Friday, September 30, 2005

Topic Search Weekly BlogScans


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A
Able Danger
Anti-terrorism
Apocalypse
April 15th
April Fool's Day
Armstrong, Lance
Avian flu fears


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B
Blame for Katrina
Blonde bloggers


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C


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D
Dads
Dark poetry
Death of John Paul II
Disappointment
Drug use, cycling


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E
End times


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F
Father's Day
Fireworks
Flu vaccine
Fourth of July
Friday the 13th


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G
Gay celebs
Gambling
Gorelick, Jamie


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H
H5N1 flu virus
Harry Potter
Hurricane damage to New Orleans
Hurricane Katrina special edition
Hurricane Katrina, blame
Hurricane Katrina relief
Hurricanes and prophesies


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I
Income taxes
Independence Day


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J


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K
Katrina damage to New Orleans
Katrina strikes
Katrina relief


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L
Lance Armstrong
London bombings


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M
Meat Loaf
Michael Jackson trial


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N
New Orleans, hurricane damage & rebuilding
New Year's resolutions
9/11 commission
NOT gay


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O
Online Gaming


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P
Papabile
Poker
Poetry
Potter/Anti-Potter
Presidential portrait pranks
Pranks


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Q


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R
Relief efforts, Katrina


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S
Supreme Court


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T
Tax day
Terrorists in London
Tour de France, Lance
Triskaidekaphobia


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W
Wandering


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Alpha-Search Paper Frigate


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A
Agricola: De Re Metallica
Albanov: In the Land of the White Death
Allende: Zorro
All Over the Guy (Movie)
All The Words, Monty Python's Flying Circus
Alsberg: The Polar Express, Chris van Alsberg
Ambrose: Nothing Like It in the World
American Gods, Neil Gaiman
Among the Thugs, Bill Buford
Artifact, Gregory Benford
Art of Getting Bent, The, Mark Sahm
Art of the Table, The, Suzanne von Drachenfels
Asprin: For King and Country, with Evans
Atlas Shrugged Retrospective, Ayn Rand
Auchincloss: Exit Lady Masham


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B
Baby of Bataan, Joseph Quitman Johnson
Ballew: Degunking Your PC, with Duntemann
Baroque Cycle: see Stephenson
Barry: Big Trouble (book and movie)
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, Dai Sijie
Barmaid's Brain, The, Jay Ingram
Bass: PC Annoyances Second Edition
Bass: Half Past Human
Baxter: Evolution
Bear: Darwin's Radio
Beauty and the Geek, Reality TV series
Benford: Artifact
Bennett: 30-Minute Meals For Dummies
Better Homes & Gardens Biggest Book of Slow Cooker Recipes
Biggle: The Light That Never Was
Big Trouble, Dave Barry (book and movie)
Big Trouble In Little China (DVD)
Billion-Dollar Boy, The - The Jupiter Juveniles, Charles Sheffield
Black Hat Physical Device Security, Drew Miller
Body by Jake: I've Seen a Lot of Famous People Naked, Jake Steinfeld
Botany of Desire, The, Michael Pollan
Boiler Room (Movie)
Boys Are Back in Town, The, Christopher Golden
Brainwashing 101, Indie Political Film (DVD)
Brickner: Test Driving Linux
Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, Helen Fielding
Briggs: Joe Bob Goes Back to the Drive-In
Brin: Kiln People
Brin: The Practice Effect
Brite: Love in Vein
Brooks: True Confessions of a Heartless Girl
Brunner: The Webs of Everywhere
Bryson: The Lost Continent
Buford: Among the Thugs
Bureau and the Mole, The, David A. Vise
Burke: The Pinball Effect
Burns: Horatio's Drive (video)
Burr: Emperor of Scent
Business of Strangers, The (Movie)


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C
Cabot: The Princess Present
Calishain: Google Hacks, with Dornfest
Calcutta Chromosome, The, Amitav Ghosh
Calendar Girls (DVD)
Cantor: The Last Knight
Carbon Dreams, Susan Gaines
Cat's Meow, The, DVD (Movie)
Chernin: The Obsession
Clar: Out of the River Mist
Coal, A Human History, Barbara Freese
Chango's Fire, Ernesto Quiñonez
Cherryh: Foreigner
Cod, Mark Kurlansky
Collapse, Jared Diamond
College of Magics, Caroline Stevermer
Companions, The, Sheri Tepper
Con, Reality TV series
Confusion, The, Neal Stephenson
Conspiracy of Paper, A, David Liss
Control of Nature, The - Los Angeles Against the Mountains, John McPhee
Conways: Perl Best Practices
Cookbook: Curves Diet Plan, Gary Heavin
Cookbook: Biggest Book of Slow Cooker Recipes, Better Homes & Gardens
Cookbook: The Working Stiff Cookbook, Bob Sloan
Cookbook: 30-Minute Meals For Dummies, Bev Bennett
Covenant, The, James Michener
Cretaceous Sea, Will Hubbell
Crossfire, Nancy Kress
Crossroads to Cure, Nicola Henriques
Cryptonomicon, Neal Stephenson
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Mark Haddon
Cyborg from Earth, The - The Jupiter Juveniles, Charles Sheffield


