Saturday, October 5, 2013

A Coming Storm

One Night in the Embrace of Hurricane Katrina


The news had reported Katrina had done more than just batter the New Orleans. The storm hit the old city like a freight train leaving behind devastation, flooding and death. I had seen several hurricanes reach Meridian, Mississippi in my lifetime but this one I was old enough to remember. I had spent much of my teens hating this town. I felt trapped by it. But as I found peace within myself, I had come to love my home and my community. As the headlines promised Katrina's arrival I feared for my home and my community. 

Meridian is known for her rolling hills. We actually live in a small valley near the top of one of the highest peaks in Meridian. Just above my house where the road meets Highway 19 you can sit there and look southward for miles. I sat on the hood of my car and watched as she approached. The power had been shut down at the main grid a day before Katrina's arrival to reduce the risk of fire. So the town already had an eerie feel. The streets were empty and the stores closed mid day. No one but law enforcement and emergency personnel were allowed on the streets. I had signed up at the local EMS as a licensed EMT and received the sticker for my car. I hadn't worked in EMS for a long while but I kept my license current. The hour was drawing near and my community braced for a hard impact. It was as if we were preparing for an air raid. 

I worked at the Howard Johnson Inn as the night desk clerk. Every room of every hotel had been reserved in advance for the power company. They had combined the resources of every facility in the surrounding area to send trucks and personnel to the area and ride the storm out with us. The mayor promised they would begin restoring power the moment the storm passed over us. The trucks never made it. The mayor had underestimated Katrina. Even with the reports of the crippled city of
New Orleans still coming in, our mayor assured us emergency services were prepared. 

A convoy of power company trucks was deployed at key locations in the surrounding counties awaiting instruction. The logistics of moving so much equipment and personnel at one time had bogged down the poorly planned effort. The resources were available but had no where to go. 30 power company trucks and over 100 employees sat in the small community of
Waveland, Mississippi. Katrina wiped the entire community of Waveland off the face of the earth. All 30 of the power trucks had been lost. 

The sky toward the south had become dark and thunder rolled in the distance. She seemed to come in slowly. The contrast between the clear blue sky above and the black storm cloud below was quite beautiful. The ground beneath her was dark. Highway 45 north extended toward me from this direction. Cars were driving at speeds well in excess of 100 miles per hour attempting to outrun the storm. As she approached the tops of the trees beneath her began to twist and even miles away you could hear them snapping like toothpicks. The scene resembled a massive armored tank crushing the earth beneath it. My hand held radio issued a final warning. "All
EMS Personnel report to your stations and to wait out the storm! We can't go out once it gets here." 

I was stationed at my front desk where I worked. It was the most logical place for me. None of the power company employees had made it in so I planned to provide rooms for the flood of evacuees that would surely be coming in. They were already pouring in from the highway when I arrived. We provided the rooms for free but took the names of everyone arriving to keep a head count. Following this storm people were going to want to know where to find their families. The sky grew dark gray and an eerie sound like a howling wolf echoed across the sky. 

The wind began to pick up and I stood with the evacuees in the hotel lobby has the tall Texaco sign across the street began to lean into the wind. This sign was atop a large steel and concrete post embedded firmly in the ground. It took the wind less than 20 minutes to snap this sign in half and send it crashing into the convenience store below. People said the wind sounded like a train. I don't think they were near where we were. The wind did not sound like anything we had ever heard before. It sounded to us like a growling beast and the children in the lobby were terrified by it. It groaned hungrily outside and it made you feel like prey being searched out by a massive animal. As the night progressed this feeling the storm somehow had benevolent intent only got stronger. 

The wind came in bands increasing in intensity then abruptly stopping into sheeting rain. With the passing of each band we began to hear something like a large cannon being fired repeatedly. It literally shook the walls of the hotel. I took a flashlight went to the top floor to investigate. At the south corner of the building the roof was being lifted by the wind and slammed down again. The concrete wall was cracked by the force of each hammering fall. I evacuated everyone from the top floor and closed it off. By this time everyone inside was huddled in the lobby on the north face of the building. 

My car was parked facing into the force of the wind. I hadn't thought to park it in front. I stared in disbelief as the wind picked the front of my car up with its front tires barely touching the pavement. The growling beast continued to howl with increasing force. My car began to glide smoothly across the parking lot then came to rest against the far embankment. Before this some in the hotel had considered leaving to drive further north. Seeing my car moved by the force of the wind ended such notions. 

