I do not think that there can ever be enough books about anything and I say that knowing that some of them are going to be about Pilates.The more knowledge the better seems like a solid rule of thumb, even though I have watched enough science fiction films to accept that humanity’s unchecked pursuit of learning will end with robots taking over the world.-Sarah Vowell

Monday, October 30, 2017

There's Someone Inside Your House by Stephanie Perkins


The title clues you in to how the serial killer works in the small town of Osborne, Nebraska. It leaves things that the victim thinks someone in the family left for them or it moves things around or leaves drawers or cupboards open.  It is a planner who does this for months before it makes its first strike with Haley the star of the drama and choir department.  It stabs her then makes exes of her eyes and mouth.

This book is told mainly through the eyes of Makani Young (except when it is showing you the viewpoint of the victim right before they die) who had to leave Hawaii due to some big secret thing that happened that everyone down there knows about that made her legally change her last name so no one up here would google her and find out about it. Also, her parents are in the middle of a very contentious divorce and as her grandmother with whom she is living with says "She's my daughter. And I love her, but she's a raging narcissist and she married an asshole".  Neither parent ever cared much for her when they were together and they care less now that they are busy tearing each other apart over the divorce.

Makani has made two friends: Alex, a goth girl who plays in the band and Darby a transgender boy whose car they all ride in.  Makani obsesses over Ollie a boy she slept with over the summer but when school started neither one talked to the other. They would have brief conversations when they ran into each other because Makani would try to talk to him. It turns out that Ollie is pretty shy and is considered the weird kid of the school because of it and some other stuff from his past and both of them were waiting for the other to make the first move.  So pretty soon they've hooked up again.  Ollie easily becomes a suspect and after the first two murders even Alex and Darby are thinking it and are worried about her being next.  But she's not next. Things become strained between them when the third victim is discovered and they all stop talking to each other. But they're right to be worried because Makani is on the killer's list.

This is a really good book. For a book that clocks in at a little under 300 pages, it does have a high body count.  And I would say don't get too attached to the main characters because they're not all going to make it to the end, but you will get attached to them. You can't help yourself.  Halfway through you do find out who the killer is so the second half is spent trying to catch them while they continue their spree trying to finish their list.  I liked that they didn't figure out why the person was killing everybody. They had their theories and they believed they knew, but like in real life, it's not always easy to figure out why people kill, especially serial killers.  Will this book keep you up all night scared? No, but it is creepy and it will keep you up all night turning the pages to find out what happens.       

Quotes
It was sad that people only got along when everybody was unhappy.
-Stephanie Perkins (There’s Somebody In Your House p 137)

Link to Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Theres-Someone-Inside-Your-House-ebook/dp/B01NCUB691/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1509369226&sr=8-1&keywords=theres+someone+inside+your+house+stephanie+perkins

Friday, October 27, 2017

The Good People by Hannah Kent


Set in 1825 Ireland during a time when people still mostly believed that the Good People, or the fairies, played a part in their lives, centers mainly on the newly widowed Nora Leahy and the once healthy, now suddenly mysteriously crippled four-year-old grandson she is forced to raise. The book opens with the sudden death of her husband at the crossroads with various signs attending it. Nora and her husband Martin had just lost their daughter Johanna a few months ago to some mysterious wasting disease according to her husband, as she had moved away.  Her husband left their child with them to raise as he was too messed up to deal with the child himself.  At the wake, Nance Roche shows up to lead the keening or the hollering up to heaven to let them know that the soul of the departed was a good one that deserves to be let in.

Nance is the local handywoman or the one you turn to for a cure when you can't afford the doctor or he doesn't know what's wrong.  She's an herbalist. She is also wise in the ways of the Good People and the curses they put on people and how to remove them.  Nora's nephew, Daniel consults her when his wife Brigid is found asleep in the cillin where the stillborn are buried and where the fairy folk is known to take others to their side and leave fairies in their place.  She gives him some bittersweet to give her to sleep deep so she doesn't sleepwalk anymore.

Nora doesn't know what to do with her grandson Michael. Her neighbor woman, Peg, suggests getting a maid for the season to help out so she goes to the hiring fair and hires Mary a young woman to help out.  But she keeps Michael, the boy, trapped inside in order to avoid talk of the town.  Instead, it just causes more talk. Now people are saying he is a changeling or one who has been replaced with a fairy child.  And Nora is beginning to wonder.  She goes to the local priest for help, but he refuses.  Back then for a priest to come into your home you needed to cross his palm with a coin.  But he is on a personal crusade against the old ways of fairies and such and refuses to indulge her.  So she ends up accepting help from Nance who refuses to accept money for her services but if you wish to give her a small gift such as a hen or some alcohol or peat moss or potatoes she will accept that, though it's never discussed.

You just know this book is going to go wrong with talk of the changeling causing the cows not to milk and the hens not to lay eggs and probably causing the death of his mother and grandfather. It gets worse with the priest preaching against Nance from the pulpit about her pagan ways and the harm they cause.  Actually, the author took a citing from an old book of the time that tells what happens to Nance and the crippled boy and she then developed a story around that.   This excellent book is a fascinating look into the past and let me tell you I wished fervently that there were fairies to show up and act like good people saving this town from itself.

Quotes
If there is one thing that will sink sickness deeper into the body, ‘tis loneliness.
-Hannah Kent (The Good People p 23)

That one knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. Believe me, Nora. An old broom knows the dirty corners best.
-Hannah Kent (The Good People p 32)
How hidden the heart, Nance thought. How frightened we are of being known, and yet how desperately we long for it.
-Hannah Kent (The Good People p 100)

Nora had always believed herself to be a good woman. A kind woman. But perhaps, she thought, we are good only when life makes it easy for us to be so.  Maybe the heart hardens when good fortune is not there to soften it.
-Hannah Kent (The Good People p 129)

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Good-People-Hannah-Kent-ebook/dp/B01NBQEA3M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1509110898&sr=8-1&keywords=the+good+people+by+hannah+kent

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Pretty Deadly: Volume Two The Bear by Kelly Sue Deconnick (Script), Emma Rios (Art), Jordie Bellaire (Colors), clayton Cowles (Letters), and Laurenn McCubbin (Design)


The young girl from the first book who was made Death has sent Fox to bring Sarah, now an old woman, to the Underworld. But her daughter Verine insists that Fox come back later because her youngest brother, Cyrus has not said goodbye yet.  He is off fighting in World War I. So Fox says he will come back on the next full moon.

But Cyrus is not alone in those horrid fields. A stray reaper is keeping guard over him.  And it's not alone. Alice and Ginny are there and the reaper of war is, of course, they're ready to take everyone down with him.  Battles fought between humans and reapers are fought under the moon and its anyone's guesses whether Cyrus will make it back to see his mother before she passes.

This is a complex book series and a very intriguing one. It was interesting to move the story so far forward.  But then time is no different to most of these characters.  I liked that Sarah was given a long life to live out on her own terms and left to raise her family alone, especially after all she did for them.  It was fitting that Fox came for her even if she never mentioned him to her granddaughter like she did everyone else.  This was a really good book and I am eager to see where the next book takes the story.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Pretty-Deadly-Vol-Kelly-DeConnick-ebook/dp/B01KIF6SAW/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1508933564&sr=1-1&keywords=pretty+deadly+vol+2


Monday, October 23, 2017

Midnight In the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt


Savannah.  Called "The Hostess City of the South", it is also, perhaps the eccentric aunt once hidden away that no one knew about.  In Berendt's amazing book as a Yankee, the ultimate outsider, he explores a city that prefers not to change; a city that is difficult to reach and while visited, was at the time of his stay, not a tourist mecca like other Southern cities.  Savannah had preserved the old ways of doing things.  They had rescued the old buildings, kept big businesses from coming in, and highways from destroying the town.  It is a peculiar town that will experience change whether it wants to or not.

