April 27, 2014
— Open Blogger

Good morning morons and moronettes and welcome to AoSHQ's prestigious Sunday Morning Book Thread.
I Wish I Had Heard About This Before I Did The Easter Thread
As far as the ebb and flow of the culture wars are going, us good guys have lately been taking it in the shorts. It's hard not to get depressed.
That's why it's encouraging to read something like this:
Muslim background believers are leading Muslims to Christ in staggering numbers, but not in the West. They are doing this primarily in Muslim-majority nations almost completely under the radar—of everyone. In the new book, A Wind in the House of Islam: How God is Drawing Muslims Around the World to Faith in Jesus Christ, [author David] Garrison takes the reader on his journey through what he describes as the nine rooms in the Muslim-majority world: Indo-Malaysia, East Africa, North Africa, Eastern South Asia, Western South Asia, Persia, Turkestan, West Africa, and the Arab world. Muslims in each of those regions have created indigenous, voluntary movements to Christ.
I can only hope this is true and not just wishful thinking. We're the big dogs on the planet right now, and even though we've used our tremendous military power to kill lots of terrorists, they just make more terrorists. Bombs and bullets may have their place, but the ultimate solution for jihadist terrorism is the gospel of Jesus Christ. So I get jazzed when I hear reports of Muslim converts to Christianity, and I hope it's a trend that continues and grows.
Unfortunately, there seems to be no electronic version of Garrison's book, but you can get a paperback copy from his website.
I've Always Wished I Could Do This
If you go to Amazon.com, you will get the Amazon store. If you click on Amazon.uk, you will get the British equivalent. Ditto for Amazon.de, which is German. But if you try to go to Amazon.se expecting to find the Amazon Swedish store, you'll be disappointed.
That's because the domain is owned by someone else:
The current owner of the domain, a fifty-seven-year-old small businesswoman, wonÂ’t sell it, despite reports of repeated attempts from the retail giant to purchase it.
She's accused of being a squatter who wants to drive up the purchase price before selling, but that's not true:
The domain, purchased in 1997 by a Stockholm-based advertising agency called Amazon AB, doesnÂ’t actually lead to a website, but rather to a landing page that simply states it is under construction.
Reminds me of a case I heard about from the early days of Burger King's national expansion, where they ran into another burger joint called 'Burger King' in Mattoon, Illinois. The resulting federal lawsuit resulted in the national BK being barred from setting up one of their franchises within a 20 mile radius of the local BK. Men and Books and Things
Says here that men aren't reading like they used to:
Men are giving up on reading books and instead are switching to movies, internet and blogs... OnePoll did a study on behalf of UK based Reading Agency and talked to over 2,000 young and adult men. 63% of men admit they simply donÂ’t read as much as they think they should. Many blamed a lack of time while, a fifth said they find it difficult or donÂ’t enjoy it.
I've been worried about this for some time. It's true; ever since the mid-90s, when the internet became The Internet, I've found I spend more and more time futzing around online, and consequently, my book-reading has declined precipitously. I had to consciously make an effort to walk away from the computer and pick up a book. Getting a Nook, and then a Nexus, helped with that. And so, incidentally, does running this book thread.
The study also drew the interesting conclusion that men are not visiting libraries or bookstores anymore. They tend to shop for more practical things or zone out on a movie on television or Netflix. Women on the other hand tend to loan books to each other and participate in the bookstore scene.
Sounds about right.
The Pulitzers
I guess The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction this year. I confess my ignorance - I haven't read it, nor heard of it, until they announced it had won.
Not everyone is enamored with it, though:
“The Goldfinch” is full of delicious-sounding names, girandôle necklaces and majolica pottery, action sequences in Amsterdam and brittle comedies of manners in New York. But for all the details and objects she invokes, in “The Goldfinch,” Tartt’s still running a junk shop, passing rather mundane ideas and [the main character's] justifications off as something rare.
And this from a Washington Post writer. One of these days I should probably do a 'most overrated book' segment. Wonder how many Pulitzer winners there'd be.
The last Pulitzer prize winner I remember reading was Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas Hofstadter, and by "reading" I mean "never finished". A good description of this book is "ambitious" and trying to understand all that he was trying to do became too much work for me, especially the mathematics. GEB is one of those books I've always been meaning to go back and give another shot to, but never have. I think this is one Pulitzer winner that actually deserved to win.
The Hugos
Most of you know that there is a brouhaha going on because the Hugo Awards finalists for this year have been announced and some of The Wrong Sort of People (conservative authors) somehow managed to get on the ballot. This is causing the Gatekeepers of The House of Tolerance to shriek louder than one of Rosanne Barr's elastic waistbands, and hilarity is ensuing.