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D
Dancing Naked in the Mind Field, Kary Mullis
Dancer, Colum McCann
Dark Lady, The, Michael Resnick
Darwin's Radio, Greg Bear
Decision, Allen Drury
Deed of Paksenarrion: see Moon
Degunking Microsoft Office, Wayne & Christina Palaia
Degunking Your PC, Joli Ballew, Jeff Duntemann
Del Rey: The Eleventh Commandment
Dennett: Freedom Evolves
De Re Metallica, Agricola
Diamond: Collapse
Dick: The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
Disney: Mulan II (DVD)
Moon: Divided Allegiance (Deed of Paksenarrion 2), Elizabeth Moon
Don't Click on the Blue E!, Scott Granneman
Door Into Summer, The, Robert A. Heinlein
Dornfest: Google Hacks, with Calishain
Dragon's Kin, Anne and Todd McCaffrey
Dreaming Jewels, The, Theodore Sturgeon
Drury: Decision
Duntemann: Degunking Your PC, with Ballew
Dyer: MySQL in a Nutshell


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E
Eberhart: Why Things Break
Ehrenfeld: Funding Evil
Eleventh Commandment, The, Lester Del Rey
Emperor of Scent, Chandler Burr
Emsley: The 13th Element
Erle: Mapping Hacks, With Gibson, Walsh
Evanovitch: One for the Money
Evanovitch: Two for the Dough
Evanovitch: Three to Get Deadly
Evanovitch: Four to Score
Evanovitch: High Five
Evanovitch: Hot Six
Evanovitch: Seven Up
Evans: For King and Country, with Asprin
Evolution, Stephen Baxter
Excel Annoyances, Curtis Frye
Excel 2003 Personal Trainer, CustomGuide
Exit Lady Masham, Louis Auchincloss


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F
Failure Is Not an Option, Gene Kranz
Fairy Godmother, The, Mercedes Lackey
Family Tree, The, Sheri Tepper
Field Guide to Desert Holes, A, Pinau Merlin
Fielding: Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason
Firefox Hacks, Nigel McFarlane
Firefox Secrets, Cheah Chu Yeow
Flawless (Movie)
Flint: Grantville Gazette
Fluke, Christopher Moore
Foreigner, C.J. Cherryh
For King and Country, Robert Asprin, Linda Evans
For Us, the Living, Robert A. Heinlein
Four to Score, Janet Evanovitch
Foy: Learning Perl, with Schwartz, Phoenix
Frederick Forsythe's Icon (Movie adaptation)
Freedom Evolves, Daniel Dennett
Free Money, Matthew Lesko
Freese: Coal, A Human History
Frye: Excel Annoyances
Funding Evil, Rachel Ehrenfeld


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G
Gaiman: American Gods
Gaines: Carbon Dreams
Getting Even, Getting Revenge, George Hayduke
Ghosh: The Calcutta Chromosome
Gibson: Mapping Hacks, with Erle, Walsh
Gibson: Pattern Recognition
Giguere: Make Easy Money with Google
Gilman: Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress
Goddess of Sumer, The, Jenna Smith
Golden: The Boys Are Back in Town
Goodbye Vietnam, Robert W. Wood
Google Hacks, Tara Calishain, Rael Dornfest
Gralla: Internet Annoyances
Gralla: PC Pest Control
Granneman: Don't Click on the Blue E!
Grantville Gazette, (ed.) Eric Flint
Grass, Sheri Tepper
Greenfield: A Perfect Red
Gunpowder Empire, Harry Turtledove
Gun, With Occasional Music, Jonathan Lethem


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H
Haddon: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Half Past Human, T.J. Bass
Harvey: The Island of Lost Maps
Hayduke: Getting Even, Getting Revenge
Heavin: Curves Diet Plan (and cookbook)
Heinlein: The Door Into Summer
Heinlein: For Us, the Living
Heinlein: Starship Troopers (Movie)
Henriques: Crossroads to Cure
Heroics for Beginners, John Moore
High Five, Janet Evanovitch
Higher Education - The Jupiter Juveniles, Charles Sheffield, Larry Niven
Hogan: Kicking the Sacred Cow
Home Networking Annoyances, Kathy Ivens
Honor Harrington: see Weber
Horatio's Drive, Ken Burns (video)
Hot Six, Janet Evanovitch
Hot Zone, The, Richard Preston
Hubbell: Cretaceous Sea
Hubbell: Sea of Time
Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress, Susan Jane Gilman


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I
Ingram: The Barmaid's Brain
Inside the Spam Cartel, SpammerX
Internet Annoyances, Preston Gralla
In the Land of the White Death, Valerian Albanov
Island of Lost Maps, The, Miles Harvey
It Takes A Thief (TV show)
Ivens: Home Networking Annoyances
I've Seen a Lot of Famous People Naked, "Body by Jake" Steinfeld


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J
Jackpot, Tsipi Keller
Joe Bob Goes Back to the Drive-In, Joe Bob Briggs
Johnson: Baby of Bataan
Jones: The Syndrome Rule

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K
Keller: Jackpot
Kicking the Sacred Cow, James P. Hogan
Kiln People, David Brin
Kingsbury: Psychohistorical Crisis
Kiss & Tango, Marina Palmer
Kitchen Confidential (TV series)
Kranz: Failure Is Not an Option
Kress: Crossfire
Kurlansky: Cod
Kurlansky: Salt


