(11-04-2021, 11:15 PM)HighSpeed Wrote: I kid you not, but offhand I cannot think of a soap that has been on my radar as long as Beaudelaire. A coincidence? Who's to say, but Beaudelaire it is! Hopefully its journey to my mailbox will be quicker and less fraught with escapades than Dantès!HighSpeed, you're tempting me to put down Moby Dick and pick up the Count! I read that fat book when I was only 14. I loved it so much I had to ration myself to thirty pages a night. Got me through a long Wyoming winter. It wasn't until many years later that I realized my version was considerably abridged. I missed nearly half of the plot! Now I'm bound and determined to go through it all stem to stern ... just as soon as I'm done with Moby Dick (Barrister & Mann Leviathan), Robinson Crusoe (Sir Henry's Island Estate), Crime and Punishment (Barrister & Mann Cologne Russe), Virgil's Eclogues (Barrister & Mann Le Grande Chypre), Don Quixote (Barrister & Mann Seville), ... too many books, too much soap!
OT1H I confess skepticism about pairing books with soaps, but OTOH the issue is of no matter to me. To me, this is mainly a chance to get reacquainted with an old friend (the book), but with a bonus chance to make the acquaintance of a new soap. If you knew how long Monte Cristo has sat on my shelf, you would understand how much I appreciate your help Bouki. The unabridged Monte Cristo has 117 chapters (which average almost 11 pages each), and reading a chapter a day would take almost four months. I doubt things will play out that way here at Casa Highspeed, since for me, fiction books tend to be either non-stop page turners or dust magnets. I doubt Monte Cristo will ever be a dust magnet, at least not a permanent magnet.
In any case, on February 24, 1815, the lookout at Notre-Dame de la Garde signaled the arrival of the three-master Pharaon, coming from Smyrna, Trieste, and Naples. ...
Have a great read and a lot of great shaves. I hope you enjoy Beaudelaire as much as I do!