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Wondrous Ladies' Room: Difference between revisions

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* In the [[Isaac Asimov]] novel ''[[The Caves of Steel]]'', the people of the overcrowded, quasi-socialist 47th century use communal bathroom-shower-laundry facilities called "Personals". [[Truth in Television|While men are instructed from childhood that it is]] ''[[Truth in Television|never]]'' [[Truth in Television|permissible to speak in the Personal, women often socialize in their Personals and this fact is an object of fascination and confusion for men.]]
* In Louis Sachar's ''There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom'', Bradley assumes the girls' room is nicer than the boys', with colored water in the toilets and fountains, perhaps. When he does hide in one, he finds it's pretty much like the boys'.
* In ''[[Harry Potter and Thethe Chamber of Secrets (novel)|Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets]]'' the hidden entrance to said Chamber was behind the sink in a girl's restroom. Come to think of it, all the cool bathroom-related stuff that happens in the series (with the exception of the Prefect's bathroom in [[Harry Potter and Thethe Goblet of Fire (novel)|the fourth book]]) takes place in ladies' rooms. Of course, that particular bathroom is haunted by Moaning Myrtle and known to flood fairly often, so 'wondrous' may not be the best term..
* In ''[[The Vampire Files|Blood On The Water]]'', Jack overhears two gangsters searching a ladies' restroom for intruders. One of them voices surprise that the toilets look no different from those in men's rooms.
* Aluded to in ''[[Septimus Heap]]'': Since ghosts can only go to places they visited in life, Alther cannot spy on the evil cabal's innermost workings since they meet in a converted former lady's room.
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