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L
Lackey: The Fairy Godmother
Land: The Spam Letters
La Place de la Concorde Suisse, John McPhee
Last Knight, The, Norman F. Cantor
Learning Perl, Randall L. Schwartz, Tom Phoenix and brian d foy
Legman: The New Limerick
Lesko: Free Money
Lethem: Gun, With Occasional Music
Light That Never Was, The, Lloyd Biggle, Jr.
Liss: A Conspiracy of Paper
Little Fuzzy, H. Beam Piper
Looking for a Ship, John McPhee
The Long Walk, Slavomir Rawicz
Los Angeles Against the Mountains (from The Control of Nature), John McPhee
Lost Continent, The, Bill Bryson
Love in Vein, Poppy Z. Brite


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M
MacKenzie: Orbiting the Giant Hairball
MacLean: Young Men and Fire
Maguire: Wicked (book)
Make Easy Money with Google, Eric Giguere
Man With Three Wives, The (TV Movie)
Mapping Hacks, Schuyler Erle, Rich Gibson, Jo Walsh
McCaffrey: Dragon's Kin
McCann: Dancer
McConnell: Science, Sex, and Sacred Cows, Wormrunner's Digest (collection)
McConnell: Stress Analysis of a Strapless Evening Gown, Wormrunner's Digest (collection)
McFarlane: Firefox Hacks
McPhee: The Control of Nature - Los Angeles Against the Mountains
McPhee: La Place de la Concorde Suisse
McPhee: Looking for a Ship
Merlin: A Field Guide to Desert Holes
Michener: The Covenant
Miller: Black Hat Physical Device Security
Mr Wilson's Cabinet of Wonders, Lawrence Wechsler
Monty Python's Flying Circus: All The Words
Moon: Deed of Paksenarrion 1: Sheepfarmer's Daughter
Moon: Deed of Paksenarrion 2: Divided Allegiance
Moon: Deed of Paksenarrion 3: Oath of Gold
Moore: Fluke
Moore: Heroics for Beginners
Moore: The Unhandsome Prince
Mulan II, Disney (DVD)
Mullis: Dancing Naked in the Mind Field
MySQL in a Nutshell, Russel J.T. Dyer
Myst, Cyan Worlds computer game


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N
New Limerick, The, G. Legman
Ninth Gate, The (Movie)
Niven: Higher Education - The Jupiter Juveniles, with Charles Sheffield
Nothing Like It in the World, Stephen Ambrose


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O
Oath of Gold (Deed of Paksenarrion 3), Elizabeth Moon
Obsession, The, Kim Chernin
Office 2004 for Macintosh, Mark H. Walker, Franklin Tessler
On Basilisk Station (Honor Harrington 1), David Weber
One for the Money, Janet Evanovitch
Orbiting the Giant Hairball, Gordon MacKenzie
Out of the River Mist, C. Raymond Clar


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P
Palaia: Degunking Microsoft Office
Pallas, L. Neil Smith
Palmer: Kiss & Tango
Park: Voodoo Science
Pattern Recognition, William Gibson
Passage, Connie Willis
PC Annoyances Second Edition, Steve Bass
PC Pest Control, Preston Gralla
Perfect Red, A, Amy Butler Greenfield
Perl Best Practices, Damian Conways
Petroski: To Engineer Is Human
Phoenix: Learning Perl, with Schwartz, foy
Pinball Effect, The, James Burke
Pinker: Words and Rules
Piper: Little Fuzzy
Pirate Coast, The, Richard Zachs
Polar Express, The, Chris van Alsberg-book, Movie
Pollan: The Botany of Desire
Practice Effect, The, David Brin
Predator's Gold, Phillip Reeve
Preston: The Hot Zone
Primal Fear (Movie)
Princess Present, The, Meg Cabot
Psychohistorical Crisis, Donald Kingsbury
Putting Up Roots - The Jupiter Juveniles, Charles Sheffield


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Q
Quicksilver, Neal Stephenson
Quiet Man, The, (Classic movie)
Quiñonez: Chango's Fire


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R
Raising the Stones, Sheri Tepper
Rand: Atlas Shrugged Retrospective
Rawicz: The Long Walk
Reeve: Predator's Gold
Resnick: The Dark Lady
Ringo: There Will Be Dragons
Ripley's Game (Movie)
Riverworld, SFC Original Movie (TV movie)
Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day, Joe Scarborough


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S
Sahm: The Art of Getting Bent
Salt, Mark Kurlansky
Scarborough: Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day
Schwartz: Learning Perl, with Phoenix, foy
Sea of Time, Will Hubbell
Secret of My Succe$s, The (Movie)
Secrets of the Widow's Son, David Shugarts
Seven Up, Janet Evanovitch
Science, Sex, and Sacred Cows, James V. McConnell, ed. Wormrunner's Digest
Shaw: Slow Glass
Sheepfarmer's Daughter (Deed of Paksenarrion 1), Elizabeth Moon
Sheffield: The Jupiter Juveniles
Shugarts: Secrets of the Widow's Son
Shute: Trustee from the Toolroom
Sideris: Surviving PC Disasters, Mishaps and Blunders, with Torres
Sijie: Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress
Singer from the Sea, The, Sheri Tepper
Slipstream, SFC Original Movie (TV movie)
Sloan: The Working Stiff Cookbook
Slow Glass, Bob Shaw
Smith: The Goddess of Sumer
Smith: Pallas
Solaris (Movie)
Spam Letters, The, Jonathan Land
SpammerX: Inside the Spam Cartel
Spencer: Tinker
Standage: The Victorian Internet
Starship Troopers, Robert A. Heinlein (Movie and book)
Steinfeld: I've Seen a Lot of Famous People Naked
Stephanie Plum: see Evanovitch
Stephenson: Cryptonomicon
Stephenson: Quicksilver
Stephenson: The Confusion
Stephenson: The System of the World
Stevermer: College of Magics
Stress Analysis of a Strapless Evening Gown, James V. McConnell, ed. Wormrunner's Digest
Sturgeon: The Dreaming Jewels
Surviving PC Disasters, Mishaps and Blunders, Jesse M. Torres. Peter Sideris
Syndrome Rule, The, Chris Jones
System of the World, The, Neal Stephenson


