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Exploring and Exposing Dominionist Christianity
diaphanus
[info]diaphanus
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Vir Miser! Volavit!
"Vir Miser! Volavit!"
"Poor Man! He Flew!"

Right:

Wind-Whipped Kite Surfer Recovering From Injuries

FORT LAUDERDALE (CBS4) -- A South Florida kite surfer who went for a wild ride during Tropical Storm Fay is doing better.

Wednesday morning 28-year old Kevin Kearney's condition was upgraded from critical to serious.

A CBS4 news crew was on Fort Lauderdale beach at A1A and east Las Olas Boulevard on Monday when a huge gust of wind from Fay blew down the beach and took Kearney by surprise.

It's good that he is getting better.

But that was a stupid thing to do.

LWotP: volare "to fly."

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Current Mood: Obstupefactissimus

mlfoley
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LATE NIGHT MUSIC
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )

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Current Mood: least well-adjusted child evar
Current Music: 45 Grave - Concerned Citizen

underpope
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Book Review: “The Academy” by Bentley Little

The Academy
by Bentley Little
ISBN: 978-0451224675
Published August 2008 by Signet Books
Rating: ★★☆☆☆

I’ve been a fan of Bentley Little’s for years now; whenever I’m in the horror section at Borders, I check to see if there’s a new Little book out that I haven’t read yet. Some writers have compared Little to King, Straub, Barker, and other greats in the horror fiction field. One blurb on one of his books, from Stephen King, describes Little as “A Master of the Macabre”; and on Little’s latest book, The Academy, there’s a blurb from King that describes Little as “Horror’s poet laureate”.

The first book of Bentley Little’s book that I read was The Ignored. That book is, in my opinion, Little’s best; not only is it a fine horror novel, but I think it could stand on its own as a respectable mainstream novel, with the likes of Upton Sinclair or John Updike. It’s the rather hokey supernatural stuff at the end of that novel, in fact, that are its biggest undoing.

Likewise with his 1998 novel, The Store. That novel can be read as a great condemnation of the influence that major “big box” retailers such as WalMart have on small towns in America. It’s great satire, another brilliant novel unfortunately done in by overly dramatic supernatural influences at the end.

Most of Little’s books are like that: unfettered and unbridled condemnations of large institutions and their dehumanizing effects over regular people. I’ve never met the man (I did have the opportunity to chat with him online once), but I have this image of Little as a card-holding NRA member, secluded on his property in Arizona and probably voting Libertarian. The dehumanization in Little’s books are usually shown as an institutional supernatural horror, which often brings people, particularly those in authority, to their absolute worst, in brutal and quite often sexually explicit ways. In The Association, we get a glimpse of how a home-owner’s association can drive a typical homeowner to utter ruin. The Policy shows a family devastated by an evil insurance corporation, sort of Michael Moore meets Freddy Kreuger.

In his more recent books, however, it feels to me that Little is scraping the bottom of the barrel in his search for ways in which he can demonstrate the inhumanizing effects that large institutions can have on people, and his supernatural elements are becoming more and more banal. In Dispatch, which I believe is Little’s strongest novel since The Ignored, the “big bad” at the end turns out to be just another misshapen, evil beast. And to be honest, I’m not even sure I got the point of The Vanishing, his 2006 novel.

In his newest novel, The Academy, Little takes on charter schools, and the result is, unfortunately, disappointing. While he handles the trope of a haunted school much more adeptly than Michael Paine did in The Night School, there’s still quite a bit that’s lacking. The dehumanized victims of the supernatural forces are brutal and vicious in typical Little ways, and in typical Little fashion we witness most of it through the eyes of people who are on the periphery, affected by the forces but not altered by them. But here the causes of the events are given such short shrift that it almost feels like Little uses the novel more as an excuse to showcase brutality and depravity, rather than examine its effects. I went through too many scenes wincing, rather than wondering what was going on. And when the forces behind the events in the novel are finally revealed, I found myself disappointed. It’s an interesting villain behind it all, but given so little face time that it’s barely seen at all. Most of Little’s villains are faceless and operate entirely through intermediaries, but the villain here seems mishandled, even clumsily written.

In general, I enjoy Bentley Little’s novels, and I recommend him. The Academy, however, is not his strongest novel, and I can’t recommend it to anyone.

Originally published at Bloginomicon. You can comment here or there.

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diaphanus
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Sine Religione?
"Sine Religione?"
"Without Religion?"

This amuses me:

http://www.smh.com.au/polls/national/form.html

IQ2 Debate : Would the world be better off without religion?

Yes - 81%
No - 19%

Interesting results!

LWotP: sine "without."

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Current Mood: Contemplativus

diaphanus
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Nova Aliqua apud Indicem Fautorium
"Nova Aliqua apud Indicem Fautorium"
"Something New at the Fanlisting"

I now have six affiliates!

http://diesgaudii.genvid.com/governess/

LWotP: aliquis "something."

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Current Mood: Excitatus

alobar
[info]alobar
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Smells Like Dangerous SPAM to Me!
        I received an anonymous comment to my post, "Food Addiction, Food Allergy and Overweight".   

        "The HCG Diet truly works. I lost 30 pounds on it and did not gain a single pound back. I feel much better, my hormones are balanced and I am much healthier. I love the protocol."

        It seemed like spam, but I went to the website suggested by the anonymous commenter.   The "diet" was far worse than I had imagined.   

        I decided not to kill the comment.   Instead I responded about what I had discovered on the website, and my opinions about it..

        See here to read more:
http://alobar.livejournal.com/2951301.html?thread=6178949#t6178949

Current Music: Bolander - The Dreams Of The C.p.u.s (Drone Zone: Atmospheric ambient space music. Serve Best Chille

teriel
[info]teriel
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Game night
Game night had four people over [info]erelin, [info]cobaltie, [info]snowcoma, and Rowan. We started out with a game of lunch money (I believe). It's a card game...you play as a catholic school girl and try to beat up the other school girls, using carefully placed cards. I won the game, playing a tantrum card...I really, really got into acting this game out...heh. I look forward to playing it in the future.

Then we played Risk God Storm. We only played three rounds, but it was a lot of fun. The game dynamics for the underworld are a little messed up, but they can still work. I think one issue I've noticed with some of the game instructions is that they aren't as explicit as they need to be. If by some chance I actually end up doing technical writing for a board game, I'd be very specific with the language to try and leave as little ambiguity as possible. Still I like the risk games, so it works out.

I also enjoyed the humor tonight. I felt like everyone had fun, which is a definite plus. Bill W even stopped by, and it's my hope that I can get him there even somewhat frequently, as I think he'd have a lot of fun.

Overall a good evening, with lots of fun, and also for me, a very good way to end a day that started out less than stellar.
erinya
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And I'm not going to live my life on one side of an ampersand
How did I miss the awesomeness that is Amanda Palmer until now?

The Dresden Dolls have been hit-and-miss for me (love "Coin-Operated Boy" and "Half Jack" though) and I didn't know much about them til recently, but Amanda's solo album--Who Killed Amanda Palmer, slated for release in September--is quite amazing. (Also, Neil Gaiman is collaborating with her, writing a book of short-short stories to go with the album.) I love her lyrics, but moreover she is intense and angry and electrifying.



Guh.

(Um, not v