March 02, 2014
— Open Blogger

"See How Important I Am, Daddy? Daddy? Please Notice Me, Daddy!"
Good morning morons and moronettes and welcome to AoSHQ's prestigious Sunday Morning Book Thread.
The Tyranny of Cool
Greg Gutfeld (author of The Joy of Hate: How to Triumph over Whiners in the Age of Phony Outrage) has a new book coming out: Not Cool: The Hipster Elite and Their War on You is worthy of purchase based on the title alone.
And the Amazon blurb is even better:
From politics to the personal, from fashion to food, from the campus to the locker room, the desire to be cool has infected all aspects of our lives. At its most harmless, it is annoying. At its worst, it is deadly, on a massive scale. The Cool are the termites of life, infiltrating every nook and cranny and destroying it from within. The Cool report the news, write the scripts, teach our children, run our government—and each day they pass judgment on those who don’t worship at the altar of their coolness. The cool fawn over terrorists, mock the military, and denigrate employers. They are, in short, awful people.
The bad news is that this book isn't available until March 18th. The good news is that it is also available on Kindle.
This is a point I have argued with liberals: "Cool? Of course we're not cool. We're Republicans for crying out loud! We're the adults in the room. We're the ones who wash the dishes and put away the toys after the kids are all in bed. And who get up and go to work the next morning."
First Arab eBookstore Launches, Few Arrests Made
An older (Feb. 7th) GoodEreader news item reports:
With the Cairo Book Fair wrapping up this week–amidst controversy, as journalists were arrested for possessing cameras and video equipment to cover the event–one exciting launch took place with critical support from Vodafone Egypt. The first dedicated Arab ebookstore, Kotobi.com, launched from their stage at the fair, bringing several hundred Arab titles from nearly forty publishers to digital devices.
Why they would stage a public event and then arrest journalists for covering it makes no sense.
I thought this was interesting:
According to the Kotobi website (translated), “Statistics show that readership levels in the Arab World are significantly lower than those among other world populations. And because we believe that reading is a key ingredient for the development of any nation, we’ve taken it upon ourselves to play a role in supporting the Arabic reading ecosystem to the benefit of raising readership levels in the Arabic language.”
This is a noble aspiration, but I wonder if they know what this means? If every Arab citizen down to the humblest peasant and streetsweeper can read, that means that they will be able to read books other than the Koran. Is that what the Kotobi backers want? I'd bet that there's a substantial number of Muslim authorities that absolutely do not want this. Certainly this isn't what the jihadis want. Nor their sympathizers, either, I'd expect.
So I predict that it won't be long before Kotobi comes under some sort of attack, either by cyberspace or by physical threats from the outside, and it won't be from the Great Satan, but by their own brethren.

A Tale of Modern Dating
Lisa De Pasquale, who blogs at The Conversation and was formerly a CPAC organizer, has written a book called Finding Mr. Righteous, a memoir of looking for love in DC among guys on the right.
In his review entitled The Racy Memoir That Will Rock CPAC, Breitbart contributor Joel Pollack writes
My colleague Lisa De Pasquale has written a lively Bridget Jones-style memoir of dating in the conservative movement, Finding Mr. Righteous...[that] pulls back the veil to reveal the hot-blooded desires (and, occasionally, earnest romantic ambitions) of conservatives who are trying to balance faith and desire, sex and politics. Along the way, she describes her own journey towards faith, encountering a new religion with each new romance. There's an atheist, a Catholic, a Quaker, and a Jew--and they even walk into bars, often at conservative conferences...Ann Coulter, one of many illustrious names to blurb De Pasquale's book, writes that it is "[a] true Christian story, disguised as racy Chick Lit." It's more than that, though: it's also journalism.
Barnes & Noble - Still Not Dead
First, how much do you think B&N has lost on the Nook since its introduction in 2011? Go on, guess.
The Nook was predicted to become extinct in 2013 due to market pressures, but that didn't happen, and B&N is still struggling to make a game of it:
Since fiscal 2014 began, approximately 190 NOOK positions have been eliminated both through reductions and attrition...Last quarter Barnes and Noble...controls roughly about 20% of the eBook market, whereas a year ago they had 27%. The bookseller is hoping to capitalize on more international distribution via Microsoft to boost revenue. Finally, Barnes and Noble announced plans for a new Nook tablet to be released sometime this year.
Well, I don't know. I would have liked to have been at the meeting where the B&N CEO unveiled the new business plan to revive the Nook division:
1. Fire everybody
2. Ask Microsoft to sell our stuff
3. Hope our new Nook doesn't suck
4. Profit!
And the competitive pressure will continue to increase in 2014 with Google scheduled to release its new Nexus 8 tablet in April.
Not Your Father's President
OK, so who is the tea-bagging right-wing knuckle-dragging religious extremist h8r who said this:
A society which seeks to make the worship of the state the ultimate objective of life cannot permit a higher loyalty, a faith in God, a belief in a religion that elevates the individual and acknowledges his true value.
Heh. According to author Ira Stoll, the answer is: John F. Kennedy. He discusses this, as well as many other surprising things about the president in his new book JFK, Conservative, specifically that
by the standards of both his time and our own, John F. Kennedy was a conservative. His two great causes were anticommunism and economic growth. His tax cuts, which spurred one of the greatest economic booms in our history, were fiercely opposed by his more liberal advisers. He fought against unions. He pushed for free trade and a strong dollar. And above all, he pushed for a military buildup and an aggressive anticommunism around the world. Indeed, JFK had more in common with Ronald Reagan than with LBJ.