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T
Tepper: Grass
Tepper: The Companions
Tepper: The Family Tree
Tepper: Raising the Stones
Tepper: The Singer from the Sea
Tessler: Office 2004 for Macintosh, with Walker
Test Driving Linux, David Brickner
There Will Be Dragons, John Ringo
13th Element, The, John Emsley
30-Minute Meals For Dummies, Bev Bennett
Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, The, Philip K. Dick
Three to Get Deadly, Janet Evanovitch
Time, Love, Memory, Jonathan Weiner
Tinker, Wen Spencer
To Engineer Is Human, Henry Petroski
Torres: Surviving PC Disasters, Mishaps and Blunders, with Sideris
To Say Nothing of the Dog, Connie Willis
Train, The, DVD (Classic movie)
Tripping the Rift (TV series)
True Confessions of a Heartless Girl, Martha Brooks
Trustee from the Toolroom, Nevil Shute
Turtledove: Gunpowder Empire
Two for the Dough, Janet Evanovitch


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U
Unhandsome Prince, The, John Moore


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V
van Alsberg: Polar Express, The
Victorian Internet, The, Tom Standage
Videohound's Golden Movie Retriever, The
Vise: The Bureau and the Mole
von Drachenfels: The Art of the Table
Voodoo Science, Robert L. Park


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W
Walker: Office 2004 for Macintosh, with Tessler
Walsh: Mapping Hacks, with Erle, Gibson
Weber: On Basilisk Station (Honor Harrington 1)
Webs of Everywhere, The, John Brunner
Wechsler: Mr Wilson's Cabinet of Wonders
Weeds of God, The, Robert W. Wood
Weiner: Time, Love, Memory
Why Things Break, MarkEberhart
Wicked (book), Gregory Maguire
Willis: Passage
Willis: To Say Nothing of the Dog
Wire In the Blood, BBC America (TV series)
Wood: Goodbye Vietnam
Wood: The Weeds of God
Words and Rules, Steven Pinker
The Working Stiff Cookbook, Bob Sloan
Wormrunner's Digest collections: see McConnell


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X


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Y
Yeow: Firefox Secrets
Young Men and Fire


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Z
Zachs: The Pirate Coast
Zorro, Isabel Allende


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Classic Techno-Thriller: The Syndrome Rule by Chris Jones

REALLY THRILLING
When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold will be legislators.
—P.J. O'Rourke, quoted in The Syndrome Rule

For anyone who has ever occupied a dot-com cubicle, Chris Jones' elegant techno-thriller The Syndrome Rule will seem terrifyingly possible. His debut novel supplies a wild ride through conflicts between commercial vs. free software, capitalism vs. socialism, and the interplay between the government and a fictional computer colossus located in Redmond, Washington.

Similarities between Jones' fictional Sky Software, "maker of operating systems, office suites and laser mice," and real-world Microsoft are probably due to Jones' former employment with the Redmond-based computer giant.

Sky Software is the 600-pound gorilla in Chris Jones' Redmond, employing so many people that it can skew local fashions—Sky employees all wear fleece jackets with Sky product logos. The company has so much capital that it can drop a billion on a single acquisition, and it wields enough power to define legislation that will mandate use of its products. Driving many of these power-moves is James Hollinrake, a corporate weasel by any definition of the word.

Hollinrake has just concluded the greatest career-move of his life. Challenged to find the next "cool techno-toy," he identifies a Silicon Valley firm manufacturing an "organic" computer case, acquires some prototypes, and puts a "crash team" to work reverse-engineering them. The result is destined to be the next big thing in portable computing, the BizTop. Having proven the concept and acquired the Silicon Valley firm for Sky, Hollinrake is basking in the glory of a promotion to vice-president, and an appointment to head SkyPAC, the company's lobbying organization in Washington, DC.

All Hollinrake has to do now is make sure every BizTop includes the soon-to-be-mandated Digital Rights Management chip. If the organic case-makers disagree with that inclusion, well, he still has his crash team ready to go to make sure it happens. The product is released on time, and sells faster than Sky can supply it.

Meanwhile, local entrepreneur Weel Traverse is hunting for his missing wife. Weel connects with Sky employee Cale Hewney, and eventually they discover his wife had been part of the BizTop crash team. But there the trail goes cold. Weel reports his wife missing, and is told that she's "probably just taking some time off."

Suddenly, BizTops begin failing, emitting a "pus-like white substance" and people exposed to that emission get sick with a SARs-like illness. A dozen die, then 50. Soon thousands of people are dying from the substance emitted from the BizTops. The CDC labels this disease "BizTop Syndrome" or BTS, and commands Sky to collect and incinerate all the BizTops, failed or not. Hollinrake claims the white emissions are the fault of the organic cases; Sky's CEO, Charlie McCrae, thinks BTS may be a terrorist act by IFS, a "somewhat-millitant free-software advocacy group."

