Hancock's Half Hour, the Very Best Episodes: v. 2
Full Cast, Alan Simpson, Sid James and Ray Galton
Book
Galton and Simpson have chosen another selection of favourite episodes from the classic radio...
Slavery
Book
Western slavery goes back 10,000 years to Mesopotamia, today’s Iraq, where a male slave was worth...
The Classical American House
Book
This latest compilation volume for The Images Publishing Group reveals an enticing glimpse into the...
Lou Grande (148 KP) rated Teratologist in Books
May 15, 2018
If you've read Edward Lee's Infernal Series, you may notice the similarities in theme. It isn't just good vs evil, it's Good vs Evil. It has the same dash of irreverent humor and more than enough depravity to make it a fun read for readers with iron stomachs.
That said, this is absolutely not for the faint of heart. If you're easily offended, why are you looking at a book by Edward Lee and Wrath James White to begin with? Both are masters of the splatterpunk genre, which has given birth to the "extreme horror" subgenre. This book will gross you out. Even seasoned readers might cringe at some of the acts depicted in THE TERATOLOGIST. They disgust on a moral and visceral level, but isn't that the point?
The New Directions Anthology of Classical Chinese Poetry
Eliot Weinberger, Ezra Pound, Kenneth Rexroth and Gary Snyder
Book
This rich compendium of translations is the first to look at Chinese poetry through its enormous...
tonidavis (353 KP) rated Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Season 6 in TV
Jul 20, 2017
Once more with feeling isn't the only great episode this series Tara death is again moving and the movement of Dark williow is superub of course the yellow crayon speech is so moving and heartfelt. I met Nick Brendon dressed as the yellow crayon was one of my favorite moment of my life.
ClareR (5561 KP) rated Nothing to Hide (DC Constance Fairchild #2) in Books
Jul 27, 2019
It’s a police procedural of sorts: Con is suspended because of something that happened in the previous book, and trouble seems to follow her. First the tabloids won’t leave her alone and are camped outside her flat, and then she finds the barely alive body of a young black man in her bins. He has had his tongue and testicles removed.
Even though she is suspended, Con finds herself involved in the investigation of this case. She travels up to Edinburgh where the boys mother lives, via a visit to her estranged mother. There she meets the enigmatic Reverend Dr Edward Masters, the leader of the Church of the Coming Light.
I couldn’t (or didn’t want to) stop reading this - it was fast paced, exciting and completely engrossing. The supporting characters were great to read too (a bit of other-worldly guidance from two very well written characters).
I can’t wait for the next in the series, and I shall be definitely looking for a copy of the first book!
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole for another excellent read, and to the author, James Oswald, for reading along with us!
Masters of Their Craft: The Art, Architecture and Garden Design of the Nesfields
Book
In this informative volume, Dr Shirley Rose Evans explores the lives of two of the most prominent...
The Billionaires Club: The Unstoppable Rise of Football's Super-Rich Owners
Book
Once upon a time football was run by modest local businessmen. Today it is the plaything of...
Suswatibasu (1701 KP) rated Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House in Books
Jan 10, 2018
Wolff seeks to fill in the gaps between the various tweets and public appearances made by the U.S. president during the last 13 months, the rash decisions and the thinking behind the bizarre rants. But more than anything, this book seems to explain the Trump brand, and everyone who has become a prime role in marketing it, especially Trump's ex-right hand man Steve Bannon and his family Ivanka and husband Jared Kushner. Their position is explained to be the 'puppet masters', in which unlike any other U.S. government - policies are dictated and "trickled upwards".
In this, Trump is described as 'post-literate', unable to read or concentrate on anything that doesn't interest him, petulant like a child, and disturbingly vacuous. This is less shocking than expected. However, the claims made in the book range from covert connections with the Russians ahead of the elections in great detail, to 'allowing' former head of the FBI, James Comey, to stay in power so that would did not investigate internal affairs - allegedly confirmed by Bannon.
Other less explosive statements include Trump's inner circle reportedly saying how ridiculously stupid he is, which he has recently refuted by saying he is a "stable genius". Overall, an incredibly readable book mostly corroborating what liberals and non-Trump supporters believe.