The narrator of this work of non-fiction is a magazine writer who has discovered that the cost of a meal is the same cost of an airline ticket, so he begins to travel.  On a trip to Charleston, he decides to visit Savannah and sets up a meeting with a Mrs. Hartly who will act as a guide.  He has a romantic and quirky notion of Savannah-based on Southern stereotypes and Johnny Mercer music (he grew up there).  Soon, he finds himself spending more and more time there and gets a place to stay.

The first thing you may notice is that the timeline seems a bit off.  It is.   The author played with it for artistic purposes, which may confuse you a bit, but will come together in the end.

While most of the book seems to be wrapped around the situation of the antique dealer Jim Williams, who owns the enviable Mercer House, who is accused of first-degree murder of a young man who works for him, Danny, who is a violent drug user, hustler, and his lover.  The D.A., Lawton,  has only tried one case before and lost it, and the man who got him elected Adler, hates Williams, with whom he has had a long feud over the restoration of buildings in Savannah.  Lawton does not seem to have much of a case and everyone wonders what he is thinking as it seems a clear case of self-defense or at the worst, second-degree murder.  But Williams has two strikes against him: his is gay, which is fine, so long as he keeps quiet about it, and two he did not come up from money but is a self-made man, who is beholden to no one.  Though, people do seem to like Williams a lot more than they like Adler, whose restoration projects are questionable.  Plus, Williams throws a very swank, exclusive Christmas party every year that everyone wants to go to.

Williams uses not just many lawyers, but a voodoo practitioner because everything helps.  And it seems that her help may eventually win him his freedom, as there will be more than one court case and you may figure out what happened that night, but you may never really know.

Some of the people he meets in Savannah are too incredible to be real, but this is the South, so I know they are.  One of the first characters you meet is Joe, a piano playing lawyer who, well, squats, in various nice houses, charges for tours, steals electricity and water.  The houses are open at all hours for everybody and a party is always going on.  He tries and fails many times at various businesses, mostly clubs and often has the law after him for bouncing checks.  But his personality is such that no one can hate him and everyone forgives him and continues to do business with him even after he has done them wrong.  He keeps promising to marry a singer Mandy, who travels a lot on the road performing and who opens up a club at one point with him.  He also had a bar with the famous Emma Kelly, whom Johnny Mercer dubbed "the woman of six thousand songs" because he guessed that seemed to be the number she knew.  She drove all over the place playing piano and singing, but the two parted ways when his creditors came after him through the business and he felt that was unfair to her.

Then there's Luther, the very weird man who once worked for the government and came up with the pest strip and various other inventions, which he got no money off of because he worked for the government at the time.  He carries around a bottle said to be of poison that he may empty into the city's water supply and kill them all at any time.  He also ties flies and such to strings and attaches them to his shirts, or will clip the wings of flies so they fly around in circles.

But one of the most wonderful characters of them all is The Lady Chablis.  When the narrator meets her he does not realize that she is a "T".  She receives hormone injections that give her breasts and other female attributes.  She has a boyfriend that satisfies her in every way.  And she is more woman than I will ever be in this life or the next.  She does a drag show, where she shows that she is more than just a stereotype and there is a hilarious scene where she crashes a black debutante ball the narrator is attending (and refused to take her to) and causes quite the scene.  She really does things her way.

Those from the South can tell you that each area, each city, is unique.  They talk differently, eat slightly differently, have a different way of doing things than the other cities.  They even have trouble getting along with each other.  Savannah is no different.  With the creation of this book and the subsequent movie, one can suppose the theory, the observer effect, that once something is observed it is changed by being observed.  Berendt, through no intention of his own, changed Savannah from a secluded city, to the tourist mecca it is today.  I was there is 1994 for a Psych Conference and sadly did not get much of a chance to look around.  This was right before the book came out.  I fell in love with Savannah then and vowed to see it again, but once I found out what had happened to it, some of the romance left it for me.  It was not the special place I had seen all those years ago, but something now lost to commercialism.  I was too late. But this book captures Savannah as she is in all her glory and sin and it is great to travel through her streets and meet her people within the pages of this book.