A patrol car appeared on the street approaching our hotel. The wind was increasing again. We had timed the bands of driving wind by now and knew it had not reached its peak. I tried desperately to reach the officer over my radio, but all communication had stopped shortly after the arrival of the storm. It was too late for him to go anywhere. The wind began to batter the patrol car. Where he was on the street provided him no protection from the flying debris. Bricks, metal and glass scoured the vehicle and we could hear it impacting the passenger side. This window was shattered and then the car was pushed over the shoulder of the street into a depression. The officer was trapped out there and I felt I had to help him. 

We had the bands of wind timed perfectly now. I felt confident I could reach my car and go to the officer and return in time to beat the next wave. I left my radio with the evacuees and told them to continue calling for the officer to let him know I was coming. I wasn't sure if our transmission was even getting out. 
I quickly got into my car and sped out of the parking lot I reached the place where the patrol car had slid off the street. I was running out of time. If the officer was injured I would have no time to retrieve him. Thankfully he appeared from his passenger side and I went down to help him up the side. Once safely in my car I glanced to my right and saw the entire hillside behind the hotel had been stripped of every large pine tree that had once stood there. The rain began to drive sideways again and I floored the accelerator. I parked in front of the hotel no and hoped we would be able to reach the lobby again. The next band was upon us. 

The officer was given a blanket and towels to dry off. Everyone huddled around him as he spoke. He said he had no choice but to attempt the drive over. The location where he was posted had been gutted by the force of the wind and it was no longer safe to stay there. His eyes widened as the loud booming concussion rang out through our hotel. We told him it was the roof being torn away. 

As we sat in the lobby wrapped in blankets the officer continued to try to reach someone on the radio. We had settled in and peered out at the devastation. Shortly after
midnight there had been a calm and we wondered if we had survived the storm. The radio came back to life long enough for the voice to warn us the eye of Katrina was passing over. No one should attempt to come out just yet. 

Morning came and the light of day revealed a torn and battered city. Entire structures were gone and fallen power lines lay in the streets. Shutting off the power earlier had been a very good idea. Vehicles were toppled and crushed underneath the debris of trees and wreckage. I wanted to get to my mom. We all wanted to get to our loved ones. The entire south corner of the hotel's rooftop was gone and every window on the south portion of the building blown out. 

I drove as far up our road as I could before reaching a point where old growth oaks had been torn from their roots and dropped into the road. I walked the rest of the way to my mother's home. Our neighbor's home was badly beaten all her windows were gone and I could see her furniture had been blown to the rear of her house. I stepped through her large window and called out to her. Beneath the pile of her furniture and broken glass I could faintly hear her voice calling out. I moved the debris thinking she was trapped or injured underneath. She had gone down into her basement and the door had been pinned shut. To make matters worse the house had shifted and her water line broke flooding her basement. She spent the night huddled at the top of her basement stairs with water knee high beneath her. The water had been shut off as well but what remained in the lines emptied into her basement. I helped her out and made sure she was okay. I promised to return once I checked on my mother. 

I was relieved to see my mother and several neighbors sitting comfortably on her porch. The location of our home in the valley between the hills had blocked her home from the brunt of the wind. Neighbors atop the hill had come down to sit out the storm with her. They had made a camping scene of sorts and even had steaks on the grill. The neighbors had returned to their homes and returned with whatever food they could find. We expected it would be days before power was restored and the food would have ruined anyway. They were making plates of grilled steak, chicken and pork and wrapping them in tin foil. I joined the team of neighbors clearing our road with chainsaws. We cut the fallen trees into firewood and left it piled at the roadside with a painted sign to others to take what they needed. By
midday, everyone on our little road had a plate of food and clean gallons of clean water. We stayed without power for seven days. But thankfully no one in our town had lost their lives. 

During those seven days following Katrina we had come to accept life without power. We visited each other and shared our resources. We sat on our porches and talked under the stars swatting mosquitoes and sipping warm beer. There was almost a feeling of disappointment when the power did return. We began to rebuild and life returned to normal. 

Our first power bill was actually higher than usual even though we had been completely without power for seven days. The local East Mississippi Power Association supervisor was hauled before the City Council to explain. He said a power surge had been to blame for the nearly 40% spike in everyone's power bill. Someone in the crowd yelled that looters were supposed to be shot! I smiled as the nervous supervisor assured everyone they would receive a full refund.
Meridian, Mississippi had returned to normal. 

Sources/Resources
Previously Posted on FullofKnowlege.com
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We Need a Button to Change the World

We Can Do That!