I have nothing new to add to any of this, so I will simply refer you to Larry ('Monster Hunter') Correia's blog post on the subject. It's as good an explanation as you'd ever want to read.
Note: in the comments to Correia's post, someone refers to Eric ('1632') Flint as a Trotskyite. Tom Kratman responded:
A Trot he may be, but EricÂ’s love of America oozes from nearly every page. The pages where it doesnÂ’t ooze? ThatÂ’s because it gushes.
I've learned you regulars on this thread that Flint is a big-time union guy, but a Trotskyite? Really?
A New Shirley Jackson Story
Apparently, there's a number of Shirley ('The Lottery') Jackson stories that have yet to be published.
And one has just been published in the New Yorker:
Jackson’s story is titled “The Man in the Woods” and follows Christopher, who is strolling through a forest when he comes upon a house inhabited by a man and two women who take charge of the household for him.
The new story is here, but you need to be a subscriber to read it.
And more is coming:
More previously unpublished work by Jackson is on the way – Random House is releasing a collection of Jackson’s work titled “Garlic in Fiction” which is being edited by Hyman and another of Jackson’s children, Sarah Hyman DeWitt, according to the New York Times. The collection consists of work by the author from the Library of Congress and will include nonfiction, fiction, drawings, and lectures delivered by the writer.
This one was published last summer, but again, you have to break through a subscription wall to read all of it.
Book Bleg
Not from me this time, but from moron commenter 'Dr. Mabuse', who arrived late in last week's thread:
OK, it was written, I think, in the late 50s or early 60s, when the Cold War was in full swing. It was that period when people were getting fatalistic about communism, and there was a feeling that eventually it would wear down the West and the best we could do was sort of stall its inevitable progress.
It takes place somewhat in the future. The main plot I remember is about a Russian writer who is one of those privileged types who gets to travel in the West. He's in America for some conference and news comes that democratic forces have managed to overthrow the Communists. He gives interviews denouncing communism and welcoming freedom, when an update arrives - the communists have crushed the revolt. He has no choice but to defect to the West now.
Now that he has the chance to really write the truth, he has a complete writer's block. He starts to hang out more and more at a restaurant haunted by other Russian expatriates, and ends up sinking into alcoholism. In the end, a Soviet commissar comes to take him back to the USSR and he doesn't even resist.
There are some other subplots, about an American girl in love with a Soviet agent, but the one about the Russian writer is the one I remember. The story was very fatalistic, the theme being that the Russians were fated to triumph because of their unwavering certainty, even though their cause was rotten.
I had thought it was written by Koestler, but I've looked up his bibliography and nothing there looks likely. Does anyone have any ideas?
Posted by: Dr. Mabuse at April 20, 2014 03:23 PM (FkH4y)
So I hope you morons can help a brother out here.
Hard Boiled
So thanks to BookBub, I picked up this here book at a ridiculous discount and I must say, I don't think anything like this has ever been done before in fiction: the main character is a seedy, failed-at-other-occupations private detective who barely has enough money from week to week to pay the bills, let alone his feisty and attractive office manager/research assistant who rags on him constantly, but is actually very loyal. He is contacted by an old flame who sets him up with his latest client, a sleazy, has-been movie star and his sexy, flirty wife.
Oh, and get this: it's set in the city of Los Angeles. Neat, huh? It's totes unique! I wonder why no one has ever thought of this before?
Yes, it's hard-boiled noir detective fiction and yes, there's not much in here that hasn't been done before, but I'm enjoying the main character and his clueless hippie parents.
___________
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 (198)
Post contains 1796 words, total size 12 kb.
Posted by: Fluffy Destroyer of Worlds at April 27, 2014 06:13 AM (pGKt9)
Posted by: Brother Cavil, Cylon/Cetacian hybrid at April 27, 2014 06:14 AM (m9V0o)
Posted by: kalel666 at April 27, 2014 06:14 AM (9xbt0)
"What if Islam is not a strong, vibrant and attractive faith, growing like some sort of theological kudzu, sweeping all before it? What if it is actually a hollow construct, under stress from a number of directions, seeming strong but in reality fragile, riven throughout with tiny cracks, and teetering on the edge of implosion? What if the frequent explosions of violence at the slightest of critical voices were not a demonstration of power and strength, but of tamped-down fear – fear that if the orthodoxy is questioned or defied, then the whole construct will come crashing down in ruins? What if the whole structure of Islam is actually shivering on its foundations, and the whole bloody-handed constellation of imams and ayatollahs, of shaheeds and jihadists know and fear that, down in the pit of their souls? That the whole thing is a sham, based on the maunderings of a desert bandit, pulled from bits of this or that, for his own aggrandizement? What if the whole jihad against the West is the last spectacular lashing out of those who know in their hearts that if the roots of Islam are ever questioned, then doubt will set in, and the whole edifice come crashing down – and that quietly, here and there, the faithful are slipping away, and ever more would join them but for the threat of death for apostasy."
