On the Nightstand.

After finishing the final word of relentless page-turner, Gone Girl, I moved immediately on to whatever else Gillian Flynn wrote.

Dark Places by Gillian Flynn

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God, this book is so good.

(gone girl)

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this looks good

from Indie Bound:

Let’s talk about secession.

Not exactly the most suitable cocktail party conversation starter anywhere in the country, but take that notion deep into the heart of Dixie and you might find yourself running from the possum-hunting conservatives, trailer-park lifers, and prayer warriors Chuck Thompson encountered during the two years he spent traveling the American South asking the question: Would we be better off without ’em?

The result is a heavily researched, serious inquiry into national divides which is unabashedly controversial, often uproarious, and always thought-provoking. From a church service in Mobile, Alabama, where the gospel entertainer announces “Islam is upon us!” to a store selling Ku Klux Klan memorabilia on a quaint little street in South Carolina—Thompson lifts the green velvet drapes on a South that would seem to belong more to the time of Rhett and Scarlett than the dawn of the twenty-first century.

By crunching numbers, interviewing experts, and roaming the not-so-former Confederacy, Thompson—an openly disgruntled liberal from the Northwest—makes a compelling case for southern secession. What would the new nations look like if Virginia governor Bob McDonnell was elected as the first President of the Confederate States of America? If a southern electorate was left to fend for itself while the North did damage control on an economy decimated by cut-rate southern workers who operate as a rival nation within its own borders? If the BCS championship football game were replaced by a North vs. South Coca Cola/ Starbucks Blood Bowl™? If Florida went to the South and Texas to the North in the most complex land-and-population grab in American history?

Better Off Without ’Em is a deliberately provocative book whose insight, humor, fierce and fearless politics, and sheer nerve will spark a national debate that is perhaps long overdue.

About the Author
Chuck Thompson is the author of several books, including the comic travel memoirs Smile When You’re Lying and To Hellholes and Back. His writing and photography have appeared in numerous publications, including Outside, Men’s Journal, Atlantic Monthly, Esquire, and Maxim.

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Books Written in DNA Code

Scientists who encoded the book say it could soon be cheaper to store information in DNA than in conventional digital devices.

from guardianuk

Scientists have for the first time used DNA to encode the contents of a book. At 53,000 words, and including 11 images and a computer program, it is the largest amount of data yet stored artificially using the genetic material.

The researchers claim that the cost of DNA coding is dropping so quickly that within five to 10 years it could be cheaper to store information using this method than in conventional digital devices.

Deoxyribonucleic acid or DNA – the chemical that stores genetic instructions in almost all known organisms – has an impressive data capacity. One gram can store up to 455bn gigabytes: the contents of more than 100bn DVDs, making it the ultimate in compact storage media.

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On the Nightstand

Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

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What if you had an eccentric old uncle who handed you the keys to a rundown turn-of-the-century library?

from oldhouseonline:

Left over from a turn-of-the-century summer colony, this library remained surprisingly unaltered. Now it has been restored outside and updated inside by caring homeowners.

The old Dunbrack Library in southern Pennsylvania had sat shuttered and unused since closing its doors in 1958, its only inhabitants powder-post beetles and a snaking trumpet vine.

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Doing some heavy reading at work.

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Patriotic Radical

America’s most controversial writer Gore Vidal has died….

First things first, Vidal HATED the Bush’s. All of them. He called W a “cretin”. He was a  ferocious, and often isolated, critic of the Bush administration. In his controversial polemic, ‘The Enemy Within’, Vidal unleashed an awesomely scathing attack on W’s Presidency, calling for an investigation into the events of 9/11 to discover whether the Bush folks had deliberately chosen not to act on warnings of Al-Qaeda’s plans, using the attacks as a pretext to enact a pre-existing agenda to invade Afghanistan and crack down on civil liberties at home.

In The Last Empire, Vidal argued that ‘Americans have no idea of the extent of their government’s mischief … the number of military strikes we have made unprovoked, against other countries, since 1947 is more than 250.’

A pompous and self-righteous aristocrat, an unreconstructed isolationist in the Senator Henry Cabot Lodge/anti-Treaty of Versailles tradition, Gore Vidal was one of the grand old men of American letters. He understood American history in the way few Americans do today. Thomas Jefferson, a fairly radical democratic republican, hoped the average American would be smart enough to elect governments from an educated aristocracy of merit. Not that he’d be surprised if we fucked up – the founders assigned a complicated set of federal checks and balances. This whole thing lost its equilibrium with W and is racing further downward with this year’s cabal of idiots. Gore Vidal urged Americans to return to the ideals of the Enlightenment as expressed in the Constitution of 1787. The alternative, Vidal knew, is one of those “revolutions” Jefferson suggested were needed every generation or so to set things straight again.

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On the Nightstand

I just started Sheila Heti’s new book and am taking the bold step of talking about it before finishing it. The novel, about a female playwright obsessed with becoming the world’s most famous genius, has been reviewed by James Wood in The New Yorker who didn’t get it, and a million other places, from Paris Review to Gawker. Weirdly, the novel was published in Heti’s homeland of Canada way back in 2010 by House of Anansi, but had been turned down by slews of American publishers even though her first novel  Ticknor was published in the US by the prestigious Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

The first sentence of How Should a Person to alert me is; “There are certain people who do not feel like they were raised by wolves, and they are the ones who make the world tick”.

Lots of reviewers have compared this book to the TV show “Girls”, which is not completely without merit (I like that show, btw). What is worth noting is the way in which both this book and that teevee show are not afraid of the ugly or the terrible. Unlike the beautiful, the morally good or at least the redeemable, in literature and on the teevee – those who don’t dwell on their own perversions or vanity, these women don’t worry about making themselves likable or attractive.

Sheila wakes up and says: “I untangle myself from the sheets and get up and go to the mirror to start my day. I produce a haughty, superior expression to intimidate myself into thinking I am cool, cooler than I am. I make my eyes as world-weary as possible, like a fashion model’s”. There is this very young quality to the characters and their philosophical speculations, marveling at their own glib, intellectual heft. They simply cannot tolerate “ugly” things, and are entitled – not in money or social status (they are in TORONTO) – but in their impatience at being recognized for their inherent specialness, which comes from just “being”. Their “fashion model” impassive coolness is such that they shouldn’t actually have to “do” anything to elicit admiration. Sheila fantasizes that;

“Everyone would know in their hearts that I am the most famous person alive—but not talk about it too much. And for no one to be too interested in taking my picture, for they’d all carry around in their heads an image of me that was unchanging, startling, and magnetic.”

Will report back when finished.

 

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RIP Nora Ephron

 

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