Monday, March 17, 2025
Saturday, March 15, 2025
[Link] Small Changes
by Emily Miller
There is obviously a political context to this post. A context that difficult things have happened and more difficult things are likely to happen in the future. For people like me, and maybe you, there is a sense of powerlessness, a sense of what we think and what we do doesn’t really matter.
I also feel like I don’t recognize my country, or maybe that I just hate what my country has clearly become. It’s dispiriting, paralyzing even.
In the face of such challenges, this is not intended to be a pep talk. It is not intended to be a rallying cry (even I’m not quite so narcissistic as to think anyone would rally to a cry I made, I’m nobody). But, contrary to my parenthetic words, this brief article is about the things that a nobody like me – maybe like you – can do. And it’s not hypothetical, it’s based on small things I have actually done, small things I have actually achieved.
So, I write erotic literature if I am feeling pompous, and I scribble porn if I am in a more realistic mood. Some people expect me to be ashamed of this. I’m not. I think any form of consensual and legal sex is a blessing to be cherished and celebrated, not something dirty to be hidden. And it’s fun to write, I deal with real human emotions, as well as procreative bodily functions.
What difference can smut make in the world? Well maybe not a lot, certainly with my limited audience, but not zero difference either. Here are four examples of small changes I have made in people’s lives through what I write.
Read the full article: https://emilymillerlit.wordpress.com/2024/11/07/small-changes/
Friday, March 14, 2025
Taylorverse Books releases BAD GIRLS, GOOD GUYS AND TWO-FISTED ACTION!
- Rick Ruby
- Lance Star
- Agara, Goddess of the Dark Lands
- Ulysses King
- The Peregrine
- Armless O'Neil
- The world of The New Deal
- Aym Geronimo and the Post-Modern Pioneers
- Blackthorn
Monday, March 10, 2025
Saturday, March 8, 2025
[Link] Evocation and allusion: Hemingway’s book titles
by Jeffrey Meyers
The best titles of Hemingway’s novels and stories have biblical and literary sources, poetic evocations of the themes, and allusions to tragedy, trauma and death. His fiction often returns to his teenage wound and narrow escape from death during World War I in Italy. By suggesting the physical locales and using bitter irony to foreshadow fatal events, he enhances the meaning of his work, reminds readers of literary associations and draws them into the tales.
The title of The Garden of Eden (published posthumously in 1986) comes from Genesis 3:24, “So He drove out the man; and He placed at the east of the garden of Eden cherubim, and a flaming sword” to keep Adam and Eve out. The title warns that the characters’ idyllic life in France and Spain will not last.
A Moveable Feast (1964), with its idiosyncratic spelling, comes from a heading in The Book of Common Prayer (1549): “Movable feasts, Tables and Rules.” These holidays are not fixed dates like Christmas, but like Easter occur on a different day each year. Hemingway uses the phrase literally to suggest the endless youthful pleasures of food, drink, sport, friendship, sex and love in Paris during the 1920s. In Across the River and Into the Trees (1950) Colonel Cantwell says “Happiness, as you know, is a movable feast.” In the posthumously published True at First Light (1999) Hemingway (himself often a movable beast) calls love a “moveable feast.” But the melancholy mood beneath the festivities warns that these pleasures cannot last.
In In Our Time (1925) the sketches of life and death, which capture essential moments between 1914 and 1923, ironically echo the hope expressed and invocation denied in The Book of Common Prayer, “Give peace in our time, O Lord.” After World War I the soldier Nick Adams experiences bitter trauma rather than tranquil peace.
The Sun Also Rises (1926) comes from Ecclesiastes 1:4-5, quoted in the epigraph: “One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: but the earth abideth forever. The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to his place where he arose.” The preacher declares the world is nothing more than “vanity of vanities.” Men soon die, but the earth lasts forever. The pristine fishing scenes in the Pyrenees mountains of Spain contrast with the characters’ decadent life in Paris.
