Saturday, November 30, 2013

Wednesday November 27, 2013 Thanksgiving Eve

On the Net, someone asked:  Given an Earthlike, mostly-rural colony planet, what weapon would be used to hunt wild turkeys?

My response:  Depends muchly on the level of technology. 

And a warning against use of atomic grenades, which wouldn't leave the meat in condition to be cooked and eaten.

***Comments on "Wrong Futures:  James Blish, 'Beep'"

Andre Guirard, 11/26: "Of course, for most people the point of science fiction isn't prediction -- it's story."

Dan Goodman @Andre Guirard, 11/27: Probably true. However, some people like accuracy; and if an sf writer makes inaccurate guesses about the future, that part of the readership can become annoyed -- years, decades, centuries, or millenia before the time in which the story is set.

I remember seeing new "USSR invades America" novels in bookstores for a while after the fall of the Soviet Union. I suspect their reprint value is relatively low.

Jordan 179 11/27: "You're assuming that the current Third World countries will _retain_ their independence. I would not take this for granted, given the high number of failed Third World states and the increasing danger this poses the Great Powers due to improved international communications. I will grant that the _Netherlands_ re-colonizing Indonesia is unlikely for various reasons, but I could easily see Indonesia winding up under the domination of Australia, or China."

I don't think Indonesia is among the most likely to be re-colonized.  But one never knows.

"The popularity of smoking has historically waxed and waned. (If you don't believe me, note the original 17th century reaction to the first tobacco-smoking)" 

Slight correction -- first outside the Americas.

As happens with various other drugs.  Moral panic cycles:  A behavior is considered something to joke about and otherwise taken lightly at certain points in the cycle.  Then it becomes regarded as A Major Menace.

Apparently, cocaine and heroin have reciprocal cycles.  Sometimes cocaine is seen as a relatively safe drug; and there are experts saying it's not really addictive, etc.  Not like that horrible drug heroin.  Then cocaine becomes The Big Menace -- and at least some druggies turn to nice, safe heroin.

Harry Turtledove's story "The King of All" is set in an alternate world where caffeine is the Big Bad Drug.

"The medical issue might be trivial by the end of the 21st century ('Oh darn, I have lung cancer. Gotta go down to the doctor for a shot to clear that up!').

"I agree with you on the unlikelihood of an extensive interstellar empire by the end of the 21st century. Too many critical energy and social thresholds to cross. In fact this prediction is unlikely even from a c. 1950 point of view.

"I certainly _hope_ that women continue to enjoy the equality with men that they do in the modern Western world, but there are already strong counter-trends, most notably from the growth of Islamic fundamentalism. As to whether or not _America_ still dominates the world of the late 21st century, that's up for grabs. Depending what happens over the ensuing decades, our global leadership might be greater, less or about the same as it is today. America is certainly the country most likely to become the Universal State of the West -- our main rival in that regard would currently be China.

"I don't think 'dumb-paper' newspapers will be that important centuries from now, but people may still want print-outs or other highly-portable displays on surfaces larger than pocket-sized. Though I suspect the information will be projected directly into their retinas, or even brains.

"We're all very lucky that the Soviet Union collapsed without a full-scale World War. It very pleasantly surprised _me_, when it happened. I think it surprised a _lot_ of people."

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Wrong Futures: James Blish, "Beep"

About the future of science fiction, I can make one surefire prediction.  Writers will make wrong predictions.  And the kinds of mistakes they'll make can be predicted by reading old sf stories.

James Blish's short story "Beep" was published in 1954.  It begins centuries in the future, jumps back to 2089 or 2090, then returns to the far future.

Here is the late 21st century heroine:  "Dana Lje -- her father had been a Hollander, her mother born in the Celebes...The conqueror Resident who had given the girl her entirely European name had been paid in kind, for his daughter's beauty had nothing fair and Dutch about it."

