• Reviews

    Faith in Buddhism

    One of the things that struck me on my rereading of Getting the Buddha Mind is the assertion of the importance of religious faith. I don’t remember that before. It is not a front and center tenet, but it is there. Faith here is not presented in the same way as some other religions. It is more like a diluted faith. The benefits of meditation and Buddhist teaching are available to anyone, so it is being claimed. Practicing on this level does not even present any conflict with other religious practices on its own. Sitting and practicing controlling your thoughts is a rather inoffensive activity. But to achieve the Buddha…

  • Prose

    Is Rupert Murdoch doing us a solid?

    Gah! I have another political piece posted below. I really am not trying to make this page a political soapbox but the U.S. election feels omnipresent right now. There is a one-page essay below about how Fox News has positioned itself in it election coverage. I whipped it up last night without thinking or editing much. Hopefully that is out of my system for a while. I promise my next posting will be more whimsical if not more pleasurable.

  • Prose

    The Aparagus Magpie

    New short story posted below! The Asparagus Magpie. Download a copy. I have to confess that it is political in nature. That is not how I intend to use this space in general but I had a notion for a story about a malcontent politician that needed to come out. Hope you enjoy!

  • Reviews

    Joe’s Mystery Box – The Hawkline Monster

    I opened one of Joe’s boxes this week. To add to the randomness, I entertained the idea of selecting the first book I saw. It was Dangling in the Tournefortia by Bukowski. I haven’t read it before and really want to, but I gave it a pass here. I was counting on Joe to give me something new and unexpected and you pretty much know what you are going to get from Bukowski. I did not have to rummage much deeper though. Several of the next few books I picked up were collections of poetry by Richard Brautigan. I know I have never read anything by him. Honestly, I can’t…

  • Reviews

    Heavy Metal #300 is here!

    I picked up Heavy Metal #300 from my comic book box yesterday. I flipped through the pages as soon as I got it home and it does look beautiful. I have a couple thoughts to share ahead of digging into it: 1.) The landmark issue was commemorated with a “All-Star” artist lineup. That is great and I’m sure I will enjoy it, but it seems a little uninspired. The 250th issue was a giant single story graphic epic about a galactic experiment wherein specimens from a thousand different worlds were sent to try to coexist on a single planet. It was a riskier and more ambitious project in my mind.…

  • Brew Druid

    The Green “A”

    So the Brew Druid Project is a collaboration with an acquaintance. We’ve both brewed in the past separately. We have different ideas about what we want to do with the project, but we do share some philosophies about the brewing process. We are trying to get it together to enough to brew a batch by the end of the month. It means, however, that we both need to rummage through out brew supplies and make a plan. I have some doubts about my partner’s commitment to doing that. I have some doubts about the condition of his brew equipment as well. I can count on him to grab on to…

  • Reviews

    Past Buddhist Readings

    I’ve started two different books on Buddhism but failed to finish either. It is pretty infrequent that leave a book unfinished but it happens. The first was a loaner I took from a dusty forgotten bookshelf at the DoE Albany Research Center. It was Getting the Buddha Mind. I was in my final year of studying Mechanical Engineering and got really busy and had to put it down. The other book was The Diamond Cutter which was a Christmas gift from my mother a few years ago. That one I put down intentionally after reading about three quarters. It did a good job of arguing the practicality of Buddhist teachings,…

  • Reviews

    The Time Machine Afterthoughts

    There were a couple of other comments I wanted to make about The Time Machine. First was about a single line from the book that tickled me. When the Time Traveler first sees the Morlocks, it is during the predawn grey while he is still groggy with sleep. He is outside a magnificent ruin left from an advanced civilization. The contours of the landscape are coming through the darkness he thinks he sees occasional stirrings in the distance. White creatures that he can not lock his eyes on. They make him think of ghosts and he muses that if each generation leaves a share of its members to haunt the…

  • Reviews

    The Time Machine

    I have this mental condition that makes me think that whatever I am reading at the moment is one of the greatest things ever written. It doesn’t happen every time, but pretty often. That may come apparent to anyone who follows this post for a time. It didn’t happen here. I did enjoy it though. When science fiction is sufficiently aged, it takes on a special charm. It happens whenever the science becomes dated, when there is a sufficient technological gap between the era that produced it and the era in which it is being read. Bradbury is such a great example of this. H.G. Welles is too. Unfortunately, I…

  • Self-publishing

    Hybrid publishing

    It took a long time to complete my first novel, Three Degrees of Freedom.  Probably longer than it should have.  Not that I regret it.  I loved the process and was doing it concurrently with full time employment, an active social life and some counterproductive substance habits.  I am pleased with it though.  I think there are some first novel issues with it that cannot be undone, but there is some good stuff in there.  It’s certainly better than some other works that have been printed for sale.      When I completed it, I started a process of reaching out to all the publishers and agents I could find that…