Monday, September 28, 2009

Aliens Exist With Photographic Proof

Aliens Exist With Photographic Proof

Alright, so Aliens like science fiction tales do not necessarily exist. However, one must note that while we have explored much of space and much of the sea, there still exists an abyss of creatures that no one is noting. That includes the above, a rare gelatinous fish that was found floating off the coast of Brazil. This thing looks alien like in a lot of ways and if we weren't living in modernity, we'd say it was a sea serpent, right? Right.

The six-foot-long (two-meter-long) gelatinous animal was found floating dead off the Bahia coast by researchers from Brazil's TAMAR Program, a sea turtle conservation group.

Initial accounts quoted the scientists calling the creature "completely new, scientifically speaking."

But fish experts looking at video footage of the bizarre fish have identified it as a member of Ateleopodidae, a little-understood group of deep-sea fish known to science since the 1840s.

"As soon as I saw it, I knew what it was," said Dave Johnson, an ichthyologist at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.


Source - National Geographic

Nocturnal Skateshop Back To School Jam Video

You gotta love when real core skate shops (not snowboard shops) go and have fun with their fans and supporters. Such is the case for the Nocturnal Skateshop's Back To School Jam. It's an awesome little thing to look into.



Burst Angel The Complete Series Blu Ray Collection

Burst Angel The Complete Series Blu Ray Collection

Burst Angel The Complete Series Blu Ray Collection is out now and it's got the whole complete series all in Blu Ray Glory! It also has over 400 hours of extras, so you're going to love this thing!

Burst Angel is a cyber-punk action entertainment thriller based on a near-future Tokyo and is inspired by hilarious spaghetti westerns and the fierce gun battles reminiscent of a Hong Kong gangster movie.

A new law and a dark underground syndicate have delivered devastating chaos to Tokyo. The city's only chance for survival is a fearless mercenary, her dangerously beautiful comrades and a massively armed and armored mech. In this land where war has spread like a disease, they will have to put their very existence on the line and fight to be the cure.


Sunday, September 27, 2009

Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates

Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates

Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates is an interesting book for fans of Norma Jean aka Marilyn Monroe. This clever take on her life is an amazing piece of work and it got major success and acclaim.

Here's more information about Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates from amazon.com, including a review of the book:

In her most ambitious work to date, Joyce Carol Oates boldly reimagines the inner, poetic, and spiritual life of Norma Jeane Baker -- the child, the woman, the fated celebrity and idolized blonde the world came to know as Marilyn Monroe. In a voice startlingly intimate and rich, Norma Jeane tells her own story of an emblematic American artist -- intensely conflicted and driven -- who had lost her way. A powerful portrait of Hollywood's myth and an extraordinary woman's heartbreaking reality, Blonde is a sweeping epic that pays tribute to the elusive magic and devastation behind the creation of the great twentieth-century American star.

It is surprising and shocking to realize that Joyce Carol Oates, one of the great writers living today, has never made The New York Times bestseller list (at least not in recent memory). Far less talented (and less famous) authors have made it while she, in all likelihood not caring much, has been shut out. That could easily change with her new novel, Blonde, which may be the masterpiece of a staggeringly distinguished career.

This 700-plus-page tome is based on the life of (you guessed it) Marilyn Monroe. In fictional form, with names changed (husband Joe DiMaggio is referred to as "The Ex-Athlete," Arthur Miller as "The Playwright," John F. Kennedy as "The President," for example), this may be the most accurate and compelling portrait of this beautiful and complex woman that one is ever likely to read.

But why discuss it on the mystery page, you might well be asking yourself. It was the author's intent to structure the book as a mystery, and of course she succeeds, as she seems to succeed at everything she attempts in the world of letters. And there is a murder, apparently arranged by a secret government bureau (FBI? CIA?), although that could be the victim's hallucination. Of course, it could also be both real and hallucinated (remember, even paranoids have enemies).

If you like biographies, you'll like Blonde. If you like novels, you'll like Blonde. If you like mysteries, you'll like Blonde. And if you fear that more than 700 pages by one of the greatest of living literary lions might be tough slogging, here's a little excerpt from the chapter titled "The President's Pimp:"

Sure he was a pimp.