The Netherlands acknowledged Indonesia's independence in 1949.  Dutch colonial officials were probably scarce for a while before that.  In the last years of the 21st century, Dana is a bit old to be called a girl.

1949 was before 1954.  The author missed social and political changes which had already happened.

Dana smokes incessantly, in other people's offices.  Today's smoking restrictions weren't in place; but by 1954 there were medical studies which showed smoking caused lung cancer.  Tighter rules on smoking could have easily been foreseen.

Technology, Blish overestimated and underestimated. 

Overestimation:  An extensive interstellar empire by the end of our century is unlikely.  In the implausible future we inhabit, even Mars hasn't been settled yet.

By the way, Earth and its empire are run almost entirely by American men.  The only female government employee shown is a secretary.

Underestimation:  When the viewpoint character of several hundred years later is introduced, he's hiding behind a newspaper.  A printed newspaper.

Print newspapers have gotten thinner, and include pointers to material only available on the Web.  I do not expect them to be common centuries from now.

"Jo hailed a hopper."  The hopper is apparently a flying taxi.  Its driver -- male, of course -- is a hoppy.

Self-driving cars are becoming practical now.  I expect human-piloted cabs to be very scarce in the far future.

Would readers have found anything implausible about this future?  Perhaps the absence of the Red Menace.  It was obvious to the meanest intelligence that the Soviet Union would still be strong at the end of the 21st century.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Wednesday November 13, 2013  Minnesota Daily story on the Hawaii legislature passing a bill legalizing same-sex marriage:  "Sen. Sam Slon...said the government should stay out of legislating marriage.

"'People have differences, and you can't legislate morality.  You can try, but you can't do it' ...."

I see an inconsistency there.

***To Waite House for NAPS (Nutritional Assistance for Seniors) food.

And for the twice-monthly produce distribution.  Abundant apples, radishes, and cabbage available.

***Southeast Como neighborhood organization Annual Meeting at Van Cleve Park.  Attendance was light.  And only three or four were college age, in a neighborhood where 52 percent of the population is 18 to 24.

In fiction, political meetings are usually exciting.  In real life?  File that trope with "War is fun."

***Comments from: Bonnie Randall Schutzman 11/13: "I think in images and sounds, but there's also usually a word-based narrative going on."

tickertape synesthesia

Carole Zastera Michels 11/13  "Words for me. I asked a friend in Germany which language he thought in, and he said he didn't think in a language."

Carol Kennedy 11/13  "In something like patterns, but as I have said before, if one doesn't think in words, it's very hard to describe in words how one thinks!"

John Shannonhouse 11/13 "I think in processes."

Lee Gold 11/13 "Words
"Memory flashbacks (embedded experiences, which includes all senses)"

***From Twitter:

Jeff Noon ‏@jeffnoon My dead wife often speaks clearly: “In two miles turn left.” Other times her voice is garbled, fuzzy with static. The car veers on the road.

Jesse Sheidlower ‏@jessesheidlower Reading Dictionary of Old English online; Chrome asks, "This page is in Malay. Would you like to translate it?" Hmm.

PLOS ONE ‏@PLOSONE Stone-Tipped Spears Predate Existence of Humans http://news.discovery.com/human/evolution/stone-tipped-spears-pre-date-existence-of-humans-131113.htm … via @Discovery_News
[More precisely, they predate our species of human.]

Wonkette ‏@Wonkette Help Us Keep Our Day Drinking Sexy And Discreet With This Bra That Holds Wine - http://happynicetimepeople.com/help-us-keep-day-drinking-sexy-discreet-bra-holds-wine/ …

Friday, November 15, 2013

Thursday November 14, 2013  Novel about synesthetic vampires:  Susan Hubbard, The Society of S.  Seen at Minneapolis Central Library.

***Adult Children Anonymous meeting.  Topic:  Laundry List traits 7 and 8:
We get guilt feelings when we stand up for ourselves instead of giving in to others.

We became addicted to excitement.
 
