Brenda Starr by June Brigman and Mary Schmich

?fh=78759587e7750cfbe9bd76ab4e8e565d

Comments (13) Jump to Comments Form

  1. Margueritem

    MargueritemGenius_badge said, 2 months ago

    Papa, good guy, or bad guy……?

  2. Newenglandah

    Newenglandah said, 2 months ago

    Now, how could a guy lying in a sick bed with a devoted daughter and a wealthy brother that won’t help him be a bad guy?

  3. shades_is_here

    shades_is_here said, 2 months ago

    I think the guy is faking it.

  4. basilfan

    basilfan said, 2 months ago

    I think he is supposed to be dead.

  5. Doctor Toon

    Doctor ToonGenius_badge said, 2 months ago

    Let’s see if Brenda can help him feel better.

  6. Joe Allen Doty

    Joe Allen Doty said, 2 months ago

    Uncle Taj, Carina’s papa’s brother, thinks that the man lying down is dead.

    Taj is the bad guy in this story line.

  7. Susan001

    Susan001 said, 2 months ago

    I’m surprised that Carina knows the meaning of the word “journalist”. Girls in India aren’t well-educated–even in the upper castes.

  8. HARVIN GWIN

    HARVIN GWIN said, 2 months ago

    Brenda specializes in happy endings.The child needs to be educated.Journalists,certainly American journalists are a laughing stock.

  9. amm56

    amm56 said, 2 months ago

    Actually women in India are well educated. They even become doctors!

  10. 2cats

    2cats said, 2 months ago

    Our family is half Indian half American. The female cousins over there are mostly lawyers and better educated than our American side.

  11. kab2rb

    kab2rb said, 2 months ago

    And what does that say about the teachers. Children and teenagers have to be willing to learn.

  12. Jo Jo

    Jo Jo said, 2 months ago

    It’s all about you, Brenda.

  13. sottwell

    sottwell said, 2 months ago

    I have a friend from a very wealthy Indian family; the aunts and his grandmothers were all very well educated, his sister is a pediatrician in England. The entire family speaks only English, having done so for generations. They were all educated in Europe, mostly in private schools in the UK.