But not just any pimp. Not him!

He was a pimp par excellence. A pimp nonpareil. A pimp sui generis. A pimp with a wardrobe, and a pimp with style. A pimp with a classy Brit accent. Posterity would honor him as the President's Pimp.

A man of pride and stature: the President's Pimp.

At Rancho Mirage in Palm Springs in March 1962 there was the President poking him in the ribs with a low whistle. "That blonde. That's Marilyn Monroe?"

He told the President yes it was. Monroe, a friend of his. Luscious, eh? But a little crazy.

Thoughtfully, the President asked, "Have I dated her yet?"

Nothing inaccessible about Joyce Carol Oates, especially in this most readable and relentlessly fascinating study of the lovely woman with whom the whole country was at least a little in love. --Otto Penzler




Can't find this book in your local store? Don't want to pay high prices on books? Check out our online book store and save money on your books. Or simply go to Amazon.com and search the massive database of books out there. Click here to visit the official Reading Rec store powered by Amazon.com

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Pedophiles Will Get Castrated

In Poland, if you rape someone or you are caught being a pedophile and convicted. You're now going to get castrated. That's right, you're going to get chemically castrated after your sentence is over.

Some people are wanting this for the United States....insane.

Poland will require convicted pedophiles or those who rape family members to undergo chemical castration when their prison term is up. Human rights groups immediately raised objections, but Poland's prime minister isn't budging—he says the criminals in these cases don't qualify as "human," notes Reuters. "Therefore I don't think protection of human rights should refer to these kind of events."

Source - NEwser

Random East Coast Skateboarding

Sometimes I find some skateboarding clips from around the United States, and I don't know where they are from or anything.

So here are two random east coast skate clips.





Quiksilver Town Tour 2009 Video

Here is the latest and greatest video from Quiksilver. Quiksilver's Town Tour 2009 has a little clip...and here you go.

Quiksilver Town Tour 2009 Videorelacja Kraków from MichalR on Vimeo.



House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski

House of Leaves

Today's reading recommendation is definitely nothing crazy in the graphic design world, the cover leaves a lot to be desired. But it seems really interesting to say the least. Check out this interesting book entitled, House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski. It is quite the literary success, as it is something that ties together so much more than traditional book offerings.

Had The Blair Witch Project been a book instead of a film, and had it been written by, say, Nabokov at his most playful, revised by Stephen King at his most cerebral, and typeset by the futurist editors of Blast at their most avant-garde, the result might have been something like House of Leaves. Mark Z. Danielewski's first novel has a lot going on: notably the discovery of a pseudoacademic monograph called The Navidson Record, written by a blind man named Zampanò, about a nonexistent documentary film--which itself is about a photojournalist who finds a house that has supernatural, surreal qualities. (The inner dimensions, for example, are measurably larger than the outer ones.) In addition to this Russian-doll layering of narrators, Danielewski packs in poems, scientific lists, collages, Polaroids, appendices of fake correspondence and "various quotes," single lines of prose placed any which way on the page, crossed-out passages, and so on.
Now that we've reached the post-postmodern era, presumably there's nobody left who needs liberating from the strictures of conventional fiction. So apart from its narrative high jinks, what does House of Leaves have to offer? According to Johnny Truant, the tattoo-shop apprentice who discovers Zampanò's work, once you read The Navidson Record,

For some reason, you will no longer be the person you believed you once were. You'll detect slow and subtle shifts going on all around you, more importantly shifts in you. Worse, you'll realize it's always been shifting, like a shimmer of sorts, a vast shimmer, only dark like a room. But you won't understand why or how.