It's fun to read the foam-flecked 1-star reviews by sputtering liberal twits who are reduced to whining about what JFK said or how he was viewed by prominent Republicans of his day, rather than what he actually did. Not that I am under any illusions. I'm sure that if he had lived, JFK would have drifted left and even farther left along with all of the other Democrats, but even so, he's a long ways away from Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and Barack Obama. In fact, I think that the modern politician whose political views are most like JFK, the tax-cutting, big government welfare state spending war hawk, is that tax-cutting, big government welfare state spending war hawk George W. Bush.
(Tell this to your liberal friends, and watch them explode.)
The only difference is, Bush didn't spend his presidency chasing skirt.
And Speaking of Bush, That Dumb Guy
The MSM always loved to portray W. as an incurious, low-IQ dullard.
But:
Bush read 186 books between 2006 and 2008, mainly history and biography. By way of comparison, the typical American reads four books annually and 27 percent of Americans report reading no books over the course of a year. Bush, in contrast, read fourteen biographies of Lincoln alone while in the White House. This was in addition to his annual reading of the entire Bible, along with a daily devotional.
Of course, it's permissible to say this sort of stuff these days. Bush is safely out of public life, he doesn't have a presidency that needs to be destroyed, so it's OK for the MSM to be honest and truthful about him now.
In contrast to his reputation, George W. Bush was a prolific behind-the-scenes reader.
No mention of how this "reputation" came about. Must've just happened, like a sudden rainstorm, all of a sudden, poof, there it is.
In another surprise, Bush read both liberal and conservative authors without appearing to discriminate.
What with us going on and on about what a close-minded dullard W was, of course something like this is going to be a surprise.
I get so tired of this crap.
Moron Recomendations
After reading this week's atheism threads, moron commenter 'RS' recommends Answering the New Atheism by two philosophy professors, Scott Hahn and Benjamin Wiker. The book "looks at the the math and physics and logical arguments advanced by Richard Dawkins and the other crop of New Atheists" and answers them.
I notice there's a boatload of books dealing with the issues raised by the New Atheists in general, and Richard Dawkins in particular:
The Dawkins Delusion?: Atheist Fundamentalism and the Denial of the Divine by Alistair McGrath
The Godless Delusion: A Catholic Challenge to Modern Atheism by Patrick Madrid and Kenneth Hensley.
There Is a God: How the World's Most Notorious Atheist Changed His Mind by Antony Flew
The Deluded Atheist: A Response to Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion by Douglas Wilson
The Devil's Delusion: Atheism and its Scientific Pretensions by David Berlinski
___________
So that's all for this week. As always, book thread tips, suggestions, rumors, threats, and insults may be sent to OregonMuse, Proprietor, AoSHQ Book Thread, at aoshqbookthread, followed by the 'at' sign, and then 'G' mail, and then dot cee oh emm.
What have you all been reading this week? Hopefully something good, because, as I keep saying, life is too short to be reading lousy books.
Posted by: Open Blogger at
06:07 AM
| Comments (225)
Post contains 1687 words, total size 12 kb.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at March 02, 2014 06:11 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Adam at March 02, 2014 06:12 AM (Aif/5)
I guess it be's that way when you are stuck in the 6th century and the only thing you are supposed to read is the Qu'ran.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at March 02, 2014 06:13 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Dr. Varno at March 02, 2014 06:14 AM (V4CBV)
http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/people/features/14718/
And for those who still defend the writer for this hoax/fraud, would you have liked it if Charles Dickens had claimed he was really Oliver Twist?
What is truly depressing, they got two books published and even a movie made from the works. *sigh*
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 06:16 AM (MOXtS)
Posted by: Sgt. Mom at March 02, 2014 06:18 AM (Asjr7)
Posted by: David at March 02, 2014 06:19 AM (6Oj/Y)
Posted by: Vic[/i] at March 02, 2014 06:20 AM (T2V/1)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at March 02, 2014 06:21 AM (Aiwi+)
Posted by: Titanium at March 02, 2014 06:24 AM (IgOQg)
Posted by: MSM at March 02, 2014 06:24 AM (Aif/5)
Some of their most influential psychos are well educated, often in the West, and have specifically rejected Western concepts of freedom and self.
Posted by: CharlieBrown'sDildo at March 02, 2014 06:26 AM (QFxY5)
Posted by: NativeNH at March 02, 2014 06:26 AM (ei6NI)
Am nearing the end of "A Death in the Family" by James Agee, as part of my book group, which has been quite a positive reading experience. It's excellently written and deals with race in early 20th century Knoxville, Tennessee, as an aside to the main focus of the book, in a much more effective manner than the fairy tale way "To Kill a Mockingbird" does to the applause of the usual suspects.
Only made a little progress in "Red Fortress" and it deals mainly with how Boris Gudunov went on a massive building spree while Fedor was still Tsar, and afterward when he first wanted his sister to be a female Tsarina (to which she said "fuck that shit" and went in a convent) and then became one hisownself. Also he was the driving force on the Rooski Orthodox Church becoming powerful by, when the Constantinople Patriarch came begging for money, locking him up and bending him over until he agreed to creating an equal Patriarch in Moscow. Pretty much playing hardball like Volodya is now.
Posted by: Captain Hate at March 02, 2014 06:27 AM (2YXbl)
Posted by: backhoe at March 02, 2014 06:31 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: West Town at March 02, 2014 06:33 AM (V8Hba)
Posted by: NativeNH at March 02, 2014 06:35 AM (ei6NI)
http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/people/features/14718/
And for those who still defend the writer for this hoax/fraud, would you have liked it if Charles Dickens had claimed he was really Oliver Twist?
What is truly depressing, they got two books published and even a movie made from the works. *sigh*
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 10:16 AM (MOXtS)
Even before it came out that "JT Leroy" was a nom de plume, it was incredibly obvious that JT Leroy was a persona and not an actual person. The only reason that it became a problem is that the person who came up with him made the mistake of starting to sign legal documents under that name. If she hadn't done that, she could have kept it up for ages. Hell, if she'd simply set up a JT Leroy, LLC and then given someone else a power of attorney to sign for "him", she could have kept it going and played into the whole JT Leroy mythos.
