You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   159-183   184-195 
 
Author Message
12 new of 195 responses total.
valkyrie
response 184 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 12:17 UTC 1999

Ok, I expect someone to get this fairly soon, since I don't have any
obscure books :).

When I was in middle school there was a spate of magazines publishing 
fantastic stories, not alone ghost stories, but weird yarns of every sort.
magic ships plying the ether to other stars.  Strange inventions.  Trips
to the center of the earth.  Other "dimensions."  Flying machines.  Power
from burning atoms.  Monsters created in secret laboratories.
  I used to buy them and hide them inside copies of Youth's Companion and
Young Crusaders, knowhing instinctively that my parents would disappreove and
confiscate.  I loved them and so did my outlaw chum Bert.
  It couldn't last.  First there was an editorial in Youth's Companion:
"Poison to the Soul--Stamp it Out!"  Then our pastor, Brother Draper, preached
a sermon against such mind-corrupting trash, with comparisons to the evil
effects of cigarettes and booze.  Then our state outlawed such publications
under the "standards of the community" doctrine even before passage of the
national law and the parallel executive order.
  And a cache I had hidden "perfectly" in our attic disappeared.  Worse, the
works of Mr. H. G. Wells and M. Jules Verne and some others were taken out
of our public library.
  You have to admire the motives of our spiritual leaders and elected
officials in seeking to protect the minds of the young.  As Brother Draper
pointed out, there are enough exciting and adventurous stories in the Good
Book to satisfy the needs of every boy and girl in the world; there was simply
no need for profane literature.  He was not urging censorship of books for
adults, just for the impressionable young.  If persons of mature years wanted
to read such fantastic trash, suffer them to do so--although he, for one,
could not see why any grown man would want to.


Have at it :)
jazz
response 185 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 14:02 UTC 1999

        On the bright side, what's come to replace them is Neal Stephenson and
Anne Harris and Janet Hagan.
void
response 186 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 14:14 UTC 1999

   robert a. heinlein?
aruba
response 187 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 15:16 UTC 1999

It sounds like Heinlein, but I can't quite place it.  The line about there
being enough stories in the Bible for everyone is familiar, though.

Hmmm.  I'll guess Asimov.
jep
response 188 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 15:40 UTC 1999

It's a familiar quote, and it does sound like Heinlein.  I cannot place 
the story, though.

Oh, yes I can, it's from "Job: A Comedy of Justice" by Heinlein.
valkyrie
response 189 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 16:35 UTC 1999

Looks like void got it.  I was hoping it'd last a little longer than
a couple hours, but oh well :).  
flem
response 190 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 19 21:28 UTC 1999

Heinlein isn't likely to last long around here.  Even I'd have gotten that
one, had I been timely enough.  :)
void
response 191 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 20 02:16 UTC 1999

   i have a quotation in mind, but don't have time to enter it before
i go to work tonight so it will have to wait until tomorrow.
void
response 192 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 20 13:15 UTC 1999

   hmmm.  looking at the date, would anyone mind if i wait until agora
rolls to enter the quotation?
aruba
response 193 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 20 18:50 UTC 1999

Sounds like a good idea.
davel
response 194 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 21 22:58 UTC 1999

Someone please link the new item into Books.
remmers
response 195 of 195: Mark Unseen   Mar 23 12:59 UTC 1999

It's been done. The new item is #83 in Books. (item:books,83)
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   159-183   184-195 
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss