BOB’S RED MILL LOW-CARB BAKING MIX & DA VINCI SUGAR-FREE PANCAKE SYRUP



As a diabetic, I’m always on the lookout for low carb products that taste great. I’ve been eating Bob’s Red Mill Golden Flax Seeds for years (great source of Omega-3!). But now I’ve discovered Bob’s Red Mill Lo-Carb Baking Mix. It makes delicious pancakes with just 7 net carbs! And, what would pancakes be without pancake syrup? My favorite low-carb pancake syrup is Da Vinci Sugar-Free Pancake Syrup. Zero carbs! And it tastes just like real pancake syrup. Try this tasty combination and you’ll end up with a happy tummy and a smile on your face!

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #206: JOHN BRUNNER (Modern Masters of Science Fiction Series) By Jad Smith


Jad Smith’s John Brunner isn’t a Forgotten Book (it was just published), but it does explore the impact of an unjustly forgotten writer–John Brunner–and his forgotten oeuvre of great books. Smith discusses Brunner’s early, pulpish work (still readable to me!) and the works ACE Books published for a decade. Then, Smith turns to Brunner’s more ambitious, challenging and longer works like his Hugo-Award winning Stand on Zanzibar (1968) which deals with our planet’s population crisis. Brunner borrowed narrative techniques from John Dos Passos to communicate the scope of his story. My favorite John Brunner novel is The Jagged Orbit (1969) where urban life deteriorates because of unlimited guns (sound familiar?) and increasing violence. If haven’t read any of John Brunner’s works, Jad Smith gives you a nice guide to where to start.

University of Illinois Press plan forthcoming books on Gregory Benford, Alfred Bester, Ray Bradbury, Lois McMaster Bujold, Arthur C. Clarke, Philip K. Dick, Greg Egan, William Gibson, Joe Haldeman, China MiĆ©ville, and Connie Willis. If they’re as good as Jad Smith’s John Brunner I’ll be buying them all.

FORGOTTEN MUSIC #34: SO By Peter Gabriel (25th Anniversary Deluxe Edition–3 CD Box Set)

It’s hard to believe it’s been 25 years since I was gyrating to Peter Gabriel’s SO album. I could not get enough of “Sledgehammer” which blended soul and dance music. MTV (remember them?) played the music video of “Sledgehammer” on heavy rotation. This remastered set sounds fabulous. And it includes my favorite Peter Gabriel song, “Solsbury Hill” as well. If you’re a Genesis or Peter Gabriel fan, SO is a must-buy. If you’re not familiar with Peter Gabriel’s best work, this box set is a must-hear. GRADE: A
TRACK LIST:
Disc 1
1 Red Rain (5:40)
2 Sledgehammer (5:13)
3 Don’t Give Up (6:34)
4 That Voice Again (4:49)
5 Mercy Street (6:17)
6 Big Time (4:27)
7 We Do What We’re Told (Milgram’s 37) (3:22)
8 This is the Picture (Excellent Birds) (4:20)
9 In Your Eyes (5:27)
Disc 2
1 This is the Picture (Excellent Birds) (5:57)
2 San Jacinto (7:26)
3 Shock the Monkey (6:44)
4 Family Snapshot (4:35)
5 Intruder (5:26)
6 Games Without Frontiers (5:29)
7 No Self Control (6:15)
8 Mercy Street (9:15)
9 The Family and the Fishing Net (7:08)
Disc 3
1 Don’t Give Up (8:16)
2 Solsbury Hill (5:10)
3 Lay Your Hands On Me (6:14)
4 Sledgehammer (5:06)
5 Here Comes the Flood (2:47)
6 In Your Eyes (10:38)
7 Biko (9:38)

RECOMMENDATION #4: STORIES OF YOUR LIFE/LIFE CYCLE OF SOFTWARE OBJECTS By Ted Chiang



Todd Mason sent me a link to the LOCUS lists of the best SF ever published. You can find those lists here. Todd mentioned that Ted Chiang managed to garner six spots on those lists that included Asimov, Heinlein, Clarke, and other giants of Science Fiction Land. I had read Ted Chiang’s The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate but nothing else. So I quickly acquired Stories of Your Life and Other Stories published in 2002 and Life Cycle of Software Objects published in 2010.