I wouldn't say I'm defending her so much as I am laughing openly at those who thought it was real in the first place.
I found the whole creation of the Robert Galbraith persona to be very interesting because it plays into the same dynamic. Rowling wanted to hide her identity to get the work reviewed on its own merit while at the same time the publisher wanted to sell books. Thus, the creation of an "author" with a back story that would lend credibility to the work and to the acceptance of that persona as real. It does help that the background chosen was a fairly common one for that type of work. At least that persona was believable. But still. If it wasn't Rowling, there would be stronger murmurs about the near fraud of it.
Also, I'm going to be blunt here, I am rather suspicious that those who unmasked Rowling as the author were tipped off. After all, the book was getting excellent reviews but wasn't a huge seller until oh hey it's Rowling! Best of both worlds, she gets her evaluation of the work and the publisher gets to sell a ton of books.
I forget who it was last week who said s/he doesn't read works by authors who go by initials instead of names due to doubts as to why that person wouldn't use a name (I'm paraphrasing because I'm too lazy to go back and look). Here's a hint. If it's initials instead of name, there's a very strong probability that the work is by someone who is trying to hide gender (EL James), trying to hide who the author really is due to change of genre or simply trying not to flood the market (remember Richard Bachman?) or it's the nom de plume for a writing partnership/consortium.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 06:36 AM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 06:36 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: PabloD at March 02, 2014 06:37 AM (iV5eJ)
I wonder? He is in the process of discrediting himself, with obvious foreign policy and domestic failures. Will his memoir really attract that much attention?
Posted by: CharlieBrown'sDildo at March 02, 2014 06:37 AM (QFxY5)
Posted by: Beagle at March 02, 2014 06:38 AM (KRNhj)
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 10:36 AM (Gk3SS)
It's a first!
Posted by: CharlieBrown'sDildo at March 02, 2014 06:38 AM (QFxY5)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 06:39 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: Ben Ghazi at March 02, 2014 06:40 AM (Im0DR)
Posted by: no good deed at March 02, 2014 06:40 AM (vBhbc)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 06:41 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: Bill at March 02, 2014 06:41 AM (uvyrw)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 06:43 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 06:44 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 06:44 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 10:36 AM (zpNwC)
The heckler's veto lives on even after the Supremes squashed it. But evidently this was in GB where they have no 1st amendment.
Posted by: Vic[/i] at March 02, 2014 06:45 AM (T2V/1)
I must admit it did give a peek behind the events around Guadalcanal. Especially in regards to Ghormley who sadly proved out of his depths in a combat command. And one comes to the conclusion that Callaghan bears the full onus of the debacle that got him killed along with Norman Scott, many sailors, and so many fine ships like USS Atlanta sunk. He had no real plan except it seems to grapple closely with the enemy. It was a death ride that need not have happened.
However it is not a definitive history of those titanic struggles around that fetid, oppressive, and very lethal island. How can I say this? Quick cross reference with Theodore Roscoe's Tin Cans from 1960 that is an abridged version of Roscoe's United States Destroyer Operations in World War II as published by UNSI in 1959 brings up several ship loses not mentioned in Neptune's Inferno.
First is the loss of USS Jarvis. Ship's name is not even in the index of the book. Referring to Roscoe, USS Jarvis was one of the destroyers assigned to guard Turner's transports. On 8 Aug 1942, the ship took an aerial torpedo. Neptune's Inferno mentions the transport hit in same attack, George F. Elliot, but does not mention USS Jarvis. Or the possibility that Jarvis sailed straight through the Battle of Savo Island that saw Quincy, Canberra, Astoria, and Vincennes sunk while being sighted by both sides. 9 Aug the last US sighting of USS Jarvis was by a Saratoga pilot. Post war analysis of Japanese records showed a Japanese air attack had sunk the ship with the loss of all hands.
Then there is the loss of the hard luck destroyer USS Blue. The destroyer that had failed to detect Mikawa's cruiser raiding force before the Battle of Savo Island still had more agony ahead. 21 Aug 1942, USS Blue and USS Henley were ordered by Turner to intercept the Tokyo Express. As payment for this effort to stop Tanaka from delivering supplies, in the early hours of 22 Aug USS Blue got hit by yet another Long Lance torpedo and sunk. Roscoe names the Japanese destroyer as Kamikaze, have also seen this ship named Kawakaze.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 06:47 AM (MOXtS)
Posted by: CharlieBrown'sDildo at March 02, 2014 10:38 AM (QFxY5)
I'm trying to get over my fear of revealing my true thoughts. It's a work in progress.
This weeks' crap YA book is The Fifth Wave. I'm about 2/3rds of the way through it and it's enjoyable and well written and part of the fun of it is trying to guess which of the obvious twists are going to turn out to happen and which aren't. It's formulaic, yes, but that's not really an insult. There's nothing wrong with using the tried and true and just writing the hell out of that.
One of the things I like about it is that Our Heroine is brave in the true sense of it. She's terrified and lonely and in over her head and she knows it but she gets up and goes on and does things anyway because she has to do it.
I'm noticing some plot holes but I'm not done with the book yet and it's the first in a series so we'll see if those get addressed.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 06:47 AM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at March 02, 2014 06:49 AM (Aiwi+)
I have no doubt that several millions copies will be supposedly printed and sales recorded with royalties paid to Obama. A few years later there will be little to suggest the book ever existed in such numbers.
