January 31, 2005
Appropriate Heinlein Quote
I found a perfect Heinlein quote for the coming month, to mark the momentous Iraqi elections yesterday:
Democracy is a poor system; the only thing that can be said for it is that it's eight times as good as any other method. Its worst fault is that its leaders reflect their constituents--a low level, but what can you expect?
From Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land.
Posted by: JohnL at
10:29 PM
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January 09, 2005
Heinlein on Legal Advice
I'm reading
Citizen of the Galaxy by Robert Heinlein. This little exchange between a ship's commanding officer (Brisby) and his paymaster/legal officer ("Pay") reminded me of some clients I've had:
Brisby scowled. "Pay, you aren't working for me to tell me I can't do things."
"Yes, sir."
"You're here to tell me how I can do what I'm going to do anyhow. So start digging through your books and find out how. Legally. And free."
"Aye aye, sir."
I'm sure most of my lawyer readers can relate.
Posted by: JohnL at
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Oh, the pain, the pain. Make it stop, John, please, for the love of God, make it stop.
Think I can relate? I related viscerally to this post. I could feel the tension creep up around my eyes.
And actually, I've heard this from senior partners, too, not just clients.
Posted by: RP at January 10, 2005 06:57 AM (LlPKh)
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January 04, 2005
Meat Puppetry
For those of you who don't follow
Neal Stephenson or SF,
The Baroque Cycle is an ambitious trilogy of 900-plus page novels, all set during the height of the
Enlightenment in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. I have just finished reading
Quicksilver, the first volume, which Stephenson painstakingly wrote in longhand on cotton parchment with a fountain pen (to get into the historical mindframe).
There are no significant spoilers here, but if you haven't read any of it yet and are sensitive to learning any details ahead of time, don't read any further. The rest of this is below the fold:
more...
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After reading Cryptonomicon, I couldn't wait to hit Quicksilver. I was disappointed. The storyline about Daniel Waterhouse I found very interesting, but I couldn't get into the Jack Shaftoe parts. I started it over again, but just can't seem to finish it.
Posted by: Howard at January 07, 2005 02:13 PM (8IlGJ)
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I finished the Baroque Cycle a few months ago and I loved it. While it took me forever and a day to get through Quicksilver, I sped (in relative terms, of course) through The Confusion and The System of the World. Great books and a very satisfying read...when you finally make it to the end. I'm currently reading Cryptonomicon and I'm loving it. Fascinating stuff. I completely agree that Stephenson was making an allusion to Gibson, and he's too smart that I cannot believe it was unintended. He seems the sort who would throw that in there, wondering who would pick up on it. Good for you that you got it. It completely slipped past my husband, who is a Gibson nutjob.
Howard: stick with it. Jack is so confusing in Quicksilver, but he's also ill. I found that once I accepted I was delving into the mind of one who was insane, and let reality drop, it was much more enjoyable. *SPOILER* Plus, he does disappear for the final two-thirds of the book, if that helps you to make your decision.
Posted by: Kathy at January 07, 2005 05:59 PM (E0v6D)
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