“Tower of Babylon” plays with the premise that miners could enter the Vault of Heaven from a tower that takes a year to climb. I loved “Understand,” a story about a man who takes the secret Hormone K and becomes super-intelligent. I did not like the ending and wish I could write a sequel that would set things right. “Division by Zero” explores the implications that arithmetic isn’t correct (I’ve secretly believed this for years). “The Story of Your Life” shows how humans process time is affected by using an alien language. “Seventy-Two Letters” is about golems. “The Evolution of Human Science” shows what happens when metahumans publish their advanced research that mere humans can’t process. “Hell Is the Absense of God” is my least favorite story. It involves angels. “Liking What You See: A Documentary” is a series of reactions by various characters to a chip that cancels out the human brain’s ability to recognize beauty or ugliness. As you can see, Chiang writes about a variety of topics.

Life Cycle of Software Objects tells what happens when a company sells virtual pets that may or may not have artificial intelligence. Like the other stories Chiang has published, there is little or no humor in these works. Chiang is big on science, mathematics, and linguistics. Do Chiang’s stories approach the classic stories of Asimov and Heinlein? This stories are good, but they’re not great. GRADE: B+

THE HENRIK IBSEN COLLECTION (6-DVD Box Set)

I’m reading Stella Adler’s book on classical playwrights and realized that I really wasn’t that familiar with Henrik Ibsen’s work. In college we read Enemy of the People and Hedda Gabler, but that is the extent of my knowledge. When I saw this BBC box set of Ibsen plays, I bought it. Ingrid Bergman and Michael Redgrave bring Hedda Gabler alive, Judi Dench and Michael Gambon are great in Ghosts, Anthony Hopkins and Diana Rigg scintillate in Little Eyolf, Denholm Elliot is brilliant in The Wild Duck, Sir Donald Wolfitt and Leo McKern are extraordinary in The Master Builder. DVD EXTRAS include eight radio plays of The Pretenders, Peer Gynt, Emperor and Galilean, The Pillars of Society, Rosmersholm, A Meeting in Rome, John Gabriel Borkman, and When We Dead Awaken. This is a fabulous set! GRADE: A

SCAPEGOAT: A HISTORY OF BLAMING OTHER PEOPLE By Charlie Campbell


“This is essentially a book about stupidity, which, as Harlan Ellison stated, is the most common element in the universe along with hydrogen.” Charlie Campbell’s slim little book about blaming other people shows this method of defecting accountability has been around for a long time. Jews and women were blamed for the Black Plague (and paid with their lives). We saw a prime example of scapegoating last week at the Benghazi hearings. GRADE: A

MUMMENSCHANZ


Diane heard about Mummenschanz, the experimental Swiss mime group, on NPR. And, coincidentally, they were scheduled to perform at the SUNY at Buffalo Center for the Arts. So I bought tickets. I’m not a big mime guy, but Memmenschanz is unique. Plenty of wit, humor, and athletic skill go into their routines. The audience was full of kids who loved the wacky skits. If you’re looking for an over-the-top performance, check out Memmenschanz if they show up in your neighborhood. Check out the video from The Muppet Show below.

PARKER


Parker is based on a Richard Stark (aka, Donald Westlake) novel called Flashfire. Parker is a professional thief and when a caper goes wrong, Parker goes after the guys who double-crossed him. Jason Statham plays Parker, Jennifer Lopez is a real estate agent, and Nick Nolte basically provides the information Parker needs to extract his revenge. I’m a fan of Jennifer Lopez since her terrific performance in Out of Sight. But, sadly, J-Lo is completely wasted here. Every scene she’s in could have cut without affecting the main action of the movie. If you’re looking for an above average action-movie, Parker fits the bill. Art Scott sent me a link to a great article on Donald Westlake. You can read the article here. GRADE: B+

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #205: I, ROBOT: THE ILLUSTRATED SCREENPLAY By Harlan Ellison & Isaac Asimov


Back in the 1970s, Hollywood expressed interest in turning Isaac Asimov’s classic SF novel, I, Robot into a movie. Things didn’t quite work out, although I, Robot later appeared as 2004 science-fiction action film directed by Alex Proyas with little (other than the title) in common with Asimov’s novel. I, Robot: The Illustrated Screenplay features Harlan Ellison’s screenplay which does embody some of the novel’s look and feel. The screenplay remains unfilmed. Ellison and Asimov agreed to have the screenplay serialized in Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine. This hardcover edition was published in 1987. If you’re an admirer of Asimov’s I, Robot and respect Harlan Ellison’s talents at writing scripts, this book should hold your attention.