There have been a few cases over the years where strange things came up around a book that was claimed to sell a zillion units despite an apparent lack of readers. I can recall seeing copies of an L. Ron Hubbard hardback coming out of a shipping box already carrying discount stickers. I was widely believed there was a campaign by his followers to buy up his books at stores whose sales are tracked for compiling the best seller lists. The books would then be gathered up and sent back to the publisher but not recorded as returns. They would then be shipped out to the stores again, still carrying the stickers that had been applied the first time they showed up. Thus sales of over a million copies could be claimed for a book that had less than 100,000 in existence. Made for great PR and an effective money laundering system.
Posted by: Epobirs at March 02, 2014 06:49 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: CharlieBrown'sDildo at March 02, 2014 10:37 AM (QFxY5)
You underestimate how delusional lefties are. They will celebrate him as the messiah they believe him to be.
Posted by: Titanium at March 02, 2014 06:50 AM (IgOQg)
Posted by: Megthered at March 02, 2014 06:50 AM (iR4Dg)
Posted by: RobM1981 at March 02, 2014 06:51 AM (zurJC)
Posted by: maddog at March 02, 2014 06:52 AM (tfuED)
Posted by: backhoe at March 02, 2014 06:53 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: rickl at March 02, 2014 06:53 AM (sdi6R)
Posted by: doug at March 02, 2014 06:54 AM (WEqwO)
Yes. Mass literacy is what changed Europe and America.
This is why it was illegal, back in the Old South, to teach slaves to read and why the present-day Leftist "educational" establishment is attempting to discourage literacy using Common Core--the latest tactic.
Illiterates make better chattel.
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 06:55 AM (36Rjy)
Epobirs, I remember reading, perhaps here at the HQ, that the State Dept. bought something like 50k copies of SCOAMT's books to hand out as
Posted by: Retread at March 02, 2014 06:56 AM (cHwk5)
Of course I shall offer as a counter Alice Bradley Sheldon who wrote under the pen names of Racoona Sheldon and James Tiptree Jr. As James Tiptree Jr, Sheldon won a Hugo for The Girl Who Was Plugged In.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 06:57 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 06:58 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 06:58 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: JustDave in GR at March 02, 2014 06:58 AM (4fyxk)
At first, I wondered whether it was going to be too P.C. for my taste -- a future society with a Queen and a Navy that seems to have more women in it then men, but not so. In fact, there is a long passage in the book I'm on now, Flag In Exile, that describes the Obama administration perfectly, except that it was written long before there was an Obama administration. It's future space opera, I guess you'd call it, battles on a large scale with huge ships, an interesting protagonist who gets more interesting as the stories unfold. I have some criticisms -- it can be boring when there are long passages of explanation or character background; only a few characters are well-filled-in. But the principal characters are great, the books get better as you go along, and the battle scenes, and the scenes of interaction between characters, are excellent.
You may be wondering how I got to the fourth book of a series that took until the third book to really grab me. Who would spend the money? Actually, I haven't spent a dime, but David Weber will be getting my money eventually. The first two books can be "bought" on Amazon, for a Kindle, for $0.00. All but the last three or four can be obtained from a freely redistributable CD that Baen put out. So I will be well locked in by the time the freebies run out. It's the heroin dealer strategy. Very clever.
Posted by: Splunge at March 02, 2014 06:59 AM (qyomX)
There is plenty more anger to come. There were times when I thought I'd have a stroke while listening tot he audio version.
If you've haven't read it in previous releases, there is a tenth anniversary edition of 'The Smartest Guys In The Room,' which is THE book about Enron. It is amazing that they got away with so much for so long and everybody whose job it was to be suspicious instead though everything was swell. Even more infuriating is that much of the real estate bubble was created by the exact same sort of behavior despite laws that were claimed to end the threat.
I have little doubt that there are numerous little Enrons all over the financial landscape. They just haven't gone far enough yet to force scrutiny of their deals and prove the revenue really exists and where it came from.
Posted by: Epobirs at March 02, 2014 06:59 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: All Hail Eris at March 02, 2014 07:00 AM (QBm1P)
Posted by: Mary at March 02, 2014 07:02 AM (2wZs/)
Regarding online reviews... there are some who game the system by having colleagues, friends, and family pile on positive glowing reviews on a book on Amazon. Usually you can see through them because they have little to do with the quality of the book or writing, but it probably does help sales.
Posted by: Christopher Taylor at March 02, 2014 07:03 AM (zfY+H)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:04 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: Richard McEnroe at March 02, 2014 07:04 AM (XO6WW)
Of course I shall offer as a counter Alice Bradley Sheldon who wrote under the pen names of Racoona Sheldon and James Tiptree Jr. As James Tiptree Jr, Sheldon won a Hugo for The Girl Who Was Plugged In.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 10:57 AM (GKbOt)
Oh I'd forgotten about Tiptree.
As far as cons and growing up on the Internet and I want to believe, the various cons that have gone through fandom as staggering when you consider that you are dealing with people who grew up on the Internet and who know full damn well that a screen name and a persona are specifically designed to mask real identity. These are people who should know better and who fall for it anyway.
What's really breathtaking is when the same person moves to a different fandom and then attempts more or less the same scam all over again. Given the ways fandoms overlap, it is inevitable that person will be found out and found out quickly. I'm sure there are people who are getting some interesting papers out of the psychology behind that.
I'm trying to figure out why there's this huge boom in Scandinavian mysteries and crime novels. I presume it's due to the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo books (which I hated oh how I hated) but it's bizarre to me that all of a sudden those translation rights are selling like hotcakes.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 07:04 AM (Gk3SS)
Worlds Apart Book 09 now online:
http://tinyurl.com/ksf9cau
The inhabitants of the planet Gethsemane, knowing their world was doomed, constructed The Gateway; a device that transport people directly to the Afterlife, and allows them to return. They have evacuated nearly their entire population through The Gateway. But where does it go, really? Prime Commander Keeler and TyroCommander Redfire are determined to find out. Once they reach the other side, they come face to face with... themselves; and confront uncomfortable truths about their lives. Also, there is a dark secret about The Gateway the authorities on Gethsemane have tried to keep hidden. This secret will change Pegasus and its mission irrevocably and for all time.
