Polemarch
John Stuart Mill: "A man who has nothing for which he is willing to fight; nothing he cares about more than his own personal safety is a miserable creature who has no chance of being free, unless made and kept so by exertions of better men than himself" Contact at polemarch1@hotmail.com
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Sunday, December 24, 2006
Season's Best
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Polemarch wishes everyone the best during this holiday season.
And just for the hell of it, it's a
Charlie Brown Jihad Christmas
Don't forget to view Prime Minister Harpers Christmas Address
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Open Season
Found this on YouTube and thought it was pretty sweet.
Here's the bands website. Check'em out
Stuck Mojo
Update
Here's the Anti-CAIR remix
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Shadow of the Wolf
Shadow of the Wolf
By James Barwick (aka Anthony Barwick and Donald James)
Published: 1978
May 10th 1941: Captain Alfred Horn of the Luftwaffe is assigned navigator on an Me 110 piloted by Rudolph Hess, Deputy Fuhrer of the Third Reich. Hess is enroute to an airfield in Scotland for a clandistine meeting with a senior American General. Before the Me 110's flight is complete it is shot down by a RAF Spitfire, Hess is injured and it falls to Horn to complete the mission. Horn soon finds himself trapped in a hostile country with only a lone American service woman as a friend. Soon everyone is after Horn and the information he carries, the British, the Americans and the dreaded SS.
A quick read, which is a good thing. For a book trying to say "this is how it could have been" there is an awfully lot of coincindences/acts of fate that allow Horn to escape from desperate situations and I found that to wear thin pretty quick. There are much better World War 2 conspiracy novels out there.
** out of *****
Timothy Findley's Famous Last Words is recommended instead of this.
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Living and Dying We Feed the Fire
Sacrament
By Clive Barker
Published: 1996
Will Rabjohns work has brought him to Northern Manitoba. He is a wildlife photographer who specializes in endangered species and he has come to capture the polar bears of the region on film, unfortunatly for Will things go wrong, and he is nearly killed by one of the bears. Comatose Wills mind journeies back to the tiny English village where he grew up in and relieves his encounter with the mysterious Jacob Steep and Rosa McGee. Will's encounter with Steep, The Killer of Last Things, has profoundley influenced his life. Awakening from the coma Will returns to San Francisco only to be tormented by Lord Fox, an animal spirit who has until recently lived quietly in his head. Will well be drawn home to England, there to once again meet Jacob and Rosa, this time as enemies. Wills future and the future of the world depends apon him discovering the true nature of Jacob and Rosa, and finding the long hidden Domus Mundi, House of the World.
Well the book drags at times, Sacrament, is one of Barkers most personal works. It's protagonast Will is one of modern fictions few openly and proudly gay characters (like Barker). Yet Barkers description of Will's life as a homosexual in San Francisco, well interesting, does tend to distract from the books better parts, most of these in the flash back to Wills childohood or scenes dealing with Jacob and Rosa. Sacrament relies less on fantasy elements then most of Barkers work and the novels gay main character may cause others to forgo reading the book... there loss, as the book deserves a wide audience. Well not perfect, Sacrament is highly recommended. One hopes Barker will one day try to get this made into a movie.
**** out of *****
Note: Well Clive Barker is an openly gay man, he is not a "Gay Writer" rather he is a "Writer who happens to be Gay".
Below is a link to Barker's official website
www.clivebarker.info