***Comments from:
bubbleblower, 11/13 "I sometimes think in words, and sometimes in pictures.  The pictures are sometimes electronic schematics or other diagrams, and sometimes move (that includes animated diagrams).
 
"I may occasionally think in other modes, but not often."

Dreamshark, 11/13 "Words, mostly."

stardreamer, 11/13 "I think in words, unless I'm specifically trying to visualize something.  This is also one of the reasons I can't read and carry on a conversation at the same time; I 'hear' the words in my head when I'm reading, and they compete for the aural-processing channel."

houseboatonstyx, 11/13 " Pictures Movies Visual diagrams

and

Kinesthetic choreography!

"What NLP calls 'Derived Kino'. As when Lewis said, 'Our muscles respond as we read it.'"

Andre Guirard, 11/13 "I think in condiments."

Lois Fundis, 11/13 "All of the above? Plus music!"

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Do you think consciously in:
Words?
Pictures?
Movies?
Visual diagrams?
Non-visual diagrams?
Something else?

***"That hilarious moment when a black talk show host gives DNA results to a white supremacist, 'Hey Bro!'"
....
"The studio audience laughed while Goddard, who is a black woman, told him the news that genetically he is 14 per cent Sub Saharan African, 86 per cent European, which Cobb promptly dismissed as 'statistical noise.'"
http://preview.tinyurl.com/n4hxjqb
Via Wolf Bro on Facebook

The figure I've seen for White Americans with nonwhite ancestry is 20 percent.  However, I suspect this assumes all European immigrants have been of pure White ancestry.

***From Twitter:

Ben Zimmer ‏@bgzimmer My latest for @lexiconvalley: Batman bin Suparman Arrested on Drug Charges. Here's How He Got His Name. http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_valley/2013/11/11/batman_indonesian_man_with_superhero_name_runs_afoul_of_the_law.html

Political Animal ‏@politic_animal In debate on probation, Richard Drax MP suggesting replacing the Border Agency with a 'militaristic' organisation of conscripted offenders.
Retweeted by Moonbootica

Political Animal ‏@politic_animal They would apparently, use the armed forces' cast-off ships and aeroplanes to patrol the borders. Quite frankly, I'm a bit scared.
Retweeted by Moonbootica

Monday, November 11, 2013

Friday November  9, 2013  Arika Okrent, In the Land of Invented Language.  Spiegel & Grau, 2009.  Begins chronologically with Hildegarde of Bingen's Lingua Ignota (first invented language of which there's written evidence.)  More about people who invent languages, and those who adopt them, than about the languages themselves.  Recommended.

****"A few days ago they tore down a house at the other end of the block.  I pass the site fairly often on the way to other places, and so far it doesn't look much different from any other torn-down house.

"But you never know.  Since the last time I looked the cops may have planted the lot with poison ivy to keep time-traveling burglars from camping there and going back in time to when there was a house there that their campsite would have been inside of.  That's not a common M.O. for burglars, but that may be because the cops are diligent about planting poison ivy where houses have been torn down.

"You may doubt me because you've never seen cops planting poison ivy at the sites of torn-down houses.  That's because they're careful not to stir up too much publicity lest they start a panic about time-traveling criminals and government agencies abusing time travel to fight them.  Likewise, if you go to the police station and ask them if they plant poison ivy on the sites of torn-down houses they'll look at you funny and say No.

"If the police do tell you they don't plant poison ivy on the sites of torn-down houses it's best to at least pretend to believe them.  This is not the kind of thing you want to get into arguments with the cops about."
Tom Digby, SILICON SOAPWARE #232
http://www.well.com/~bubbles/
http://www.plergb.com/Mail_Lists/Silicon_Soapware_Zine-Pages.html

Sunday November 10, 2013  Wax hair removal isn't just for women.  An ad offers men "Free Eyebrow, Ear or Nose to spruce you up."  Women can get "Free Bikini Line, Eyebrow or Underarm....Upgrade to a cheeky Brazilian for $21.00."