Part one - http://tinyurl.com/n66z5x8
Part two - http://tinyurl.com/lkkyj4d
Posted by: Sgt. Mom at April 27, 2014 06:15 AM (Asjr7)
Posted by: Fluffy Destroyer of Worlds at April 27, 2014 06:17 AM (pGKt9)
I'm going to start what will be a difficult book for me, only because I'm not hugely interested in military books. It is called, "The Super Sixth: The History of the 6th Armored Division in World War II" by George F. Hofmann. From what I can tell, it's pretty much a day by day movement of the division and the reason I am reading it is because we just found out that my grandfather was in this division when he was killed in WWII. So, I found an old copy of the book and bought it, I'm going to read it and then give it to my dad. It's pretty cool that after such a long time, we're finally getting to learn a bit about our family history which was sort of kept from us by my dad's mom.
Posted by: DangerGirl, who is tired at April 27, 2014 06:19 AM (GrtrJ)
Posted by: Trimegistus at April 27, 2014 06:20 AM (r9ezw)
Posted by: LoneStarHeeb at April 27, 2014 06:21 AM (BZAd3)
Posted by: Epobirs at April 27, 2014 06:22 AM (Icq+V)
Posted by: Nip Sip at April 27, 2014 06:23 AM (0FSuD)
Posted by: --- at April 27, 2014 06:25 AM (MMC8r)
Posted by: sound awake at April 27, 2014 06:25 AM (fKOqs)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 27, 2014 06:26 AM (c8Izq)
Posted by: --- at April 27, 2014 06:27 AM (MMC8r)
Posted by: Trimegistus at April 27, 2014 06:28 AM (r9ezw)
This is the light mainstream version of their doorstop tome aimed more directly at the PoliSci field. It takes its cues from Machiavelli in which the retention of power is the primary qualifier of success rather than good governance.
A very interesting read but not encouraging.
http://tinyurl.com/lgwobz8
Posted by: Epobirs at April 27, 2014 06:30 AM (Icq+V)
Made some progress in Red Fortress where Catherine the Great has came and went and there was some fantastic plans that were designed for the Kremlin that were admired but rejected as being too damn expensive. This was done in the first place because Peter the Great had let the place fall into such disrepair while he was relocating everything to Saint Petersburg that every time Catherine came to the Kremlin she complained about everything smelling like shit. Catherine was an interesting case because even though her instincts were to be a liberal, the French Revolution's excesses frightened her so much that she dialed back on that significantly, which probably set the stage for things staying repressive in Russia which led to the commies eventually taking over. This was explicated very effectively in Jay Winik's The Great Upheaval, recommended by a fellow moron,
Posted by: Captain Hate at April 27, 2014 06:30 AM (YqrNH)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 27, 2014 06:33 AM (c8Izq)
Posted by: Epobirs at April 27, 2014 06:33 AM (Icq+V)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at April 27, 2014 06:34 AM (Aiwi+)
Posted by: Motionview at April 27, 2014 06:35 AM (e6TyM)
Posted by: Fluffy Destroyer of Worlds at April 27, 2014 06:35 AM (pGKt9)
Another flashback to 80s thriller fiction recommendations:
Robert Byrne. Known mostly for his writing and instructional videos on billards. He has written in other areas as well, including tech beat reporting, language -- and fiction.
In the New Wave Era he wrote a series of civil engineering technothrillers. The writing is crisp, the heroes and villains have realistic motivations, and Byrne was a master of the plot head fake. He makes you care about a character that you're sure will make it through, then -- *snikt*.
The books I read were:
The Tunnel, 1977 - An American engineer must overcome the objections of environmentalists as well as the machinations of Irish terrorists to complete a tunnel under the English Channel.
The Dam, 1981 - A young engineer applies innovative analysis to determine that a dam designed by his firmÂ’s most senior engineer is in imminent danger of collapse and then must take matters into his own hands when his findings are ignored.
Skyscraper, 1984 - An engineer discovers that the sixty-six-story Zalian Building is flawed throughout and in danger of collapsing and that some people will do anything to suppress the facts
Mannequin, 1988 - A freight train leaking a paralytic nerve gas hurtles uncontrolled toward San Francisco, and the only woman who can stop the ruthless profiteer behind this...