Quotes
Blue bloods are so inbred and weak.  All those generations of importance and grandeur to live up to.  No wonder they lack ambition.  I don’t envy them.  It’s only the trappings of aristocracy that I find worthwhile—the fine furniture, the paintings, the silver—the very nice things they have to sell when the money runs out.  And it always does.  Then all they’re left with is their lovely manners.
--John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 4)
But at heart he’s a southern chauvinist, very much a son of the region.  I don’t think he cares much for Yankees.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 5)
Drinking Madeira is a great Savannah ritual…It’s a celebration of failure, actually. The British sent whole shiploads of grapevines over from Madeira in the eighteenth century in hopes of turning Georgia into a wine-producing colony.  Savannah’s on the same latitude as Madeira.  Well, the vines died, but Savannah never lost its taste for Madeira. Or any other kind of liquor for that matter. Prohibition didn’t even slow things down here.  Everybody had a way of getting liquor, even little old ladies.  Especially the old ladies.  A bunch of them bought a Cuban rumrunner and ran it back and forth between here and Cuba.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 11)
I’ve never been sick a day in my life except for a common cold once in a while.  I just can’t be bothered. I don’t have the time.  Being sick is a luxury. 
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 22)
We have a saying: If you go to Atlanta, the first question people ask you is “What’s your business?” In Macon they ask, “Where do you go to church?” In Augusta they ask your grandmother’s maiden name.  But in Savannah the first question people ask you is “What would you like to drink?”
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 31)
Yesterday I pulled into a gas station, and this truck driver followed right behind me and pulled up alongside. He said, ‘Ma’am, I have been driving behind you for the last forty-five minutes, and I’ve been watching. First you did your makeup.  Then you did your hair.  Then you did your nails.  I just wanted to get up close and see what you looked like.’ He gave me a big wink and told me I was right pretty.  But then he said, ‘Let me ask you something.  I noticed every couple of minutes you’ve been reaching over and foolin’ with something on the seat next to you.  Whatcha got over there?’ ‘That’s my TV,’ I told him. ‘I can’t miss my soaps!’
- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 45)
Savannah’s a real small town.  It’s so small everybody knows everybody else’s business, which can be a pain, but it also means we know who all the undercover cops are, which can be a plus.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 49)
“I dunno,’ he said with a sigh. ‘Sometimes I just can’t face going through with breakfast.’
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 69)
 Someone once wrote that musicians are touched on the shoulder by God…and I think it’s true.  You can make other people happy with music , but you can make yourself happy too.  Because of my music, I have never known loneliness and never been depressed.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 88)
There’s another wonderful thing about being able to play music.. It’s something Johnny Mercer told me.  He said, ‘When you play songs, you can bring back people’s memories of when they fell in love.  That’s where the power lies’.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 90)
The South is one big drag show, honey, and they all know The Lady.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 102)
Well, I ain’t on food stamps yet, but I’m getting’ real close.  It’s a good thing y’all don’t pay me any more than you do, or I might never qualify.
- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 120)
It’s damn hard work being a girl full time.
- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 123)
‘Lord, you Yankees are something else,’, said Joe Odom, ‘We do our best to set you on the straight and narrow, and look what happens.  First you take up with folks like Luther Driggers, whose main claim to fame is he’s gettin’ ready to poison us all.  Then you drive around in an automobile that ain’t fit to take a hog to market in, and now you tell us you’re hangin’ out with a nigger drag queen.  I mean, really! Your mama and daddy are gonna pitch a fit when they hear about this, and I reckon they’ll blame it all on me.’
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 125)
Men from Savannah’s good families are born into a pecking order they can never get out of..unless they leave town forever.  They’ve got to go to a proper secondary school—Savannah Country Day or Woodberry Forest—then to a good enough college, and then come back home and join the team.  They’ve got to work for a certain company or a certain man and move up gradually.  They’ve got to marry a girl with the right background.  They’ve got to produce a proper little family.  They’ve got to join the Oglethorpe Club, the yacht club, and the golf club.  Finally, when they’re in their late fifties or early sixties, they’ve arrived, they’ve made it.  But by then they’re burned out, unhappy, and unfulfilled.  They cheat on their wives, hate their work, and lead dismal lives as respectable failures. Their wives, most of them, are little more than long-term prostitutes, the main difference being that when you factor in the houses, the cars, the clothes, and the clubs, Savannah’s  respectable wives get a lot more money per piece of ass that a whore does.
- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 237)
‘Do you want me to explain what he’s got? ’No, not especially. But tell me—not that I really care about this—who won the game today? ’Georgia.  Nineteen to eight. ’Good,’ said Williams. ‘That means Sonny will be in high spirits.  It’s all so childish.  When Georgia loses, it absolutely destroys him. He goes into shock and can’t function for days.’ ‘In that case, I think you’ll get a vigorous defense out of him.  It was a solid victory.’ ‘Not too big a victory, I hope.  He might regard my trial as an anticlimax.’ ‘I don’t think the game was that important,’ I said. ‘It wasn’t a Southeastern Conference game.’ ‘Wonderful,’ said Williams. ‘I wouldn’t want him to be all distracted and daydreaming.  I want him to be frisky.  Yes.  That should work.’
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 277)
Dr. Lindsley told me that an old house will defeat you if you try to restore it all at once—from roof to windows, weatherboarding, jacking it up, central heating, wiring.  You must think of doing one thing at a time.  First you say to yourself: Today I am going to think about leveling off the sills.  And you get all the sills leveled.  Then you turn your mind to the weatherboarding, and gradually you do all the weatherboarding.  Then you consider the windows.  Just one window at a time.  That window right there.  You ask yourself, ‘What’s wrong with that part of that window?’ You must do it in sections, because that’s the way it was built.  And then suddenly you find the whole thing completed.  Otherwise it will defeat you.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 299)
No, I think I’ll stay right here… My living in Mercer House pisses off all the right people.
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 371)
It dawned on him that the sheriff would soon be arriving with a warrant for his arrest, so he pulled on a shirt and a pair of pants, climbed out a rear window, jumped into his van, and headed south on I-95.  He had no intention of spending the weekend with sheriffs, bail bondsmen, and lawyers.  Not this weekend anyway.  The Georgia-Florida football game was on Saturday, and Joe would definitely be there.  Nothing took precedence over the Georgia-Florida game.  Not even a felony indictment. 
-- John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil p 376)
Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Midnight-Garden-Good-Evil-Berendt-ebook/dp/B003JMFKVK/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1508765347&sr=8-2&keywords=midnight+in+the+garden+of+good+and+evil+dvd

Friday, October 20, 2017

The Liar by Nora Roberts


This book by Nora Roberts is my favorite non-trilogy book I've read by her.  Maybe I am a little biased.  The main character is named Shelby, as is my daughter.  She has red curly hair.  I have red hair and would kill to have her curls.  She also lives in the Smokey Mountains of Tennessee, which I have visited often when traveling to Kentucky to see my Dad's family.  I can still picture the area in my mind.  Its God's country.

Shelby, her husband Richard, and their three-year-old daughter, Callie was supposed to go on a boating vacation, but when Callie gets sick, Shelby stays behind with her and her husband goes ahead and becomes lost at sea, presumed dead.  Soon, Shelby's eyes are opened up to what, if not who, her husband really is.  Nothing has been paid for: not the cars, the house, the ugly furniture, even the jewelry turns out to be fake.  She is left in millions of dollars worth of debt and she cannot go home.  At least, not until she has paid as much off as she can.  Inside of one of his jackets that she's preparing to sell at a consignment shop, she finds a safety deposit key and when she uses it to open the box, there are three fake IDs for Richard and $250,000.  She takes all of it and leaves.  She uses some of the money to pay off one of the eleven credit cards and buys a cheap van.

Now, its time to go home and face the music.  When Shelby met Richard at a club she was singing at, during her summer break from college, he sweeps her off her feet and off to Vegas where they marry without telling anyone.  Over the years, she would try to make trips to see her family, but Richard would not allow her to go and he had control over everything, including her life.  She missed weddings, births, and funerals.  Now that he is dead, she is ashamed that she let him control herself like that.

Her large family takes her back and she makes amends with her old best friend Emma Kate who is living with her boyfriend, Matt, that she met while working as a nurse in Maryland.  Matt's construction and home repair business partner, Grif, came along with him.  Grif immediately falls for Shelby and while she thinks she may have feelings for him, she doesn't quite trust her judgment yet.  Especially when a woman arrives in town saying that she is Richard's wife and that Shelby was just a cover for their scam operations with another guy who has just escaped from jail.  They are looking for the three million dollars worth of diamonds and stamps they lifted from a woman five years ago.  She does not believe that Shelby knows nothing about it.  A PI is also sniffing around.

Shelby goes to work at her grandmother's beauty parlor part-time as a helper and sings on stage on Friday Nights, at the local bar that is owned by a friend she had in high school.  With the exception of the death of the woman who was Richard's wife and the people who may be coming after her for the diamonds, she does not have, her life is really beginning to come together.  The debt is slowly coming down, she's with her large family again, and she's falling in love with a really great guy who will treat her right.

There is a threat looming over the horizon that will put it all in jeopardy.  Is there any doubt that Shelby and Grif will get together?  No.  They do not even doubt it; its just a matter of time.  Will you figure out the ending?  Maybe.  But that does not matter.  Its such a joy getting there and these characters are so much fun to be around you will not mind if you have an idea of what is to come.  This is truly a great book and one of her finest yet.

Link To Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Liar-Nora-Roberts-ebook/dp/B00O2BKKZS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1508491213&sr=8-1&keywords=the+liar+nora+roberts

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

A Deadly Web: A Bishop Files Novel by Kay Hooper


This is the second installment in the Bishop Files series.  Brodie and the good guys have decided that when they can, they will help the psychics to establish a very public profile so that it will make it very difficult, if not impossible for Duran to take them.  This is what they did with Sarah from the last book.  She and Tucker married and he wrote a book about her, which put her in the spotlight.  Her powers have grown by leaps and bounds. Another psychic, Murphy, seems to work for Brodie, Bishop, and Duran.  I'm not really sure which side she is on. Brodie now works alone.

