Danger posted:The best Simmons is about Obama's Muslim Caliphate taking over the U.S. Is it as nuts as Tom Kratman's Caliphate? Because I can read that for free. quote:Demography is destiny. In the 22nd century European deathbed demographics have turned the continent over to the more fertile Moslems. Atheism in Europe has been exterminated. Homosexuals are hanged, stoned or crucified. Such Christians as remain are relegated to dhimmitude, a form of second class citizenship. They are denied arms, denied civil rights, denied a voice, and specially taxed via the Koranic yizya. Their sons are taken as conscripted soldiers while their daughters are subject to the depredations of the continent's new masters. guns
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# ? Sep 22, 2015 16:46 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 16:36 |
Almost no one is as crazy as Kratman.
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# ? Sep 22, 2015 16:57 |
Well, apart from his fellow neo-nazis.
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# ? Sep 22, 2015 17:03 |
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ravenkult posted:Do you trawl all the threads to defend racists and bigots or just the Book Barn? a) I was poking fun at the rah rah people have over writing versus author's prejudices, and b) I don't trawl to defend, I opportunistically poke fun at those uppity people. And I pretty much only frequent the Book Barn so its a numbers game.
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# ? Sep 22, 2015 21:01 |
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You're the worst.thehomemaster posted:I opportunistically poke fun at those uppity people.
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# ? Sep 22, 2015 21:21 |
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I dunno, Hitler was pretty bad.
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# ? Sep 23, 2015 02:07 |
I really enjoy how, in the name of "opportunistically poking fun at uppity people", you've got people pretending that Dan Simmons is capable of writing an ending to a story, or of continuing stories beyond their halfway point.
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# ? Sep 23, 2015 06:02 |
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Simmons is a neo-con loon and H.P. Lovecraft was an drat dirty racist and a pretty lovely writer. There I said it.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 13:57 |
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wow that really took some bravery
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 14:08 |
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The Terror has me in some kind of trance, where I read 300 pages but then my reader says it's actually only been 10.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 14:38 |
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Try to count how many times he lists everyone who's died and by what means they passed. I'm honestly curious.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 16:09 |
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Since we're talking about Dan Simmons, anyone read Carrion Comfort? It looks interesting based on the back cover blurb.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 16:34 |
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I thought it was pretty unremarkable. Don't remember much about the story other than something involving vampires maybe?
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 17:19 |
The Rat posted:I thought it was pretty unremarkable. Don't remember much about the story other than something involving vampires maybe? Mildly interesting twist on vampire mythology. If the blurb piques your interest, it's probably worth a shot. But as you say, it's not all that memorable.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 17:55 |
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ravenkult posted:The Terror has me in some kind of trance, where I read 300 pages but then my reader says it's actually only been 10. Non-euclidean page counts. I gave up halfway through. May get back to it someday, but doubtful. On another note, I'm halfway through Annihilation Score and am thinking that it would be great short story had it not taken place in the Laundry universe. I kind of liked Mo previous to this.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 18:29 |
My main issue with that book is how little of it actually turns out to be relevant to anything; not to mention the POV switch to Mo seems really unnecessary and badly executed. A lot of people who liked her before that book apparently stopped.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 18:40 |
michel houellebecq posted:Si le style de Lovecraft est déplorable, on peut gaiement conclure que le style n’a, en littérarure, pas la moindre importance; et passer à autre chose.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 22:46 |
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I'd probably rather hang out with Lovecraft than Houellebecq, because while ol' HPL was a racist nerd, at least he wasn't a racist pedo nerd. Mind you, I'd rather hang out with neither of them.
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 22:52 |
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anilEhilated posted:My main issue with that book is how little of it actually turns out to be relevant to anything; not to mention the POV switch to Mo seems really unnecessary and badly executed. A lot of people who liked her before that book apparently stopped. I didn't mind it, but I also thought the insane power creep of Bob means that we're in a bit of a corner as far as where his story goes. I mean, is the next book going to be him running around putting out all of the fires that the death of Angleton has started? My only real critique is that we got very little in the way of Mo BEFORE this book, so suddenly being all Mo and Bob is ultimately a footnote to the goings on of Annihilation Score. The fallout of Score is the death of the Zahn Violin and Mo has made, and been kicked out of, a civil service for the use and apprehension of meta-humans, right? And Mo is on track to become an Auditor at some point in the not too distant future?