Thrill, 1995 - When a teenager is fatally injured after being hurled from a high-intensity amusement park roller coaster, the park owner agrees to remodel the ride much to the chagrin of its designer, and when the newly refurbished ride makes its first test, disaster occurs.
http://tinyurl.com/mselp5f
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 27, 2014 06:38 AM (kdS6q)
Posted by: Weirddave at April 27, 2014 06:38 AM (N/cFh)
Posted by: West at April 27, 2014 06:40 AM (Ib1LY)
Posted by: Tonestaple at April 27, 2014 06:44 AM (B7YN4)
Posted by: Weirddave at April 27, 2014 06:44 AM (N/cFh)
Posted by: alexthechick - Oh save us mighty SMOD at April 27, 2014 06:44 AM (dMSj2)
And still working my way through Michener's Poland, and I just don't quite get it. It's like he *wanted* to write a book named Vienna, but missed.
Posted by: Anachronda at April 27, 2014 06:52 AM (o78gS)
Posted by: Jean at April 27, 2014 06:59 AM (Aqvh6)
I agree with this 100% yet some people, *cough*Mrs Hate*cough*, who otherwise have good taste slavishly give them credence as if they're the gold standard in what to waste time on.
Posted by: Captain Hate at April 27, 2014 07:00 AM (YqrNH)
An in CAC friendly fiction, an updated list of Science Fiction stories with Good Astronomy and Physics, compiled by Andrew Fraknoi
"This is a selective list of some short stories and novels that use more or less accurate science and can be used for teaching or reinforcing astronomy or physics concepts. I include both traditional “science-fiction” and (occasionally) more serious fiction that derives meaning or plot from astronomy or physics ideas."
http://tinyurl.com/n8vy2y2
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 27, 2014 07:01 AM (kdS6q)
Posted by: JoeyBagels at April 27, 2014 07:01 AM (SzG+F)
Posted by: Tonestaple at April 27, 2014 07:02 AM (B7YN4)
Posted by: Jean at April 27, 2014 07:03 AM (Aqvh6)
like some sort of theological kudzu, sweeping all before it? What if it
is actually a hollow construct, under stress from a number of
directions, seeming strong but in reality fragile, riven throughout with
tiny cracks
Thanks, Sgt. Mom, this is my view of Islam, too. Hard, but brittle
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 07:06 AM (fTJ5O)
Part two - http://tinyurl.com/lkkyj4d
fwiw, your part two link is broken.
Posted by: Anachronda at April 27, 2014 07:08 AM (o78gS)
Posted by: tmitsss at April 27, 2014 07:08 AM (7Rx8v)
Well at least these days of Socialist Supremacy and Awards for Showing Up or Being the Correct Hue.
Only the Nobel awards for the Hard Sciences still mean anything and how long before that gets degraded?
Posted by: Bitter Clinger and All That (Waiting For SMODOT) at April 27, 2014 07:10 AM (JS0vr)
When I put my bargain-bin purchases of "The Encyclopedia of Fascist Armored Vehicles of the Second World War" and "Mac Bolan - The Executioner #14: Congo Merc" on the counter I feel like I'm 18 again and buying porn. Which is not a good thing.
Posted by: Taro Tsujimoto at April 27, 2014 07:10 AM (celt+)
Posted by: Sabrina Chase at April 27, 2014 07:11 AM (2buaQ)
Posted by: 98ZJUSMC Waiting for the Sun at April 27, 2014 07:11 AM (RsS1Z)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 07:12 AM (s/sIv)
Posted by: Timwi at April 27, 2014 07:12 AM (pdhxN)
Posted by: doowleb at April 27, 2014 07:13 AM (EoE58)
Posted by: Ben Ghazi at April 27, 2014 07:14 AM (m3Dxy)
Posted by: 98ZJUSMC Waiting for the Sun at April 27, 2014 07:14 AM (RsS1Z)
Posted by: RightWingPRof at April 27, 2014 07:15 AM (RtR5I)
You think that's hard boiled.
You want some hard boiled?
You can't handle the hard boiled.
Here's the mafukin hard boiled. And by a guy who's been boiled himself.
http://byronbales.com/category/byron-bales-news/
He's actually an uncle of this moron and pretty much the inventor of the lifestyle.
Seriously. Check it out.
Posted by: Ronsonic at April 27, 2014 07:15 AM (1qQf+)
Posted by: alexthechick - Oh save us mighty SMOD at April 27, 2014 07:18 AM (dMSj2)
Posted by: ExSnipe at April 27, 2014 07:19 AM (hzpoi)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 07:20 AM (s/sIv)
Posted by: Banjo at April 27, 2014 07:21 AM (59Mmb)
Posted by: --- at April 27, 2014 07:21 AM (MMC8r)
Yeah, but what about pastries?