Tasha Solomon is a very gifted psychic. She can read thoughts all around her and has a very strong shield because of this.  Her parents have just died, so she sold the home in Atlanta because she felt like she was in danger.  She moved to a very high-security building in Charleston, South Carolina and began a new life, but kept mostly to herself. Instinct seemed to tell her to stay in crowds as much as she could, though she could not say why.  Then she began to notice that someone seemed to be following her. One night she woke abruptly knowing that someone was coming to get her. She quickly made the bed so it would look like she hadn't been home and she grabbed her purse and keys and went and hid on the stairwell.  She saw some men come up the other stairwell and enter her apartment with no problem, look around, then left.  When she went back to her apartment and looked at the camera feed, she saw nothing.  How were they able to get in?

The next day at her usual breakfast café she meets Murphy who introduces her to Brodie.  What they don't know is that Duran and his psychic Astrid are nearby hoping to take advantage. Brodie opens himself up in order to gain Tasha's trust and when she goes inside, she can feel his emotions as well as see his memories and thoughts.  This gives Astrid a chance to hook into the connection and enter Tasha's mind and try to take control.  Tasha finds herself in a maze and knows that she shouldn't go to the center so she goes backward.  Then the vines of the hedge begin to strangle her arms.  Luckily, Sarah and Brodie are there.  Sarah is able to help her out of the maze and Brodie grabs her arms in the physical world and brings her back.  During the experience, the two have become linked psychically even though Brodie has no psychic abilities.

Brodie takes her back to her apartment and keeps watch over her. They spend a couple of days there recuperating.  While there, Tasha is visited by Brodie's dead wife, who tells her about her life and why Duran and his superiors want the psychics, because she was at one time, one of the ones they were after.  Tasha keeps quiet about this visit as she feels it is a rather personal matter.  But because of what she tells Tasha, Tasha soon figures out what Duran's superiors want with her and Brodie must not know.

Bishop has introduced himself to Brodie's group and made his extensive resources available to them. Three of the psychics that Bishop was watching has gone missing. And when two of them call out to him mentally, Duran becomes aware of Bishop. He wants to try to save them, but Brodie and Murphy tell him that it is hopeless to try at this point.  Once they are taken, the first thing they do is break down their minds and take their souls. All that is left is an empty husk.

This book left me feeling wanting.  It felt like it stopped mid-sentence. Technically the story arch was completed, but it left me with lots of questions, like who is Murphy and what is her agenda?  What is Duran's agenda?   What has Tucker found in his research? Who are Tasha's real parents? It was, however, a real delight to see Sarah in action. She has really grown as a character.  She is strong now and out to get the bad guys. She also has a sense of humor and really kicks ass. It will be interesting to see what happens between Tasha and Brodie.  Brodie feels the need to protect her, but since she was little, Tasha has been trained in martial arts.  Plus she has psychic powers. She can take care of herself to an extent and isn't as helpless as the usual psychics Brodie has had to bring in over the years. How will that psychic bond affect them?  Right now Brodie keeps it blocked by imagining an ocean so their thoughts will be their own. Will Brodie develop any psychic abilities from this link? I need answers!! I need the next book to come out now! I guess you could say I really liked this book.  This series keeps getting better and better. 

Link To Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Deadly-Web-Bishop-Files-Novel-ebook/dp/B00BTRDHLC/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1508334386&sr=1-1&keywords=a+deadly+web+kay+hooper

Monday, October 16, 2017

The First Prophet: A Bishop Files Novel by Kay Hooper


Kay Hooper has so far written nineteen thrillers involving Agent Bishop, the leader of the Special Crimes Unit of the FBI. This book is the first in a series that is an off-shoot of that one, which is called the Bishop Files.  It does not involve any of the SCU agents or anything that they do, but Bishop is involved, albeit, in the background, because what is going on concerns him as both the leader of the SCU and as a psychic who is concerned about other psychics.  The prologue begins with a brief battle between a man named Duran and his men preparing to attack a cabin where Brodie is protecting a psychic when things go horribly wrong. This cracks the door open to a fight very few know about.

The story begins with Sarah Gallagher, who watches the Victorian house, in Richmond, she had pain-strikingly restored with her own hands, burn to the ground.  The fire marshal says that it is arson.  A man that should be a stranger to her, but is not, Tucker Mackenzie, a successful writer, comes up to her to talk.  She knows what he wants before he opens his mouth.  He wants what they all want.  Ever since her mugging six months ago that left her in a coma and nearly killed her, she awoke with the ability to see the future.  However, no one really wants to hear what she has to say, the truth, or that she cannot turn her ability on or off at will.  In Tucker, however, she sees something different: someone who wants to believe and someone who wants the truth, no matter how painful that truth may be.

When Sheriff Lewis talks to her she tells him that Tucker is a friend from out of town. It's obvious that Lewis is not likely to discover who did this.  In fact, Duran is responsible, who is in town to capture or kill her, we are not sure.  Brodie is also in town with his partner, Cait, and they seem to be, once again, one step behind. What is it exactly that they want from her too?

Sarah and her business partner, Margo, have an apartment that either can use if need be, over their antique shop.  Tucker talks his way inside and into staying the night, especially when she tells him that she thinks someone's been watching her over the past few days.  They are greeted by a black cat named Galahad, who comes and goes as he pleases, and is quite more than he seems. Every vision Sarah has had has come true. She recognizes Tucker because she has seen him in her visions.  He is part of her fate, her destiny, her journey toward her death. She sees these shadows that are coming to kill her and a grave that she falls into with a tombstone with her name and the month of October and that year on it. It's not that long before October now. Tucker tries to convince her that surely it does not work that way, that every decision we make, changes the future, that her fate is not set in stone.  A gravestone does not necessarily mean death.  It could symbolize something else.  It is hard to convince the stubborn Sarah.

Its hard for Sarah to conceal her worry when her friend and partner, Margo returns home from the business trip early after hearing about the fire.  Sarah has had a vision that Margo will die from a bizarre accident in the shop, which is why she sent her away in the first place.  Now she can't get her to leave.  The next day when the three are in the shop, Margo, who looks similar to Sarah, goes to get something out of a dresser for Sarah that someone called saying they left in there, while Sarah is dealing with another phone call.  Suddenly, the large dresser begins to fall.  Luckily, Tucker is there and tackles Margo and gets them both mostly out of the way and uninjured.  They call Sheriff Lewis, but he is once again, no help.  This time, Margo agrees to leave, and Tucker and Sarah decide to leave too, but they get a look at the men coming to get Sarah first and get a surprise that makes them realize that they can trust no one.

They head to a cabin that a friend of Tucker has out in the middle of nowhere.  It has secure computer access and they can rest for a while and figure out their next move. This is when Tucker begins doing searches and discovers that for the past decade psychics have gone missing or been found dead.  Someone, it seems, is out to get psychics, for some reason, and it seems they are after Sarah now.  The computer, which is not even hooked up to the internet, receives a message to them to leave now.  This alarms them, but they quickly pack up and leave, with both Duran and Brodie on their tail.

Sarah's powers are quickly changing.  Now she can hear thoughts and project them.  There are two voices in her head, one saying something that she's not sure she should believe and the other, a gentle voice, guiding her north.  She is also able to see so much more than the future and has the answer to the questions Tucker has about the woman from his past that he let down. So, following Sarah's directions, while making a few detours, they travel north hoping to meet a psychic who can help Sarah control her powers and figure out what to do.  Then things go horribly wrong.  And Sarah must decide if she will accept that her vision is written in stone or if it can be changed and if she can be the one to change it. 