Often I see my friends posting billboards related to current political issues on my social media pages. More so, these billboards spur comments and thread that can sometimes reach hundreds of replies. People are more politically aware than we have ever been before. And we talk about these issues daily. If our voices really matter, why are we not using the internet to affect the changes we need? 

I asked my Facebook friends to weigh in their opinions on a "Facebook Button" that would petition our government representatives and let them know how we really feel about the decisions they are making that affect our lives and our country. The responses were not surprising, however, the volume of responses were overwhelmingly surprising. The polls are in and my friends want the Facebook Button! But do Americans everywhere else want it as well? 

The premise seems simple enough. As the current outdated system stands today, important issues being considered by congress are relayed to us on the news and we all chat about it. If it affects us strongly enough we call our representatives and get his/her answering machine. After that, if we still feel strongly about the issue we try to gather up as many signatures as we can to petition our representatives by a process of buying airtime on local stations or knocking on doors. By the time our voice is heard the vote has already submitted. Unless you can afford a lobbyist, your chance of actually influencing anything government does in real time is slim to none. If this really is a government ran for the people by the people why is it so difficult for our voices to be heard? 

As I have mentioned in an earlier article, we are not using the internet to its fullest potential. Social media is where a great many of us are discussing these issues and a simple online petition system would not be difficult to put into place. It was easy enough to install a way to submit our tax information online using a digital signature. It would seem to be just as simple to have a way to petition our representatives in real time to ensure we actually are being heard. 

I can't really pat myself on the back for this idea because there would be ramifications of a system like this. The president would be more inclined to address the nation rather than congress to approve military action funded by our tax dollars. Any moves made by representatives directly in opposition of the people they were elected to represent would gravely affect their chances of re-election. Lobbyist would no longer wield the power to influence our representatives with wealth and political gifts. The ramifications of a real time petition system would bring our government back to the way it was always intended to be by our founders. For the first time in our nation's history, all Americans have the means to directly connect with our elected government leaders as easily as we do everyone else. 

"This would be wonderful but wouldn't it be too much on the system?" --- Terrie Allen 
This system would not be a simple polling that can be easily dismissed as circumstantial. It would be a link to a valid and binding petition submitted officially directly to our representatives. The social media page itself would only be the host for our petition button displaying the issue being petitioned. A real time petition system is not just a reasonable suggestion but would resolve the disconnect between the people and our government. 

"I think this would be a great idea. But I don't see social media sites hosting conservative Ideas" --- Jason Hannah. 
While it has been a concern in the past for conservative parties getting the access they need to the permits and legal required to validate their political organizations. The petitioning system would eliminate that as well. The need to form groups to get your message out would no longer be necessary. And the issues being petitioned could be either liberal or conservative. The petitioning site would be separate and perhaps even moderated by our government to ensure against fraud. And on this note, if the issue of petition tampering did arise we'd know we were doing something right! 

A few have hoped to affect change by leaking government information to us. I suggest real change will only result from all of us leaking information to our government. And a real time online petitioning system would be more than a leak. It would provide each and every one of us a real voice in the actions of our government. 
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Friday, October 4, 2013

The Care and Feeding of Your Article Farm

If You Don't Care For Your Farm, It Will Not Produce.
It's an unflattering term, 'Article Farm'. It draws to mind thousands of lowly writers huddled together in cramped, unsanitary conditions tapping away at their keyboards for mere pennies a month. The advertisers get leads and sell their products, the corporation gets the ad revenue, and the writers get just enough to buy a cup of coffee to stay awake to keep pecking away.

I have been chastised for my naughtiness as a writer as many times as I have received accolades. I can't help myself, it's part of who I am to jump my fenced enclosure and get into the beautiful editors pastures. I'm promptly returned to my place but, take your eye from me for a moment, and I'm out again chasing my publishers. On the article farm, corporations don't fit in. They don't appreciate their livestock and are especially irritated at typists like myself. In corporate article farming you, as a writer, are a production line by product and your thoughts are a commodity. Nothing more.

There was once a Utopian concept of this industry operated by a small mom and pop team. Everyday they entered into the farm and spoke with us and gave us encouragement. We were well cared for, no one took more than their fair share and everyone benefited. Our keyboards were sleek in design and our minds sharp and agile. We produced the best content and eager consumers rallied to read our new and unique perspective of the current events. The mom and pop were very happy. And we were as well. Until they sold us to the corporation and moved to Barbados.