***Thought experiment:  To qualify as a voter, one must serve one year as a civilian government employee.  In theory, this means voters have some idea of how government actually works.

I realized that this solves a problem with my current story. 

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Friday November 8, 2013  Certain I wasn't going to get any fiction written.  But then... This is the zero draft beginning of "The Touch of Any Color" (working title.)

"Whatever he's on, I want some of it."  An unprofessional thing for an Interstellar Terminal security employee to say; but Gatha Laken was new.

"That's his ordinary brain state," Jenny Tyler said.  "Synesthesia, including kinds rarer than seeing sounds and hearing colors."

"I had synesthesia once," Gatha said.  "But my parents had it cured."

After a pause, Jenny replied.  "It's not officially classed as a disease."

"My parents were Edenic Orthodox.  They believed it was a disease.  Like lefthandedness and being attracted to only one sex."

***Comments:  Shelley Adrienne Mimi Belsky 11/8:  "Amazing how many folks voted on the basis of how folks answered the question?
Do you support the new Vikings Stadium?——"

***In spam listing: No expensive surgeries - if you mix 2 products you can do it at home

***From Twitter:

The Raw Story ‏@RawStory Albania has become Europe’s main marijuana supplier http://ow.ly/qDjqf

Tsholetsang [Kai] ‏@The_Galanteador RT @Lit_Review: 'for Martha, in dismantling me, dredged a voice out of me I did not know I owned' #BadSex

alt_medicine.txt ‏@altmed_txt Is eating just a habit that enslaves us? Is it such a stretch to think people who learn to cultivate their prana can live on that instead?
Retweeted by Ken MacLeod

Ken MacLeod ‏@amendlocke .@altmed_txt If you believe that, I say go for it.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Thursday October 7, 2013  Mayoral election counting continues.  There were 118 write-in candidates; their second choice votes have been redistributed.  This left only the 35 candidates who filed. The 29 who didn't get a serious percentage of the vote will have their second choices redistributed, from the bottom up, till one candidate (almost certainly Betsy Hodges) has a majority. [Update:  Winner announced 10:14 PM -- Betsy Hodges]

***Adult Children Anonymous meeting.  It amuses me that several times a month, I'm a religious anarchist.

***Paging Marty Helgesen:
"Imagine a future like McLeod's Engines of Light or Anderson's The Long Road Home

"Where there is relatively easy light speed travel between stars: it's not hard to get to Tau Ceti but when you get home a quarter century will have gone by. And let's say the recent reports that [one in five stars have] Earth-mass worlds in habitable zones are right and so within 50 light years there are a hundred or more lifebearing planets that for reasons we won't examine too closely get settled.

"Imagine that there is also a Catholic Church.

How do they handled the Pope issue? One Pope in Rome issuing comments that spread to the scattered faithful at the speed of light?"
http://james-nicoll.livejournal.com/4668615.html

***From Publisher's Lunch list of books bought:  "Notre Dame MFA grad (and soon to be emergency room physician) Tom Miller's THE PHILOSOPHER'S WAR and a sequel; part coming-of-age, part love story, part literary fantasy set in 1917 and pitched as Harry Potter for adults."

***From Twitter:

Lindsey Mastis ‏@LindseyMastis Would you try it? "Glow-in-the-dark jellyfish ice cream -- for $225, you can have a scoop" http://lat.ms/HHxaQs

ANDC ‏@ozworders The language of criminals on the mean streets of Melbourne in the 1890s. See our new blog! http://goo.gl/ZihE4s  pic.twitter.com/RewGEvJZom








Thursday, November 7, 2013

Wednesday November 6, 2013  Odd notice in the local laundromat.  The handwritten ad for a dryer wasn't strange in itself.  But it was on paper which said at the bottom "testosterone restored."