Bishop became aware of the missing psychics years ago and eventfully came across Duran and Brodie. He has a vested interest in what is going on here, as the members of his unit are psychics, and while they have yet been targeted, that may change.  Also, some of these missing psychics were ones he had approached but had declined to join, but he had never the less kept an eye on, just in case they needed help, and now they are gone. This book is really good.  The characters are real.  They make mistakes, they are flawed, they are scared (which they should be), frustrated, sad, overconfident,  too trusting, and just plain human, even if some of them do have psychic abilities.  And you really have no idea who to trust and even if you can see into the future, it does not mean that you figure it out correctly, which could be costly.  I am excited about the future of this sizzling new series.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/First-Prophet-Bishop-Files-Novel-ebook/dp/B008JHXORM/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1508162082&sr=8-1&keywords=the+first+prophet+by+kay+hooper

Friday, October 13, 2017

Astonishing X-Men: Volume Two Dangerous by Joss Whedon (Writer), John Cassady (Artist), Laura Martin (Colorist), Chris Eliopoulos (Letterer)


Agent Brand of S.H.E.I.L.D.'s sister agency S.W.O.R.D. which deals with aliens blew it by making an agreement with Ord of Breakworld to cure the mutants with the help of Ord and Dr. Rao's formula. Ord's people could see a future where a mutant, an X-Man to be precise kills off their planet.  So instead of going to war with Ord which goes horribly wrong, they cure the mutants.  Wolverine keeps Ord from leaving the planet and destroys the cure in the process. But Hank still has a copy of it and Dr. Rao and others can make one based on her findings within months.  They did get Pete, Colossus, back, though.

One of the students, Wing, was touched by Ord and had his powers taken from him.  This has upset him greatly to the point of committing suicide.  One of the psychics says that if he leaves the other will come. Then all of the psychics pass out and the school is attacked by a long-dead Sentinel.  While the others go and fight the Sentinel, Kitty takes the kids to the Danger Room to safety where they find Wing's dead body.  And the real danger begins.

The Danger Room is now a sentient being. It likely started when the Professor made the Sh'ar technology upgrades but with the death of Wing it has now mutated and made itself known.  All it has ever known is violence and the kids are in there with it.  Colossus and Beast both tear into the wiring to try to break in.  The Danger Room, however, is connected to anything computerized. It is what brought the Sentinel to the school and it starts up the plane.  The X-Men will fight with it, but ultimately the X-Men are not his main target. Professor X is.  Can they save him from this creature?

Quotes
Next time guys we should just rebuild this place [the mansion] outta Lego.
-Wolverine when Xavier’s School For Higher Learning gets smashed to bits again (Astonishing X-Men Volume Two: Dangerous by Joss Whedon)
Link to Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Astonishing-X-Men-Vol-2-Dangerous-ebook/dp/B00AAJQVBI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1507897013&sr=8-1&keywords=astonishing+xmen+volume+2

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Stephen Colbert's Midnight Confessions by Stephen Colbert


On The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Colbert about once a week or so, like the good Catholic that he is, wishes to confess his sins. Well, these are not necessarily sins, but he does feel bad about them.  The book is broken up into three sections: the ones he wrote, the ones that God wrote, and the ones submitted by those who watch the show.

Here are some of his:

I have violent thoughts when people use the terms "sci-fi" and "fantasy" interchangeably.  "Oh, I love science fiction. I just read Lord of the Rings." I will end you.

I update my iPhone software way more often than I call my sister.

I have a fair amount of gay friends, but sometimes....I worry that I haven't made enough gay enemies.

I have impure thoughts about the Land O'Lakes Butter Lady. But mostly about the butter.

I wouldn't hurt a fly. But when it comes to mosquitoes, I am one sick some of a bitch.

I haven't looked in my refrigerator's crisper since 1987. I can hear the brussels sprouts screaming.

I have no skeletons in my closet. They're buried under the porch.

One of the wise men in my Nativity scene broke, and instead of buying a new one, I replaced him with Lego Batman.

Here are some sent it:

I park my car between 2 trucks in the parking lot so drivers will think they found an open spot until the last moment.

Sometimes I fake an orgasm so my roommates don't suspect I'm in my room scrapbooking.

I've never told anyone this before, but I have no idea how plastic wrap works.


Overall this is a hilarious book and one worth reading.  I cannot recommend it enough.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Stephen-Colberts-Midnight-Confessions-Colbert-ebook/dp/B06ZZHMYSN/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1507810593&sr=8-1&keywords=stephen+colbert%27s+midnight+confessions

Monday, October 9, 2017

Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 by John Scalzi


John Scalzi began a "web journal" or what we would today call a blog, back in 1998 that he named Whatever.  This book is a collection of those blogs from a ten year period, 1998-2008, that also serves sometimes as a snapshot of a date in time that at first may seem so long ago or different, but in reality is not.  He is a science fiction writer as well as a free-lance writer of various things, as well as a husband and the father of a daughter.  His blogs cover just about everything under the sun: religion, politics, television, science, homosexuality, grief, breastfeeding, parenthood, philosophy (he occasionally gets to pull his major out and use it), and life in general.  He is funny, thought-provoking, poignant, and might make you angry.  He is everything a writer should be.

On his blog titled Levitcans, which is a term he made up for those "Christians" who spend way too much time obsessing over the book of Leviticus and ignoring the New Testament, he slams them for not following the actual teachings of Christ.  "Rules are far easier to follow than Christ' actual path..."  A good example of a Levitican? Fred Phelps and his group who picket funerals with signs, John Ashcroft, Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell (the last two who suggested that the terrorist attacks happened because we were tolerant of pagans, abortionists, feminists, gays, and, lesbians). Not every Christian or even fundamentalist is considered a Levitican in his book.  That takes someone who will "transmute one's belief's into hate and intolerance, to deprive others of rights they ought to enjoy." Interestingly, he says though Leviticus is part of the Torah, there do not seem to be too many Jews that fall into this category, for whatever reason.

His blog on the Scooby gang is so spot-on and something that has never occurred to me, but explains everything: Fred is a cult leader.  As a group of teenagers, these people would never hang around together. Fred and Daphne make sense in the way quarterback and cheerleader do. Daphne and Velma even make sense if you accept that Velma has an "unrequited crush" on her and follows her around everywhere.  Shaggy and Scooby, "a stoner loner and his talking, possibly hallucinated dog. A perfect match." But all of them together? No way. Why do you think Fred always insists Daphene goes with him? He doesn't want Velma anywhere near her because she would be secretly putting him down. A group of teens riding around in a van that keeps stumbling upon mysteries that are all the same? Why aren't they in school? Why don't they ever change clothes, why are they always traveling, and where are the parents?  It has to be a cult, with Fred as the authority figure who separates them from the rest of the world.  They travel, not to solve crimes, but to stay ahead of the deprogrammers. In a weird way, it explains the whole show.

In his blog titled "Best Vision of Hell of the Millennium", he talks about Hieronymus Bosch, a Dutch painter who lived between the 15th and 16th centuries.  His painting of Hell is a rather vivid and insightful look at what Hell could be.  His work would influence two great schools of art: Surrealism and Heavy Metal.  The Surrealist liked his use of color and his ability to "combine the mundane and the fantastical to make bitter and intelligent social commentary." Heavy Metal artists like him because he drew really cool demons.  Without Bosch, there'd be no Vallejo airbrushings or Dio album covers.  The church tells us that Hell is not exactly a location but an eternal absence of God's grace. So one could say that Bosch's painting is just a mythical picture. Scalzi opines that the real question is not whether where Hell is or isn't, but if we could see our souls in a mirror, would they look like what Bosch envisioned? That would be Hell enough.