We'll have to take his word for it, however. As it's presented here, the description of the spooky film isn't continuous enough to have much scare power. Instead, we're pulled back into Johnny Truant's world through his footnotes, which he uses to discharge everything in his head, including the discovery of the manuscript, his encounters with people who knew Zampanò, and his own battles with drugs, sex, ennui, and a vague evil force. If The Navidson Record is a mad professor lecturing on the supernatural with rational-seeming conviction, Truant's footnotes are the manic student in the back of the auditorium, wigged out and furiously scribbling whoa-dude notes about life.
Despite his flaws, Truant is an appealingly earnest amateur editor--finding translators, tracking down sources, pointing out incongruities. Danielewski takes an academic's--or ex-academic's--glee in footnotes (the similarity to David Foster Wallace is almost too obvious to mention), as well as other bogus ivory-tower trappings such as interviews with celebrity scholars like Camille Paglia and Harold Bloom. And he stuffs highbrow and pop-culture references (and parodies) into the novel with the enthusiasm of an anarchist filling a pipe bomb with bits of junk metal. House of Leaves may not be the prettiest or most coherent collection, but if you're trying to blow stuff up, who cares? --John Ponyicsanyi




Can't find this book in your local store? Don't want to pay high prices on books? Check out our online book store and save money on your books. Or simply go to Amazon.com and search the massive database of books out there. Click here to visit the official Reading Rec store powered by Amazon.com

Friday, September 25, 2009

Transworld Video

Filming and Editing 100% By John Schissler, and amazing free footage.

Transworld Video from john schissler on Vimeo.



Super-Cannes by J. G. Ballard

Super-Cannes by J. G. Ballard

Super-Cannes by J.G. Ballard is an interesting book with an even more interesting cover. Seriously, check this thing out, it evokes a certain sense of emotion. Super-Cannes is today's recommendation.

Check out this review of Super-Cannes by J.G. Ballard from Amazon.com to you:

The connoisseur of the bizarre (Cocaine Nights, The Atrocity Exhibition, etc.) turns his attentions to the globalized corporate elite in his 26th book. Crippled aviator Paul Sinclair ("I counted the titanium claws that held the kneecap together") accompanies his young wife, Jane, to her new posting at a luxurious corporate park on the French Riviera. A manicured paradise of multinational conglomerate HQs and their executives' villas, Eden-Olympia (which the author has modeled on the current business parks of Antibes-les-Pins and Sophia-Antipolis) is managed by a seductive yet sinister psychiatrist named Wilder Penrose, who ensconces the Sinclairs in the house of a former local doctor named Greenwood, who one day went on a suicidal murder spree, leaving 10 dead. In short Ballardesque order, the Sinclairs become estranged from one another: Jane falls into heroin-fueled m‚nages with the Belgian couple next door; Paul takes up tranquilizers and trysts with an Eden-Olympia vamp. Paul becomes obsessed with unraveling the mystery of the massacre, coming almost to identify with Greenwood. His efforts eventually reveal the horrifying true nature of Eden-Olympia, where the most bestial drives of corporate executives are harnessed in Brownshirt-style "therapy sessions" to create optimum working efficiency. Paul's collision course with the psychopathic Penrose is a new twist on Ballard's weird neo-romanticism, whereby our self-defining "latent psychopathy" is put to use to save society rather than to revel in hedonistic defiance of it (… la Crash). Ballard actually seems to have penned a story with a clear-cut hero (if the reader overlooks Paul's drug use and pedophiliac urges) and villain ("I don't want to start a race war or not yet"), with the fate of civilization in the balance. This novel, for all the author's trademark grotesqueries, may be Ballard's most commercially viable yet.



Can't find this book in your local store? Don't want to pay high prices on books? Check out our online book store and save money on your books. Or simply go to Amazon.com and search the massive database of books out there. Click here to visit the official Reading Rec store powered by Amazon.com

Thursday, September 24, 2009

ASR Mini Ramp Jam Video

At ASR last weekend, Volcom helped kick off the tradeshow by hosting a mini ramp jam, with a pretty sweet ramp courtesy of ASR and Jim Bell
epic.




Jehovah's Witnesses Caught Extoring Millions

Oh yes, The Jehovah's Witnesses are not just knocking on people's doors and telling people about the watch tower. Nor are they arguing about religion, they are stealing money from the U.S Treasury in the tune of 116 billion dollars! That's right, that's a TON of money!

