Marni Clavijo

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Ernest Cline
“I spent a few more minutes puzzling over the timeline before turning my attention to the notebook’s first page, which contained a pencil drawing of an old-school coin-operated arcade game—one I didn’t recognize. Its control panel featured a single joystick and one unlabeled white button, and its cabinet was entirely black, with no side art or other markings anywhere on it, save for the game’s strange title, which was printed in all capital green letters across its jet black marquee: POLYBIUS. Below his drawing of the game, my father had made the following notations: No copyright or manufacturer info anywhere on game cabinet. Reportedly only seen for 1–2 weeks in July 1981 at MGP. Gameplay was similar to Tempest. Vector graphics. Ten levels? Higher levels caused players to have seizures, hallucinations, and nightmares. In some cases, subject committed murder and/or suicide. “Men in Black” would download scores from the game each night. Possible early military prototype created to train gamers for war? Created by same covert op behind Bradley Trainer?”
Ernest Cline, Armada

D.S.   Smith
“Love is a necessity, just as lust is. Two instincts we modern humans have turned into our strongest emotions. Love gives us the desire to bond with a partner long enough to care for our children to an age when they can fend for themselves. Lust gives us the will to want to reproduce in the first place. These instincts are so deeply ingrained in our psyche that even with our advanced brains, they still govern us. We are now, for the most part, intelligent enough to decide who we want to love or have sex with. We can even control whether or not that sex results in offspring, but we can’t just ignore those instincts. From the simplest person to the most powerful kings, queens and presidents, our our lives are still governed by those two emotions.”
D.S. Smith, Unparalleled

Paul Cude
“Would you like me to put you out of your misery, before I put you out of your misery?”
Paul Cude, Bentwhistle the Dragon in a Threat from the Past

M.F. Kelleher
“No sound pervades the space. Her footsteps create the only life in the emptiness. She walks through to the bedroom. His body lies on the bed, a single tiny drop of dried blood on his left temple.”
M.F. Kelleher, Olivia Streete and the Parisian Contract

Clement Clarke Moore
“there arose such a clatter, I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter. Away to the window I flew like a flash, Tore open the shutters”
Clement C. Moore, The Night Before Christmas: The Classic Account of the Visit from St. Nicholas

year in books
Krassi ...
359 books | 908 friends

Derrick...
56 books | 34 friends

Jonell ...
7 books | 26 friends

Chung C...
9 books | 32 friends

Tommie ...
190 books | 35 friends



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