In his blog on vegetarianism, he says that he could never be one.  He makes a good point that everything we eat was once a living thing and that it's a shame that animals cannot shed a steak or a fully cured ham like plants do. He does draw the line at veal, but really with a calf, it's almost a silly line to draw since it's always going to be "sooner or later".  He does love to pick on vegetarians by reminding them that Hitler was one and that he also thought up the Volkswagon. Why no one every retorts back with Stalin, who was a big meat eater, is a wonder.

Scalzi has ticked off a lot of people over the years with this particular blog on"The Lie of Star Wars as Entertainment". Lucas is not an "entertainer" because an entertainer reaches out to his audience and wants them to join him. Lucas could care less. He is more interested in creating his universe. If you are there, fine. The trilogy is a mix of "30s adventure serials, 40s war films, 50s Kurosawa films and 60s Eastern mysticism, all jammed into the cinematic crock-pot and simmered in a watery broth made from the marrow of [Joseph] Campbell's thousand-headed hero."  Lucas was very much interested in mythology and building one, which is "necrophilic storytelling; one that implicitly kills off an entire culture and plays with its corpse...It's better than being God, really. Gods have to deal with the universes they create; mythmakers merely have to say what happened." Anything entertaining about the series is purely incidental (his sources were entertaining after all, and the writers he hired were good, and the sheer novelty went a long way).  Scalzi offers a test. Go and find the 1980 B-movie Battle Beyond the Stars, which was produced by Roger Corman, with a screenplay written by John Sayles, and starring Richard Thomas.  It was made for $2 million and is funny and smart and actually entertaining because Corman and Sayles want to entertain you. Lucas could care less if he does.  Watch it and see if its better than I, II, III, and VI. They use the same sources that Lucas used. I am a huge Star Wars fan and even I have to concede that he has a point. I am also looking for Beyond the Stars now because I am terribly curious.  For those that are curious as to what he has to say about The Force Awakens, here is a link to his site: http://whatever.scalzi.com/2015/12/18/ (there are no spoilers).

I have to say I love his blog on going to the Creation Museum, which is, sadly, located in my home state of Kentucky. He tells you flat out he thinks creationism is bunk. He went there out of curiosity. A lot of money was put into this museum (you can tell). He had to wait for about an hour and a half due to a jam in the middle where there is a short movie.  When you walk in you see a display of two paleontologists unearthing raptor bones. One of them says they are both the same, only he starts from the Bible and the other guy (who doesn't speak) starts from "man's reason". Right off you have to scream b.s. It tries to put them both on equal footing, but they are not. "creationism isn't a theory, it's an assertion, to wit: The entire universe was created in six days, the days are 24-hour days, the layout for the creation and for the early history of the planet and humanity is in the first chapter of Genesis and it is exactly right." Everything in the museum is either caused by or a consequence of The six-day creation, Adam eating from the tree of life, and Noah's flood.  I'm rather glad that Eve, for once escapes blame for the whole fall of the human race,  but poor Adam. He gets blamed for the creation of venom, carnivorous animals, and even entropy (the inevitable heat death of the earth). Then there are the dinosaurs running around Eden and being put on Noah's ark. It's so over the top it's more of an amusement park than anything else. For those who truly believe, it will be a comfort, for the rest, it will be just a day of fun.  And in the end, this is a good thing. Creationism is not going away anytime soon, so we should be glad that it is totally ridiculous and boxed up and put away somewhere.

Scalzi kind of goes off on a rant that even his wife thinks might be a bit much, when he sees the ads for the channel WE, when it was starting up. They show a montage of female celebrities: Victoria Williams, Cindy Crawford, and Faye Dunaway.  Each is listing their achievements. "I'm an actress. I'm an athlete. I'm a friend."  His point is that "women should [not] feel compelled to qualify their successes through the prism of their gender.  Anytime you have to qualify your success, you implicitly diminish it." It also bothers him that all the women are attractive.  Faye Dunaway was chosen as a "director" but has only directed one movie, which was for WE.  They could have picked Penny Marshall, Betty Thomas, or Mimi Leder, all very successful directors.  In the end, he concludes, the ad is pandering to women, not inspiring them and if this is a network for women what does that say about how they think of you.

At the heart of it, PETA is not a really bad organization. I mean it stands for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. The problem lies in the fact that they are more often interested in ticking people off than anything else. At one time they were going to promote breastfeeding in Mississippi by putting up a billboard of Baby Jesus suckling the Virgin Mary's nipples. Pregnant women already know that breastfeeding is better for their baby. If they haven't already heard if from a doctor/nurse/midwife, then the "La Leche League mafia" would have told them. They were really just after making the religious conservatives angry.  Of course, this brings up the question of why is this so offensive? It's what happened. Could it be that Christians don't like to dwell on the humanity of both Christ and Mary? "Jesus' suffering was rooted in his divinity--he was called on to redeem the sins of the world--but the actual suffering part was predicated upon his human nature. Being nailed to the cross to die doesn't work if He Who is Nailed doesn't have the humanity required to suffer."  Their dual nature of being both divine and human makes them special and the fact that Mary breastfed Jesus is a part of that.

Being poor is: knowing exactly how much everything costs; having to keep buying $800 cars because that's what you can afford, but then they break down on you because a car for that much money isn't worth anything; hoping a toothache goes away; a heater in only one room of the house; hoping your kids don't have a growth spurt; finding the letter your mom wrote your dad, begging him for the child support; a bathtub you have to empty into the toilet; needing that 35-cent raise; crying when you drop the mac and cheese on the floor; knowing you work as hard as anyone, anywhere; never buying anything someone else hasn't bought first; picking the 10 cent ramen instead of the 12 cent ramen because that's two extra packages for every dollar; deciding that it's all right to base a relationship on shelter; a lumpy futon bed; people who have never been poor wondering why you choose to be so; seeing how few options you have; running in place; people wondering why you didn't leave.

There are so many more I want to write about, like the blog about I Hate Your Politics, Bad Chocolate, Adorable Little Punks, Christopher Robin is Out There in the Woods, Best Gay Guy of the Millennium (Richard the Lionhearted), The Problem With Parents, Ayn Rand, Mom!, The Speckless Sky (written the day after 9/11), Football With Jesus, The New Sesame Street Characters Suck, and the Best Personal Hygiene Product of the Millennium.  This is such a joy to read, the only drawback some might find is that he chose to not correct any spelling or grammar errors he made on his blog. After a while, though, when you get to reading, your mind just reads what it knows is supposed to be there naturally and you stop noticing them.  Trust me, this is something that annoys me to bits and I found this to be true.  My brain just auto-corrected subconsciously.  Here is the address for the blog Whatever: http://whatever.scalzi.com/.  It's funny. At the beginning of his book when he is describing blogs he talks about how people assume that blogs are written by angsty teens and cat lovers who put up lots of pictures, he doesn't really mention to what extent he falls in the latter category. I went to his website and he puts up lots of pictures of his cats. He's still writing science fiction books and blogging about everything under the sun as well, but, wow, all those cats!