So maybe the mainstream media needs to wake up a little before they blame bad economy and government alone.

Want to know where billions of dollars went? HERE YOU GO!

Here's a piece of the story via Bloomberg:

U.S. Treasury bonds with a face value of $116 billion seized in Italy in August are fake and were destined for U.S. investors, according to the prosecutor running the probe.

The phony U.S. securities were sent to Italy from the Philippines and confiscated on Aug. 19 at Milan’s Malpensa airport, prosecutor Francesco Dettori said in an interview today. In June, police seized $134 billion of fake U.S. securities at the border with Switzerland. Prosecutors don’t have evidence to link the two batches of bonds, both dated from 1934 and of $500 million denominations, he said.

A woman from the Philippines, who was to receive the bonds taken in August, and the sender, her brother, who later traveled to Italy, were arrested by local police, the prosecutor said. The man remains in custody, he added. The U.S. Secret Service assisted in analyzing the bonds to determine whether they are counterfeit. Had the notes been genuine, the pair would have been the U.S. government’s sixth-biggest creditor, behind Russia, which is owed $118 billion.

Lilly Allen Sucks



Lilly Allen got tired of piracy, even though she rose to fame off piracy of her albums. So now she's making headlines by saying she is quitting music and is going to do something else.

Whatever.

Lilly Allen Sucks.

This isn't news.

How about you get a real job and then get fired and be unemployed see how you feel then!

I'm sorry folks, i'm unemployed and broke right now.

However, spokespersons are saying that she's not quitting, i'm tired.

Grandville Graphic Noel Trailer

Bryan Talbots new steampunk fantasy adventure graphic novel due out this October 2009. Colour filling and trailer directed by Jordan Smith (cover artist for Alice in Sunderland). Fans of DC's Sandman comic will know Bryans work well.

Comic Book Movie News

The latest news from the comic book world is huge!

We're getting a New Daredevil, Ghost Rider, Silver Surfer, and Spawn movie! Yep.

Start your engines

The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri

The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri

If you've seen the movie, you might have missed the book. The Namesake is an interesting book and it's an amazing piece of literature from around the globe! The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri is our recommended book for today, enjoy reading.

Jhumpa Lahiri's debut story collection, Interpreter of Maladies, took the literary world by storm when it won the Pulitzer Prize in 2000. Fans who flocked to her stories will be captivated by her best-selling first novel, now in paperback for the first time. The Namesake is a finely wrought, deeply moving family drama that illuminates this acclaimed author's signature themes: the immigrant experience, the clash of cultures, the tangled ties between generations.

The Namesake takes the Ganguli family from their tradition-bound life in Calcutta through their fraught transformation into Americans. On the heels of an arranged wedding, Ashoke and Ashima Ganguli settle in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Ashoke does his best to adapt while his wife pines for home. When their son, Gogol, is born, the task of naming him betrays their hope of respecting old ways in a new world. And we watch as Gogol stumbles along the first-generation path, strewn with conflicting loyalties, comic detours, and wrenching love affairs.

With empathy and penetrating insight, Lahiri explores the expectations bestowed on us by our parents and the means by which we come to define who we are.




Can't find this book in your local store? Don't want to pay high prices on books? Check out our online book store and save money on your books. Or simply go to Amazon.com and search the massive database of books out there. Click here to visit the official Reading Rec store powered by Amazon.com

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

McDonalds Owns America

We are the Sealed

This is an interesting map. This map shows the concentration of McDonalds in the 48 continuous United States. That's right, the hotter the spot the more McDonalds.

Face it, McDonald's owns the U.S and the belly's of millions.

Via We Are the Sealed

The Complete Peanuts 1973-1974 By Charles M. Schulz

The Complete Peanuts 1973-1974 By Charles M. Schulz

Tennis, anyone? Billie Jean King serves up an introduction... and we celebrate Woodstock! The twelfth volume of Peanuts features a number of tennis strips and several extended sequences involving Peppermint Patty’s friend Marcie (including a riotous, rarely seen sequence in which Marcie’s costume-making and hairstyling skills utterly spoil a skating competition for PP), so it seems only right that this volume’s introduction should be served up by Schulz’s longtime friend, tennis champion Billie Jean King.

