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28. April 2005, 04:28:26
RogueWarrior 
hemingway is great

28. April 2005, 04:26:03
danoschek 
Subject: Hemingway
Modified by danoschek (28. April 2005, 04:27:11)
densed-blood literature very well fitting for long winters ...

Here some resources for you ... ... ~*~ .

14. April 2005, 22:09:22
bumble 
For our younger readers (and those young at heart) - an author recommended by Nirvana.

Beverly Cleary

14. April 2005, 02:41:11
danoschek 
Subject: In Memoriam: Andrea Dworkin
Andrea Dworkin, feminist activist and author who helped break the silence around
violence against women, died in her home on April 9 at the age of fifty-eight,
after an illness. Her impassioned words always informed, provoked and inspired ... ~*~

12. April 2005, 16:15:17
Andre Faria 
Subject: Re: REVIEW:
ANTICHRIST: Very weak, compared with "The Gothic Book", by Mick Mercer.

12. April 2005, 06:54:19
danoschek 
Subject: Re: REVIEW:
Modified by danoschek (12. April 2005, 07:07:54)
ANTICHRIST: nice review and since it's not the philosophy board where a one
and only true answer is a bore 'per se' it merely be claimed here as existing ...
fyi an article in the music context I put in one of my FSs lately about GangstaRap ... ~*~

11. April 2005, 15:41:31
ANTICHRIST 
Subject: REVIEW:"Dark Reign Of Gothic Rock" BY:THOMPSON, DAVE
There had been so many discussions and descriptions in the media regarding the term “gothic rock”, but none of them really pointed out THE one and only (true) answer. And let’s nail it on the wall - none of them ever will. Neither in this book.

The reason is just obvious: Although the face of this style at first sight seems just simple, in reality there are far too many ingredients and sides in order to strap down handcuffs without compromises. Thompson approaches this phenomenon in a really exciting and entertaining manner, adorning his book with a remarkable amount of stories, details, facts, private dives and more, besides he integrates comments from several artists like Robert Smith, Ian Astbury, Nick Cave, Peter Murphy, Peter Hook and others. The book is a trip through many years. Punk, post punk, batcave and the initial flirt with the word “gothic”, the departure mood in those times, the role of the media, scandals, provocations, drug abuse, anti-mainstream creativity, the do-it-yourself mentality, the influence of the vampire creature and the effect by albums like Iggy’s „The Idiot“, Nico’s „Marble Index“ or the first releases by Joy Division, Siouxsie, Bauhaus, Cure and other bands coming up that time - all this Thompson tells about with loads of background knowledge. Further more he touches upon the changes within the music scene, the evolution of the bands including their ups and downs during their career (f.e. The Cult, The Cure), crises and split ups (f.e. Sisters versus The Mission), the standstill period of the gothic rock music and finally the reunion (gig) thing going on years later with bands like The Mission, Fields Of The Nephilim, The Cult. At last you can find a chronologically overview of important events, sessions and releases happening during the years. This book (423 pages by the way) is nutritious readers' food and can be recommended to everyone involved and interested in the dark scene.

11. April 2005, 15:37:58
ANTICHRIST 
Subject: REVIEW:"The Book Of Metal" BY:INGHAM, CHRIS
Starting with „A“ like A Perfect Circle and Atari Teenage Riot and going ‘til „Z“ like Zombie, Rob – in his reference book Chris Ingham (chief editor of UK’s Metal Hammer) confronts us with the most important representatives within the rock, metal and industrial sector.

Nirvana, Paradise Lost, Skinny Puppy, Deftones, Ramones, Type O Negative, Killing Joke, Slipknot, Ministry, Tool, The Cult, Misfits, Black Sabbath, Smashing Pumpkins – the author wanders through various styles und offers well investigated band infos and bios, always decorated with stylish photos. You really notice his long-standing experience as journalist as you’re not getting the usual standard gossip but exciting and interesting facts, as well as some criticism when necessary. Apart from loads of bands Ingham also shortly examines the diffent styles, from gothic rock ‘til new metal. All in all you’re offered a very good info pool on 256 pages, available for about 25 $ as paperback in European A4 size.

28. March 2005, 10:25:59
danoschek 
Subject: gnod
Modified by danoschek (28. March 2005, 10:58:57)
The Global Network of Dreams is a nice site for people interested
in literature. The site comes with an authors search that is designed
in an uncommon way and appealing from the graphics and its function ... ~*~

The link in bold above shows an example output for searchword 'Poe' ... .

25. March 2005, 22:33:54
Partica 
A good read for any interested in Spiritual Healing - "The Magus of Strovolos"

24. March 2005, 22:30:28
danoschek 
Subject: please remember
this is a public board. ... ~*~ .

24. March 2005, 21:57:57
Bruno Jesus 
Does anyone have the seventies editons of "Tania and "Gina"?
I loved those editions...