***My city council member was re-elected with 87 percent of the vote.  (Cam Gordon, Green Party, Ward 2.)  I'm surprised his opponent got as much as 13 percent.  She belongs to the Socialist Workers Party; members of other Trotskyite groups, and non-Trotskyite Marxists, wouldn't be eager to vote for her.  And she didn't do much campaigning.

Ward 2 is not prime conservative territory.  Other parts of Minneapolis are farther to the right.  Some even vote right of San Francisco and Portland OR.

Note:  Municipal elections are nonpartisan.  However, parties make endorsements.  Minnesota politics -- if you're not confused, you don't understand the situation.

***Comment:  Andre Guirard 11/06 "I think any convention in Antarctica can be considered continent-wide, because really, what else is there to do?" 

Winter sports, I would think.

***Citation: Dina Fainberg. Review of Leitch, Gillian I., ed., _Doctor Who in Time and Space: Essays on Themes, Characters, History and Fandom, 1963-2012_. Jhistory, H-Net Reviews. November, 2013. URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=39534

***From minnpost.com:  ...at MPR, Bob Collins covers the state Supreme Court's reversal of a Court of Appeals ruling. "The Minnesota Supreme Court today reversed a Court of Appeals ruling that granted a new trial for a St. Paul priest who said religious doctrine was used in his prosecution in violation of the U.S. Constitution. Christopher Wenthe was convicted in 2011 of having sex with a young woman he was counseling. … The priest was prosecuted under a Minnesota law that prohibits a clergy member from having sexual contact with a parishioner when the parishioner is seeking or receiving 'religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort', in private. He argued that the law unconstitutionally singles out clergy, which fails a test for determining whether it violates the Establishment Clause of the Constitution. He also argued that the statute 'inhibits' religion. But today the Minnesota Supreme Court rejected the argument, saying 'it covers only those clergy who choose to use their position as a clergy member, or who hold themselves out as a clergy member, to enter into sexual relationships with vulnerable individuals.'"....

***From Twitter:

Ari Berman ‏@AriBerman Democrats swept local elections in Boone NC yesterday, where GOP tried to restrict student voting http://www.journalnow.com/news/elections/local/article_cf560e1a-4686-11e3-8741-0019bb30f31a.html …
Retweeted by Ray Radlein

Digital Spy ‏@digitalspy Lady Gaga will break a world record and become the first artist to sing in space in 2015: http://dspy.me/1aFVb6m

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Tuesday October 5, 2013  Ranked Choice Voting was supposed to bewilder Minneapolis voters this year.  Not me.  I've used versions of what used to be called the Australian Ballot for decades, in two science fiction clubs.

For that matter, this was the second mayoral election using RCV.  But in 2009, a popular mayor was running for reelection and had weak opposition.  R.T. Rybak got a majority of first place votes.

This time, 35 people ran.  Voters were supposed to mark their first, second, and third choices.

The city council race was simpler.  My Ward's incumbent (Green Party) is competent.  His one opponent belonged to the Socialist Workers Party, and doesn't seem to have campaigned much.

I voted at Van Cleve Park.  And answered a survey after I voted.

***As Joseph Lykken, a theorist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, and Maria Spiropulu, of the California Institute of Technology, put it in a new paper reviewing the history and future of the Higgs boson:

"Taken at face value, the result implies that eventually (in 10^100 years or so) an unlucky quantum fluctuation will produce a bubble of a different vacuum, which will then expand at the speed of light, destroying everything."

The idea is that the Higgs field could someday twitch and drop to a lower energy state, like water freezing into ice, thereby obliterating the workings of reality as we know it. Naturally, we would have no warning. Just blink and it’s over.
http://preview.tinyurl.com/opecdqz
Monday October 4, 2013  Science fiction conventions include one for North America (only in years when the World convention is elsewhere), Eurocon, and the Australian National Convention.  How long till the remaining continents have continent-wide sf conventions?

My guesses:  Asia and South America by the middle of this century.  Africa toward the end of 21st or beginning of the 22nd century.