And people continue to die as the finger-pointing progresses. The question becomes, Did Sky Software know BTS would result from the product release? Weel Traverse's missing wife, a vanished Wall Street Journal reporter, and Sky's DRM chip all play into the thrilling answer to this question.

Jones avoids the easy steroetypes; he makes Sky CEO McCrea and entrepreneur Traverse sympathetic characters, and paints Traverse's powerhouse wife as willing to drop her career for the prospect of motherhood. A veteran fiction-writer might have done more with the mysterious recruiter who hires Hollingrake for Sky, and had less problem with verb tenses than does Jones. But these are minor quibbles with an extremely enjoyable, and very exciting tale.

Save a good chunk of time once you start this novel—you won't be able to put it down!
0976792702,B00008438U,0385334966,0385479565,020132797X


Please join us at BlogCritics to comment on this review.

Weekly Blogscan: Able Danger and the Gorelick Wall



There's a balloon floating in Washington lately, wafted in and out of view by hot air from bloggers and other new media. Is the name on that balloon Judith Miller? Tom Delay? Even Karl Rove?

No, it's Able Danger.

Able Danger was the code-name for a Pentagon data-mining surveillance project set up in the 1990s to track Al Qaeda activity worldwide. The project is reported to have identified Al Queda operatives in the US—including Muhammad Atta and three other of the 9/11 hijackers—prior to September 11, 2001.

The backstory on Able Danger comes from Flopping Aces blogger Curt, who wrote in mid-August that what "really sticks out to me is the timeline with Sandy Berger's burglary of Archive documents." But the blogger's piece was titled " The Gorelick Wall & Sandy Berger," indicating hw is also concerned over 9/11 commission-member Jamie Gorelick's "wall of separation" between FBI, CIA, and Pentagon intelligence efforts.
Rep. Curt Weldon (R-PA), a champion of integrated intelligence-sharing among U.S. agencies, wrote to the former chairman and vice-chairman of the Sept. 11 commission late Wednesday, telling them that their staff had received two briefings on the military intelligence unit—once in October 2003 and again in July 2004. Weldon said he was upset by suggestions earlier Wednesday by 9/11 panel members that it had been not been given critical information on Able Danger's capabilities and findings.

Austin Bay Blog commented on the "Gorelick Wall" with thoughts about why such a separation was appropriate for its time, saying a wall between military and Federal agencies and the police has a definite civil purpose, and noting that the wall has been lowered in the past when the US was at war.
Until 9/11 America did not consider the terrorists' attacks as war. Washington treated the terrorists as criminals. That was the strategic error, no matter what you think of Clinton or Bush... If Jamie Gorelick wasn’t the weakest commission member, she was the most compromised. Gorelick should have recused herself from participation on the 9/11 Commission—because she did "raise the wall" during the Clinton Administration. Had she done that she would have enhanced her reputation. But she didn't.

A "multi-expert blog dedicated solely to counterterrorism issues," The Counterterrorism Blog, cites a number of writings on the subject of Able Danger, but leads the list with this intro written by Bill West, who served in what was then the Clinton Administration’s Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).
If the news about the DoD intelligence is true, that infamous intelligence "wall" truly did create a huge missed opportunity... The INS Headquarters National Security Unit (NSU), which was created in the late 1990s in spite of considerable obstacles generated by the INS High Command... tried to post a liaison officer to the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) specifically to tap into DoD intelligence on counter-terrorism matters. The NSU Director at the time approved it and DIA bought off on the plan... but INS senior management above the NSU Director nixed it so it never happened...

If we had gotten that DoD Intel about Atta and crew in 2000/early 2001, lead information about al-Qaeda operatives in our backyard in south Florida, it’s virtually certain that between Miami INS and Miami FBI, we would have worked up a plan and found a way to take those thugs into custody.

Guest-blogger Joseph Cannon wrote in mid-August on The Brad Blog about learning the identity of Weldon's whistle-blower Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer. Cannon's approach is evident from the opening of his essay:
The right continues to make disturbing use of the Able Danger story—which holds that a secretive DIA unit had identified [Al Queda operative Mohammed] Atta well before 9/11.

Rush Limbaugh and a number of right-leaning newspapers have continued to spread the lie, first published in NewsMax, that Jamie Gorelick of the Clinton Justice Department somehow forced the DIA to refrain from sharing the unit's discoveries. John Podhoretz at National Review has also given respectful attention to this tale, although he has steered clear of the NewsMax spin.

Later in that month, we learned the names of two more people involved in Able Danger. Navy Captain Scott Philpott confirmed Lt. Col. Shaffer's claims, as did J.D. Smith, a civilian contractor who worked on Able Danger. "I am absolutely positive that he [Atta] was on our chart among other pictures and ties that we were doing mainly based upon [terror] cells in New York City," Smith said. He explained the project in an interview posted on FoxNews.com:
Smith said data was gathered from a variety of sources, including about 30 or 40 individuals. He said they all had strong Middle Eastern connections and were paid for their information. Smith said Able Danger's photo of Atta was obtained from overseas.