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 07:23 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: 98ZJUSMC Waiting for the Sun at April 27, 2014 11:11 AM (RsS1Z)
My personal guess is that my grandmother and my dad's father were never married, as she claims. After he died, she could pretty much say anything she wanted, considering she never again associated with anyone from my dad's dad's family.
We may never figure out a lot about him, but at least we have a start.
Posted by: DangerGirl, who is tired at April 27, 2014 07:23 AM (GrtrJ)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 27, 2014 07:27 AM (c8Izq)
Posted by: john Pomeroy at April 27, 2014 07:28 AM (lOLTH)
Posted by: eman at April 27, 2014 07:28 AM (AO9UG)
Posted by: Banjo at April 27, 2014 07:29 AM (59Mmb)
Over many years I still say 'The Journeyer' by Gary Jennings is the best read ever.
Posted by: doowleb
All the novels he wrote before his death, as opposed to the books published afterwards by Gary Jennings Inc, are well worth this time.Manly, I'd say, historical fiction with a kinda Mondo World sensibility. Believable, even when he's probably just making it up.
I'd recommend his Aztec to new readers, that book rocked back in the day. although I'll admit to having a soft spot for Spangle.
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 27, 2014 07:29 AM (kdS6q)
Posted by: Old Dog at April 27, 2014 07:29 AM (tQYJH)
I ultimately did a 180 on Vonnegut, whom I initially liked a great deal. By the time he died I couldn't stand him or his trite garbage.
Posted by: Captain Hate at April 27, 2014 07:30 AM (YqrNH)
Posted by: sithkhan at April 27, 2014 07:31 AM (F7qjM)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 07:32 AM (s/sIv)
Posted by: Skookumchuk at April 27, 2014 07:34 AM (OSzB9)
Posted by: KindlyFuckOff at April 27, 2014 07:35 AM (JwLKW)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 27, 2014 07:36 AM (c8Izq)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 11:32 AM (s/sIv)
That collection is probably the best thing he ever did imo. It was the first thing I read by him.
Posted by: Captain Hate at April 27, 2014 07:37 AM (YqrNH)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 27, 2014 07:38 AM (c8Izq)
Posted by: KindlyFuckOff at April 27, 2014 07:38 AM (JwLKW)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 07:38 AM (XyM/Y)
Does anyone have a link how to join the WorldCon so i can pay $40 for all those nominated works in ebook format?
Posted by: sithkhan
Memberships are pricey, so no way does it make sense to join just for a discount. Anyway, this ham gum is all bones.
http://www.loncon3.org/memberships/
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 27, 2014 07:40 AM (kdS6q)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 07:41 AM (s/sIv)
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 07:41 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: Weirddave at April 27, 2014 07:41 AM (N/cFh)
Posted by: Let me Goggle That fir yee at April 27, 2014 07:42 AM (aRE3g)
Posted by: eman at April 27, 2014 07:43 AM (AO9UG)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 07:43 AM (XyM/Y)
Christianity = Islam There's no difference. Each wages war in the name of a millennia-old fairy tale. But keep telling yourselves that one (the predominantly white one) is better than the other, if it makes you feel better about yourself.
Posted by: KindlyFuckOff
*trolls morning book thread*
*pats self on back, adjusts fedora to rakish angle*
*attempts to fit asthma inhaler thru mouth of Guy Fawkes mask*
*fails and passes out from anoxia*
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 27, 2014 07:43 AM (kdS6q)
Posted by: KindlyFuckOff at April 27, 2014 07:44 AM (JwLKW)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 07:45 AM (s/sIv)
Posted by: KindlyFuckOff at April 27, 2014 07:47 AM (JwLKW)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 07:47 AM (XyM/Y)
Re WorldCon:
It's in London this year, and I notice it has this rate structure
Adult membership - aged 26 and over.
Young Adult membership - aged between 16 and 25 years on 14 August 2014.
Probably because YA NEETS on the dole infest the UK and they're trying to appeal to that set.
Posted by: Laurie David's Cervix at April 27, 2014 07:47 AM (kdS6q)
Posted by: GSain at April 27, 2014 07:48 AM (9L8Hs)
Posted by: KindlyFuckOff at April 27, 2014 07:50 AM (JwLKW)
Posted by: KindaFuckedUp at April 27, 2014 07:51 AM (c8Izq)
And the other point made, that women buy and loan books, gotta admit most of the recent books I've read have been from my sister. But she has pretty wide tastes, so it's not like she's loaning me just chick lit or anything like that. Oh, and she also belongs to Vine, which I think Sgt. Mom mentioned the other week. Books are sent to you to review. According to my sis, Amazon needs reviewers, so if anyone wants free books...
