« Archives in April, 2010

Review: The Lost Symbol

Five bucks and a tube sock full of pistachio nuts to whomever bitch slaps Dan Brown on my behalf.

Bring the backhand around for a second pass, and I’ll promise to ensure the tube sock is clean.

Now, I’m not a Dan Brown hater, who knew I was going to dislike the book before I even read it. I don’t particularly like his books, but I don’t hate them, either. He has some good ideas, he just can’t seem to write them down in an evocative or interesting way.

This review contains some mild spoilers. That shouldn’t matter, because it’s a fucking Dan Brown potboiler. The whole point of reading it is you ALREADY KNEW WHAT THE FUCK WAS GOING TO HAPPEN. If you didn’t…well, I’m sorry, but I have to revoke your library card. Please cut it up until itty bitty pieces, place it in a just opened bottle of Rittenhouse 100 Bonded Rye whiskey, and mail it to me at PO Box 132, Madison, WI 53717.

In The Lost Symbol, Brown continues his tradition of leading you through the story using a carrot on a stick, a ring in your nose, and a riding crop on your ass. If it were any more obvious that he wanted you to read the book non-stop because you have to know what happens next, the book would be called Don’t Put Me Down.

Actually, that would have been a good name for this review. Not that Dan Brown will read it. Or ever know that I exist. Or even spit upon me from the lofty golden perch he has erected with the millions of dollars he has made.

Here, Mr. Brown pulls us through another Robert Langdon adventure, in which the college professor saves the world from the horror that would occur if we knew what the Freemasons did.

Except we know what the Freemasons do. We know they drink wine from skulls, and practice ritual death, and do all those crazy things. We read books about it ages ago. People do weirder things every day, and most of them don’t make the news, even if they do involve politicians.

Also, even if half the government got kicked to the curb, and special elections were held for everything imaginable, we’d just be a few extra billion in the hole, and a bunch of idiots just like the last ones would be in office. Only the rich can afford to run for public office, and precious few of them give a flying fuck about really doing anything good for the country.

So, the neat part of the book is the part about how we’re surrounded by symbols, many of them masonic. Which is true. Many of the founding fathers were Freemasons. Freemasons are pretty awesome, and have a great love for imparting wisdom incrementally, so learning is a journey. They like symbols, because they provide a feeling of enlightenment when you decode them.

So, Mr. Langdon follows a crazy dude through the nation’s capital, National Treasure style, and some people die. others get hurt. there’s some even crazier crap about Noetics that I don’t disagree with, but feels so tacked on in an effort to prove his points about apotheosis and the power of the human mind that they’re laughable.

Read the book if you want to see a pretty decent outline for a story that will probably make a great Hollywood big budget screenplay, and is a pretty damned middle of the road novel.

And don’t forget to smack Dan brown for me.

By the way…it was Mr. Brown. In the library. With the shotgun.

Plug:The Sovereign Era: Year One

New Media author and one of our favorite DIY evangelists Matthew Wayne Selznick has a new anthology set in his Brave Men Run universe called The Sovereign Era: Year One. The anthology includes stories from some of the biggest names in New Media like Mur Lafferty, J.C Hutchins and Matt Wallace. It’s currently only available electronically with at paperback in the works, but I don’t know about you, but I’m not gonna wait for trees to die before I read it. Check back for the inevitable review.

This Day in (Harmonic) History, April 14th

April 14th gets a bum deal.

Why, you ask?   Well, let’s look at the obvious.   For all those of you that like to wait until the last minute to pay your annual bribe to the government, a.k.a. your income tax, April 14th is the last day.  True, the actual last day is not until the 15th, but there is still enough stress to bleed over to the 14th and make the day miserable.

Now, let’s look at the not-so-obvious.  A quick glance through history will tell you that April 14th has not been a kind day for the world.  For instance, in 1846, the Donner Party leaves Springfield, Illinois on the 14th of April for California and we all know what happened to that little venture.  For the historically challenged, the party got lost in the mountains and resorted to cannibalism to survive.  A pleasant little bedtime story for your children.  In 1865, Abraham Lincoln is shot in the head by John Wilkes Booth at the Ford’s Theatre, which is another happy little story.  Be sure to take the kiddies to the Ford Theatre in Washington, D.C., where you, too can see the linen that the President bled out on, complete with bloodstains and perhaps a little brain tissue as well.  Not convinced yet that April 14th has a dark side?  How about the sinking of the Titanic?  That’s right, guys and gals, the unsinkable ship struck an iceberg in the Atlantic at 11:40 pm, April 14th, 1912, causing the boat to submerge the following morning and kill 1517 people.

I hear you all cry out ‘But Tony, surely there has to be something good about April 14th!’  Either that, or it’s the voices in my head again.   In either case I exclaim that yes, there is some good still on this day.  It was this day in 1894 that Thomas Edison invents the kinetoscope, which is basically the precursor to motion pictures and allowed people of the time to watch animated peepshows and allowed a whole new medium for pornography to spill into.  Speaking of film, it was this day in 1956 that videotape was first demonstrated.  However, the advent of film is not the reason for this observance.  For our little discussion, we would need to go to 1945 in Weston-super-Mare, England.

Why 1945?  Why England?  Simply put, one of the greatest guitarists of all time was born on April 14th, 1945.   I, of course, am talking about Ritchie Blackmore.

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Quick Review: Moon

Moon (film)

Image via Wikipedia

Duncan Jones‘s Moon is a lesson in one of the most basic tenants of story telling: Keep it simple.

98% of the movie only has 3 characters, two of which are played by the phenomenal Sam Rockwell, and pretty much only one set, but the story doesn’t need more than that.