A "mostly Political weblog" on Slate, kausfiles, includes blogger Mickey Kaus' speculations on the Able Danger phenomenon from August. Kaus thinks the blogosphere is zeroing in on the real reason Able Danger's report was rejected by the 9/11 inquiry. Kaus cites two other bloggers in his revelation:
J.D. Smith [one of the Abel Danger whistle-blowers] also said that Able Danger had gotten Atta's name by linking him to Omar Abdul Rahman, the blind sheikh implicated in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing... It turns out, as blogger A.J. Strata discovered, that there are links—whether accurate or inaccurate... in the public domain between Rahman and a doctor, Magdy El-Amir... who has a brother named Mohamed El-Amir who has apparently been linked by Dateline—again, perhaps erroneously—to some intrigue or other. Mohammed El-Amir... Wasn't that the same name used by Mohammed Atta at the beginning [of] 2000?... It was just a different Mohamed El-Amir.... Why do I feel that through the power of the blogosphere we are asymptotically approaching the truth?

Mohammed Atta al-Sayed, 9/11 Hijacker, Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

Did DoD know Atta was Al Queda in 2000?


The "two Attas theory" is crisply debunked by Chris Regan of JunkYard Blog as ridiculous. He writes that this
...seems to fall into the category of the rush to deny or explain away the Able Danger story. The world's most critical data mining surveillance program should be able to distinguish between two identically-named people far better than any other method known to man. They would have flagged many unique indicators in order to profile personal preferences... Plus there's the Atta photo that was mentioned. Nobody else in the world looks like the 9/11 Mohammed Atta. He's a guy you could pick out of a lineup with his identical twin after seeing him only once in passing. He would be the evil twin of course.

On September 21st, according to NewsMax.com, the Pentagon ordered members of the Able Danger group not to testify about their findings at an open Senate hearing. This prompted Michelle Malkin to recall two-year-old statements from the 9/11 commission, saying that "It seems like just yesterday the 9/11 Commission was demanding access to every 9/11-related document, no matter how sensitive." She cites a Common Dreams Newscenter report dated October 25, 2003:
"Any document that has to do with this investigation cannot be beyond our reach," Mr. Kean said on Friday in his first explicit public warning to the White House that it risked a subpoena and a politically damaging courtroom showdown with the [9/11] commission over access to the documents, including Oval Office intelligence reports that reached President Bush's desk in the weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks.

William M. Arkin wrote quite recently (Sept. 27) an entire column detailing the "Secret History of Able Danger," in which he appears to debunk (but actually supports) the "Gorelick Wall" as a factor in the suppression of Able Danger's findings prior to the 9/11 attack.
Like most government activity associated with counter-terrorism in the late 1990's, Able Danger was a "compartmented" effort. After the 1998 embassy bombings, National Security Advisor Sandy Berger directed that a tightly compartmented process be put in place to keep all counter-terrorism military planning secret.... U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM)... worked with the Joint Chiefs to develop a set of 13 military options against Al Qaeda under a war plan called Infinite Resolve.

As the Able Danger cell began its work, its first questions were: What is al Qaeda? How big is it? Where is it?

As the 9/11 Commission said in its final report: "Despite the availability of information that al Qaeda was a global network, policymakers knew little about the organization. The reams of new information that the CIA’s Bin Laden unit had been developing since 1996 had not been pulled together and synthesized for the rest of the government."

Finally, Captain Ed writes today on his Captain's Quarters blog that one of the Able Danger whistle-blowers has been discharged from the DoD. Not for whistle-blowing, he hastens to point out, but for ancient offenses like stealing pens in 1985 and "going over his chain of command to do briefings."
Col. Tony Shaffer has had his security clearances revoked by the DoD and [they] have officially notified his attorney of the circumstances surrounding the revocation. Although it does not technically affect his membership in the Army reserve, the action effectively ends the career of the former DIA liaison to the Able Danger project. Shaffer cannot pursue his specialties within the Army or DoD without security clearances.

On the other hand, he can now testify (albeit with reduced credibility) before the Senate. That testimony may turn out to be more interesting than anything we learn from journalist Judith Miller.

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Thursday, September 29, 2005

An Unreasonable Woman by Diane Wilson

GOLIATH FALLS
None of us knew what a real paycheck looked like, but to Momma a real job was anything that didn't have nothing to do with the bay, because everybody knew if you wanted to make a dime on the bay, you'd have to bleed real hard. ...bad times were like the salted peanuts shrimpers ate with their beer...

Diane Wilson's weather-beaten face was just another in a crowd of shrimpers working the bays and bayous of the Gulf Intercoastal Waterways, out of Seadrift, Texas, Calhoun County. Her shrimp-boat was a fourth-generation effort that barely made ends meet, even when the shrimp were running high.

Then the shrimp began dying. So did the dolphins that fed on them. And like the other shrimpers, Wilson at first ignored the Toxic Release Inventory report that placed Calhoun County at the top for all kinds of toxic materials. First in the land. A horrible stew of alphabet-poisons was streaming into the Lavaca Bay, and from there to the Gulf, from poorly-regulated coastal industries in Texas and Louisiana.

The communities Wilson describes are often actively on the side of the polluters, because as fishing becomes poor, the factories are the only resource for families needing income. So we can have the cruel juxtaposition of dying shrimp fisheries with a municipal dinner to honor the chairman of one of those factories releasing toxins into the bay.