15. March 2005, 07:02:22
redfrog 
Subject: Sci-Fi
Any fans of Daniel Keys Moran here?

Armegeddon Blues...
Emerald Eyes....
The Long Run....
The Last Dancer....
Terminal Freedom....

???

2. March 2005, 00:43:41
nobleheart 
Subject: just discovered this group : good concept
a few recommneded books I have read:
Lip Service-Kate Fillion
http://www.beatrice.com/interviews/fillion/

Shake Hands With The Devil-Roméo Dallaire
http://www.canadiandemocraticmovement.ca/books-index-bkid-16.html

Crashing the Party: Taking on the Corporate Government in an Age of Surrender-Ralph Nader

24. February 2005, 00:17:30
danoschek 
Subject: Re:
ughaibu:
MacBeth actually means simply 'Son of Beth' ... ~*~ .

23. February 2005, 14:43:48
ughaibu 
The Scottish "Mac" is a patronymic so I'm puzzled by MacBeth. In the case of royalty was an exception made for the heir to a queen or was (is) Beth also a men's name in Scotland?

22. February 2005, 04:15:01
The Listener 
Subject: Hey Rube
Modified by The Listener (22. February 2005, 04:18:29)
Hey Rube : Blood Sport, the Bush Doctrine, and the Downward Spiral of Dumbness Modern History from the Sports Desk
                                   By Hunter S. Thompson

13. February 2005, 01:08:39
Mongoloid 
Sad news... :'-(

12. February 2005, 20:27:10
danoschek 
Subject: Arthur Miller, known here as an "American with one European Eye" died at the age of 89
Modified by danoschek (12. February 2005, 20:30:30)
Arthur Miller died with the same dignity by which he had always lived, at his home in
Connecticut on February 10th, at the age of 89, and he will be greatly missed by all
who knew him or his work. A great writer, a staunch humanitarian, and vital human
being, his biggest legacy is his writing, and he has thankfully left us with a great wealth.
It will be the society's privilege to continue to promote and study this national treasure. ~*~

30. January 2005, 19:00:37
danoschek 
Subject: Ephraim Kishon Dies at 80
I discovered him quite early and he sure is one of the founders of my humour ...
"Turn around Mrs Loth" and "The seasick whale" were the first books of him I read.
He died appearantly by heart attack - here a reminiscential by the Washington Post. ~*~

29. January 2005, 03:30:05
Skyking 
Subject: Re: H.G. Wells
Mongoloid: Reminds me of Well's The Time Machine

28. January 2005, 10:01:45
Stardust 
Subject: Re: H.G. Wells
Mongoloid: It was the last time I checked lol

28. January 2005, 04:07:18
Mongoloid 
Subject: Re: H.G. Wells
Stardust: Yes, that's what I was thinking!
I'm studying to be an author, and it was very interesting to see that HG Wells placed his future time around 2100. That's still our future, isn't it?

28. January 2005, 02:00:35
Stardust 
Subject: Re: H.G. Wells
Mongoloid: Sounds good. It would be interesting to see how a 19th century author imagined lfe would be like that far into the future. Thanks for the tip :-)

27. January 2005, 23:17:43
Mongoloid 
Subject: H.G. Wells
I'm currently reading a book called, "When The Sleeper Wakes" by H.G. Wells.
Originally published in 1899.

It's a story about a man who falls into a deep sleep and wakes up over 200 years later in the future.
A most highly recommended read for anyone with a good imagination and zest for classic Sci-Fi :-)

26. January 2005, 18:54:54
Stardust 
Subject: Final Witness by Simon Tolkien
Skyking: Interesting fact.

I've just started reading a book by the grandson of J.R.R.Tolkien. His name is Simon Tolkien and he is a barrister in England. The book is called Final Witness and is the junior Tolkien's first novel. I've only read the first couple of chapters yet (too soon to rate the book). His style of story telling is different from what I'm used to reading but eerily close to my own!

26. January 2005, 12:35:55
Skyking 
Enheduanna
the First Author




Who: Perhaps more a title than a name, "Enheduanna" means something like "High Priestess, Ornament of the Sky."

When: Enheduanna was born around 2300 BCE, though some scholars place her a little later, at circa 2285-2250 BCE.

Where: Sumer and Akkad (Mesopotamian kingdoms) were united and ruled by Enheduanna's father. Enheduanna was Akkadian, but lived in the Sumerian city or Ur. This is in the part of the world that we now know as southern Iraq.