Posted by: Gregory of Yardale at March 02, 2014 07:04 AM (lcVWe)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 07:05 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: Epobirs at March 02, 2014 07:06 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: Darles Chickens at March 02, 2014 07:06 AM (ZpoIZ)
Posted by: Krebs v Carnot: Epic Battle of the Cycling Stars™ [/i] [/b] [/s] at March 02, 2014 07:07 AM (HsTG8)
Posted by: Christopher Taylor at March 02, 2014 07:08 AM (zfY+H)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:09 AM (mGC6m)
AlextheChick I got gimlet eyed real quick online. Comes from someone in what is your online circle pretending to being several people. And then deciding it amuses them to tell the people in the circle that one of their personas was just killed in an auto accident.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:09 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: LoneStarHeeb at March 02, 2014 07:10 AM (BZAd3)
Posted by: HR at March 02, 2014 07:10 AM (hO8IJ)
Posted by: buzzsaw90 at March 02, 2014 07:10 AM (FpHdx)
To this day, most of the fans of 'Steig Larson' don't know the actual person was a big name in Euro SF fandom and a serious commie.
The thing about Jonathan Ross is that he offers something to offend everyone. Such as the people who were angered when he teamed up with Russell Brand to harass Andrew Sachs (best known as Manuel on 'Fawlty Towers') about his grand-daughter taking up prostitution.
Posted by: Epobirs at March 02, 2014 07:12 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: doug at March 02, 2014 07:12 AM (WEqwO)
To write. It was illegal in North Carolina to teach them to write.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_during_the_Slave_Period
The slavemasters in the South were Christians, and they understood it as a religious duty to teach their charges to read the Scriptures.
After Nat Turner, there were moves to limit reading as well, but these weren't codified into law.
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 11:04 AM (mGC6m)
I'm not just speaking of NC. And it seems to me that reading and writing go hand in hand. Most government of the time thought so as well.
http://www.yale.edu/glc/archive/927.htm
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 07:14 AM (36Rjy)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at March 02, 2014 07:14 AM (Aiwi+)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1139797/
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:15 AM (GKbOt)
Sadly we're living in an increasingly illiterate age, not by lack of education, but by choice.
Posted by: Christopher Taylor at March 02, 2014 07:16 AM (zfY+H)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:16 AM (mGC6m)
Balderdash and fumblydiddles!
Posted by: Richard McEnroe at March 02, 2014 07:16 AM (XO6WW)
Posted by: Megthered at March 02, 2014 07:16 AM (iR4Dg)
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 07:17 AM (36Rjy)
Posted by: Sgt. Mom at March 02, 2014 07:17 AM (Asjr7)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:20 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: buzzsaw90 at March 02, 2014 07:20 AM (FpHdx)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 07:21 AM (zpNwC)
I love Jo Nesbo and I'm very glad that these works are being translated. It's just strange to me that right now it seems to be the Hot New Thing in mystery to push Scandi authors.
Another Swedish import is Let the Right One In that also got a US remake. Remember the movie about the little blonde girl who was a vampire. Yeah.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1139797/
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 11:15 AM (GKbOt)
I read Handling the Undead by Lindqvist as well and that's where my interest in why Swedish authors was piqued. Here's the thing about Bringing in the Undead, it's an interesting idea and presented well and I could not shake the feeling that there was an entire level of the book I was missing because I'm not Swedish. It was obvious that the when and where of the reanimation was Very Significant Indeed but it was whizzing right past me.
To haul True Detective into it, it's like someone from the UK watching it and not understanding why it's significant that Rust asks for Lone Star. I mean, hey, it's just beer, right? No additional cultural signifiers or anything.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 07:21 AM (Gk3SS)
Additionally, when I worked in Saudi back in the '80s, cameras were allowed, but we were forbidden to take pictures of people, industrial facilities, trash piles, or anything that might be detrimental to the Saudi public image. Even desert sunsets were out, because they showed the extent of pollution from flaring off all that natural gas. (Even Australia was complaining about that pollution!)
I'm not surprised that they were confiscating cameras, but the journalists themselves were not barred.
Posted by: I lurk, therefore I amn't at March 02, 2014 07:21 AM (ab+jQ)
This is a point I have argued with liberals: "Cool? Of
course we're not cool. We're Republicans for crying out loud! We're the
adults in the room. We're the ones who wash the dishes and put away the toys
after the kids are all in bed. And who get up and go to work the next
morning."
Please change Republican to Conservative - RINOs want to be Cool!
Posted by: No Hipster at March 02, 2014 07:21 AM (SqxMb)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:21 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: mnw at March 02, 2014 07:22 AM (68RU9)
In the book business it's called "logrolling". Agents and publishers will have their other authors plug their hot new one whether they've read the stuff or not, in order to get some name-names on the jacket. Been going on since commercial publishing began, and probably earlier: "Spinoza...is an intriguing challenge to the modern reader." — Cardinal Mazarin...
Posted by: Richard McEnroe at March 02, 2014 07:23 AM (XO6WW)
Posted by: buzzsaw90 at March 02, 2014 11:20 AM (FpHdx)
With the exception of the last howler sentence, that's very prescient for a Kossack. I assume he or she is being purged from the hive.
Posted by: Captain Hate at March 02, 2014 07:23 AM (2YXbl)
O/T-Listening to the Sunday talking heads is maddening. What are Russia's money making exports? Gas and oil. Who do they sell it to? Europe! If this administration would stop their myopic war on fossil fuels instead of exploiting our natural resources, and sell it to Europe, we'd have some leverage.