This volume also picks up on a few loose threads from the previous year, as the mysterious “Poochie” shows up in the flesh; Linus and Lucy’s new kid brother “Rerun” makes his first appearance, is almost immediately drafted onto the baseball team (where, thanks to his tiny strike zone, he wins a game), and embarks on his first terrifying journey on the back of his mom’s bike; and, in one of Peanuts’ oddest recurring storylines, the schoolhouse Sally used to talk to starts talking, or at least thinking, back at her!

The Complete Peanuts 1973-1974 also includes one of the all-time classic Peanuts sequences, in which Charlie Brown’s baseball-oriented hallucinations finally manifest themselves in a baseball-shaped rash on his head. Forced to conceal the embarrassing discoloration with a bag worn over his head, Charlie Brown goes to camp as “Mister Sack” and discovers that, shorn of his identity, he’s suddenly well liked and successful. 344 b/w illustrations.

About the Author:

Charles M. Schulz was born November 25, 1922 in Minneapolis. His destiny was foreshadowed when an uncle gave him, at the age of two days, the nickname Sparky (after the racehorse Spark Plug in the newspaper strip Barney Google).

In his senior year in high school, his mother noticed an ad in a local newspaper for a correspondence school, Federal Schools (later called Art Instruction Schools). Schulz passed the talent test, completed the course and began trying, unsuccessfully, to sell gag cartoons to magazines. (His first published drawing was of his dog, Spike, and appeared in a 1937 Ripley's Believe It Or Not! installment.) Between 1948 and 1950, he succeeded in selling 17 cartoons to the Saturday Evening Post—as well as, to the local St. Paul Pioneer Press, a weekly comic feature called Li'l Folks. It was run in the women's section and paid $10 a week. After writing and drawing the feature for two years, Schulz asked for a better location in the paper or for daily exposure, as well as a raise. When he was turned down on all three counts, he quit.

He started submitting strips to the newspaper syndicates. In the spring of 1950, he received a letter from the United Feature Syndicate, announcing their interest in his submission, Li'l Folks. Schulz boarded a train in June for New York City; more interested in doing a strip than a panel, he also brought along the first installments of what would become Peanuts—and that was what sold. (The title, which Schulz loathed to his dying day, was imposed by the syndicate). The first Peanuts daily appeared October 2, 1950; the first Sunday, January 6, 1952.

Diagnosed with cancer, Schulz retired from Peanuts at the end of 1999. He died on February 13, 2000, the day before Valentine's Day—and the day before his last strip was published—having completed 17,897 daily and Sunday strips, each and every one fully written, drawn, and lettered entirely by his own hand—an unmatched achievement in comics.

All Major Skateboard Brands

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Daily Skateboarding Links 9/23/09

Adidas has a video from their Diagonal tour.

Volcom has mini ramp footage from ASR. C1rca welcomes David Reyes to the team with a video.

MIA and friends get Funky In Frisco for the second time.

Dan Murphy hits the Rye Airfield Ramp Camp.

Black label has video from Chris Troy's Pro BBQ.

Dyrdek Skate Plaza Montage

Here's a video from some locals at the Rob Dyrdek/Carls Jr. Skate Plaza Safe Spot in Los Angeles...my old home town.

An afternoon of skateboarding captured at the Rob Dyrdek/ Carls Jr. Skate Plaza Safe Spot in sunny Los Angeles, CA. Filmed with a Panasonic HMC150, 35mm adapter, and Century Optics Super Fisheye.



Uppercut Skateboarding Film

Here you go, this skateboarding film is from another place...Le Blog de Soma, which I can't read cause I'm an idiot.

UPPERCUT from Julien Paccard on Vimeo.



After the Quake: Stories by Haruki Murakami

After the Quake: Stories by Haruki Murakami

Today's recommendation is After the Quake: Stories by Haruki Murakami, which is an interesting read of mixed stories from around the globe! Well, mainly from the mind of Haruki Murakami, acclaimed Japanese writer.