In To Have and Have Not (1937), the 1930s Depression theme suggests the struggle for existence; the unequal conflict between the rich and the poor; between those who own and don’t work and those who work but don’t own. Hemingway quotes Matthew 25:29 to express the economic conditions of the poor: “For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath.”
Read the full article: https://www.thearticle.com/evocation-and-allusion-hemingways-book-titles
Friday, March 7, 2025
Crazy 8 Press' Thrilling Adventure Yarns 2025 is now on sale!
To honor and celebrate the bygone era of pulp magazines, Crazy 8 Press has assembled a stellar lineup of writers to produce new thrills and chills, spanning mystery, sword and sorcery, horror, science fiction, romance, and adventures. We will take you to other worlds, other realms, and other times where heroes and heroines battled for justice or survival or just getting through the day.
Thrill to brand new stories from Dan Abnett, Charles Ardai, Liz Braswell, Russ Colchamiro, Win Scott Eckert, Mary Fan, Michael Jan Friedman, Paul Kupperberg, Elliot S Maggin, Jeffrey J. Mariotte, Author Bobby Nash, Christopher Priest, Aaron Rosenberg, Hildy Silverman, William F Wu. Edited by Robert Greenberger. Cover b Jeffrey Hayes.
Each yarn is bigger and better than the one before it!
Thursday, March 6, 2025
The Great White Savior (Or Why It's Way Past Time To Retire Tarzan, Sheena, and The Last Samurai)
- To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee: While Atticus is portrayed as a moral hero, the narrative centers on his perspective and heroism rather than Tom's experience and agency.
- The Help by Kathryn Stockett: The story revolves around a young white journalist, Skeeter Phelan, who writes a book about the experiences of black maids in the 1960s South. The narrative often shifts focus from the maids' struggles to Skeeter's journey and growth.
- The Blind Side (2009): The narrative emphasizes the wealthy white family's role in Michael's success, overshadowing Michael's own resilience and efforts.
- Dangerous Minds (1995): A white teacher, LouAnne Johnson, takes a job at an inner-city school and is depicted as the savior of her predominantly non-white students, who are portrayed as needing her guidance to succeed.
- Avatar (2009): A white protagonist, Jake Sully, becomes the savior of the Na'vi, an indigenous alien race, by leading them in a fight against human colonizers. This narrative centers on his transformation and heroism rather than the Na'vi's own resistance.
- The Last Samurai (2003): A white protagonist, Captain Nathan Algren, joins the Samurai to resist the Emperor and imperialism as part of the Satsuma Rebellion. The story focuses on Algren's journey to be a hero rather than the efforts of the Samurai (wich a few exceptions that need to be shown in how they related to Algren's growth).
- The Phantom (comic strip, movie, comic books): While the mask may hide the identity of "The Ghost Who Walks," it never hides the fact that this hero of the jungle is the white man Kit Walker.
Monday, March 3, 2025
Saturday, March 1, 2025
[Link] This Is How Reading Rewires Your Brain
According to Neuroscience, reading doesn’t just cram information into your brain. It changes how your brain works.
by Jessica Stillman
We all know reading can teach you facts, and knowing the right thing at the right time helps you be more successful. But is that the entire reason just about every smart, accomplished person you can think of, from Bill Gates to Barack Obama, credits much of their success to their obsessive reading?
Not according to neuroscience. Reading, science shows, doesn’t just fill your brain with information; it actually changes the way your brain works for the better as well.
The short- and long-term effects of reading on the brain.
This can be short term. Different experts disagree on some of the finer details, but a growing body of scientific literature shows that reading is basically an empathy workout. By nudging us to take the perspective of characters very different from ourselves, it boosts our EQ. This effect can literally be seen in your brain waves when you read. If a character in your book is playing tennis, areas of your brain that would light up if you were physically out there on the court yourself are activated.
Another line of research shows that deep reading, the kind that happens when you curl up with a great book for an extended period of time, also builds up our ability to focus and grasp complex ideas. Studies show that the less you really read (skim reading from your phone doesn’t count), the more these essential abilities wither.
Read the full article: https://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/reading-books-brain-chemistry.html