The Color of Law by Mark Gimenez:
A poor-boy college football hero turned successful partner at a prominent Dallas firm—who long ago checked his conscience at the door—catches a case that forces him to choose between his enviable lifestyle and doing the right thing in this masterful debut legal thriller.
Clark McCall, ne’er-do-well son of Texas millionaire senator and presidential hopeful Mack McCall, puts a major crimp in his father’s election plans when he winds up murdered—apparently by Shawanda Jones, a heroin-addicted hooker—after a tawdry night of booze, drugs, and rough sex.
I wonder if Mark Gimenez remembers the terrific old James Garner movie from Cameron Hawley’s novel CASH McCALL. That would be an interesting cross-over…
What are the top 20 “geek novels”? from Guardian Unlimited: Technology:
Time magazine has produced a list of the all-time 100 great novels published in the English language since 1923, and it seems a reasonable collection, as these things go. What’s interesting is that it includes a few “geek novels” such as Philip K Dick’s Ubik, William Gibson’s Neuromancer and Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash. I’d expect any self-respecting geek to have read these books, but have they really reached an “all time greats” market that includes Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind and Vladimir Nabokov’s Pale Fire?
So, what are the top 20 greatest “geek reads” since 1923? I think they have to be brain-challenging, but do they have to have a science fiction or fantasy element? Do they have to have any literary merit?
Here’s my quick dozen suggestions, in alphabetical order:
Brave New World — Aldous Huxley Giles Goat-Boy — John Barth The HitchHiker’s Guide to the Galaxy — Douglas Adams The Illuminatus! Trilogy — Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson The Left Hand of Darkness — Ursula K Le Guin Neuromancer — William Gibson Nineteen Eighty-Four — George Orwell Orlando — Virgina Woolf The Shockwave Rider — John Brunner Snow Crash — Neal Stephenson Stranger in a Strange Land — Robert Heinlein The Man in the High Castle — Philip K Dick
Yes, I know (say) Mervyn Peake’s Titus Groan is incomparably better than Heinlein, but is it geeky enough?
Add:
Isaac Asimov’s FOUNDATION series DUNE by Frank Herbert
Technorati Tags: science fiction, geeks, books
The Commonplace Book: Occasional notations of beautiful writing noted in passing.
I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; I fled Him, down the arches of the years; I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears I hid from Him, and under running laughter.
Source: Francis Thompson (1859-1907), from “The Hound of Heaven” via Bruderhof.org
Dan Brown on Abraham Lincoln and Scarlett O’Hara:
If Dan Brown wrote a book claiming that Abraham Lincoln escaped his assassination and ran off with Scarlett O’Hara, would it change society’s perception of history? According to Dr. Joseph Kelly, one of the nation’s leading experts on The Da Vinci Code, the answer is no. By the same reasoning, he contends people should not alter their views on religion because of a work of fiction.
Dan Brown on Abraham Lincoln and Scarlett O’Hara:
If Dan Brown wrote a book claiming that Abraham Lincoln escaped his assassination and ran off with Scarlett O’Hara, would it change society’s perception of history? According to Dr. Joseph Kelly, one of the nation’s leading experts on The Da Vinci Code, the answer is no. By the same reasoning, he contends people should not alter their views on religion because of a work of fiction.
– Posted by wfzimmerman to The Solomon Key and Beyond: Dan Brown News at 10/28/2005 06:16:51 AM
From Roberto Takata on DINOSAUR:
A group of paleontologist of Luteran University at Cachoeira do Sul anounced that a fossil finding could represent a new species of Triassic carnivorous saurischian dinosaurs.
The specimen resembles a big herrarasaurid/staurikosaurid. Vertebrae, teeth, phalanges, limb components and others yet unindentified bones was found – together they suggest a 5m-long animal.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/ciencia/ult306u13925.shtml [in Portuguese]
(no pix yet)
– Posted by wfzimmerman to Science Phile at 10/27/2005 02:55:00 PM
From Roberto Takata on DINOSAUR:
A group of paleontologist of Luteran University at Cachoeira do Sul anounced that a fossil finding could represent a new species of Triassic carnivorous saurischian dinosaurs.
The specimen resembles a big herrarasaurid/staurikosaurid. Vertebrae, teeth, phalanges, limb components and others yet unindentified bones was found – together they suggest a 5m-long animal.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/ciencia/ult306u13925.shtml [in Portuguese]
(no pix yet)
Publishers Marketplace:
Glynnis Walker’s DIRTY LITTLE SECRET: The Deliberate Destruction of the Middle Class and the Feminization of Poverty, weaving the author’s personal narrative of an unexpected descent into poverty and homelessness with research on the causes of poverty among women, to Brooke Warner at Avalon
A long-winded way of saying “poor me.”
Taschen:
An uncanny feel for what will sell, combined with a flair for provocation and self-promotion, has helped establish the Taschen name near the top of the art publishing world. His business model of large print runs and low prices shook the elite world of art publishing, spawning some imitators and frustrating other publishers.
Let’s cut through the clutter, as the IHT and PublishersLunch were unwilling to do. Taschen publishes a lot of books that are just plain pornographic trash. Financial success does not change that.
A “search wiki” for Dan Brown fans. Pretty cool!
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