rendition of the Exorcist is short and too the point. No meesing around with pesky things like plot or character development. Just cut to the chase and let the fruballs fly.
So to speak.
It's really a rather entertaining little animation featuring a few dead bunnies. And at least one damned one.
Ever feel like you weren't who you seemed to be? Like an actor playing someone elses role during rehearsal just to get another person through their lines?
No?
Oh well. I don't either. Not any more. Thanks to the Book of Sick.
sounds pretty nasty, but it's the best thing since sliced bread if your are a fan of Calvin and Hobbes.
Every strip has been indexed, crossreferenced and made searchable. To make it even better, the strips have been scanned, so you can see the strip online along with the references to the books that strip is available in.
I grew up immersed in science fiction and space literature. I collected NASA memorabilia and wanted nothing more than to be an Atronaut.
Didn't get to become in an Astronaut, but I did at least live long enough to find out there was once water on mars. That's cool. Check out the press release and other info at NASA's homepage.
promised to make us all publishers. That was one of the major claims being made in the nineties as evangelists pushed their vision of a new media utopia on the hordes of idealistic geeks.
No one seemed to worry that the established means of distribution would try to defend themselves. Now that it seems as though the dream of participatory media is no longer being dreamt, it's nice to know that a few individuals have refused to awaken.
Like the people at Telltale Weekly. They are trying to build up a library of free audiobooks, by selling you audiobooks. By using micro payments, creative commons licensing and a new type of multilevel marketing, they are hoping to prove that new artistic works can be created, artists paid, and business made while simultaneously loosening copyright restrictions.
It's a pretty tall order, but I hope they are able to fill it.