This is an uncomfortable book to read, for many reasons. One, certainly, is that the author, Diane Wilson, is an uncomfortable woman, unreasonable and confrontational. The title of the autobiographical description of her fight against rampant polluters in Seadrift, Texas, is perfectly chosen. Wilson showed herself willing to take whatever steps were required to expose her opponent, Formosa Plastics, as the cause of the poor shrimp harvests. She is also ardently pro-union, which allowed her opponents to dismiss many of her complaints are "designed to force a union on the industry."

Another reason for the reader's discomfort is that it is very hard to be comfortable with the kind of corporate behavior Wilson encountered, documented, and fought in her Texas Gulf town. The materials they released into the shrimp-fishing waters of the Coastal Inland Waterways were not more toxic than the way Formosa Plastics treated the fishing community and their unofficial spokeswoman, Diane Wilson. Faced with someone who could not be swayed by community opinion, and would not accept a bribe, and who moreover was beginning to get sympathetic press with a hunger strike, Formosa Plastics was finally forced to sit down at the bargaining table with this unreasonable woman.

In telling the story of her fight to force industrial plants in Calhoun County to stop their release of toxins into the Gulf, Wilson cuts herself no slack. She describes quitting a job at Union Carbide (echoes of Bhopal here) because "every day when I came home and washed my hair, the water turned yellow..." Even if you can be comfortable with Formosa and Wilson, the horrendous litany of toxins released into the bays and bayous of the coastal waterways is calculated to appall.

By turns poetic and brutal, An Unreasonable Woman is a stunning chronicle of one woman's fight against a Goliath on the Gulf. I warn you, you will begin to develop a respect for this woman, even if you cannot agree with her point of view. Even though she is unsympathetic, and thoroughly unreasonable, you will end by giving her the due she has earned.
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Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Next Week in the Bookstore: The Great Quake, Emeril, and Civil-War Generals



Earth-shaking, soul-quaking, heart-breaking and icon-making are the themes this week, plus an invitation to "kick it up a notch" with recipes from a famous New Orleans restaurant.


Monday, October 3
Best-selling author Michael Connelly comes out with his first legal thriller, The Lincoln Lawyer, about a cynical defense attorney named Mickey Haller, whose last spark of integrity may cost him his life. "...leaves every other contender from Grisham to Turow in the dust... While Mickey's courtroom pyrotechnics dazzle, his behind-the-scenes machinations and manipulations are even more incendiary in this taut, gripping novel, which showcases all of Connelly's literary gifts. There's not an excess sentence or padded paragraph in it--what there is, happily, is a character who, like Harry Bosch, deserves a franchise series of his own." —Jane Adams, Amazon.com review

The Age of Anxiety: McCarthyism to Terrorism, by the Pulitzer Prize winner Haynes Johnson, documents the era of McCarthyism and draws parallels with the Patriot Act. "Johnson's narrative is succinct and well written, although he doesn't cover any new ground... Johnson overreaches when he ties the McCarthy era to our current efforts to protect domestic security after 9/11. Although he does effectively indicate some potential dangers inherent in the Patriot Act, his suggestion that we are in store for a suppression of civil liberties is not easy to substantiate." —Jay Freeman, Booklist review
Note: Although Amazon says The Age of Anxiety can be shipped today, it is actually not released until October 3rd.


Tuesday, October 4
Romantic suspense queen Nora Roberts' Blue Smoke features Reena Hale, an arson investigator for the Baltimore Police Department, departing slightly from Roberts' "In the Garden" bestsellers (Blue Dahlia, Red Lily, Black Rose). "Reena proves unlucky in love, mainly because her beaux tend to die in fires, but her fortunes look up after she meets hunky carpenter Bo Goodnight... nothing stands in their way—except an obsessed, pyromaniac stalker determined to kill any man Reena loves... Roberts portrays investigative procedure more accurately than her many imitators. Well-sketched supporting characters with potential subplots of their own suggest that the prolific Roberts will put her feet to the fire again." —Publishers Weekly

The Sunflower by Richard Paul Evans, author of the bestseller The Christmas Box, delivers a syrupy but satisfying novel about love between a volunteer nurse and a handsome but traumatized ER doctor in the jungles of Peru. "The budding romance between Paul and Christine is totally predictable (including the awkwardness of their initial meetings). Evans adds a nice dramatic touch when Jessica's newfound boyfriend is seriously hurt while guiding a group of orphanage workers through the mountains near Machu Picchu, and he has a nice feel for framing devices, dialogue and scene-pacing." —Publishers Weekly

In the eagerly-awaited A Crack in the Edge of the World: America and the Great California Earthquake of 1906 by Simon Winchester, the Oxford-trained geologist and bestselling author of The Professor and the Madman explores the tectonic upheaval and firestorm that nearly wiped San Francisco off the map. "Winchester covers much more than just the disaster... Winchester is well qualified to discuss the subject, and he clearly explains plate tectonics theory (first introduced in 1968) and the creation of the San Andreas Fault... He also covers the social and political shifts caused by the disaster, such as the way that Pentecostalists viewed the quake as "a message of divine approval" and used it to recruit new members into the church, and the rise in the local Chinese population." —Shawn Carkonen, Amazon.com review

The Complete Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson will be nirvana for fans of Bill Waterson's delightfully demented cartoon phenomenon. The slipcased three-volume collection includes every Calvin and Hobbes comic strip that appeared in syndication from 1985 to 1995—the full span of its brief, shining life. "Everything having to do with Calvin and Hobbes expressed my own ideas, my own values, my own way. I wrote every word, drew every line, and painted every color. It’s a rare gift to find such fulfilling work and I tried to show my appreciation by giving the strip everything I had to offer." (from the Introduction by Bill Watterson)

