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October 9th, 2006, 08:16 PM
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General
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Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Posts: 3,070
Thanks: 13
Thanked 9 Times in 8 Posts
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
Literary, not film. The Fungi from Yuggoth, from H.P. Lovecraft's "The Whisperer in Darkness".
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Cap'n Q
"Good morning, Pooh Bear," said Eeyore gloomily. "If it is a good morning," he said. "Which I doubt," said he.
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October 10th, 2006, 11:11 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
Posts: 731
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
Aha!~ You know, I've never read much Lovecraft. I tend to think of him as a "horror" author, and I do not care for that genre at all.
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October 11th, 2006, 04:27 PM
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General
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Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Posts: 3,070
Thanks: 13
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
Lovecraft is a different "flavor" of horror, very psychological and introspective, with very little gore, but his 1920's attitudes toward race turn some people off. It helps to have an unabridged dictionary at hand to look up some of the vocabulary he uses.
Nivek's game has a fifth player pending join.
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Cap'n Q
"Good morning, Pooh Bear," said Eeyore gloomily. "If it is a good morning," he said. "Which I doubt," said he.
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October 11th, 2006, 10:49 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
Posts: 731
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
Hehe, 1920's attitudes toward race. Have you ever read Huckleberry Finn?
You know, that is actually a two-edged sword. On the one hand, when reading old authors their racist attitudes sometimes grate on our modern sensibilities. On the other hand, because they were so utterly indifferent to modern sensibilities, older authors were free to make observations that no modern author would dare.
As a case in point, back in the late 80's, I was doing some serious research on the punic wars. One of the best authors on the subject did his work in the 1930's. As part of his introduction to the subject of the punic wars, the author did some exploration of the ethnic origins of the carthaginians, tracing them back to the "proto-semitic" ethnic group which also gave rise to the ancient hebrews (and many of their most bitter enemies). Some of his observations would simply not have been comfortable to modern academia, lest they be misconstrued as anti-semitic.
A fifth player, you say?
/me rubs hands together and cackles in evil laughter
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October 12th, 2006, 04:57 PM
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General
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Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Posts: 3,070
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
No, I haven't. Checking his bibliography, it looks like the only Twain I've read is _A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court_.
There are too many "classics" to read more than a fraction of them. I've been buying omnibuses from the Science Fiction Book Club faster than I can read them.
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Cap'n Q
"Good morning, Pooh Bear," said Eeyore gloomily. "If it is a good morning," he said. "Which I doubt," said he.
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October 12th, 2006, 08:32 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
Quote:
capnq said:There are too many "classics" to read more than a fraction of them. I've been buying omnibuses from the Science Fiction Book Club faster than I can read them.
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That's a big, big 10-4, good buddy.
And some of that so-called classic stuff is trash, too.
I plowed through all 1300+ pages of War & Peace, thinking "We must be getting to the good part soon, the part that made Tolstoy famous, right?"
Nope, the whole book was utter crap. Nothing but the clumsy machinations of a bunch of arrogant, selfish, small-minded aristocrats, and Tolstoy raving on about his laughably ridiculous theories of socio-military dynamics.
I think part of what made it so awful was the utter dearth of any sympathetic characters. My profoundly egalitarian sensibilities made the main characters all objects of scorn for me. Frankly, I felt they deserved the misfortunes that befell them.
OTOH, Silas Marner (of all unlikely things!), which we read in high school, was an absolute gem. Obscure as it may be among those books reckoned "classics", I enjoyed it enormously.
Almost anything by Charles Dickens is well worth the reader's time.
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October 15th, 2006, 08:46 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
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Re: Anybody up for a game of stock SE4 at PBW?
Cap, I am requesting a re-start.
There are non-stock AI empires, in what's supposed to be a totally stock game, and I drew two of them in my starting sectors.
Please see posts in the game forum 
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