
This is my Dad’s favourite book. I’ve still yet to read it. Must do soon.
But, because of the above quote, I can understand why he must love it.
(Source: theamericanatheist)
11:42 AM | 132 notes | http://tmblr.co/ZynHKxiMrCbw

This is my Dad’s favourite book. I’ve still yet to read it. Must do soon.
But, because of the above quote, I can understand why he must love it.
(Source: theamericanatheist)

The Best Book I Read This Year
The Atlantic editors and writers share their favorite titles—new, classic, or somewhere in between—from a year of reading.
Guarantee there will be something for almost any interest. There are almost 400 books available as PDFs. Amaaaaaazing.
Inner dramaturg wants ALL THE BOOKS. But inner dramaturg isn’t going to get them.

The Kennedys: Photographs by Mark Shaw
Published by Reel Art Press (September 2012)
This stunning publication is the definitive collection of Mark Shaw’s renowned photographs of the Kennedys. More than fifty percent of the images have never been seen before and are the finest reproductions of Shaw’s work yet seen in print. For the first time ever, complete access was granted to The Mark Shaw Photographic Archive in order to produce this fresh and expanded take on Shaw’s classic 1964 work, The John F. Kennedys: A Family Album. Not only is this beautiful tome a tribute to the Kennedy Family, but it pays homage to the extraordinary talent of Mark Shaw himself.
Shaw first photographed the Kennedys in 1959 for Life magazine. He subsequently developed a close friendship with the family that gave him extraordinary and informal access to their inner circle. He became the Kennedys’ unofficial family photographer and his captivating shots capture some of their most intimate and candid moments. Photographs include Kennedy’s favourite ever shot of himself, walking alone on the dunes at Hyannis Port, plus images on the campaign trail, relaxing at home with friends, entertaining at the White House, and the sombre days immediately following JFK’s assassination.
Mark Shaw (1922-1969) was an American photographer renowned for his photographs of the Kennedys and for his fashion work. He worked for several magazines such as Harper’s Bazaar, Mademoiselle and Life. During his sixteen years at Life, he shot twenty-seven covers and over one hundred stories. He photographed the rich and the famous, including Elizabeth Taylor, Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn, Pablo Picasso, Brigitte Bardot and Pope Paul VI. He was also the first photographer to shoot backstage and in colour at the European couture fashion shows. He won numerous awards for his still photography and commercial work, most notably with his Vanity Fair lingerie campaign.
Want!! Want!! WANT!!
Ooooh.. just in time for their anniversary? Yeah, probably so.
It’s a book about an oppressive government that forces teenagers to kill each other as a means of exerting arbitrary control and entertaining the masses (just in case that sounds familiar to you). It came out in 1999 and it’s pretty fucking amazing.
There’s also a film adaptation that is well-regarded:
Learn what came before.
Or, you could admit that like anything in the written word, they’re based on similar themes, but completely different stories, seen in opinions here:
In their normal lives, Shuya and Katniss do have similarities. While Shuya’s mother left his family and his father killed himself, and Katniss also has a dead dad and a mom who has emotionally and mentally checked out. They are both intelligent and popular in their normal lives. When it comes to fighting and killing their peers, however, they diverge greatly. Unlike many of his classmates, who fight either out of fear or pleasure, Shuya is actually a docile character who immediately forms an alliance and, for the most part, tries to keep his head low. The same can’t be said about Katniss in the Hunger Games arena. Rather than operating through fear, Katniss is endlessly determined to win, fueled by her desire to see Gale and her sister, Prim, again and while she does try to keep to the shadows, she is a true force to be reckoned with once she has her bow and arrows.
Or here:
However, when Battle Royale ends (spoilers!) with Shuya and Noriko escaping, that’s it. That’s the end of the book. With the exception of a plan to get to the USA, we don’t really know what happens to our protagonists after that. We don’t get any behind the scenes of the game. It’s the one game and that’s the end.
Or here in this fancy little piece by the ever disresputable Wall Street Journal, where we learn that:
Collins herself has repeatedly denied having ever seen or even heard of “Battle Royale” until she’d already turned in the manuscript of the trilogy’s first novel, at which point she asked her editor if she should read it. “He said: ‘No, I don’t want that world in your head. Just continue with what you’re doing,’” she told the New York Times last April, and claimed to have still never read the book or the movie.
You know, Ron was completely respectable in his differing opinion and he at least read the original source material when he had a differing opinion or tried to.
I have a long standing belief: you can bitch and complain all you want, as long as you’ve taken a chance to hear out and at least make a good faith effort to explore the other side’s point of view.
With all due respect, Battle Royale is and was a cult film and, in the U.S. novel, and that all changed with the popularity of the Hunger Games. You would think that Battle Royale fans would be happy that something they hold in such high respect was finally getting the recognition that they felt it deserved and would tell fans of the series, “Hey, if you like that.. then check this out…” but no. It’s a war to rival both stories where there is only one absolute winner.
And the next time you bring up how similar Battle Royale is, I’m going to start saying what a rip off it is of Golding’s “The Lord of the Flies”. Premises have to be incredibly similar in this day and age, where we are roughly a thousand of years past the first printing press and even thousands more since the first play. You mean to tell me there isn’t some ancient Japanese drama that Takami didn’t “borrow” from, at least the idea of a society at war within itself?
Seriously?

This is a photo of President Barack Obama volunteering as an assistant coach at his daughter’s basketball game. It has nothing to do with MoJo DC bureau chief David Corn’s new book, Showdown, about the first three years of the Obama administration, available for pre-order and in stores next week. (You can check out an excerpt here.)
We just thought it was an awesome photo.
Pete Souza/Flickr
One party preaches family values… another one just lives them without all that hypocrisy getting in the way and telling others what to do…
Okay, so my publishing company Lachesis Publishing is promoting one of our authors - David Lee Summers - he writes Science Fiction/Fantasy and Horror. I’ve just edited some short stories that he wrote for an historical vampire series - really good! I like his writing. And he doesn’t write about wishy-washy vampires - these are hard core vamps!
And he is such a cool guy - he is an astronomer! wowee! he works at Kitt Peak National Observatory, outside of Tucson, Arizona but he lives in New Mexico.
Anyway - super nice guy - and a good writer - so i hope you’ll give his writing a try.
We’re offering one of his earlier books for free - it’s the first book in his Science Fiction series.
The Pirates of Sufiro. You can get it free at Barnes and Noble Nook: click here
You can also get it for .99 cents at Amazon Kindle (so, that’s almost free) click here
For more info about The Pirates of Sufiro click here.
cheers!
jojo
Not my thing, but just in case anyone is interested..