6. January 2005, 16:02:28
danoschek 
Subject: Christos Se Rodi
Modified by danoschek (6. January 2005, 16:03:49)
The Orthodox Tribes celebrate Christmas Eve today ...
I wish a Merry Christmas - Blessed Be Every Open Heart ... :")
If you are interested in the Shades of the Word, feel free to check these Bible Studies ~*~

14. December 2004, 13:06:06
cariad 
The book is a far far better thing that I read than I have ever read.

13. December 2004, 12:59:18
Skyking 
Subject: Re: He dies at the end..
In the Book, Bumble? A look alike sacrificed for him in this movie.

13. December 2004, 02:45:57
The Listener 
That's a 'no' then is it ? hehehehe

13. December 2004, 02:39:31
The Listener 
Subject: Hard reading...
Anyone here read the entire book ?

13. December 2004, 02:36:13
RamblinMan 
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness,... and it goes on like that for a while but i don't remember the guy dying @ the end? ;-)

13. December 2004, 02:15:49
bumble 
He dies in the end. Oh, I hope I haven't spoiled it for anyone. :)

13. December 2004, 01:34:22
The Listener 
Subject: Tale of Two Cities...
It's the French Revolution -- What'd you expect ?

13. December 2004, 00:46:01
Skyking 
I just watched a video of Charles Dickens classic Tale Of Two City's and was shocked. Is this how the book is. I wouldn't let a child read that book.

11. December 2004, 19:28:45
RamblinMan 
Subject: I have an Idea Werner
do you yahoo? if so I am ramblinmanmike or if not, can you send me via PM your email?

11. December 2004, 14:34:20
danoschek 
Subject: a good weekend to everyone ...
Modified by danoschek (11. December 2004, 14:35:09)
I hope the poetry board and its purpose is not forgotten. my apologies
to the comment already writtten ... but it would have been irritating, so
standalone without the post it referred to, therefore I deleted it as well. ~*~

11. December 2004, 11:57:25
Skyking 
Subject: Re: Dano re: richard bachman
Running Man was good too. Book and Movie

10. December 2004, 16:55:39
Niki 
Subject: Dano re: richard bachman
I thought The Bachman Books excellent ! Especially Rage and The Long Walk :))

29. November 2004, 13:02:43
Skyking 
Subject: Re: Happy Birthday C.S. Lewis
I have not as yet started reading his The Last Battle yet I read the other books in the serie. I have the troilogy Out Of The Silent Planet, Perelandra, & That Hideous Dtrenth that sounds interesting

29. November 2004, 12:59:04
Skyking 
Subject: Happy Birthday C.S. Lewis
Lewis, C. S. (Clive Staples Lewis), 1898–1963, English author, b. Belfast, Ireland. A fellow and tutor of English at Magdalen College, Oxford, from 1925 to 1954, C. S. Lewis was noted equally for his literary scholarship and for his intellectual and witty expositions of Christian tenets. Among his most important works are The Allegory of Love (1936), an analysis of the literary evolution of romantic love during the Middle Ages; The Screwtape Letters (1942, rev. ed. 1961), an ironic treatment of the theme of salvation; and a history of English Literature in the Sixteenth Century (1954). He is also the author of Out of the Silent Planet (1938) and That Hideous Strength (1945), outer-planetary fantasies with deep Catholic and moral overtones; the "Chronicles of Narnia," a series of allegorical fantasies set in the mythical kingdom of Narnia, including The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1950) and The Silver Chair (1953); many works of literary criticism, including Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature (1966); and the autobiographical Surprised by Joy (1954). From 1954 until his death he was professor of Medieval and Renaissance English at Cambridge.

20. November 2004, 02:09:23
The Listener 
Subject: Rev. 18
-
-
-


Can you hear MP3s?...
If so, here's a good one z;)

http://www.audiotreasure.com/mp3/Revelation/REV18.mp3

  If not, here's the text:


           Revelation 18


Babylon is Destroyed

18:1 After these things I saw another angel, who possessed great authority, coming down out of heaven, and the earth was lit up by his radiance.

18:2 He shouted with a powerful voice:

"Fallen, fallen, is Babylon the great!
She has become a lair for demons,

a haunt for every unclean spirit,

a haunt for every unclean bird,

a haunt for every unclean and detested beast.

18:3 For all the nations have fallen from the wine of her immoral passion,
and the kings of the earth have committed sexual immorality with her,
and the merchants of the earth have gotten rich from the power of her sensual behavior."

18:4 Then I heard another voice from heaven saying, "Come out of her, my people, so you will not take part in her sins and so you will not receive her plagues,

18:5 because her sins have piled up all the way to heaven and God has remembered her crimes.

