 Hello again, YouTube viewers, it is February 28, 2018. It is technically the final day of my $500 fundraiser. I got a donation Monday night, so my new total is $23. I will do my specific thank yous. I will name my donors in my monthly wrap-up, which I'll record tomorrow, and I will see you then. I'm not going to bother to set up my green screen and my special lighting today for this quick video. I'm going to do a book tag that I saw a couple of other booktubers do. Over the course of the past month, when so many of us on YouTube were racing to get our 1,000 subscribers and our 4,000 hours viewed, I became acquainted with a great many other small YouTubers, specifically booktubers, and I saw these two ladies do this Pixar book tag. There's Katie at Katie's booktube and Sophie at Sophie's Decaded Books. And I liked this Pixar book tag. I'm not particularly interested in Pixar, but I liked the nature of the questions, so I'm going to do it. And here we go. Question number one is inspired by cars, and the question is a book involving characters on a long journey. And the first thing that came to mind was the Well World series, which I've talked about a number of times and I reviewed it last year. Specifically, the book Exiles at the Well of Souls. All of the books involve the characters having to trek across the surface of the Well World planet, but Exiles at the Well of Souls is probably the most involved. Question number two, Inside Out, Books About the Mind. I immediately thought of I Am the Cheese. The picture I put together here is from the movie. I've read the book. I think the movie is better. If you've never seen the movie, I recommend you do. I like it quite a bit. It's one of my favorites. This one could also be about a character on a journey. It could be an answer to question number one as well. Question number three, Monsters Incorporated, a favorite creature from a book. The first thing that I thought of was Lioncat from the Saga comic books. Okay, questions four and five. I'm going to read together Finding Nemo and Brave. They are respectively best book dad and best book mom. I'm going to answer these questions after the next one. The next question being Toy Story, a book every kid should read. I said this very thing that every kid should read this book when I reviewed A Wrinkle in Time a few years ago, and I want to repeat that. A Wrinkle in Time is a book that everyone should be introduced to as soon as they can read. It's a great book. It's great science fiction too. And my answer has nothing to do with the fact that there's a new Disney movie adaptation of A Wrinkle in Time coming out. It has nothing to do with that. This is something that I said years ago. Besides, I think Disney already did A Wrinkle in Time movie, didn't they? Wasn't it for like the Disney Channel made for TV or something? It had Whoopi Goldberg in it. And this new one has Oprah in it. And these are not good things. Okay, back to the previous questions. You'll see why I'm answering this question now. Having given thought to the Toy Story answer, I realized that the mom and the dad in the book A Wrinkle in Time are a great mom and dad. They're great examples of fictitious moms and dads. Outside of that, I had a great deal of trouble thinking of good dads and good moms in books. I could think of a lot of bad ones. As a matter of fact, I just got finished reading The Book Authority by Jeff Vandermeer, which is the sequel to Annihilation. There's a very bad mom in that book. And one of my favorite books from two years ago, The Library at Mount Char, an extraordinarily bad father in that book. He just goes by the name Father. That's the only name you have for him. Okay, next to last question. Ratatouille, a fictional food you've always wanted to eat. The first thing I thought of here was in the movie Return to Oz when Dorothy is in the subterranean realm of the Gnome King. He serves Limestone Pie and molten silver. I always thought that looked great. Even though that would kill you if you actually ate it. I don't know if these come specifically from the books. They may have made this up for the movie. I read all of those early Oz books, by the way. Frank Baum wrote 14 Oz books and an author named Ruth Plumlee Thompson picked up after him and wrote something like 20 more. And today, I think there's more than 100 official Oz books, including some graphic novels by Eric Shanauer. Yeah, there's lots of them. And I read, I think 24. I think I read up to book 24. Those are weird books. I should talk about those someday. The Return to Oz movie, by the way, is one of my favorite movies. I was in college when this movie came out. So by all rights, I should have been too adult and too cynical to enjoy this film. But I loved it. It's still one of my favorite films. The Gnome King is one of the great movie villains of the 80s, if you ask me. And he has a great death scene. Final question. Coco, a book with an international setting at the Mountains of Madness by HP Lovecraft? That's in Antarctica. Okay, that's it for this book tag video. I'm not going to bother to tag anybody in particular. Anybody who sees this who wants to do it, please do. Thank you, Katie and Sophie for doing it and being the inspiration for this. Thank you to my my donor from Monday who I'll talk about tomorrow. And again, everybody, please donate, help support the channel. Bye. Thank you for watching. Please subscribe to my channel here on YouTube and please be sure to press that thumbs up button. That's how videos get recommended and seen. And please take a look at the link in the description below and go to my 50th Street page where you can become a sponsor.