Posted by: boned to the bone at March 02, 2014 07:23 AM (Ph479)
Posted by: HR at March 02, 2014 07:23 AM (hO8IJ)
Posted by: No Hipster at March 02, 2014 07:23 AM (SqxMb)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:24 AM (mGC6m)
Now to wrestle with do I submit anything to you for review?
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:24 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: doug at March 02, 2014 07:25 AM (WEqwO)
Posted by: buzzsaw90 at March 02, 2014 07:25 AM (FpHdx)
Lefties never shut up about how brilliant they are because they read stuff
Yet what they read is simply their own thoughts reflected back to them in print. They read affirmations of their own biases and preconceptions
Yet somehow "Faux News" and "H8 Radio" prove that conservatives are stoopid because they just tell them what they want to hear
Posted by: kbdabear at March 02, 2014 07:25 AM (aTXUx)
I knew he was a hard-core rat bastard commie, but not that he wrote SF.
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 07:25 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:25 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 11:20 AM (mGC6m)
Ha! I was thinking it but not saying it.
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 07:26 AM (36Rjy)
Arguably even worse is when ideologues show up. On the Islam beat, I've seen some extremely flawed material get 1/5 by Muslims and 5/5 by antiMuslims, or vice versa, as best I can tell because they liked the title. And these are the ones which get "58 of 61 people thought this review was helpful". Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 11:16 AM (mGC6m)
My personal pet peeve are those who give one star reviews based on price of book/app/whatever while admitting that they've never read/used/whatever it. I wish there was some way to weed those out.
I will admit that when it comes to the self-published stuff I head straight to the one star reviews looking for discussions of grammatical and spelling errors. At least that is helpful.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 07:26 AM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:27 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: rickl at March 02, 2014 07:28 AM (sdi6R)
Posted by: Tuna at March 02, 2014 07:28 AM (M/TDA)
He writes about that in his book as well. It was a great sense of pride for his family and himself when he was growing up as a young Muslim. He parents raised him as an "ambassador for Islam" in America, speaking about the peace and truth found in the religion. He went to college to study medicine, became a doctor, but gave it up to be a Christian apologetic (right now he's traveling with Ravi Zacharias International Ministries).
Posted by: Mary at March 02, 2014 07:28 AM (2wZs/)
Posted by: buzzsaw90 at March 02, 2014 07:29 AM (FpHdx)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 07:30 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: Megthered at March 02, 2014 11:16 AM
Don't forget their constant rants about "corporate this and corporate that" along with their smug superiority because they're not driven by consumerism
Posted by: kbdabear at March 02, 2014 07:30 AM (aTXUx)
Never copy and paste from Word, or any other formatted word processor. Use a text editor (like notepad) instead
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 07:30 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: HR at March 02, 2014 11:23 AM (hO8IJ)
Sheesh, since everyone is pointing out the obvious counter examples, fine, lemme clarify.
In genre fiction, there is a high probability etc etc.
I should note that there's not one thing wrong with any of the examples I gave. I was rather taken aback by the notion that anyone would refuse to read a book merely because the author elected to use initials rather than a full name.
I don't want to know about the author as person. I don't give a rat's ass about his/her personal life or politics or if s/he is a Yankee's fan. I just want to know about the work itself.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 07:31 AM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: Paladin at March 02, 2014 07:31 AM (Ouc7s)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:31 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: Achilles at March 02, 2014 07:31 AM (oj0hw)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:33 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: Nevergiveup at March 02, 2014 07:33 AM (t3UFN)
Posted by: George R. R. Martin at March 02, 2014 07:33 AM (Aif/5)
Posted by: Retired Buckeye Cop at March 02, 2014 07:34 AM (1htQa)
Posted by: Insomniac at March 02, 2014 07:34 AM (UAMVq)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:36 AM (mGC6m)
when god lets my body be
From each brave eye shall sprout a tree
fruit dangles therefrom
the purpled world will dance upon
Between my lips which did sing
a rose shall beget the spring
that maidens whom passions wastes
will lay between their little breasts
My strong fingers beneath the snow
Into strenous birds shall go
my love walking in the grass
their wings will touch with their face
and all the while shall my heart be
With the bulge and nuzzle of the sea
Posted by: e.e. cummings at March 02, 2014 07:36 AM (QFxY5)
Nevergiveup, by pointing out where Apple gets their products made I am merely trying to illustrate the hypocrisy of Apple Inc and those 'oh so morally superior d-bags' who can't afford to buy anything but will drop $400 for an iPhone.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:36 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: Nevergiveup at March 02, 2014 07:37 AM (t3UFN)
Posted by: beavis at March 02, 2014 07:37 AM (UAMVq)
Tell me about it.
Posted by: mary mapes at March 02, 2014 07:38 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 07:40 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:41 AM (GKbOt)
Something I asked last week, but never saw an answer to: are the books he wrote with collaborators any good? I've had bad experiences several times when authors I liked as solos did collaborations, so I'd really appreciate some Moron input.
Posted by: Empire1 at March 02, 2014 07:41 AM (R8/Kw)
Posted by: Thrawn at March 02, 2014 07:43 AM (X866z)
Posted by: tsrblke, PhD(c) (No Really!) at March 02, 2014 07:43 AM (hq5sb)
Posted by: buzzsaw90 at March 02, 2014 11:10 AM (FpHdx)
****************
Yeah, it's a tough go. The Gulag is as much of a catalog as it is a revelation of Stalinism. And Solzhenitsyn is going to go into detail of every aspect of that archipelago as he can.
He had a lot of it committed in his memory when he finally came out. Think about that.
Posted by: I lurk, therefore I amn't at March 02, 2014 07:44 AM (ab+jQ)
Posted by: biancaneve at March 02, 2014 07:45 AM (2sR50)
Posted by: RWC at March 02, 2014 07:46 AM (MtC8f)
Posted by: backhoe at March 02, 2014 07:47 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: Lincolntf at March 02, 2014 07:48 AM (ZshNr)
Posted by: HR at March 02, 2014 11:23 AM (hO8IJ)
And why are TSE and EAP frequent answers to crossword puzzle clues?