Slowly our conditions began to go down hill, we were fed less and less and expected to produce more and more. Our content suffered as a result and those troublesome writers like me led to slaughter. I escaped my confines for one last time and wandered the lonely hills and valleys until I found another small and happy farm. The owners are gentle and encouraging and their contributors are happy and talented. I often wonder how my old beloved masters would react if they witnessed the conditions of their writers under the cold hand of the corporations. I can only hope my current home at Full of Knowledge never sells out as well. Time will tell.

Sources/Resources
Previously Posted on FullofKnowlege.com

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Monday, September 9, 2013

True Believer

A Conversation of Faith

A gentleman holding a bible enters a mid suburban coffee shop and seats himself at a table. As he sips his coffee he places a small yellow card on the table. He gets up for a refill and on his way he drops more of the small yellow cards on each table he passes by. The card he places on each table reads, "Are you saved?" and includes an addressed invitation to his church. The gentleman has been to three public places before coming here and has left the yellow cards on every table at each location. This is the information phase of indoctrination. He sees another gentleman seated on the outside patio of the crowded coffee shop and approaches him. The contact phase begins. "Excuse me, but are you saved, Sir?" the gentleman asks?
The other gentleman seated outside looks up at the other gentleman and then looks to the bible. He motions with his had inviting the gentleman to join him at his table. He stares at the bible as he replies, "I guess, saved would be a relative term, as I have seen no one upon this earth saved from anything."
The gentleman takes a seat across from the other and thinks for a moment. His people at the church had prepared him for such encounters. He was well versed in the teachings of the bible and alone had increased the numbers of the congregation by hundreds. As he started to speak the other gentleman raised his hand to stop him.
"Be careful, Sir. Because I assume you are about to introduce yourself as a representative of God." The gentleman spoke in a calm voice that made the other a bit uneasy. "If you do speak for God, and your book holds his words then be prepared to prove it."
The gentleman realized he was gripping his bible now. He still felt relatively confident with his well rehearsed lines. This conversation was leading toward a subject of faith. Faith is the fallback to proof and since it can neither be proven nor disproved, it always serves its purpose. "Sir, we can only have faith in God's word which has been left for us as a guide to teach others and lead them to his flock."
The other gentleman sat up in his seat a bit now. He now took his gaze from the other's bible and stared him deeply into the eyes. His voice had a chill to it now. Yet still calm, he seemed to be biting his words off. "I am faithful to my God and diligently await a sign, but even I have never seen the face of God nor heard a word spoken from the lips of God as I speak to you now."
The gentleman was very uncomfortable now. He had not ever encountered a person such as this. He counted himself a talented salesman and this talent had until now served him well in his role for the church. He responded, "I can only attest, Sir, that these words here in this bible, the King James, version is the true and correct word of God."
The light around the other gentleman seemed to get dimmer and shadows grew darker around him. The warm air was now colder. He sat for a moment then replied, "You mentioned faith, Sir. Can you have faith you are speaking to a man seated across from you?" His skin now appeared pale in the decreasing light of the sun. "Does your faith, tell you I am a man?"
The gentleman was now keenly aware there was no one else seated near them and he was out here alone with the gentleman. He peered around nervously. He then realized that he had never before had to think about God in a very real sense. He, himself, had been indoctrinated to believe as those around him believed. He spoke again but his voice was trembling and unsure. "I have faith in God, Sir."
"I do not question your faith… I doubt your sincerity." The other gentleman responded raising his cup to his lips. The man's eyes were darkening in an unnatural way. It could have simply been a trick of the failing light as the sun passed behind the clouds now. But the gentleman's eyes were off in a way that was quite unsettling.
As he spoke again the shadowy gentleman's voice carried a tone of sincerity. Anyone that heard him speak these words could have faith he meant them. "If you speak for God… be well prepared to prove it... for the sentence of the sin of blasphemy is death. And I judge every man that claims to knowGod."

Previously Posted on FullofKnwledge.com
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Are We Prepared for the End of the World?

