Have games, will travel: trapped in travel limbo? Gladstone's Games to Go will set you free.Next time your mind is adrift in a travel dead zone--security lines, waiting lounges, awkward moments of silence between attractive men who don't speak English--whip out your pen! Jim Gladstone's idea for a backpack-friendly book of portable pen and paper travel games was hatched while waiting for midnight mass at Venice's St. Mark's St. Mark's could refer to:
tr. & intr.v. com·pli·cat·ed, com·pli·cat·ing, com·pli·cates 1. To make or become complex or perplexing. 2. To twist or become twisted together. adj. 1. it." (The resulting variations, Dueling The fighting of two persons, one against the other, at an appointed time and place, due to an earlier quarrel. If death results, the crime is murder. It differs from an affray in this, that the latter occurs on a sudden quarrel, while the former is always the result of design. Danglers and Wellhung Man, appear in the book.) Also included are more than 20 games that don't require much in the way of common language. "It's a great way to engage--and flirt--across language barriers," offers Gladstone. Try playing Star Qualities: HOW TO PLAY Point out someone who resembles a celebrity (already a major gay pastime). Whisper the celebrity's name and a "likeness percentage." For example, "95% Dolly Parton par·ton n. Any of the point particles believed to be a constituent of hadrons, now known as quarks. No longer in technical use. [part(icle) + -on1.] ." The other players then try to identify whom you're referring to. The game becomes more challenging when the likenesses are lesser and played in combination, for instance "This person looks about 20% Harvey Fierstein and 30% RuPaul." HOW TO LOSE Get caught gawking (or worse, pointing) at a stranger and giggling. |
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