Posted by: I lurk, therefore I amn't at March 02, 2014 07:51 AM (ab+jQ)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:51 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 07:51 AM (zpNwC)
Not only do I not know who Lisa De Pasquale is, I don't know who Bridget Jones is either, nor do I know anything about her style of writing.
If this is an attempt to illuminate the ignorant, it has failed. If it is an attempt to prove one's kool factor by dropping a name only the koolist of the kool know about, well, I can't judge the effectiveness of that remark.
So off to Google I go, knowing that even after searching out the biographies of people I have never heard of, I still won't know anything, but will have succeeded in wasting a few minutes of my allotted life span all the while knowing I have been exposed as being unkool to the max. Just the way I like it.
Posted by: Joe Neaderthal at March 02, 2014 07:52 AM (uQw68)
Posted by: Nevergiveup at March 02, 2014 07:53 AM (t3UFN)
Posted by: tsrblke, PhD(c) (No Really!) at March 02, 2014 07:55 AM (hq5sb)
And Americans are dogs, iirc. These are great books. And Spiegelman felt gulity about how successful he became because of his books. At the beginning of the second book, he drew a picture of himself at his drawing table atop a giant pile of dead bodies. Gut punch!
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 07:55 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:55 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 07:56 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: Some Asshole at March 02, 2014 07:57 AM (cgeZi)
Posted by: Andors at March 02, 2014 07:57 AM (8xPuu)
Posted by: Insomniac at March 02, 2014 07:57 AM (UAMVq)
As for the other chick, no idea who she is. Posted by: tsrblke, PhD(c) (No Really!) at March 02, 2014 11:55 AM (hq5sb)
All I can say is that telling me anything is Bridget Jonesesque is a good way to keep me from ever ever ever reading it.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 07:58 AM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: Mustbequantum at March 02, 2014 07:59 AM (MIKMs)
Posted by: Dr. Varno at March 02, 2014 07:59 AM (V4CBV)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 07:59 AM (mGC6m)
Posted by: Huggy at March 02, 2014 08:01 AM (aUlRP)
Posted by: tsrblke, PhD(c) (No Really!) at March 02, 2014 08:01 AM (hq5sb)
Posted by: Fox2! at March 02, 2014 08:02 AM (cHwSy)
I did. The last update to Mobipocket was in 2008.
Dead product?
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 08:03 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: boulder toilet hobo at March 02, 2014 08:04 AM (mGC6m)
I'm gonna say no.
Niven and Pournelle are also one of the GREAT collaborations. Both are good but greater together.
Posted by: Mustbequantum at March 02, 2014 11:59 AM (MIKMs)
You are correct, you are absolutely correct, but dear heavens I hated their book with the elephant aliens. I can't even tell you why, it's an interesting concept, well executed, their writing is up to their usual standard but I hated it oh so much.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 08:05 AM (Gk3SS)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 08:05 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: Insomniac at March 02, 2014 08:06 AM (UAMVq)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 08:08 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: No Hipster at March 02, 2014 11:23 AM (SqxMb)
As others have said, never paste from Word. I use Notepad or Wordpad, like I'm doing with this comment.
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 08:09 AM (36Rjy)
I actually watched my first episode of Red Eye last nite with the feeyancy. Serious, you guys, in what way was that show any better than the "cool people?'
Posted by: Richard McEnroe at March 02, 2014 08:09 AM (XO6WW)
I have to take Frank the Dachshund for his after-lunch run (which he will not be getting the next few days, most likely). Back in about half an hour.
Posted by: Empire1 at March 02, 2014 08:11 AM (wyKf7)
Posted by: Richard McEnroe at March 02, 2014 08:11 AM (XO6WW)
Posted by: NCKate at March 02, 2014 08:12 AM (4KFgL)
Muse?
Well, I'll be dogged! It's funny how you switch between analog and digital books- I have not used it in a long time. Went back to paper books for some odd reason. Right before Miss Emily died in 2010 we discussed getting an actual Kindle to share- but they were kind of pricey then, and "events got in the way." After losing her I discovered Amazon had a free Kindle app, so I installed it on her netbook which I had commandeered since it had so much of her info on it. Read mostly all ebooks for a year or so, then went back to paper. Who knows why?
Posted by: backhoe at March 02, 2014 08:12 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: tsrblke, PhD(c) (No Really!) at March 02, 2014 08:12 AM (hq5sb)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 12:08 PM (GKbOt)
I know! I should love it and I don't. I admit freely that the problem is me, not them. The weird thing is that I love their other stuff, it's just Footfall. For the life of me, I cannot tell you why it triggers my arrgggh hatehatehate response.
Oh, I also reread The Cobra Event by Richard Preston this week and, of course, that led to rereading The Monster in the Freezer and then I had to hide under the bed for awhile.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 08:12 AM (Gk3SS)
I blame everyone but me.
Posted by: alexthechick - come for the Global Warming stay for the SMOD at March 02, 2014 08:15 AM (Gk3SS)
Yeah, that's what I thought, too. Looks like we were both wrong.
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 08:16 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: ParanoidGirlinSeattle at March 02, 2014 08:16 AM (RZ8pf)
Posted by: motion view (@motionview) at March 02, 2014 08:17 AM (e6TyM)
Posted by: Megthered at March 02, 2014 08:18 AM (iR4Dg)
bh, I do all my reading on my tablet now. I'm going to have to switch back at some point, though, because I've got dead tree books to read piling up.
Posted by: OregonMuse at March 02, 2014 08:18 AM (fTJ5O)
In short, I can not recommend the book and am sorry I wasted my money on it.
