Site Feed

contact me


my Flickr

Sad Salvation Fotolog

Super Karate Monkey Fist

Last FM profile

Home

Technorati Profile

Reads

Imaginary Year

Invisible City

Raccoon

It Is What It Is

Aaron's Weblog

CraBlogged

Me(ish)

faisal.com

Adventures in Trouble- shooting

Sugary Sweet Machine

San Jose Blogs

Daily C

Random Curiosity

Elkit in Wonderland

Ego, Ego, Ego!

GuysBlog

Sci-Fi Hi-Fi

Intricate Plot

Torches Over the Wino

is that all there is?

BotzBlog

are you there god? it's me, margaret.

Dahlshouse

post-hip chick

Kadavy.net

Mike's Blog

Zeigen

ALL ART BURNS

Slacy's Blog

Paul's Time Sink

Disorderly Content

fling93 loves fishies

UnNatural History

Munich-
maedchen


Introspection/ Extroversion

derf content, blog-style

antwon.com

SF Bay Bloggers

San Francisco Bay Area Journals

The Bay Area Is Talking

Random Blogs

Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?

Inactive

Photo-a-day

Better Than Reportingly

Sans Sheriff

House Band

Here Are The Facts You Requested

Other Things

Jeremy's Superfun Portal of Mystery

Invisible City

Angela's Daily Planet

Bob Pence

Peter Conrad

biscoRADIO

Powered by Blogger Pro™

Comments by: YACCS

Welcome to Sad Salvation. Day by day by day by day ... this is my attempt to make sense of the world.



Current | Archives


Sunday, April 01, 2007


Life on other planets

I heard a news story the other day about the huge Hexagon on Saturn. Right now scientists cannot explain what it is. On the radio they were comparing the Hexagon on Saturn to the Red Spot on Jupiter.

After hearing this story on the radio I kept on thinking about the Red Spot on Jupiter. What would it like to live on a habitual planet with this kind of storm on it? I do not think I have ever read this in science fiction. What would it be like to be on a planet with a permanent storm on it? Think of a planet like earth that had a hurricane over a land mass and that hurricane never ended. Think about a hurricane over the Tropic of Capricorn that never stopped.

I wounder what it would do to living conditions around the storm would be like. I wonder if the storm would make the area impossible to live in or would it be like the Nile after the floods? Would the storm be different over land or over sea?

I wonder how that would effect the development of culture on that planet. I think that so much of the planet's culture would be effected by the storm. People would worship the storm as God or as the work of God.

As the culture grew up would people challenge the storm? Would extreme adventures try to defy the power of the storm. Would businesses find ways to make money off the storm. Would the storm be blamed for droughts and plagues. Would Scientist try to find a way to put an end to the storm.

I wish I knew someone who taught a creative writing class. I think this would be a good idea of a bunch of writers to try to tackle.

Labels: , , , , , ,


Friday, January 12, 2007


Best American Fiction of the Last 25 years

The New York Times has published a list of the Best American Fiction of the Last 25 years. I have read five of the twenty-two books on the list.

Independence Day by Richard Ford
The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien
Where I'm Calling From by Raymond Carver
White Noise by Don DeLillo
Underworld by Don DeLillo


Of the five I read, I loved all but Underworld. I am not surprised that Underworld is on this list. I think it is the kind of book that people who write and read for a living really like. I found it to be thick and hard to penetrate. I just could not get into it.

There are three Don DeLillo books on the list. My favorite Don DeLillo book, Mao II, did not make the list. I thought that book really captured so much about identity and self value. It is unlike any other book I have ever read.

I liked White Noise. This is a book I was supposed to read for a class in college. I never read the book but I still passed the test on the book. I guessed my way to a good grade. When I read White Noise three years later, I called up the professor and talked about the book with him. I love how unreal the second half of the novel is. Whenever I bush my teeth with my finger I think of this novel.

Whenever I am asked what is my favorite novel of all time, I usually say either Independence Day or The Sportswriter. I would have rather seen the Sportswriter on this list, but winning a Pulitzer Prize might have pushed over the top.

The Things They Carried is a great book. It is not a novel, but a collection of vignettes with a common set of characters. The title story is just amazing. I remember reading it 10 times in a row when I borrowed the book from Jeremy. I need to find a copy of this book and read it again. It has been too long.

Cathedral is my favorite short story of all time. It alone is worth going out and buying a copy of Where I'm Calling From. I have always been amazed by Raymond Carver style of writing about nothing happening. I can remember getting in my car and hearing Cathedral on Selected Shorts. The story was so beautiful that I just sat in the parking lot of a strip mall and cried.

I would love to hear what you have read on this list. I also want to know if you think there is something missing from this list.

Labels: , , , , , ,


Friday, June 27, 2003


Slash Wand

I do not know why people are surprised that it is women that are behind Harry Potter Slash Fiction. I always thought that it was women behind Star Trek Slash Fiction. I wonder if Warner Brothers things it can get it to go away. The people you would alienate are usually your biggest fans.

Labels: , , ,

 

Current | Archives

Contact me