18:6 Repay her the same way she repaid others; pay her back double corresponding to her deeds. In the cup she mixed, mix double the amount for her.
18:7 As much as she exalted herself and lived in sensual luxury, to this extent give her torment and grief because she said to herself, 'I rule as queen and am no widow; I will never experience grief!'

18:8 For this reason, she will experience her plagues in a single day: disease, mourning, and famine, and she will be burned down with fire, because the Lord God who judges her is powerful!"

18:9 Then the kings of the earth who committed immoral acts with her and lived in sensual luxury with her will weep and wail for her when they see the smoke from the fire that burns her up.

18:10 They will stand a long way off because they are afraid of her torment, and will say,

"Woe, woe, O great city,
Babylon the powerful city!
For in a single hour your doom has come!"
18:11 Then the merchants of the earth will weep and mourn for her because no one buys their cargo any longer—

18:12 cargo such as gold, silver, precious stones, pearls, fine linen, purple cloth, silk, scarlet cloth, all sorts of things made of citron wood, all sorts of objects made of ivory, all sorts of things made of expensive wood, bronze, iron and marble,
18:13 cinnamon, spice, incense, perfumed ointment, frankincense, wine, olive oil and costly flour, wheat, cattle and sheep, horses and four-wheeled carriages, slaves and human lives.

18:14 (The ripe fruit you greatly desired
has gone from you,
and all your luxury and splendor
have gone from you—
they will never ever be found again!)

18:15 The merchants who sold these things, who got rich from her, will stand a long way off because they are afraid of her torment. They will weep and mourn,

18:16 saying,

"Woe, woe, O great city—
dressed in fine linen, purple and scarlet clothing,
and adorned with gold, precious stones, and pearls—

18:17 because in a single hour such great wealth has been destroyed!"

And every ship's captain, and all who sail along the coast—seamen, and all who make their living from the sea, stood a long way off

18:18 and began to shout when they saw the smoke from the fire that burned her up, "Who is like the great city?"

18:19 And they threw dust on their heads and were shouting with weeping and mourning,

"Woe, Woe, O great city—
in which all those who had ships on the sea got rich from her wealth—
because in a single hour she has been destroyed!"

18:20 (Rejoice over her, O heaven,
and you saints and apostles and prophets, for God has pronounced judgment against her on your behalf!)

18:21 Then one powerful angel picked up a stone like a huge millstone, threw it into the sea, and said,

"With this kind of sudden violent force
Babylon the great city will be thrown down and it will never be found again!

18:22 And the sound of the harpists, musicians, flute players, and trumpeters
will never be heard in you again.

No craftsman who practices any trade
will ever be found in you again;

the noise of a mill will never be heard in you again.

18:23 Even the light from a lamp
will never shine in you again!

The voices of the bridegroom and his bride
will never be heard in you again.

For your merchants were the tycoons of the world,
because all the nations were deceived by your magic spells!

18:24 The blood of the saints and prophets was found in her,
along with the blood of all those who had been killed on the earth."


            ~ MS

18. November 2004, 14:11:33
Nirvana 
Dornford Yates is one of my favourite authors,

Dornford Yates

16. November 2004, 21:58:32
engram 
Subject: oops, correction...
It's five DVDs with over 25 hours, not two DVDs.

one must be precise if one wishes to be insightful...or is that spelled inciteful? Oh drat, one must have a dictionary if one wishes to spell with precision.

16. November 2004, 21:23:26
engram 
Subject: Re: John Carter was the lead character in Edgar Rice Borroughs..
My brother got me two DVDs with over 25 hours of old sci-fi flicks. They were terrible, my youngest daughter spent the night and we tried watching some of them...we both had nightmares that night.

I never read any of Burroughs sci-fi stuff and yes I agree....gorgeous. Two thumbs up on that review!!

16. November 2004, 21:06:02
bwildman 
Subject: John Carter was the lead character in Edgar Rice Borroughs..
Mars series.
"War lord of Mars"
"Synthetic Men of Mars"
"Swords of Mars"
to name a few.
and yes...a gorgeous red-head ;-P

16. November 2004, 21:01:21
engram 
Subject: Re: We are all published authors here...think about it..
I don't remember John Carter. Was he Sci-fi writer? I was heavy into sci-fi as a teenager, but didn't notice until later most good sci-fi is written by science guys who can't write well. The science part was good, but style of writing lacked something. Since you and I are the only ones here now, I guess that makes us the designated book critics.

Is Tuesday a red head? I thought she might be. Ahm smiling like a butchers dog!! Wheeee doggies!!

16. November 2004, 20:57:01
bwildman 
Subject: "The Robe"
is based on the story of the Roman Centurian who was ordered to crusify Christ,then won his robe,with a dice game.

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