Thnaks for the heads up - the premise sounds like something I would normally like, but issues like the ones you stated would bug me to no end.
Posted by: PMRich at March 02, 2014 08:19 AM (KDUNf)
but issues like the ones you stated would bug me to no end.
Just like realizing I did a typo, after I hit post.
Posted by: PMRich at March 02, 2014 08:20 AM (KDUNf)
Posted by: naturalfake at March 02, 2014 08:22 AM (0cMkb)
177?
The one thing I note about the ereaders on my netbook is the scalable fonts are a wonder and blessing. Some of the typefaces in beloved old paperbacks are on the verge of being painful to try to read. I just hate getting old....
Posted by: backhoe at March 02, 2014 08:24 AM (ULH4o)
Posted by: WalrusRex at March 02, 2014 08:24 AM (E+uky)
Posted by: Cass Sunstein at March 02, 2014 08:27 AM (4+AaH)
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 08:28 AM (36Rjy)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 08:30 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: blaster at March 02, 2014 08:32 AM (4+AaH)
Posted by: blaster at March 02, 2014 08:35 AM (4+AaH)
Posted by: PaleRider at March 02, 2014 08:36 AM (m+nIW)
Posted by: filbert at March 02, 2014 08:37 AM (roTS7)
Posted by: Tammy-al Thor at March 02, 2014 08:37 AM (Pfvig)
Posted by: FishUnderTheSea at March 02, 2014 08:39 AM (SdKsJ)
Posted by: Tammy-al Thor at March 02, 2014 08:40 AM (Pfvig)
Posted by: Epobirs at March 02, 2014 08:47 AM (bPxS6)
Posted by: Tuna at March 02, 2014 08:48 AM (M/TDA)
Posted by: Stu-22 at March 02, 2014 08:50 AM (KbrNh)
Posted by: Libra at March 02, 2014 08:51 AM (GblmV)
Andre Norton anyone?
Posted by: HH at March 02, 2014 08:53 AM (XXwdv)
Posted by: All Hail Eris at March 02, 2014 08:53 AM (QBm1P)
Posted by: Stu-22 at March 02, 2014 08:54 AM (KbrNh)
Posted by: garrett at March 02, 2014 09:04 AM (r1RNB)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 09:10 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: Tammy-al Thor at March 02, 2014 09:11 AM (Pfvig)
"How to Listen to and Understand Great Music"
"The Other Side of History: Daily Life in the Ancient World"
"The Rise and Fall of the British Empire"
and "Luther: Gospel, Law, and Reformation".
All of these are part of the Great Courses Series, available on Audible.com.
Posted by: grammie winger at March 02, 2014 09:13 AM (oMKp3)
Posted by: votermom at March 02, 2014 09:17 AM (GSIDW)
Posted by: Tuna at March 02, 2014 09:19 AM (M/TDA)
Posted by: Richard McEnroe at March 02, 2014 09:21 AM (XO6WW)
It is snowing really heavy right now, and I just looked at the local radar and this huge band is crossing over my area. Looks like it's going to last for hours.
So yes, I may be going outside, but not because of the warm weather.
Sighs...
Posted by: HH at March 02, 2014 09:21 AM (XXwdv)
Posted by: Tammy-al Thor at March 02, 2014 09:23 AM (Pfvig)
Perhaps the hang-up is the little aliens have tentacle trunks, an Unknown Eldritch horror that Lovecraft probably thought was too horrible to write about.
Another anthro comic is Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo that as won the Eisner. Miyamoto Usagi is a masterless samurai rabbit in feudal Japan.
Still debating a pen name to hide behind myself.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at March 02, 2014 09:23 AM (GKbOt)
Posted by: Tammy-al Thor at March 02, 2014 12:40 PM (Pfvig)
Not yet. I've been in the process of trying to save my house from foreclosure.
Posted by: baldilocks at March 02, 2014 09:23 AM (36Rjy)
Posted by: rickl at March 02, 2014 09:30 AM (sdi6R)
Posted by: Tammy-al Thor at March 02, 2014 09:43 AM (Pfvig)
Those, plus re-reading "Way of Kings", should get me through the storm very nicely, even if we lose power and I can't play Skyrim at all.
Gods, I love this place!
Posted by: Empire1 at March 02, 2014 09:52 AM (wyKf7)
Posted by: All Hail Eris at March 02, 2014 09:52 AM (QBm1P)
This thread is fun and informative, but can also be expensive!
Posted by: Empire1 at March 02, 2014 09:58 AM (wyKf7)
Posted by: votermom at March 02, 2014 10:09 AM (YCfvr)
The right eye has been stable over the last year: mildly farsighted with a blur. I found out last year that Colorado legally allows me to drive just using the left one, so that's a plus (Texas demanded both eyes - I'd be boned if I still lived there, especially Houston where cars are required).
Posted by: boulder terlit hobo at March 02, 2014 10:10 AM (30eLQ)
Posted by: cool breeze at March 02, 2014 10:29 AM (A+/8k)
Posted by: BornLib at March 02, 2014 11:49 AM (zpNwC)
Posted by: doug at March 02, 2014 11:50 AM (WEqwO)
Posted by: votermom at March 02, 2014 12:00 PM (GSIDW)
What do people think about the idea of an AoSHQ group on goodreads?
Posted by: cool breeze at March 02, 2014 02:57 PM (A+/8k)
The Stars Came Back is doing OK, or more accurately for a first-time self-published noob, OutSTANDing! It was first plugged here about six weeks ago. Thanks one and all, hope you liked it.
Posted by: Rolf at March 02, 2014 03:58 PM (+O7nZ)
Is this OK with Ace? Any veterans willing to step up and do this? OregonMuse? votermom?
Posted by: cool breeze at March 02, 2014 04:37 PM (A+/8k)
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Posted by: NCKate at March 02, 2014 06:07 AM (4KFgL)