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Back issues of the Journal of Business Ethics. I hate my life.
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Did you get to the gay sex scene with Harry Potter yet?Kill Your Darlings (1984) by Max Allan Collins
Seems like Turtledove is best when he abandons the direct allegory and goes super wacky hence why his book about crazy Boers time travelling to give Robert E Lee AKs is still his best book. I'm going to try this one out because it genuinely sounds interesting.Reading after the downfall by turtledove Werhmacht officer gets isekaied out of berlin 1945 to a fantasy world with aryans ubermensch on oneside and swarthy jews on the other its great
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That cover alone sold it for me
Obama is or was the liberal messiah. Meant to usher in new age of prosperity by enacting permanent liberal rule. Obama represented the end of the fight for racial equality. With Hillary representing the end of the sexual one. Trump killed that dream with a smile on his face. And it took the democrats fielding another old bland white guy to deny trump the 2020 election. Something that was never supposed to happen again. King is lashing out in the only way he can.As an aside, I swear four years of Trump gave King brain damage somehow. Every villain remarks about how much they like Trump, and those who like Trump who aren't villains are idiots. Not sure how often it happened, but it seemed to be happening a lot. The final boss/ultimate baddie was even a child molesting/family murdering stand in for Rupert Murdoch. It was quite blatant. King might as well have called him by his real name it was so obvious.
That's so annoying, what a way to pointlessly date your book. If you want to get political, don't explicitly talk about politicians in your book. Just shows King word vomits whatever comes to his mind.Just finished Billy Summers by Stephen King. He was obviously aiming to do the Richard Stark thing here and kind of succeeded. There's some very well crafted action scenes, some intriguing plot ideas, nice references to other King novels, all unfortunately buried under an extreme case of diahrrea of the keyboard. Monologuing characters, weird pointless plot meanders even a main character that seemed to have not a whole lot to do. And as is usually the case with King, the ending was a slobbery incoherent mess. I'm not quite sure what a Stephen King editor does at this point, but it can't be much.
3/5, don't regret reading, but will not read again.
As an aside, I swear four years of Trump gave King brain damage somehow. Every villain remarks about how much they like Trump, and those who like Trump who aren't villains are idiots. Not sure how often it happened, but it seemed to be happening a lot. The final boss/ultimate baddie was even a child molesting/family murdering stand in for Rupert Murdoch. It was quite blatant. King might as well have called him by his real name it was so obvious.
He wouldn't have to deal with it for long, because when he made them leave the camp followers behind for a risky battle in 1914 the Arabs mutinied and got shot by the AskarisVon Lettow, famous for his laissez-faire attitude towards local customs and sexual mores, had learned to take the African as he found him. The Askaris had long been allowed to bring their wives and concubines along on campaigns. These hardy black women, often with children in tow, nursed the wounded, tended the campfires of the army, and satisfied the sexual needs of their men..the Arabs however, bound by the strictures of Islam, would not associate with women in public. Instead, they travelled with a contingent of pretty young men, who performed the same function as the Askari camp followers. Von Lettow, ever the broad-minded interpeter of the world and its diversity, shrugged at this peccadillo. “With these simple people, whose predilection for their ancient traditions and customs is further confirmed by Islam, and who are besides very proud and vain, it is particularly difficult to interfere with such customs”
Given the multiplicity of deadly natural afflictions in Africa, it's not difficult to understand why, after arising there, a goodly portion of the human species decided to seek its fortunes elsewhere