
Awix (3310 KP) rated Godzilla (1954) in Movies
Mar 24, 2018 (Updated Mar 24, 2018)
The sequences with the human characters have that slightly melodramatic, soap-opera-ish feel to them common to many B-movies, but the actual monster attacks are astonishingly bleak and explicit about the massive body-count left in Godzilla's wake. You get a strong sense of a country left reeling, struggling to come to terms with why this catastrophe has been visited on them (the movie reflects the widespread Japanese belief that the country was a victim of the second world war, not an aggressor).
It's quite hard to compare this to most of the subsequent films, for this is obviously a much more serious parable. Some of the melodramatic plotting lets it down a bit, and the climax is rather disappointing given the strength of the earlier set pieces. But it's clear why people are still making movies about Godzilla nearly sixty-five years later.

Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False
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In Mind and Cosmos Thomas Nagel argues that the widely accepted world view of materialist naturalism...

I Drink Therefore I am: A Philosopher's Guide to Wine
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Here Scruton explains the connection between good wine and serious thought with a heady mix of...
Cyber-Physical Systems of Systems: Foundations, a Conceptual Model, and Some Derivations: The Amadeos Legacy
Andrea Bondavalli, Sara Bouchenak and Hermann Kopetz
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This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. Technical Systems-of-Systems (SoS) - in the form...
Mission to the Volga
Ahmad Ibn Fadlan, Tim Severin and James Montgomery
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"A compelling account which is, among other things, the earliest first-hand description of travel...

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2357 KP) rated Strangled Eggs and Ham in Books
Jun 27, 2019
The book takes a little time setting up the characters and motives before the murder takes place, but once the murder happens, things are off and running. Robbie combines what she learns while working at her restaurant with sleuthing outside of work hours to reach the logical conclusion. I appreciated how both sides of the resort issue were presented fairly because both sides did have views that needed to be heard. Part of that comes from well-rounded suspects. The series regulars are as fantastic as always; I enjoy spending time with them. If the book leaves you hungry, you’ll be happy with the five recipes at the end. Spending time with Robbie is always a pleasure and this book is no exception.

Trophy Hunt
Book
It's an idyllic late-summer day in Saddlestring, Wyoming, and game warden Joe Pickett is fly-fishing...

Gore in the Garden (Washington Whodunit #5)
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After her boss narrowly escaped political defeat, Kit Marshall is settling into life as a busy...
Mystery

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2357 KP) rated Deadly Summer Nights in Books
Sep 15, 2021
As much as I loved the book, I found the mystery to be rather week. We get too much about life at the resort for it to have the time to be fully developed. However, it’s hard to complain since resort life sounds fabulous. I’m not ready for summer to be over, and I enjoyed dreaming about spending time on the lake with nothing to do. The book is set in the 1950’s, and I felt like I was transported back in time as well. The characters are as charming as the setting, and I want to see more of them. I enjoyed this book enough that it won’t be my only visit to Haggerman’s.

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2357 KP) rated Once Upon a Murder in Books
Feb 21, 2024
The first book in this series was one of my favorites of last year. This book wasn’t as good, but it was still enjoyable. As with the first book, the mystery takes a backseat at times. However, here the other storylines weren’t as compelling. This is especially true of the romance. I was glad it wasn’t dragged out too much and I bought it in a way I wouldn’t in other series, but I wasn’t as invested in it. When the murder really kicks in during the second half, I was more fully on board, and I love how that was resolved. Likewise, I still loved all the characters and did enjoy seeing what happened to them. Fans of the first will want to pick this up. If you missed the first, you’ll definitely want to start there.