Posted by: HH at April 27, 2014 07:52 AM (XXwdv)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 07:54 AM (XyM/Y)
That story will chill the marrow. When the HMS Dreadnought was christened in 1906, Britain and its Empire was unrivaled in the world.
Fifty years, two world wars, and a heaping dose of socialism later, Britain was but a dried husk of its former self.
If Obama were historically literate, which he is not, I'd be tempted to say he looks at the decline of the British Empire and sees a model for the U.S., not a warning.
Posted by: Caledroski at April 27, 2014 07:58 AM (YBusZ)
Posted by: Pointless in Paduka at April 27, 2014 07:58 AM (aRE3g)
Posted by: garrett at April 27, 2014 08:00 AM (4sqCK)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at April 27, 2014 08:00 AM (Aiwi+)
Posted by: --- at April 27, 2014 08:01 AM (MMC8r)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 08:02 AM (XyM/Y)
Posted by: Notsothoreau at April 27, 2014 08:03 AM (Lqy/e)
Yeah, and the murder rate in those rural counties is appalling.
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:04 AM (fTJ5O)
Seems to me I read years ago that his one fear was that he would go insane and wind up in an Asylum.
Guess what happened...
Also, didn't he write "The Horla"? Man, that was a creepy story.
Posted by: HH at April 27, 2014 08:05 AM (XXwdv)
Messala, "I tell you how you fight an idea. With another idea!"
May Yeshua become the Saviour of so many more, instead of merely a human teacher in the Qu'ran.
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at April 27, 2014 08:06 AM (bKEDY)
Posted by: S. Muldoon at April 27, 2014 08:09 AM (MKpBT)
Posted by: JHW at April 27, 2014 08:09 AM (A4PmA)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 08:11 AM (XyM/Y)
Posted by: Nip Sip at April 27, 2014 08:12 AM (0FSuD)
What about O. Henry?
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:12 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: S. Muldoon at April 27, 2014 08:13 AM (MKpBT)
Posted by: S. Muldoon at April 27, 2014 08:13 AM (MKpBT)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 08:15 AM (XyM/Y)
Right, which is why I recommended him. I'm thinking maybe he might have others like that.
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:18 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: Sgt. Mom at April 27, 2014 08:18 AM (Asjr7)
Posted by: waelse1 at April 27, 2014 08:19 AM (FVt/M)
Posted by: biancaneve at April 27, 2014 08:19 AM (2sR50)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at April 27, 2014 08:20 AM (Aiwi+)
Ok gang, looks like it's about time to turn on my weather radio. Things about to get interesting here in the KC area. Wish us Luck...
Posted by: HH at April 27, 2014 08:20 AM (XXwdv)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 08:23 AM (XyM/Y)
Posted by: Buck Farack, Gentleman Adventurer at April 27, 2014 08:24 AM (y9dfJ)
I was thinking the Arab Muslim world was going to get blindsided by thousands of Chinese evangelists coming from the east. Google for "Chinese home church back to Jerusalem" and you'll find some interesting links.
However, an indigenous "Jesus people" movement springing up in the Muslim world is fine by me.
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:24 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: S. Muldoon at April 27, 2014 08:28 AM (MKpBT)
This has been a major issue in the Episcopal church for quite a while where the only growth is taking place in Africa and Asia where they're going toe to toe with the rock worshipers. There was a big world wide conference a few years ago where the bishops from the growth areas were demanding that Rowan Williams and his fellow turds dial back on homo marriage and other dipshit ideas that made their task more difficult. Rowan and his toadies fired back by, in not so many words, calling those people a bunch of illiterate savages that needed to STFU when among their betters. This obviously did not go over very well and continues to this day.
Posted by: Captain Hate at April 27, 2014 08:29 AM (YqrNH)
This wouldn't surprise me. When the gospel first hits a culture, those who typically respond first are among the lower castes, the untouchables, the poor, the have-nots of that culture. So a Muslim woman who has been shoved around all her life by first her own family and then her husband and sons would be ripe to hear the good news of liberation and freedom brought by Jesus Christ.
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:31 AM (fTJ5O)
Also, I'd like to toss Taylor Anderson's Destroyermen series into the ring as a good read. U.S. Navy WW2 destroyer winds up in an alternate universe, where strange lemur-like creatures are fighting a war for survival against velociraptors? Sure, let's roll with it.