The End is Near... Again
Innovations throughout history have brought about the end of life as we know it and began life anew. As we stand on the brink of a new age are we prepared?
No. I have not gone apocalyptic and will not be donning my billboard to walk the street announcing the "The End Is Near!" But the end of our way of life could, in fact, be nearing the end of its era.
We learned from history that our civilization has evolved as the result of certain innovations that changed the way we lived. These innovations marked the end of an age and the new beginning of another. As progress did its work those that could not adapt found themselves leading the world one day and struggling to survive the next.
Throughout history the innovations that we mark as defining moments are classified as the Stone age, Bronze age, Iron age, Age of invention (Agricutural age), and the Industrial revolution age. Those that mastered the defining innovations of each age rose quickly to dominance over those that could not. And today we are seeing history repeating itself. Today, the face of our civilization is evolving so rapidly that we have three defining and life altering ages materializing at once, Technology age, Information age, and Space age.
Today, the value of human thought is not only a sellable commodity but is the engine that is effectively tolling the bell for the previous Industrial Age. As information is pooled worldwide, transformed into ideas, and molded into technology at an astronomical rate those that still hold on the increasingly outdated Age of Industrialism must adapt or face extinction.
Teenagers are creating applications for our computers, Ipads and smart phones that make our everyday lives more efficient and productive while simultaneously rendering entire production lines obsolete. Eesha Khare and Henry Lin created a supercapacitor that is said to have the ability to charge batteries within seconds, and they haven't even graduated high school. This supercapacitor is wonderful news for those of us spending a small fortune on batteries, but not so good news if your job is on an assembly line making batteries.
Governments and government contractors enjoyed sole access to space for years after innovations in rocket fueled propulsion, before Sir. Richard Branson, CEO of Virgin Atlantic looked into the heavens and said, "I want to go there." Today Branson has built an air/spacecraft that can taxi from the surface of the earth and fly to the edge of space and land again. Branson promises that soon, we will be able to make reservations to resort hotels orbiting the earth.
As our economists wrestle to solve the mystery of the collapsing job markets and entire governments are crumbling into economic ruin perhaps they should look to the world around them and ask themselves if the Industrial Age that sustained them so well yesterday will be obsolete tomorrow?
People are dropping out of the job markets. They are more educated, connected and free to share ideas and collaborate in the creation of technology so amazing it hinges on the verge of science fiction. As people find more work opportunities available online they are less reliant upon the typical job market. As more people learn their own ideas, personal talents and ingenuity have value to the world the less they want to work for some one else.

Together, people are quickly bringing in a new age where the typical employer/employee relationship is becoming increasingly outdated. Replacing this outdated business model is a more creative and efficient partnership between talented people and corporations equally invested in their ideas and products. Out with the old and in with the new has been the way of things repeatedly throughout our history as a civilization.
I end this article with an appropriate medieval end to this foreboding prophesy. Lay down the old ways of the previous age and embrace the new. I say, the end is near.... Repent! The value of your ideas and talents are worth more to the world than the burgers you flip!
Source:
Previously Posted on FullofKnwledge.com
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Isolation: A Real Concern for the Online Generation

If you are like me and your profession is the internet isolation can become an issue. It's an interesting psychological problem not easily understood or resolved. In fact, one need not be alone to become isolated. We are, in essence, more united now as a civilization than we ever have been in history. So how can we possibly be isolated?
Even if our profession is not online we do tend to spend a great deal of time online while at home. We shut out our friends, family and spouses drawing into ourselves more and more. And we absolutely never go anywhere without our smart phones. Some of us, me included, can even reply to a text message without even looking at the screen while simultaneously carrying on a conversation face to face with someone. Texting and walking can become as dangerous an activity as texting and driving, especially when the two intersect.
I am reminded of some amusing images I've seen while researching this article. A soldier standing at parade rest is addressed by his superior while texting behind his back. A woman topples into a mall fountain while texting and walking. A police officer directs traffic with one hand and checks his smart phone with the other. Even surrounded by people we quite simply close ourselves off to the world around us sometime with disastrous results.
Are we lost souls? Are we doomed to a fate of only connecting with others via cloud based relationships? No, we are not hopeless cases. With some simple guidelines we can cure ourselves of our own isolation and reconnect with those around us. But it is not easy and will feel unnatural at first.
Allow and embrace life's little interruptions. I have a cat that roams freely about my home. She will eventually make her way to me and require affection. Rather than shooing her away I force myself from whatever I'm doing and show her attention. This is therapeutic for me as well, forcing me to return to the world around me. When friends and family visit, I leave my smart phone on vibrate in another room. If for any reason I do require my smart phone to receive a call related to a deadline or new contact, I let my visitors know that I'm expecting a call. My friends and family know this about me and appreciate my efforts to remain centered into the here and now.
Many of us do, however, have deadlines and online obligations that require us to focus on what we are doing. I resolve this by reserving time to myself that I feel certain I will not be interrupted. I awaken early and sit in my window with a cup of hot tea or coffee during the early morning hours. And while the rest of the world sleeps, I tend to my assignments. By the time the first rays of the sun warm my face I have my pending assignments completed.
With laptop and smart phone in tow, I drive to the coffee shop in town. I am warmly greeted there by friends and colleagues, the two are synonymous. Here we chat and exchange ideas and opinions over an early morning cup. Admittedly, this is often where I get my ideas and subject matter I share with all of you. 
There are moments of my life reserved for work and online activities but there are definite moments specifically reserved for those directly in my life. As with all things, a balance must be maintained. This is vital as we delve ever deeper into this new era, so we don't loose ourselves in the thickening cloud around us.

