Over 16,530,473 people are on fubar.
What are you waiting for?

My blog is moving

Again, I know. My personal/writing blog is moving here to my web page. BookLove is not moving at all. Hopefully this will help me save time, posting to one blog rather than 3 to 5. Saving time will hopefully translate into more writing and reviewing.

Yay!!

My computer is fixed! I've had it on all day and I haven't even heard the fan much less had it shut down on me because of over heating. When it started doing that multiple times in a day I knew I had to get something fixed on it. No more pulling the AC plug to see if that helps it cool down and I managed to play AdventureQuest today without it getting choppy or the computer dying on me. And all of this goodness is just in time for the teaser trailer for this summer's The Incredible Hulk. My hopes are rising. Ed Norton plays an excellent split personality. fight-club-dvd.jpg Oooo yeah. And my favorite Norton film? death_to_smoochy.jpg If you haven't seen it then you should. Costumed kids show characters. Mafia. Nazis. Addicts. And little people.
And it's funny! December Quinn's "Is it a Zombie?" Zombie Finger Cookies, also from December Quinn. Would those be perfect for a book release party or what? 10 Reasons Why Zombies are Better Than Men Susan and the Zombie Menace Susan and the Zombie Menace

Add to My Profile | More Videos Demonstration of the Dead Demonstration of the Dead

Add to My Profile | More Videos And in the zombie revelry I'm going to end with a list of zombie stories that I loved: History is Dead, edited by Kim Paffenroth. An excellent collection of stories with some humor, some tragedy and some zombies that don't eat humans at all... "Station 19" by Michael Josef from Fried! Fast Food, Slow Deaths. An excellent, soulful tale that twists the anthology's theme and zombies. "By Zombies; Eaten" by Christopher William Buecheler from GUD, Issue 2. Another surprisingly soulful take on the fight between zombies and humanity. The line that inspires the title is absolutely haunting. One of those that you might never forget.

Picture Post...

We came through the ice storm just fine. It's slickery as hell outside right now, and it doesn't help that it's so cold and still raining that the water is freezing as much as it's thawing. But of course, it makes for some good pictures.
If you fancy yourself to be a horror writer, or use dark themes in your fiction you really, really need to go read this essay by Mort Castle. It really sums it all up.

"Thin" and "Healthy"

(Article found at Bob Freeman's blog) Fat people cheaper to treat, study says By MARIA CHENG, AP Medical Writer Preventing obesity and smoking can save lives, but it doesn't save money, researchers reported Monday. It costs more to care for healthy people who live years longer, according to a Dutch study that counters the common perception that preventing obesity would save governments millions of dollars. "It was a small surprise," said Pieter van Baal, an economist at the Netherlands' National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, who led the study. "But it also makes sense. If you live longer, then you cost the health system more." In a paper published online Monday in the Public Library of Science Medicine journal, Dutch researchers found that the health costs of thin and healthy people in adulthood are more expensive than those of either fat people or smokers. Van Baal and colleagues created a model to simulate lifetime health costs for three groups of 1,000 people: the "healthy-living" group (thin and non-smoking), obese people, and smokers. The model relied on "cost of illness" data and disease prevalence in the Netherlands in 2003. The researchers found that from age 20 to 56, obese people racked up the most expensive health costs. But because both the smokers and the obese people died sooner than the healthy group, it cost less to treat them in the long run. On average, healthy people lived 84 years. Smokers lived about 77 years, and obese people lived about 80 years. Smokers and obese people tended to have more heart disease than the healthy people. Cancer incidence, except for lung cancer, was the same in all three groups. Obese people had the most diabetes, and healthy people had the most strokes. Ultimately, the thin and healthy group cost the most, about $417,000, from age 20 on. The cost of care for obese people was $371,000, and for smokers, about $326,000. The results counter the common perception that preventing obesity will save health systems worldwide millions of dollars. "This throws a bucket of cold water onto the idea that obesity is going to cost trillions of dollars," said Patrick Basham, a professor of health politics at Johns Hopkins University who was unconnected to the study. He said that government projections about obesity costs are frequently based on guesswork, political agendas, and changing science. "If we're going to worry about the future of obesity, we should stop worrying about its financial impact," he said. Obesity experts said that fighting the epidemic is about more than just saving money. "The benefits of obesity prevention may not be seen immediately in terms of cost savings in tomorrow's budget, but there are long-term gains," said Neville Rigby, spokesman for the International Association for the Study of Obesity. "These are often immeasurable when it comes to people living longer and healthier lives." Van Baal described the paper as "a book-keeping exercise," and said that governments should recognize that successful smoking and obesity prevention programs mean that people will have a higher chance of dying of something more expensive later in life. "Lung cancer is a cheap disease to treat because people don't survive very long," van Baal said. "But if they are old enough to get Alzheimer's one day, they may survive longer and cost more." The study, paid for by the Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports, did not take into account other potential costs of obesity and smoking, such as lost economic productivity or social costs. "We are not recommending that governments stop trying to prevent obesity," van Baal said. "But they should do it for the right reasons." I'm absolutely against this idea that there's one right size for everyone. There have been all kinds of studies that have proven active "overweight" people are healthier than sedentary "thin" people, that diets are worse for you than carrying those ten or so extra pounds, and that some people are just built bigger. The media hype on this "obesity epidemic" is going to be worse than the "epidemic". Cases of anorexia and bulimia are going to skyrocket, because guilting and putting pressure like this on people is not the way to handle this. Plus, the "facts" are flawed from the beginning, case and point An Illustrated Guide to BMI.

