Books
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Thanks for tagging me @vaquero357, for some reason I didn't get a notification. I'll look into it as it's right up my alley. I love every intricate detail of billiards and I'm sure this book will be an interesting read.
Excellent pool should look really simple, because the shooter moves the cue ball around the table with such precision that it set's up the next shot with ease. that's the goal every game.
I play with some of the best players in the state, and a team in my league called "CR's classics" (named after a pool hall in Coon Rapids), just won the world masters tournament in Las Vegas a couple months back.
the Minnesota Kid has rough nights when we play those guys.
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…you're going to enjoy this book then. Guaranteed!
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…you're going to enjoy this book then. Guaranteed!
The tag on @jordanscollected wasn’t coded.
If you are using Tapatalk writing the “@“ first will not code the user name as a mention/tag. This is because Tapatalk and the forum engine use different codes. It is dumb and a PITA.
If you use the desktop version and don’t hit the highlighted name or write the name incorrectly, it won’t get coded as a tag.
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Got myself some new reading materials today. Anyone familiar with these?
The Blue Blooded one is particularly beautiful: turns out the cover is actually made of denim! I hadn't realized when I ordered online. It also has a feature on Iron Heart and a short interview with @Giles.
If anyone can recommend any additional denim-related "essential reading," I'm all ear!
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I was intruiged by the podcast but can't for the life of me listen to one… So I just ordered the book instead...
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/renegades-barack-obama-and-bruce-springsteen/1139886910
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I’m about ~75% of the way through “Empire of Pain” by Patrick Radden Keefe and it’s one of the best pieces of non-fiction I’ve ever read. It’s a real deep dive into the Sackler dynasty, chronicling the rise or Arthur Sackler and the subsequent opioid crisis caused by his family’s unwavering drive for wealth. I’m amazed at the depth and detail of this book, but also the pacing which resembles the best page-turning fiction. It’s not often that I’m hooked on a piece of non-fiction as I’ve been with this.
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I had minor surgery and getting meds for it was a nightmare.
In Pa. the MD told me he state law required he get approval for scripts, he couldn't just give me a script.
He was not happy about this.
I know addiction is tied to the fucked up economy and the deliberate sending of jobs out of the country and the Sacklers and pharmacies are talking through their hats about the amount of oxy prescribed but- how about being responsible for what you do as an individual? -
Part of what is so heinous about opioid addiction is that it changes the wiring of your brain so that you feel like you’re in horrible pain and dying if you’re NOT taking them. At that point I would argue that your agency is not the dominant part of the equation anymore.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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the resulting family health and death disasters speak for themselves
and for many chronic pain sufferers addiction is not their biggest health problem -
I knew nothing about the Sacklers.
I found this, which I guess is effectively a precis of "Empire of Pain", but buy what a shit show….
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/10/30/the-family-that-built-an-empire-of-pain
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…@Giles that was quite an article. Deeply disturbing.
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Moving this reponse from the thread that originated it:
LOL again @Matt
@ARNC if you haven't read any H. P. Lovecraft, he was a pretty visionary writer. His stories (mostly short stories with a few novellas) have a sort of creeping doom atmosphere that has influenced a lot of horror that has come since. I'm not aware of anyone who yet has done him justice in terms of bringing these stories to life in film, but the basic gist is that we're not alone in the universe, and that there are beings of unimaginable power with inscrutable goals who, if they are not simply indifferent to human life, are malignant to it in the way that a kid with a magnifying glass might be to ants on a sunny day. The unimaginable power of these beings and our relative insignificance creates insanity in many of the characters in the books. And that's the big theme–existential dread: the vastness of space and time, that it's rife with unknowable, implacable doom, and that we are insignificant and powerless. That was probably much scarier when HPL was writing and we were learning just how huge the universe is, and going through the things Nietzsche observed after discoveries such as Darwinism forced us to reassess our place in the universe.
I am not sure why Cthulu--who makes limited appearances in the canon--got so much traction and popularity among the pantheon of alien inter-dimensional beings he created; possibly because he has a consistent form that can be understood and rendered more easily than some of the other god-monsters he created. But as much as I love Cthulu, my personal favorite of these beings is Nyarlathotep.
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It’s pretty easy to find his complete works for cheap on a Kindle format, and any half way decent used bookstore is bound to have plenty as well.
Just don’t spend too much time on some of his more controversial socio political mentionings.
He wasn’t exactly a role model for forward thinking.
That said, he’s required reading in my house.
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LOL Matt
Yeah, he was a pretty virulent racist, and if we're being honest, some of the nuances of his fiction stems from his darker impulses, including racism and xenophobia. But when applied to alien beings in a work of fiction, I think this is harmless: e.g., when you read The Shadow Over Innsmouth, you don't necessarily understand the perspective it's coming from, but the feelings he describes there do reflect his own xenophobia–it's just not overtly aimed at real human beings, cultures, or races in the fiction.
For example, he spent some time in Brooklyn, and he was so freaked out by immigrants there that this informed some of his characterizations of slightly abnormal populations associated with some of his eldritch creatures in his fiction. So, Matt's right: don't read his letters about his experience in Brooklyn, you'll get similar characterizations reading about, for example, the people of Innsmouth.
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Thanks @mclaincausey and @Matt. I’ll have to check this out (the fiction not the other stuff).
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You’ll like it, I’m sure. Like @mclaincausey said no one has really made any noteworthy translations into other media formats like TV or movies but Lovecraft Country on HBO is definitely worth a watch after you have read some of his stories. It’s especially interesting and purposefully ironic to see how they create such a powerful vision of racism in the Jim Crowe era using the themes of HPL’s supernatural works juxtaposed to the monstrosity of the prevailing interracial relationships at the time.
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For me, easily the scariest part of Lovecraft Country was the racism. I will leave it at that so I don't spoil anything, but they wrought that very real threat in a way that made the otherworldly threats in the series pale by comparison.
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The Ballad of Black Tom is a Lovecraftian book that deals with HPL's racism in the course of a damn good horror story