For more than 100 years, Delmonico* has embodied the spirit of New Orleans. Emeril's Delmonico: A New Orleans' Restaurant with a Past, by Emeril Lagasse, celebrates that spirit and simplifies the famous restaurant's old world and Creole dishes for home cooks. "Purists will be delighted to find recipes for hamburger buns and mayonnaise; Lagasse also includes directions on stove-top duck smoking and even hard-boiling an egg. He pays tribute to the restaurant's former owners and staff in the book's dedication as well as in its color photos of old menus and other mementos. This is a nice melding of ideas and food present and past, classic and new." —Publishers Weekly

Wide Angle: National Geographic Greatest Places by Ferdinand Protzman. From National Geographic—a name synonymous with spectacular photography—comes this collection of magnificent images depicting the epic grandeur of unique landscapes around the world. Ferdinand Protzman's essays introduce each of the book's 12 chapters. "Many of the images, from the National Geographic Society's 10 million-image archive, have never been published before. Meditative introductions to each region of the world consider questions such as our stereotypical views of Asia and the ambiguity of evocations of the Middle East... But the real attraction is the full-color photos... Still, dipping anywhere into this volume offers a feast for the eyes and introduction to parts of the world most are unlikely ever to visit." —Publishers Weekly

First she taught us that The Devil Wears Prada, and now bestselling author Lauren Weisberger introduces us to Everyone Worth Knowing. Weisberger's new book follows a 20-something investment banker's wild leap into Manhattan's celebrity stratosphere, when she lands a job as a PR events manager. "Weisberger is clever enough to turn seemingly outrageous circumstances into amusing anecdotes, like the tale of a woman who was close to suicide until she found out she was only 18 months away from scoring a highly coveted Birkin bag ("You simply cannot kill yourself when you're that close ... it's just not an option."). This wit, combined a hint of voyeurism that most of us can't deny, is what makes Everyone Worth Knowing a guilty pleasure that's well worth the indulgence." —Gisele Toueg, Amazon.com review

Andrew Jackson: A Life and Times by H.W. Brands, author of the bestselling Ben Franklin bio The First American, offers a "bracing, human portrait of both a remarkable man and of American democracy as it was transformed from a 'government of the people' into a 'government by the people,'" according to a Publishers Weekly review. "Andrew Jackson came to the political fore as a "westerner" with humble origins but also with a distinguished (yet controversial) military background that made him the most popular man in the country. It is as a man of the people, the hero and defender of common folks over the moneyed classes, that Brands presents Jackson; this complete and completely enveloping biography indelibly establishes Jackson's abiding sense of duty in serving democracy. A distinguished treatment certain to be the most authoritative and comprehensive account for some time." —Brad Hooper, Booklist

Grant and Sherman: The Friendship That Won the Civil War, by Charles Bracelen Flood, shows how the two men shook off their pre-war failures and led the North to victory, as Sherman offered Grant fearless support, while Grant rewarded his subordinate's tactical brilliance with admiration and trust. "The story seems like a fairy tale: two men who were remarkable failures as civilians use their West Point backgrounds to rejoin the army during the American Civil War. They steadily rise to the highest ranks and lead the North to victory over the secessionist South, becoming friends in the process. But that's exactly what happened. In his winning book, Flood underscores the powerful bond formed between Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman and tells the story of a friendship that would influence both the politics and the military operations of the Civil War." —Jerry Eberle, Booklist
Note: Although Amazon says Grant and Sherman can be shipped today, it is actually not released until October 4th.


The Ransomed Heart by John Eldredge offers 365 daily readings from the Colorado ministry founder's best-known works including Wild at Heart, Captivating, Waking the Dead, The Journey of Desire, The Sacred Romance, and Epic. "For millions of people, reading the writings of John Eldredge has been a deep and profound experience, generating a hunger to integrate his ideas and insights into their daily lives... More than a daily devotional, this volume is a portable library that will prompt readers to soulful reflection and deeper intimacy with God." (Publisher's release notes)


Wednesday, October 5
Sports Illustrated: The Football Book by Rob Fleder. America's premier sports magazine collects into a single breathtaking volume a half century of NFL football. "On the heels of Sports Illustrated's 50th Anniversary Book comes a spectacular celebration of professional football that will be treasured by fans of America's Game. [T]his lavish coffee-table volume brings to life the bone-rattling action of NFL football and the extraordinary athletes who have made it America's true national pastime. In 256 oversized pages, The Football Book commemorates the dynasties and the dominating players, the crucial plays and classic games, the personalities and performances that propelled the NFL, during SI's first 50 years of publication, from a marginal, ragtag league to the biggest game in town." (Publisher's release notes)


I'll add the Winchester to my shelf, and drool over Emeril's book in the bookstore.




*Emeril Lagasse's New Orleans restaurants and headquarters were spared the worst damage from Hurricane Katrina. The famous chef, whose tagline, "kick it up a notch," became a byword for Cajun cooking, has vowed to rebuild and reopen as soon as possible. Lagasse said, "It’s our hope to open as soon as the city is safe for our employees to return, and it's safe to open our doors."
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079223913X,0743262298,0385507380,0374166005,0785207066,1932994742



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