Posted by: Toastrider at April 27, 2014 08:34 AM (68UOB)
This has been a major issue in the Episcopal church for quite a while where the only growth is taking place in Africa and Asia where they're going toe to toe with the rock worshipers. There was a big world wide conference a few years ago where the bishops from the growth areas were demanding that Rowan Williams and his fellow turds dial back on homo marriage and other dipshit ideas that made their task more difficult. Rowan and his toadies fired back by, in not so many words, calling those people a bunch of illiterate savages that needed to STFU when among their betters. This obviously did not go over very well and continues to this day.
Yeah, the disintegration of the Anglican Union is truly a sad thing to watch. Rowan Williams and and his merry band of liberal saboteurs are signing that denomination's death warrant.
I recommend Christopher Johnson's blog http://www.themcj.com that chronicles the decline.
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:34 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: sithkhan at April 27, 2014 08:38 AM (F7qjM)
http://www.chrismarnewick.com/writing-tips/
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at April 27, 2014 08:39 AM (bKEDY)
Its true, but not a huge movement. Its a slow and steady trickle that's spreading, as Christianity always has under oppression and persecution. You can see how true it is by the reaction: more and more brutal hate and cruelty to Christians, more laws to silence any faith other than Islam, etc.
The truth cannot be silenced by hate and cruelty or law. Even as Christianity wanes in the west, it grows in the rest of the world, God bless them all. We wasted it here on wars and inquisitions and finally just let it all go to please the world around us.
Posted by: Christopher Taylor at April 27, 2014 08:41 AM (zfY+H)
Posted by: Mr. Dave at April 27, 2014 08:43 AM (c8Izq)
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 08:45 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at April 27, 2014 08:46 AM (bKEDY)
Posted by: Inspector Cussword at April 27, 2014 08:49 AM (Qp0nB)
I'd like to strongly recommend a book about "righteous gentiles" who saved Jews during WWII "The Altruistic Personality" by Samuel Oliner.
Oliner, a Polish Jew, was hidden by gentiles when he was a child and as an adult, wondered why some people went out of their way and risked their own lives and the lives of their families to save Jews while others were indifferent or aided the Nazis. He conducted interviews with 700 European rescuers and nonrescuers.
The thing that really stuck me was that you not only had to be brave to be a successful rescuer, you had to be very smart and inventive. A frightened Jewish family turns up on your doorstep and you want to help. Well, OK, where are you going to put them? How will you feed them, when you don't have enough food for yourself and your family because of the war? What sort of hiding places or escape routes will you devise? What stories will you tell neighbors and relatives who might rat on you? Everything had to be very carefully planned and every scenario had to be covered, because one slip-up meant death.
There is a story about a woman who was taking a small Jewish boy from one "safe house" to another. They walked down a street and saw Nazis hauling Jews out of a building. The boy said, loudly "We Jews must be very important, everyone is looking for us." Several soldiers and passerbys looked at them. The woman had the presence of mind to laugh and say, "We Jews? Why you silly boy, what a joker you are!" That was the danger of hiding children who were too small to understand what was going on.
It was more dangerous to hide boys (because of circumcision). It was also more difficult to hide Eastern European Jews than it was to hide more assimilated Western Europeans. Many of the Eastern European Jews spoke Polish or Russian or Czech with heavy Yiddish accents, which gave them away.
Posted by: Donna and V. (no ampersand) at April 27, 2014 08:50 AM (+XMAD)
Posted by: waelse1 at April 27, 2014 12:19 PM (FVt/M)
Hey, glad you liked it. The last of his that I read is called "FIREBIRD".
Interesting thread that runs through the novel is the story of 'ghost' ships. Spacecraft that appear on radar, possibly some communication, but then are gone.
And it's an Alex Benedict Novel.
Posted by: HH at April 27, 2014 08:51 AM (XXwdv)
Posted by: Carol at April 27, 2014 08:51 AM (gjOCp)
Posted by: Hammerin' Hank Aaron at April 27, 2014 08:51 AM (Dwehj)
Posted by: The Montreal Canadiens at April 27, 2014 08:53 AM (S/Z9J)
Posted by: eman at April 27, 2014 08:53 AM (AO9UG)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 08:53 AM (XyM/Y)
Posted by: Carol at April 27, 2014 08:56 AM (gjOCp)
Posted by: Grampa Jimbo at April 27, 2014 08:57 AM (V70Uh)
Anachronda, more of the third book of the original Piper treatment. When Little Fuzzy and that tribe of wild ones got caught in the forest fire. BTW got any hokfusine?