The six stories in Haruki Murakami’s mesmerizing collection are set at the time of the catastrophic 1995 Kobe earthquake, when Japan became brutally aware of the fragility of its daily existence. But the upheavals that afflict Murakami’s characters are even deeper and more mysterious, emanating from a place where the human meets the inhuman.

An electronics salesman who has been abruptly deserted by his wife agrees to deliver an enigmatic package—and is rewarded with a glimpse of his true nature. A man who has been raised to view himself as the son of God pursues a stranger who may or may not be his human father. A mild-mannered collection agent receives a visit from a giant talking frog who enlists his help in saving Tokyo from destruction. As haunting as dreams, as potent as oracles, the stories in After the Quake are further proof that Murakami is one of the most visionary writers at work today.

And here is a review of the book from Amazon online:

Haruki Murakami, a writer both mystical and hip, is the West's favorite Japanese novelist. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Murakami lived abroad until 1995. That year, two disasters struck Japan: the lethal earthquake in Kobe and the deadly poison gas attacks in the Tokyo subway. Spurred by these tragic events, Murakami returned home. The stories in After the Quake are set in the months that fell between the earthquake and the subway attack, presenting a world marked by despair, hope, and a kind of human instinct for transformation. A teenage girl and a middle-aged man share a hobby of making beach bonfires; a businesswoman travels to Thailand and, quietly, confronts her own death; three friends act out a modern-day Tokyo version of Jules and Jim. There's a surreal element running through the collection in the form of unlikely frogs turning up in unlikely places. News of the earthquake hums throughout. The book opens with the dull buzz of disaster-watching: "Five straight days she spent in front of the television, staring at the crumbled banks and hospitals, whole blocks of stores in flames, severed rail lines and expressways." With language that's never self-consciously lyrical or show-offy, Murakami constructs stories as tight and beautiful as poems. There's no turning back for his people; there's only before and after the quake. --Claire Dederer




Can't find this book in your local store? Don't want to pay high prices on books? Check out our online book store and save money on your books. Or simply go to Amazon.com and search the massive database of books out there. Click here to visit the official Reading Rec store powered by Amazon.com

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Can't Live Without You Supra Skate Video

All i know about this video is that I found it on a supra site and it's insane.



Help us keep this site updated, please purchase discounted skateboard decks, wheels, and more at discount prices online by clicking here. Every little bit helps and allows us to keep this site active, and if we can get enough cents here and there we can buy a domain and get more original content up. Thank you.

Habitat Skateboards in Berli Skateboarding Video

Habitat skateboards recently stopped in Berlin to mop up...and they sure did.



Help us keep this site updated, please purchase discounted skateboard decks, wheels, and more at discount prices online by clicking here. Every little bit helps and allows us to keep this site active, and if we can get enough cents here and there we can buy a domain and get more original content up. Thank you.

Samurai Sword Kills Burglar

Samurai Sword Kills Burglar

That's right, Samurai Swords are legal in the United States, and if someone takes away your guns, get yourself a sword. Check this out, an impressive news piece, which you need to check out. This is from the Calgary Herald:

A U.S. student on Tuesday killed a recidivist burglar with a samurai sword, slicing off his left hand and severely cutting his neck after he spotted the intruder in his garage, police said.

The undergraduate medical student at Baltimore's prestigious Johns Hopkins University was being questioned by police but he may not be charged if found to be acting in self-defense. Samurai swords are legal in the United States.

Doom #3

Originally, I thought that this book was about the video game Doom. The cover almost looks like something that was birthed out of the classic ID Video Game. However, this comic book is not really about that, it's about Doctor Doom! I guess that kind of spoils the ending. This was part of a three issue lot, and I'm not sure where to find it. So here you go, full scans of Doom #3, not bad...great overall graphic style and an interesting story.

So check out Marvel's Doom #3 by clicking the images to get larger versions and if you've got a few cents buy something via the amazon links.

