a category or not is annoying me. That said, I'm not sure if their categories even matter if they're looking for academic literature on (subjective) categories, which I doubt exists as they imagine it.