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at April 27, 2014 08:57 AM (bKEDY)
Posted by: OregonMuse at April 27, 2014 09:02 AM (fTJ5O)
Posted by: Inspector Cussword at April 27, 2014 09:02 AM (Qp0nB)
Earlier this week, a thread here discussed a possibly life-sustaining planet 500 light years away.
One of Percy's "thought experiments" was this: Suppose a spaceship of humans arrives at the planet and before they are allowed to land they have to answer the following question: "What is the state of your conscience?"
The Humans reply: What do you mean?
The inhabitants reply: "There are three states. The first one is innocence, like your Adam and Eve before the Fall into sin. The second is after the Fall but before help is sought from the Creator. The third is one of redemption while help is being sought."
Since the humans are in neither state 1 nor 3, they are not permitted to land.
The idea of "self-help" is mocked.
Posted by: Grampa Jimbo at April 27, 2014 09:08 AM (V70Uh)
Has good reviews, but curious if anyone on the book thread has read it.
Posted by: Charlotte at April 27, 2014 09:09 AM (opWWt)
Inspector Cussword at April 27, 2014 01:02 PM (Qp0nB)
Good comment. Christ's statement about rendering onto to Caesar what is Caesar's and onto God what is God's makes a crucial distinction between church and state. Over the next 2000 years, at times the Church and civil authority acted in tandem (and it was under those circumstances that the Church became corrupt), sometimes they were in opposition - but a distinction was always drawn, even during the Middle Ages. Clergymen could have great influence over a monarch - they themselves were not kings or knights.
Unlike Christ, Mohammed commanded an army. No distinction was ever drawn in Islam between the faith and the state.
Posted by: Donna and V. (no ampersand) at April 27, 2014 09:10 AM (+XMAD)
Posted by: Pointless in Paduka at April 27, 2014 09:11 AM (aRE3g)
Posted by: Elisabeth G. Wolfe at April 27, 2014 09:12 AM (Aiwi+)
I was thinking more specifically of the scene in the courtroom where one of the fuzzies whips out a pipe and lights it up.
I bought them all in one big book, so I'm a big fuzzy about where the book boundaries lie.
Posted by: Anachronda at April 27, 2014 09:13 AM (o78gS)
Posted by: pep at April 27, 2014 09:16 AM (4nR9/)
Posted by: Jeffrey Pelt at April 27, 2014 09:18 AM (Jsiw/)
Posted by: Bookaday at April 27, 2014 09:18 AM (j3vws)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at April 27, 2014 09:19 AM (XyM/Y)
Posted by: AmishDude at April 27, 2014 09:19 AM (1UzRc)
Posted by: Bookaday at April 27, 2014 09:21 AM (j3vws)
Posted by: Anna Puma (+SmuD) at April 27, 2014 09:23 AM (bKEDY)
It was The Barack Obama Story.
Posted by: [/i]andycanuck[/b] at April 27, 2014 09:23 AM (D+5pt)
Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 09:34 AM (s/sIv)
Posted by: Splunge at April 27, 2014 10:17 AM (qyomX)
Posted by: Splunge at April 27, 2014 10:24 AM (qyomX)
Posted by: Tonestaple at April 27, 2014 10:26 AM (B7YN4)
Posted by: mr_jack at April 27, 2014 10:48 AM (0Kqj/)
Posted by: rickl at April 27, 2014 11:32 AM (sdi6R)
Posted by: elcid91 at April 27, 2014 11:57 AM (e83Xk)
Posted by: Banjo at April 27, 2014 01:03 PM (59Mmb)
Posted by: sithkhan at April 27, 2014 01:18 PM (F7qjM)
Posted by: jbarntt at April 27, 2014 01:37 PM (UNFot)
Posted by: All Hail Eris at April 27, 2014 02:44 PM (QBm1P)
Posted by: sinalco at April 27, 2014 03:19 PM (V42Jv)
Posted by: RW at April 27, 2014 04:20 PM (JQbnu)
Posted by: Serena at April 27, 2014 05:09 PM (73xYH)
Posted by: sithkhan at April 27, 2014 07:29 PM (F7qjM)
Posted by: RW at April 27, 2014 08:34 PM (JQbnu)
Thanks for the info. I'll see if the local library has a copy.
Posted by: Charlotte at April 27, 2014 09:28 PM (opWWt)
Posted by: OK, thanks, bye at April 28, 2014 02:24 PM (uopHF)
Posted by: BornLib at April 28, 2014 06:43 PM (zpNwC)
Posted by: BornLib at April 28, 2014 06:50 PM (zpNwC)
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Posted by: Buddha at April 27, 2014 06:13 AM (s/sIv)