Sunday, July 17, 2011

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns By Frank Miller

I used to watch the old Batman reruns with Adam West when I was a kid. I thought Batman was funny and a bit cheesy but the love for him remained. There was something in those blue tights and cool Batmobile that left me fascinated. But when I read Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, I saw Batman as not just a superhero but as a man, troubled by his past and his future, a real human being. Take the trip into the legend and the darkness that stirs inside.

Stiff: The Curious Life of Human Cadavers By Mary Roach- Essays

The life of the human cadaver is anything but beautiful, yet somewhere in this look at death Mary Roach seems to find it. Her sharp wit, eye for humor and honesty weave a tapestry of history formed from the lifeless bodies she explored. As we search for the answers of 'what happens when I die,' Roach skips the spiritual aspect and gets down to the hard science. From vivid accounts of burial, embalming, cremation and the less obvious choices such as crash test dummy donor or crime scene victim, we find what death really means. Sure to help you make a decision about your own remains!

Sunday, October 24, 2010

I Am Not a Serial Killer By Dan Wells- Fiction


I Am Not a Serial Killer By Dan Wells is a book that falls between fiction and science fiction, Jeff Lindsay and Frank Peretti...even reminiscent of C.S. Lewis' Screwtape Letters. The protaganist seems like a pubescent version of Dexter without a mentor to keep him from spiraling out of control. John Wayne Cleaver, our serial killer obsessed teen narrator lives by a set of rigid rules determined not to become the monster he believes he will one day become only to find himself confronted by a darkness more brazen and sinister that he could imagine. As Cleaver lets down his own safety nets to confront a killer and save his small town he must battle his inner demons and own thirst for carnage to keep himself intact. This debut novel is the first in a trilogy.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Winter Soldiers- History-Iraq/Afghanistan


Winter Soldier By Iraq Veterans Against the War and Aaron Gantz

Whether you support the war in the Middle East or not, this book is a must read. I picked up this title after a family member was sent to Afghanistan and tore through it in a matter of days. Published by the Iraq Veterans Against the War they are not necessarily asking for your support but they are asking for you to take a moment and listen to what they have to say. One of the best lines in the book comes from the foreword by Anthony Swofford (author of Jarhead). He says, "Do not turn away from these stories. They are yours, too."

Waiter Rant- Essay

Waiter Rant By Steve Dublanica

After dropping out of seminary and being laid off from the mental health sector for essentially being too ethical, Steve Dublanica was at his wit’s end. After awhile he realized he would have to return to a job but really had no idea what to do. His brother, a waiter at an upscale New York restaurant landed him a job and what followed was a wildly popular blog: WaiterRant.net. This book is both a how-to guide for those of us not versed in the proper behavior of eating out and a manifesto to our millions of wait staff who deal with the absurdity of psychotic diners. If you’ve ever wondered how to get good service, tip properly or not have the staff spit in your food, then Waiter Rant is for you. Hilarious and eye opening don’t eat out again until you’ve read this book!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Nobody Move- Fiction


Denis Johnson is a brilliant writer. After winning the National Book Award for A Tree of Smoke I wasn't sure what he could do to follow up such a brilliantly written novel. Then he surprised me with Nobody Move. This novel is both an homage to crime noir and a play on its predictable style. The dialogue moves and the characters are real and seedy but at the same time you find yourself rooting for that moment of salvation- but I won't tell you whether it comes or not.

Don't wait for the paperback, you need to read this book now!

Game Boys- Essays

As sales on games sky rocket past Hollywood box office profits, Michael Kane takes a deeper look into video gaming and the underground world of competitive play. Instead of taking an abstract view of this insider’s world he follows two clans and their struggle to stay on top and make money for their skills. A rivalry as deep as the Yankee’s versus Red Sox, meet CompLexity and 3D. Do you have what it takes to be a cyber athlete? These guys do and they want you to know it.

What made this book difficult to get through was my constant desire to break out my own video game system. Kane is fair in his reporting and shows the greed and desire of the men on top, not the players, who are raking in the large profits, as well as a look at the 15-23 year olds who make playing video games their life.