These are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.
(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here.
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These are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.
(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here.
)
I keep seeing these posts where memes get passed around, where one person "tags" another as an inducement to answer a list of questions. One is presumably supposed to answer the questions, post the response, and tag a handful of others.
I had been secretly glad that I'd never been tagged. And I also wondered, just how are you supposed to find out you're on the hook?
Well. Never mind. There I was ego-surfing my blog, checking out the incoming referrers, wondering who's linked to me lately, and there I find that Travis Johnson, fellow PneumaBlogger, has done gone and tagged me with the One Book meme.
An enterprising Ben Fernström, with way too much time on his hands, tracked down the beginnings of the One Book meme, wrote an entertaining narrative, and positioned himself as belonging to the 14th generation of this meme's recipients.
Thus, ultimately, we have Benjamin Myers to blame for this post. I'm the 18th generation of this particular meme, but by a different route (see the note at the end).
:: sigh ::
Well, at least I'm one of the cool kids now!
So, here goes:
These are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.
(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here.
)
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Titled "To hell and back", from Dateline NBC. Carlton now peaches that everybody gets a free pass to Heaven--everybody. Says Pearson: "I was resentful of God. See, if you fear God the way we’re taught to fear Him, you’ll serve
So, Google Books has been revived and released. Naturally, therefore, I egosurfed. Here is what I found:
Perfect Illustrations for Every Topic and Occasion: For Every Topic and Occasion — Page 297
by Craig Brian Larson — Religion — 2002 — 384 pages
It's all about who they are and what they want.” Citation: Rich Tatum, Carol Stream, Illinois; source: Dave Tenenbaum, “When Kids Kill,” The Why Files, ...
Limited preview — Table of Contents — Index — About this book
Surviving
Graziunas, Daina and Starlin, Jim: PredatorsReading: 2/11/98.
Okay, I've got to admit up-front that the premise is hokey: What do you get when a telepath suffers the loss of his family to a serial killer's madness? You get this book—which initially reads like a first-novel, but does pick up somewhere along the way. The plot is adolescent, but the character development isn't too bad, and by the end of the novel I was really into it. Part of it may be a continuing childhood fantasy that I can read minds. (No, I know that I can't, but I think my wife can.... And the cats? Don't get me started.)
This book reminded me that it wouldn't be such a great trip to have that ability. It would be a curse.
The primary protagonist is a little hard to identify in this story;
Ken Follett: The PIllars of the Earth
Read: 2/20/1998.
This is a phenomenal read! While I wasn't exactly on the edge of my seat throughout the whole book, it was surprisingly satisfying.
I initially bought this book on the enthusiastic recommendation of a Hasting's clerk. So, I wound up being leery of it for some reason — and then it languished on my shelf for more than a year. Maybe two. So, when I was finally low on reading material I gave it a try. I was very pleased and am now serious about chasing down other Follet works.
The main protagonists are Tom Builder and his stepson Jack Jackson. (Follet is probably not lecturing on the “interesting names for your novel’s characters” tour.) Tom's lifelong's vision is to be appointed master builder of a cathedral church, and everything is
I finished reading an old Stephen King novel, The Dark Half, last night. Wow, what a read!
(I’m not sure I’ll have much time for this post … the kids are about to wake up from their nap and I need to take them shopping. So, I’ll try to be brief.)
I love books about moral good versus evil, and I especially enjoy books featuring writers as protagonists. One of the first I read along these lines, years ago, was Mr. Murder, by Dean Koontz, also an enjoyable read, as I remember it.
In this tale, the principle character, Thad, began writing as a pre-teen, but the creative act somehow awakened some tissue that remained inside his body that was the leftover from a so-called fetus in fetu. (The rare, but real, circumstance where one