Quotes
The second thing calendars do is notify us of the cyclical nature of our planet. Thanks to a more or less tilt of the earth’s axis and a regular period of revolution around our sun, our world gets hot and cold on a predictable schedule, and the patterns of life take note.  Flowers bloom in the spring.  Animals hibernate in the winter. Leaves fall in autumn.  We get re-runs in the summer.  It’s the cycle of life.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p 71)
Put these five in a room, and you don’t have the Scooby Gang, you have the Breakfast Club, minus the happy ending where they all sign a joint declaration to the music of Simple Minds.  So the idea of this group being a naturally occurring grouping of teenagers is out, way out—and enforced contact would result in somebody being bitten, not necessarily by Scooby.  Fortunately, there’s a much more rational explanation for this odd little grouping, led by Fred. It is: Fred is not the leader of a gang of friends, he’s the leader of a cult.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p84)
Occasionally I am asked if I believe in Jesus.  My standard answer to this is “as much as I believe in evolution,” which serves the dual purpose of both answering in the affirmative and usually annoying the person who asks the question.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p85)
We’re all a country song waiting to happen.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p109-10)
I could never be a vegetarian. First of all, my heart just wouldn’t be in it.  I’m okay with the fact that what I’m cramming into my mouth was once a living thing, because with the exception of chewing gum (which is some sort of plastic, untouched by nature), everything you eat was once living. It’s the way the whole digestive thing is set up.  You can’t live on chewing gum and multivitamins.  I tried it my senior year of college, when I [sic] running low on rent money. It just doesn’t work.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p 115)
The only other meat product in the fridge was a package of turkey ham that had been sitting in the meat bin for longer than I could remember.  Which of course is a very bad sign. It was lying in wait to ambush me.  It was the turkey’s revenge—first it was killed, and then it was make to perform a carnivorous transvestite act, masquerading as the meat of a pig.  Its only method of revenge was to lie in the meat bin past its due date and trick me into eating it then.  Well, not this time, Tom.  I passed it up (but I didn’t remove it from the fridge and throw it in the trash, its threat then forever neutralized. No, I don’t know why not.  I suspect the decision will come back to haunt me.)
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p116)
Star Wars is not entertainment.  Star Wars is George Lucas masturbating to a picture of Joseph Campbell and conning billions of people into watching the money shot.  There is nothing in the least bit “popular” about the Star Wars films. This is true of all of them, but especially of Episodes I, II, and III. They are the selfish, ungenerous, onanistic output of a man who has no desire to include others in the internal grammar of his fictional world.  They are the ultimate in auteur theory, but this creator has contempt for the people who view his work—or if not contempt, at the very least a near-autistic lack of concern as to whether anyone else “gets” his vision.  The word “entertainer” has an assumption that the creator/actor is reaching out to his [sic] or audience to engage them.  George Lucas doesn’t bother with this.  He won’t keep you out of his universe; he just doesn’t care that you’re in it. To call the Star Wars films “entertainment” is to fundamentally misapprehend the meaning of the word.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p120)
Thousands of years from now, after the inevitable apocalypse of some sort wipes out our civilization, future archaeologists will scour the land to make some sense of our times, and I think the process will go something like this.
Archeologist1: Look, it’s another temple of the ancestors’ dominant faith. Note the golden arches.
Archeologist2: And look what I’ve found in the storage crypt! (pulls out a box of cheese slices)
Archeologist1: Ah, the communion squares.  For their ritual obescience to Ro-Nald, the demon destroyer of worlds. You can see his terrible visage bedecking the illuminated windows from behind the tithing altar.
Archeologist2: (sniffing the cheese) These smell terrible. It must have been some sort of penance to injest these.
Archeologist1: (glancing over) You know, those samples have maintained their unholy orange taint.  They may still be potent.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p134)
But seriously, the ability to just come out and put on a placard that the Jurassic era is temporarily contiguous with the Fifth Dynasty of the Old Kingdom of Egypt—well, there’s a word for that, and that word is chutzpah.  Because, look, that’s something you really have to sell if you want anyone to buy it. It’s one thing to say to people that God directly created the dinosaurs and that they lived in the Garden of Eden. It’s another thing to suggest they lived long enough to harass the Minoans, and do it all with a straight face.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p139)
If we can’t tell the gays from the straights, then the bisexuals are really up the creek, aren’t they? Simultaneously, wearing a too-tight ribbed tank top and relaxed fit Wranglers won’t mean anything anymore. These sort of articles make me want to smack the [New York] Times upside the head and yell at it to try its hand at actual news again, you know, for a refreshing change.  I hear there’s a war on. Secondly: This is a bad thing? We live in an era in which an active quorum of religious bigots would quarantine gays into concentration camps if they could (“It’s just like Guantanamo-only fabulous!”), and the Times is snarkily concerned that we can’t simply visually identify the gay guys anymore? Hell.  I’ll  happily wear a leather armband if it’ll flummox a hateful Bible-wielder. And I’ll let a gay man borrow my Wal-Mart purchased t-shirt, just to really throw them off. He can’t be gay---that shirt is 40% polyester! Yes, the gay can blend. Just like polycotton.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p143)
Professing to have a long-standing crush on an unapproachable girl, is, of course very teen gay. So is being verbally clever, slight of build, an active participant in singing and theater groups and enjoying Depeche Mode on a regular basis.  And I took dance. Modern and Jazz. Oh, yeah. Add it all up and I was queer to the friggin’ core.  The only thing that really pegged me as possibly being in the heterosexual camp was that I was a freakin’ slob and that in addition to enjoying Depeche Mode I was also a big fan of Journey. But as anyone can tell you, gay teens compensate for their queerness by doing things like, you know, picking a random corporate rock band to obsess over, hopefully one with a moderately cute lead singer.  In my era it would be Journey. 10 years later: Creed (Today: Well, hell. All those new rock bands seem pretty sexually all over the map, don’t they? Have you got a gander at, say, Franz Ferdinand?).
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p144)
Here in the US, gay is the new British, which is to say that if people think you’re gay, they also think you are smarter, wittier, and more fun to be around than the average guy.  Sure, you sodomize other men on occasion, but that’s your business, and we Americans always suspected British men had sodomy as a required subject at Eton.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p145)
Jesus was divine, but also human. He was a baby, he had to eat. Mary was the Mother of God but also a mother; she gave birth, her body pumped out milk so she could feed her baby. Mary suckled Baby Jesus. Deal with it.  The response. We know she did it, we just don’t want to see it or think about it.  And or course, the answer here is: Why on Earth not? Well, for one thing, it’s a breast—and we all know that looking at boobs arouses thoughts of sex. Sex leads to sin, sin leads to fear, fear leads to hate, hate leads to suffering. So we just can’t have the Virgin Mary going topless. The kids will riot.  As you can imagine, this line of reasoning makes me giggle. For one thing, there’s undoubtedly a special seating area in Hell for people who have lustful thoughts about the Virgin Mary (excluding Joseph.)…For another thing, breasts being  used for breastfeeding are unsexy in almost exactly the same way a vagina being used for birth is unsexy—indeed, it’s a vivid reminder that God, in His wisdom, evolved dual uses for just about every fun-providing part of the human anatomy, and that second use is definitely not about having a good time.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p166-7)
One of the things that really chaps my ass about the people who oppose gay marriage is that so many of them seem to believe that allowing guys to marry guys or gals to marry gals will tumble the entire nation into a festering cesspool of carnal inequity, in which everyone suddenly turns into lustful raveners who engage in group marriages with dogs and close relatives, like recursively genetic unfortunates or characters from a late-era Robert Heinlein novel.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p169)
I would suspect that on a day-to-day basis and in his personal encounters the man is normal enough, which makes him, like most people, a generally nice person to be around.  I’m also sure that, like most people, he has his moments of irritability, neuroses, and supreme dickheadedness, which unfortunately for him are played out on the world stage and make for good news, while the rest of us get to have our moments of incivil stupidly in relative obscurity.  One correspondent, in listing Dubya’s not-nice crimes against humanity, noted to me that the man is reportedly given to irrational bouts of rage.  Well, maybe he is.  On the other hand, yesterday I beat a malfunctioning phone to death with a hammer. So maybe I’m not the best person to judge someone for their irrational bouts of rage. And anyway, hammering my phone to death does not make me any less nice. Yes, yes, where I hammer a phone in a fit of pique, Dubya’s can bomb a country. But I’m reasonably sure they’d bring in Colin Powell to hose him down first…Dubya-haters want him to be evil because they perceive his policies to be evil…The problem with that formulation is that it’s totally wrong; nice people do these sorts of things all the time.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008, 173-4)

