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Kadrey's Butcher Bird: Dante meets RE/Search

Richard Kadrey -- a charter member of cyberpunk's original vanguard, author of the wonderful Metrophage -- has a new novel out at long last, and it was worth the wait.

Butcher Bird is Kadrey's extended, mythological celebration of all things deviant, transgressive, queer, perverse and broken. Spyder Lee, a San Francisco tattoo artist, is mugged by a demon who was summoned by the "tribal" art on his skin, the meaning of which Spyder has never been clear on.

Thus begins Spyder's journey into the half-world, the hallucinogenic freakshow that lurks just below the surface of the real world, where beasts and men of all description cavort, just out of our site. Spyder finds himself on a quest with a host of strange companions -- Lulu, his piercing-artist business partner; Blind Shrike, a lost princess ninja who fights though she has no vision, and many others. It is with these people that Spyder must venture into hell and steal the lynchpin of the universes, to redeem himself, his world, and his friends.

This is a Dante book, a tour through the author's bent and ferocious imagination. Kadrey is a connoisseur of transgression, an ardent admirer of counter culture, burnouts, and glorious losers. In Butcher Bird, he marshals his prodigious knowledge of the freakish and odd in a series of exciting set-pieces that make up a gallumphing action-adventure novel. This is like being in a Breugel painting, or a Jim Woodring painting, or maybe both at the same time.

Kadrey is a multi-talented man: photographer, novelist, video producer, comics writer. But no matter what medium he works in, you always know that it's his stuff -- his signature is his romantic obsession with the steamy underbelly. In Butcher Bird, he consummates it. Link

Update: Thanks to everyone who reminded me that a version of Butcher Bird was originally published as a Creative Commons licensed ebook, under the title Blind Shrike.

 

Fake Steve Jobs outed by NYT's Brad Stone: Daniel Lyons of Forbes

Wow, didn't see this one coming: Link vs. Link. (thanks, MS!)
 

Cramer begs Fed Reserve Chairman to cut interest rates (video)

I've been a fan of Jim Cramer for many years, and I've seldom seen him flip out as epically and fantastically as he does in this clip.

On CNBC's Mad Money Friday, he screamed at Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to slash interest rates, to help the stock market. Video Link. The money quote: "No, we HAVE Armageddon."

Also, is it just me, or does he look pretty awesome at 62? (* in fact he's not, it's a running joke on the show). But the lame-ass bobblehead is utterly unconvincing. (thanks, Kent!)


Update: Patrick Nielsen Hayden points us to an amusingly annotated copy of this Cramer video:

Video Link. Smart and snarky. I don't know anything about video makers "iTulip.com" but their gloss on Cramer's epic seizure seems pretty reasonable to me. They mostly seem to be saying, "Wait, exactly where were you promised your business model would always work?"
Simon writes,
While Jim Cramer makes for some mildly amusing entertainment, he is actually a pretty horrible analyst, and as studies have shown, people who actually take his advice have a greater than 50% chance of losing their shirts. Link.
 

Zimbabwe: Mugabe enacts law to spy on phones, 'net, mail


In the southern African nation of Zimbabwe, President Robert Mugabe has enacted a law granting state security agents full authority to surveil landline and mobile phones, postal mail and what little internet is available anyway, according to a government notice published on Friday. Snip from wire service report:

The law gives police and the departments of national security, defence intelligence and revenue powers to order the interception of communications and provides for the creation of a monitoring centre.

Postal, telecommunications and internet service providers will be required to ensure that their "systems are technically capable of supporting lawful interceptions at all times".

Critics have said the law is a government ploy to keep tabs on the opposition at a time when political tensions are mounting and Mugabe is deflecting growing criticism from Western powers.

At least we can rest comfortably here in America, knowing such a thing would never happen in a civilized, Western democracy.

Link (Thanks, Johan).

The move comes as economic and state structures in the world's fastest shrinking economy approach the point of absolute collapse: Link.

Previously on BoingBoing:

  • Africa -- Zimbabwe passes "interception of communications" law
  • Zimbabwe crisis: a view from South Africa on data intercept laws
  • Zimbabwe's Internet cut off due to lack of foreign currency
  • In Zimbabwe, bloggers and journalists pay a high price.
  •  

    Steampunk toon: A Gentleman's Duel


    In the 8-minute animated short "A Gentleman's Duel," what starts off as a sexist little cartoon about a Frenchman and a Brit vying for the attention and affection of an improbable-breasted bimbo builds up a rapid head of steam as the antagonists climb into their giant Victorian mecha suits and kick the snot out of each other, with a lot of Road Runner-esque funny gracenotes. Link (Thanks, Andrew!)
     

    SexTV special on Lost Girls


    Last September, I reviewed Lost Girls, the incredible, pornographic three volume comic created by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie -- a retelling of the lives of Dorothy from Oz, Alice from Wonderland and Wendy from Peter Pan.

    SexTV has aired a fascinating feature on the comic, including interviews with Moore and Gebbie and bookstore owners, along with stills from the book.

    Lost Girls is a controversial and wonderful work of erotica and remix culture. Moore and Gebbie have a lot of smart things to say about writing about sex and the artistic impulse behind erotica. I've never heard anyone read from a comic before, but it really works, especially in combination with a slideshow of stills from the art. NSFW Link (Thanks, Jeff!)

     
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