I love to read - and keep finding good stuff to tell about.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Tubeless Toilet Paper!
I don't know how they're going to do this, but what a great green idea! It hasn't come to the Midwest yet, so I'll have to wait to try it. Read more on this press release from Kimberly-Clark.
I love it that they are going to price this the same as TP with tubes "to make it easier for the consumer." Um, between us, Kimberly (you, too, Clark), I figure you're gonna save a bundle by leaving out the cardboard tubes, so why not give us a price break?! I'm willing to risk a little confusion in the supermarket if I can save a little $$!!!
You are so right! But maybe it will start a trend. After all, they had to let other companies start marketing "popup" facial tissues, right? Maj. Reader
Entree: A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler. I love to come back to this author every few years or so. Her books always take place in Baltimore (where she lives now), but the stories are so real, so humorous, so human. She writes about everyday people who are like us, yet so unique (aren't we all?).
Side: Last Bus to Wisdom by Ivan Doig. Think of an 11 yr old kid in 1951 living on a Montana ranch, where his grandma is the cook for the ranchhands. When Grandma has to have a mysterious female operation, Donal is sent to Wisconsin to spend the summer with Aunt Kate and Uncle Dutch. Bossy Kate puts Donal back on the dog bus to Montana, but Dutch decides to join him. Very enjoyable adventures follow.
Side: Reading in the Dark by Seamus Deane. This was the only book in my neighborhood library from the Book Lust list on Irish authors. Another book about the Troubles.
Side: This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance! by Jonathan Evison. A recent widow decides to go on the cruise to Alaska that she and her late husband had planned. Harriet's trip allows her to look back at her life in a surprising way. This book about an older woman by a male author is supposed to be "funny and moving." Ok, let's see.,,
Dessert: Northanger Abbey by Val McDermid. I love almost everything by or about Jane Austen, so I was happy to hear that British author, Joanna Trollope, has enlisted some colleagues in writing a series of modern variations of Austen's classics. Trollope wrote a version of Sense & Sensibility, which I have yet to read, but this is a crime writer's version of Austen's mystery novel.
I love it that they are going to price this the same as TP with tubes "to make it easier for the consumer." Um, between us, Kimberly (you, too, Clark), I figure you're gonna save a bundle by leaving out the cardboard tubes, so why not give us a price break?! I'm willing to risk a little confusion in the supermarket if I can save a little $$!!!
ReplyDeleteYou are so right! But maybe it will start a trend. After all, they had to let other companies start marketing "popup" facial tissues, right? Maj. Reader
ReplyDelete