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 23:05 |
The Vosgian Beast posted:I'd probably rather hang out with Lovecraft than Houellebecq, because while ol' HPL was a racist nerd, at least he wasn't a racist pedo nerd. how many great authors would be fun to hang out with though
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# ? Sep 24, 2015 23:26 |
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Clipperton posted:how many great authors would be fun to hang out with though True, true.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 01:11 |
In an effort to swing this thread back to something vaguely interesting... The latest Humble Book Bundle is full of Phillip K. Dick Award winners. Now, most of them are sci-fi and fantasy, but I want to draw your attention to The Cipher by Kathe Koja because it is really loving weird!. The basic premise is that a guy and his friend find a mysterious hole in a utility room in his apartment building and start experimenting with it. Things get very weird, very fast, but not necessarily in the ways you might thing. For one thing, and I'll spoil this even though it's something that doesn't happen, no one goes spelunking in the mystery hole, which honestly is a drastic shift away from the usual genre trope. The book isn't particularly scary (which is fine, horror is not required for weird fiction), but I think a lot of folks that post in here will like it. If you don't want to buy the bundle, it's available on Kindle for like three bucks.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 01:53 |
Ornamented Death posted:In an effort to swing this thread back to something vaguely interesting... Sold! I don't even need to hear more.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 02:23 |
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Clipperton posted:how many great authors would be fun to hang out with though I really wish I could travel through time and meet Robert E. Howard, but he wasn't "great" in the sense that his stories have a lot of literary merit. He just wrote a lot of fun stories. ("The Worms of the Earth" is pure pulpy cosmic horror goodness)
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 03:46 |
Ornamented Death posted:In an effort to swing this thread back to something vaguely interesting... Just to clarify, it looks like this is the latest Story Bundle, not the Humble Book Bundle. The current Humble Book Bundle is banned comics.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 04:31 |
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Clipperton posted:how many great authors would be fun to hang out with though It takes a certain kind of person to lock yourself up alone in a room and imagine onto paper/a screen for months on end. Depression and social anxiety are very common. With that said, I'd have loved to hang out with Kurt Vonnegut. Sure, he doesn't have the liver-busting party-animal power of Hemingway or Bukowski, but there such essential warmth and humanity in his work. He'd have been fun. Him or William Gibson, who never fails to astound me with how much utterly mad crap he knows about.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 10:24 |
gibson these days looks like he has the worst case of old-person-smell ever (the peripheral was great though)
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 14:13 |
Clipperton posted:how many great authors would be fun to hang out with though Lucius Apuleius.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 14:34 |
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mdemone posted:Mildly interesting twist on vampire mythology. If the blurb piques your interest, it's probably worth a shot. But as you say, it's not all that memorable. The title was the best thing about that book.
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 15:20 |
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Clipperton posted:how many great authors would be fun to hang out with though a lot of the substance abusers might have been fun in small doses
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 16:32 |
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Effectronica posted:Lucius Apuleius. Petronius Arbiter (no homo)
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# ? Sep 25, 2015 17:21 |
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Neurosis posted:a lot of the substance abusers might have been fun in small doses Aren't small doses exactly what you wouldn't get with them, though?
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# ? Sep 28, 2015 17:49 |
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Clipperton posted:Is it as nuts as Tom Kratman's Caliphate? Because I can read that for free. It never fails to terrify me that Kratman was Director (Rule of Law) for the Peacekeeping and Stability Operations Institute for the US Army War College. I mean, how does one job description have so much multilayered in it?
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# ? Sep 28, 2015 17:54 |
Hunter Thompson - get high and threaten to shoot you William Burroughs - get high and actually shoot you Norman Mailer - get drunk and fight you Arthur Koestler - rape you George Orwell - bad breath Ernest Hemingway - cat-pee smell Arthur Conan Doyle - would probably talk about fairies all the time Neil Gaiman - would definitely talk about fairies all the time idk a bit of pathological racism is starting to look pretty good
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# ? Sep 28, 2015 17:56 |
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Lovecraft would be amazing to hang out with. Watching him grow more and more horrified as you described American society and how we treat one another, the fact that most people faced the bubbling nothingingness at the core of reality shrugged and kept on keeping on, and topping it off with Obama? It's us, we're Nyarlothotep.
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# ? Sep 29, 2015 18:18 |
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I'm actually certain you could show Lovecraft a picture of Eva Mendez and he'd rescind his racist ways instantly.
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 11:20 |
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Rough Lobster posted:I'm actually certain you could show Lovecraft a picture of Eva Mendez and he'd rescind his racist ways instantly. Nah, wouldn't work. Go for a really sexy piece of African architecture instead.
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 11:37 |
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The Penguin Classics reprint of Ligotti's Songs of a Dead Dreamer and Grimscribe will be out on the 6th, just in time for some October/Halloween themed reading. I bought Teatro Grottesco a while back since it was one of the few works of his not out of print and exorbitantly priced and really enjoyed it. For the most part the stories were fantastic and creepy so I have high hopes for this one
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 18:11 |
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Ramadu posted:So I grabbed this based on this and I'm like 10 chapters in and my impression is "Oh my god this is the most British thing I've ever read". Like some of the slang and sentences are words that are English, I can tell, but they are put together in some weird rear end ways. Pretty cool scenes when she reaches the Red House though, that was really well done with the eyes and other stuff. What stood out to you as being super British? I mean being British i may have just not noticed it but I didn't notice it being full of bewildering to outsiders slang.
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 18:58 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 16:36 |
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Geokinesis posted:What stood out to you as being super British? I mean being British i may have just not noticed it but I didn't notice it being full of bewildering to outsiders slang.
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# ? Sep 30, 2015 19:04 |