Antarctica will take longer.

***From Twitter:

Tim Maly ‏@doingitwrong Cassandra makes a killing on the stock market and is indicted for insider trading. #modernmythology

Farhad Manjoo ‏@fmanjoo Every year I'd like someone to do a list of news stories of the past year that seemed really important at the time but turned out not to be
Retweeted by Adam L. Penenberg

FOX 8 New Orleans ‏@FOX8NOLA 15 Jan A dense dog advisory remains in effect until 6 pm tonight.
Retweeted by NaturallyCurlyHair

R.L. Ripples ‏@TweetsofOld Fifteen telephone girls employed by the New England Telephone Co. were discharged for taking dinner in "disgraceful" Chinatown. MA1908

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Sunday November 3, 2013.  Daylight Losing Time; All Hallows Day.  And in one fantasy story, St. Hammer-and-Sickle's Day. 

***David Tenner in soc.history.what-if:  "Richard Albert. 'The Constitutional Politics of Presidential Succession,' Hofstra Law Review 39, no.3 (2011): 497-576, http://tinyurl.com/kr2wlp5 argues that the current system is all wrong and proposes an alternative I have never seen mentioned before...."

I downloaded the PDF.  "Here is what I suggest: the solution is to revise the order of succession to insert former living Presidents—in reverse chronological order of service, beginning with former Presidents of the same party as the unavailable president—into the line of succession and to concurrently remove the Speaker of the House and the Senate President pro tempore. Under this new presidential succession sequence, a former President will serve only temporarily until a special election is held to elect a new head of state. Former Presidents are the only ones equipped with the proven competence, domestic repute, and foreign stature needed to pull the United States out of the depths of disaster. Moreover, they are known quantities seen as motivated by the public interest and not driven by political posturing."

"To illustrate the line of succession more vividly, here is the order of presidential succession assuming it had been activated on March 1, 2010, under the administration of President Barack Obama: assuming Vice President Joe Biden were unavailable, the first four statutory successors would be former Presidents Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, George W. Bush, and George H. W. Bush, followed by the Cabinet."

Note:  Hypothetical Presidents and successors are referred to as "she" and "her," with one exception that I spotted.

Commenters on the newsgroup were divided between those who thought it was a stupid idea and those who thought it was an outstandingly stupid idea.

***From Twitter:

US Reality Check ‏@USRealityCheck Monsanto's Losses Widen as #GMO Seed Sales Decline http://dld.bz/cSGAY  #GMOs #RightToKnow #LabelGMOs

R.L. Ripples ‏@TweetsofOld A Chicago physician says small feet indicate a hot temper and an evil tongue. KY1883

Monday, November 4, 2013

Saturday November 2, 2013  "Aeroflot, which says its classic Soviet emblem of a winged hammer and sickle now represents a smile, has been at the forefront of a broad and transformative trend in the Russian service industry brought about by the rising demands of middle-class consumers."
New York Times

That's an interesting rebranding method.

***On my way to the Mnstf Halloween Party at Richard Tatge and Sharon Kahn's, I passed Goda Restaurant.  Sahara Cuisine -- wonder what they serve?

Hoagies and sandwiches, apparently.

A bit over 44 people signed in at the Halloween Party; and there were people who didn't sign in. 

One person signed in backwards.

It was a good party.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Thursday October 31, 2013  Halloween.  People in costume.  And people wearing clothes which a few decades ago would have been classed as costumes, but are now unremarkable.

***The Minnesota Daily had an interview with an exorcist.  He attributes his relatively few failures to those patients not wanting to give up their connections to Satan.

("How many psychiatrists does it take to change a light bulb?"  "Only one; but the lightbulb has to want to change.")

Thoughts:  Perhaps there are specialists who serve those who want to be demon-possessed, and can't manage it on their own.

And perhaps others who help people possessed by angels who want to be freed.

***To the Adult Children Anonymous meeting.  The two people leading the meeting had keys to the church.  However, the keys didn't work.