You have to be a really interesting sort of ignorant not to know that the Marines kill people from time to time. Your first hint: The big rifle so many of those Marines carry around. Your second hint: All those movies, books and television shows, widely available to the general public, in which Marines are shown, you know, killing people. Your third hint: The fact that the Marines are widely acknowledged to be a branch of the military of the United States, and militaries are likewise widely known, by most people who are smart enough to stand upright, on two legs, to kill other people on occasion (typically members of other nations’ militaries, though sometimes they’re not so picky, depending on country and context).
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008, p177)
Democrats: The attention span of poultry; easily distracted from large, useful goals by pointless minutiae.  Not only can’t see the forest for the trees, can’t see the trees for the pine needles.  Deserve every bad thing that happens to them because they just can’t get their act together.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p182)
Conservatives: Less interested in explaining their point of view than nuking you and everything you stand for into blackened cinders before your evil world-view catches on like a virus. Conservatives have no volume control on hate and yet were shocked as Hell when Rush Limbaugh went deaf.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p182-3)
Libertarians: Never got over the fact they weren’t the illegitimate children of Robert Heinlein and Ayn Rand; currently punishing the rest of us for it.  Unusually smug for a political philosophy that’s never gotten anyone elected for anything above the local water board.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p183)
When you’re a student, grad student or associate professor, you vent in your blog; when you get tenure, you get to vent in a book.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p225)
If fear is hard working and has a goal, angst is like fear’s directionless cousin, the one that has a trust fund and no freakin’ clue what he wants to do.  Angst by definition has no definite object; it is formless and ubiquitous, and it just sits on your head and freaks you out.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p231)
Heidegger’s writings are so famously impenetrable they could be used by SWAT teams in place of Kevlar; to the uninitiated, he sounds a little like the self-help counselor from the third circle of Hell (“Love your Dread! Embrace the Nothingness!”).  Left unsaid is what happens after one has if fact embraced the nothingness; one has the unsettling feeling that it’s difficult to get cable TV. Also, there’s the question of what happens when on has reached a state of authentic being, only to discover one is authentically an ass.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p232)
Munch knew all about dread; first off, he was Norwegian. Second, he was a sickly boy whose family had an unfortunate tendency of dying on him: His mother when he was five, his sister when he was 14, then his father and brother while he was still young. His other sister? Mentally ill.  Munch would write, quite accurately, “Illness, insanity and death were the black angels that kept watch over my cradle and accompanied me all my life.”
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p232)
“The Scream” is just one element in Munch’s epic “Frieze of Life”, a collection of 20-odd canvases jam-packed with angst: One of the four major themes of the work, in fact, is “Anxiety”. But even the more supposedly cheerful theme of “Love”, features paintings swaddled in depression and dread: check out “Ashes” or “Separation”, and angst leaps up and hits you like a jagged rock Don’t even view the “Death” pictures if you’ve skipped your Xanax for the day.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p233)
Given the choice between Heinlein and Rand, which would I want as a parent? Let’s posit that one couldn’t have both—beyond such a union causing the cracking of at least four of the seven seals, there’s a pretty good chance that after about 15 minutes in each other’s presence, either or both of them would have been thumbing their holsters. There can only be one Alpha Male in the room.  In a shootout, incidentally, it’d be even money: Heinlein would probably be faster off the draw, but Rand would probably need a stake through the heart to go down. (Before you start: I know about Rand and her thoughts on force. But let’s just see her try to reason with Angry Bob.)
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p247)
When it comes to elections, you don’t let the GOP get close.  Letting them get close just means you can’t see where they’re planning to jam in the knife.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p278)
I’m going to talk as a man here for a minute, pleading to any woman out there who might possibly be considering expending a brain cell or two on this whole “Rules” of “Surrendered Wife” angle of things.  I will begin by saying that I can’t possibly imagine what the Hell is wrong with you that you’d ever possibly be considering something like this seriously anyway…Whatever the reason, stop. Just stop.  The last thing you want to do is put yourself in a position where a man has total control over you.  Why? Well, beyond the fact that it’s an irredeemably stupid thing to let anybody have total control of your life besides you, there’s the more particular matter of the fact that men, invariably, are dumb-asses.  Big fat stinky dumb asses, with dumb ass ideas about every dumb ass thing. Why we’re allowed out of the house without leashes is beyond me.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p 322)

The Lord is my receiver; I shall not fumble. He maketh me perform the handoff, and occasionally leadeth me to the Hail Mary pass. He restoreth the point spread; He leadeth me down the field toward victory in His name. Yea, though I thread through the Valley of the Blitzing 35-Pound Defensive Line, I will fear no sacking; for Thou art with me; Thy offensive line of burly disciples they comfort me.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p339)
Think about the classic Sesame Street Muppets and you’ll know what I mean. Each of them had his or her own endearingly neurotic quirk. Cookie Monster: Addictive personality and moderate mental retardation. Big Bird: Esteem issues. Bert and Ernie: Co-dependence. Oscar the Grouch: Misanthropy. The Count: Deviant lifestyle. Snuffaluphaus: Hell, he didn’t actually exist.  Kermit, well, Kermit was the worst, with his veneer of calm control occasionally exploding into random fits of amphibian rage (now you know why it’s not easy being green). And as for Grover: Good lord. He’s a psychiatrist’s yacht all on his own.  Elmo doesn’t have any of this.  He’s merely obnoxious and red and has ping-pong eyes. But get this: He’s the most appealing of the new Muppets. The Zoe Muppet, for example, has a personality of the sort that makes you wish that she were real, so you could stuff her in a sack and drown her in a river and be done with her….The first set of Muppets were created in the late 60s, when being freakish and weird held a romantic sort of charm, and there was the idea that maybe we should accept people eve with vaguely neurotic quirks. Today, of course, children’s quirks are merely something to be medicated out of them…The new Muppets don’t have quirks, and without the quirks, they simply grate.  This is bad news for our kids, since Muppets more or less reflect their target audience. The solution is clear: Write to the Children’s Television Workshop and demand they make their Muppets more freakish. Do it for the kids. They deserve neurotic Muppets! Years from now, they’ll thank you for it.
--John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p348)
Some people believe bad chocolate is like bad sex: Even when it’s bad, it’s still good.  This formulation is nonsense at its root. Bad sex is definitely not still good. It’s actually tremendously depressing, sort of like getting all worked up [sic] go to Disneyland just to find that the only ride open in the whole park is the monorail to and from the parking lot—and that the monorail seats small kind of funky.  Secondly, bad chocolate is worse than bad sex.  We accept that sex may occasionally be bad…but chocolate is supposed to be above that. Chocolate is supposed to be an absolute good.  Occasional bad sex is regrettable, but bad chocolate is a betrayal.
-John Scalzi (Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 p63)
Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Your-Hate-Mail-Will-Graded/dp/0765327112/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1507552919&sr=8-1&keywords=your+hate+mail+will+be+graded