In which we take
a look at the movies of yesteryear and bring some of their more subtle, less- noticeable idiosyncrasies
to the fore. Do some of your favorite films exist in the memory purely as
entertainment and nothing more? Well, look again...
The first thing you notice about comic books is that they're color coded. Sure, it's the characters and the storylines that keep you coming back month after month, issue after issue, but it's the bright, shiny colors that catch your attention first. In this regard, the colorists' job is just as important as the penciler's, or the script writer's. Think about it: without Superman's red-and-blue getup or the Hulk's green florescent skin, would you have given them a second glance?
Saturday, April 19, 2014
Monday, April 14, 2014
... FOR "EXCUSES, EXCUSES" (A BOOK REVIEW OF "THE OFFSPRING," BY R.J. CRADDOCK)
As someone who's tried his hand at writing a novel or two, I can tell you this: it's no easy feat. I barely have the patience (or the brain power) at this point to hammer out a couple nonsensical paragraphs for the blog, let alone 300-500 pages worth. More than that, being able to keep a plot rolling for that long, or characters worth the trouble, is a task so Herculean I can scarcely understand how authors like Stephen King or James Patterson or (heaven forbid) Stephenie Meyer are able to do so on a regular basis. It takes tremendous talent and effort to do what these people do, yet ultimately what binds us together boils down to one simple thing: our obsession with the written word.
Born in Oaka
Tamuning, Guam (where her father worked as an art teacher), Ruth
"R.J" Craddock has every excuse never to attempt the Next Great
American Novel - marriage, kids, housework (and all the exhaustion that
entails), not enough hours in the day, you name it. Yet she also suffers from a
disability only 17% of the population can claim to share: dyslexia, diagnosed
at a very young age. Determined to never let it get the best of her, or define
her in any way, Ruth was able to maintain a 4.0 GPA by her sophomore year in
high school, and at 29, published her first novel, The Forsaken, Book One in
her proposed Children Of Cain series. Now just a year later comes its sequel,
The Offspring, a sure sign that her dyslexia has no chance of holding her back.
(She joins a select group of dyslexic authors throughout history, including
Agatha Christie, Hans Christian Anderson and William Butler Yeats.)
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