Doom #3 Comic Cover

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Cities Want Skateboarding Banned Links 9/22/09

Guess what? A Suburban City Bans skateboarding!

Oh and that's not all, Another suburb says no skateboarding in the streets!

Like skateboarding at public schools? Well these skateboarders get a skatepark built on school property!

And right when news gets better, it gets worse, Another city wants a ban on skateboarding in their city!

Bummer High has a new video on their catalog.

Chad bartie is ripping in his Osiris welcome video.

Strange Notes is on the road with Saints and Sinners.

Ernie Torres flips to grind for Adio.

Yonnie Cruz does his thing for Bones.

Help us keep this site updated, please purchase discounted skateboard decks, wheels, and more at discount prices online by clicking here. Every little bit helps and allows us to keep this site active, and if we can get enough cents here and there we can buy a domain and get more original content up. Thank you.

Skateboarding in Victoria B.C. Video

Skateboarding in Victoria B.C. is a video from Threesixty Boardshop in canada...awesome, these skaters are featured, so enjoy:

Drew Copleston
Zach Barton
Todd Myers
Pierce McKay
Matt Gravel
Lucas Hodges
Guy Sheffield
John Roberts
and Friends............

ThreesixtyBoardshop.ca

360 Promo from Cyrus Jackson on Vimeo.



Help us keep this site updated, please purchase discounted skateboard decks, wheels, and more at discount prices online by clicking here. Every little bit helps and allows us to keep this site active, and if we can get enough cents here and there we can buy a domain and get more original content up. Thank you.

The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood

the blind assassin by margaret atwood

The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood is an award winning piece of literature with a classic literary communication that is modern and yet...somewhat post modern at the same time.

Here is a review and more information of The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood:

The Blind Assassin opens with these simple, resonant words: "Ten days after the war ended, my sister Laura drove a car off a bridge." They are spoken by Iris, whose terse account of her sister's death in 1945 is followed by an inquest report proclaiming the death accidental. But just as the reader expects to settle into Laura's story, Atwood introduces a novel-within-a-novel. Entitled The Blind Assassin, it is a science fiction story told by two unnamed lovers who meet in dingy backstreet rooms. When we return to Iris, it is through a 1947 newspaper article announcing the discovery of a sailboat carrying the dead body of her husband, a distinguished industrialist. Brilliantly weaving together such seemingly disparate elements, Atwood creates a world of astonishing vision and unforgettable impact.

And here is a review from Amazon online:

The Blind Assassin is a tale of two sisters, one of whom dies under ambiguous circumstances in the opening pages. The survivor, Iris Chase Griffen, initially seems a little cold-blooded about this death in the family. But as Margaret Atwood's most ambitious work unfolds--a tricky process, in fact, with several nested narratives and even an entire novel-within-a-novel--we're reminded of just how complicated the familial game of hide-and-seek can be:

What had she been thinking of as the car sailed off the bridge, then hung suspended in the afternoon sunlight, glinting like a dragonfly, for that one instant of held breath before the plummet? Of Alex, of Richard, of bad faith, of our father and his wreckage; of God, perhaps, and her fatal, triangular bargain.

Meanwhile, Atwood immediately launches into an excerpt from Laura Chase's novel, The Blind Assassin, posthumously published in 1947. In this double-decker concoction, a wealthy woman dabbles in blue-collar passion, even as her lover regales her with a series of science-fictional parables. Complicated? You bet. But the author puts all this variegation to good use, taking expert measure of our capacity for self-delusion and complicity, not to mention desolation. Almost everybody in her sprawling narrative manages to--or prefers to--overlook what's in plain sight. And memory isn't much of a salve either, as Iris points out: "Nothing is more difficult than to understand the dead, I've found; but nothing is more dangerous than to ignore them." Yet Atwood never succumbs to postmodern cynicism, or modish contempt for her characters. On the contrary, she's capable of great tenderness, and as we immerse ourselves in Iris's spliced-in memoir, it's clear that this buttoned-up socialite has been anything but blind to the chaos surrounding her. --Darya Silver




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