Rot Sneak Preview

So, I entered Nathan Bradford's The Essential First Page Contest. I'm not sure why, because he's already seen my query and my first 30 pages for Corpse Blood. I'm not sure what we'd talk about if I got a 10 minute phone call with him either. Mostly I entered it just because I'm proud of Rot. Rot is the novella that I'm gonna finish today (I swear!). So that you get all the fun without having to go over to Nathan's blog and scroll through all the entries to read mine here's a slightly expanded version of my first page. Oh, and please remember that I haven't edited this at all, period, so please excuse any mistakes. * * * When I met Amy she'd been dead for four days. She'd been at the facility for three of those days. At that point I'd only been there two. Not that anyone needed more than a few moments to get the gist of the place. She was more bitter about being at the facility, than about the being dead part, and quite honestly I didn't blame her. She had a scowl on her face as I walked into the office at Silver Springs Retirement Facility. She was pretty, pale skin graced with freckles, chin length soft-looking brown hair and the palest hazel eyes I had ever seen set into the mildly chubby body of an early twenty-something. “You're dead.” I couldn't stop it once I'd though it. Her scowl deepened and I felt bad immediately. “You know I hadn't noticed. Thanks for telling me.” “I didn't mean... Look, all of the zombies I've seen so far have been...” “Like them?” She pointed out the window to the grounds where I could see a keeper leading a train of dessicated corpses on their daily walk. The facility employed people with enough skill at raising the dead to keep the zombies' urge to chew on people at bay. Me, I didn't have a talent for commanding the dead. What I had was twenty plus years of military experience and the ability to look someone's ninety year old grandmother in the eyes and shoot her. The job called for all sorts of skills. “Some of us still retain our own thoughts and personalities. I'm Amy.” I nodded. “I'm Dean.” “Which would you prefer, Dean? Being one of those thing out there, rotting and mindless? Or being locked in a body that's already dead and knowing that's the future you'll face?” Personally, I thought both options sucked. * * * It used to be that death, maybe even a long or violent death would be the worst thing you'd ever have to face. In the few skirmishes I'd served in other soldiers had taken some comfort in knowing that. But the, that was before they started raising people from the dead. My nephew, not that long ago, used to play a video game where the point was to just wander around shooting zombies. There was more to it than that, a bit of mystery, a touch of evil corporation or government conspiracy. The games said that zombies were the result of a disease. When they started showing up in real life people assumed the same thing. Government experimentation, biological terrorism, some sort of corporation poisoning the public-- the fear and the outrage from the living humans caused more damage in those days than the few confirmed zombies did. I was privy to a few case reports of home grown terrorists plots against global corporations who had nothing to do with the occasional walking dead. And there was Black Wednesday too. Forty five civilians dead. They never did confirm how many employees of that soda company burned in that building. Then the truth came out, and I still wonder how many people harbor the secret memories of doing violence that day in the name of protecting themselves or their families from a mistaken target. Creating zombies, it turned out, was just a matter of will. The first few we caught in public had likely raised themselves. A few assholes too stubborn to die. The problem came when people started to make zombies for fun and profit.
Some of us here in the U.S. have been gifted with experiencing some pretty wild storms and weather. Put simply, the weather patterns are acting like it's spring. It was 70 degrees here yesterday. My heat has been off for three days and my windows have been open (except when my husband has closed them). And yesterday the warm front passed and the cold front came in. That's where the all the storms and tornadoes are, where the two fronts meet. We fared well, the house smells like rain, and yeah it's dropped to almost below sixty, and the wind keeps blowing in and making all the papers in my room flutter, but it's January and I have my windows open! (And I'm not crazy!) The bad news is that the roof sprung a leak in our room (it's not bad, but it is a leak)and instead of hitting my word count goal all nice and early I had to rearrange the room so that I could put a bucket under the leak instead of having the bed under the leak. I rather like the new layout, even if I don't have a wall to cuddle against anymore (I also don't have a freezing exterior wall to move against in my sleep and wake me up suddenly.) The best thing is that I now officially have a workspace. The parts that you don't see are my 4-in-one printer thing and my red backpack o' writing stuff (notebooks, copies of things to review, extra laptop batteries and wires etc) which are on the floor by said workspace. Excuse the somewhat blurred picture. I sneezed.

December Review

My husband and I have been goofing off all day, saying things like "Gosh, I haven't written a thing all year!" But in that has also been things like "Wow, I haven't gotten a reject all year" and "Yay! We haven't paid a bill all year." December Review || Publishing News || I sold two stories this month! Scarecrow to Pseudopod and Carnivorous to Black Ink Horror Moodoo my dark humor flash tale is still up at From the Asylum. Give it a read if you need a laugh. || December Reviews || Disposal by Jeff Strand Lone Star Stories #24 Gratia Placenti Monkey Love by John Paul Allen Horror Graphic Classics volume 10 History is Dead Postscripts #13 || Stats || This Month's Word Count: 1,890 Total 2007 Word Count: 112,692 Submissions This Month: 5 Total 2007 Submissions: 116 Stories Out: 16 Stories In: 5
last post
16 years ago
posts
54
views
6,997
can view
everyone
can comment
everyone
atom/rss
official fubar blogs
 8 years ago
fubar news by babyjesus  
 13 years ago
fubar.com ideas! by babyjesus  
 10 years ago
fubar'd Official Wishli... by SCRAPPER  
 11 years ago
Word of Esix by esixfiddy  

discover blogs on fubar

blog.php' rendered in 0.0727 seconds on machine '192'.