I returned home.

***From Publishers Lunch listing of books bought:  "Michael Grant's YA trilogy that re-imagines the second World War in an alternate world where young women are drafted along with men...."

And:  "THE STOLEN CHILD author Keith Donohue's THE INSIDE BOY, set in coastal Maine about a young boy, deathly afraid of the outdoors, whose drawings of monsters begin to cross the line between fantasy and reality; Simon Unsworth's THE SORROWFUL, set in Hell, pitched as 'The Wire meets Clive Barker...."

***From Twitter:

 Erin M ‏@tad_overdue Why was the vampire nervous about the library board meeting? Too many stake-holders! #halloweenlibrarypuns #sorrypunhaters
Retweeted by rivenhomewood

The Daily Beast ‏@thedailybeast The forgotten reign of England's lesbian queen http://thebea.st/19gj2Hw
Thursday October 31, 2013  Halloween.  People in costume.  And people wearing clothes which a few decades ago would have been classed as costumes, but are now unremarkable.

***The Minnesota Daily had an interview with an exorcist.  He attributes his relatively few failures to those patients not wanting to give up their connections to Satan.

("How many psychiatrists does it take to change a light bulb?"  "Only one; but the lightbulb has to want to change.")

Thoughts:  Perhaps there are specialists who serve those who want to be demon-possessed, and can't manage it on their own.

And perhaps others who help people possessed by angels who want to be freed.

***To the Adult Children Anonymous meeting.  The two people leading the meeting had keys to the church.  However, the keys didn't work.

I returned home.

***From Publishers Lunch listing of books bought:  "Michael Grant's YA trilogy that re-imagines the second World War in an alternate world where young women are drafted along with men...."

And:  "THE STOLEN CHILD author Keith Donohue's THE INSIDE BOY, set in coastal Maine about a young boy, deathly afraid of the outdoors, whose drawings of monsters begin to cross the line between fantasy and reality; Simon Unsworth's THE SORROWFUL, set in Hell, pitched as 'The Wire meets Clive Barker...."

***From Twitter:

 Erin M ‏@tad_overdue Why was the vampire nervous about the library board meeting? Too many stake-holders! #halloweenlibrarypuns #sorrypunhaters
Retweeted by rivenhomewood

The Daily Beast ‏@thedailybeast The forgotten reign of England's lesbian queen http://thebea.st/19gj2Hw
Thursday October 31, 2013  Halloween.  People in costume.  And people wearing clothes which a few decades ago would have been classed as costumes, but are now unremarkable.

***The Minnesota Daily had an interview with an exorcist.  He attributes his relatively few failures to those patients not wanting to give up their connections to Satan.

("How many psychiatrists does it take to change a light bulb?"  "Only one; but the lightbulb has to want to change.")

Thoughts:  Perhaps there are specialists who serve those who want to be demon-possessed, and can't manage it on their own.

And perhaps others who help people possessed by angels who want to be freed.

***To the Adult Children Anonymous meeting.  The two people leading the meeting had keys to the church.  However, the keys didn't work.

I returned home.

***From Publishers Lunch listing of books bought:  "Michael Grant's YA trilogy that re-imagines the second World War in an alternate world where young women are drafted along with men...."

And:  "THE STOLEN CHILD author Keith Donohue's THE INSIDE BOY, set in coastal Maine about a young boy, deathly afraid of the outdoors, whose drawings of monsters begin to cross the line between fantasy and reality; Simon Unsworth's THE SORROWFUL, set in Hell, pitched as 'The Wire meets Clive Barker...."

***From Twitter:

 Erin M ‏@tad_overdue Why was the vampire nervous about the library board meeting? Too many stake-holders! #halloweenlibrarypuns #sorrypunhaters
Retweeted by rivenhomewood

The Daily Beast ‏@thedailybeast The forgotten reign of England's lesbian queen http://thebea.st/19gj2Hw