Previously Posted on FullofKnwledge.com
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Movie Censorship: Is it Time to Reconsider What We Are Allowed to Watch?

If you are like me you have probably read a great novel and were later thrilled to see that it's coming to the big screen. But alas, upon reading the novel you were let down by the watered down screen version. 
In this internet age we are bombarded by our news, media and search engines with images displaying in graphic detail every known atrocity and deviance under the sun. Our senses have become dulled by the sheer volume of it all. So why are our movies being censored when, with a click of a button, nothing is left to the imagination? Why do we need to be protected from the mad minds of Steven King and Clive Barker? And how did it all get this way? To understand this we must first delve into a bit of Hollywood history.
The Motion Picture Association of America is the film ratings authority that reviews our movies and gives them their stamp of approval. A movie is rated based upon its content and a subsequent rating attached to it. This rating governs who, if anyone can even watch it.
It all started in 1922, with some risqué films and a series of off-screen scandals involving Hollywood stars. There were those that felt the antics of Hollywood were corrupting our morals as a society. Political pressure was building, with legislators in 37 states introducing almost 100 movie censorship bills in 1921. So the studios enlisted Presbyterian elder Will H. Hays to rehabilitate Hollywood's image. Hays was paid $100,000 a year, a great sum of money for that time, to clean up Hollywood's image. Hays served for 25 years as president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America (MPPDA), where he defended the industry. He devised "The Formula" in 1924, which the studios were advised to heed, and asked filmmakers to describe to his office the plots of pictures they were planning on making. The Supreme Court had already decided that free speech did not extend to motion pictures. But stage theater productions remained a frequent source of topless shows, performances filled with curse words, mature subject matters, and sexually suggestive dialogue. 
In 1927 Hays suggested studio executives form a committee to discuss film censorship. They collaborated on a list they called the "Don'ts and Be Carefuls" based on items that were challenged by local censor boards. The list was approved by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the guidelines evolved into what we have today to govern the content of our movies. It has been largely unchanged for eighty years. 
Today, we have great independent film makers getting their movies out to the masses on shoestring budgets that are unfettered by censorship. And we have the option to watch it or not. It is this movie lover's sincere hope that the great novelists and directors will get on board with this trend as well. Their talent and vision should not be chained by a rating. If we had the opportunity to see Wes Craven's movies as he really envisioned them we'd truly never sleep again. 
Reference
"MPAA: Censorship Is Good For Consumers | Techdirt" . n.p., n.d. Web. 3 Aug. 2013.
"Motion Picture Production Code" Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. n.p., 1 Aug. 2013.Web. 3 Aug. 2013.

Previously Posted on FullofKnwledge.com
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Book Review: Where Darkness Dwells, a Great Depression Horror Novel

This book kept me a bit off guard in the beginning with its many plot twists. Experienced readers will recognize the author's writing strategy of providing only enough details in the beginning to make readers believe they know where the story will lead. I found this book to be smartly written, compelling and difficult to put down.

The characters were colorfully envisioned and easily relatable but slightly difficult to identify the main characters. I would have preferred to have remained with the main characters more and less with those on the periphery. To some degree, this led to an overall distraction that caused the storyline to be slightly less frightening than it could have been. In this respect I felt the author left a lot on the table.

Readers like myself, who enjoy not only the character believability but the scenery will appreciate the author's gentle references to the surroundings that allowed the reader to easily envision the environment. The contrast between the town above ground and the tunnels underneath instantly places the reader in a state of unease.
I found the plot to be disturbing, sadistic and twisted from the very start, which is exactly what I look for in a good horror. It all comes together wonderfully towards the end and nothing is left to the imagination. Be warned, I would recommend this book to my friends who prefer their fear slightly on the deviant side.
Reference
"Where Darkness Dwells" by Glen Krisch. copyright 2010,2012 by Glen Krisch. Stray King Publishing.

Previously Posted on FullofKnwledge.com
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