Speaking of the story, it’s a pretty awesome mindfuck and has a cool lesson in corporate assholiness. Over all, well worth a watch and really probably should have won an Oscar. Expect a deeper review later.

Collision Detection!

Backoff timer expiring in 6…5…4…3:

Fuck it.

As a great man once said, “Buy the ticket. Take the ride.”

You haven’t heard from me in a while. Judging by the vast quantities of comments and emails received, Pat and Tony may have noticed. Possibly.

You’re the audience. Were you listening? Are you even listening now? I may never know.

During that time, somewhere in the back of my brain, the entire idea for this column was mutating. It was meant to be a place where I’d try and talk a bit about social media, and perhaps inspire you to dig deeper. To get to the meat of what we’re saying to each other, so you could sit down and chew the fat.

Instead, I feel I was putting out rehashed puffballs of fluffy crap that maybe interested someone for a nanosecond and were quickly forgotten beneath the buzz provided by their grande mocha half-fat latte.

The anger I felt towards myself for this turned the whole thing into a rotting idea in the back of my mind. I sacrificed my hate to it for the last week and watched it evolve into a sphere of grey-green ichor, pulsing like the heartbeat of a meth addict in a marathon and screaming a chainsaw scream.

This morning, as my inner eye roved over this magnificent horror again, I found a mottled rat standing atop the thing as if it were a soapbox. His one good eye had a gearwork monocle screwed into it, and the other sported a jaunty patch. He clutched a bottle of Bushmills in one scabrous claw, and pointed the other at me in mute indignation, as if asking what I was gonna do about this thing.

Based on the scuff marks on my knuckles, the fire in my belly, and the half gone bottle I whiskey I spy on the desk before me, I beat the little fucker to death. Possibly with this keyboard. Then I assume I ate the mutated idea. Who knows how long I’ll be spewing this thing up.

Social media has me spinning in all directions. It’s the most gloriously useless thing we’ve ever had access to as a species.

It’s as if we had telepathy, and all we ever used it for was to tell people what we had for lunch.

Goddamn, we’re idiots. I include myself in that, by the by. Look at what I’m doing with social media right now. I should be organizing a takeover of this horrific government we’ve enslaved ourselves to, and instead I’m typing up this tripe. One nation, under polarization. Divided we fall; United we rust. It makes me pissed at myself all over again.

So, on a (mostly) weekly basis, I’ll now be screaming whatever the fuck I like in this space. It could be social media bullshit. It could be articles on why I think tech sucks. It could be a book review. It could be an unboxing of my Nexus One, if the thing ever comes out on Verizon. It could be a 4 minute Youtube video of me getting drunk and falling down. I promise to keep my pants on. Wearing them on my head counts.

Stop by, and get your dose of vitriol. Drink it up, you little shits. You’ll have to lap it up out of your hands, because daddy sold the cups and spoons for whiskey money.

If you don’t care for the tone this column has taken, write me a letter and let me know. Email works, but I can only guarantee it will be read if you wrap the missive around a liquor bottle and leave it on my front porch. Gin would be good. Gin makes a man mean.

…2…1. Backoff timer expired. You are free to transmit.

Quick Review:Warren Ellis’s Ignition City

Warren Ellis is one of my heroes. What can I say, I’m a bearded asshole that smokes too much, and occasionally uses a cane and writes weird shit. Who am I supposed to idolize?

Anyways, Ignition City tells the tale of a woman looking into the death of her father in the retro-futuristic 1950′s, traveling to the ass end of the planet to the shanty town that is the last place on Earth where you can catch a ride into space. There she finds that the city is really the place where humanity has stuffed their inconvenient individuals, such as some of the first people in space.

As for the story, it’s the usual Warren Ellis badass-ness that can be summed up in a particular scene where a scientist kicks open a door and screams, “Science will FUCK YOU!” whilst brandishing what appears to be a Tesla gun.

So to sum up: Ignition City is pure Warren Ellis: a good story that reminds you that we are all hemorrhoids on the asshole of humanity and that science will indeed fuck us all.

Flash Fiction: A God in Mendota Park by Pat Humphreys

I saw Thor today, sitting in the park by the lake looking out over the water. He was wearing sunglasses, graying blond hair pulled back tight into a pony tail.

He looked forlorn, gazing out over the lake, as if remembering his younger days. You could still see the God of Thunder in him. His shoulders were still broad and you could see the muscles still under the wrinkled skin of his arms.

Is that what it’s like in the twilight of your years? Sitting alone, pining away for the good old days? I could see that he had resigned himself to his lot, though I suspect it took him longer than most of his fellow deities.

Yet even then, he still had the dignity of a God. He sat upright, back straight, as he gazed out from his rocky pearch, beard blowing in the breeze. Like an old biker that never hides his gang tats, confident that he could still take any man in the room but perfectly happy to let his aura be the only warning that this being was not one with whom to fuck with.

Thor shook his head, as if say “Well, that’s enough of this shit,” and stood, hitching his jeans up over his gut. I look away in difference to this god while he adjusted himself, for every being needs dignity, but as I returned my gaze he had disappeared, a faint peal of thunder in the distance the only remeberance that there had ever been a god in Mendota Park at all.

A Week Without a Post…

…doesn’t mean we don’t love you, it just means us and all our regular content suppliers have been busy with the dreaded Real Life.

On that note, we do have content coming (w00t!) and you are welcome (and encouraged) to help on that front, so if you have stories, poetry, essays, random thoughts that you think would fit here, let us know or drop an email to slushpile@badkarmaink.com.