Thanks for the equal opportunity given to Ben Affleck’s abs and Blake Lively’s chest in The Town, a fun, low-rent Boston version of Heat.
“…barefoot children scavengi…
“…barefoot children scavenging for food, picking kernels of corn from cow manure.” beyond Orwellian in North Korea http://bit.ly/hr9vUf
Comcast just informed me there…
Comcast just informed me there’s a shortage of static IPs right now which is affecting California. I need Ip Man to get me some static IPs!
Watched Salt on Friday and the…
Watched Salt on Friday and then The Spy Next Door the next day. Still not sure which movie is more realistic.
@fuw3 yeah, we get TFR warning…
@fuw3 yeah, we get TFR warnings emailed from the AMA when it affects RC flying.
Tough to win a war, let alone …
Tough to win a war, let alone a battle, when your ONLY fighter jet gets shot down. http://bit.ly/dO83Mc
6 mile run in the rain this mo…
6 mile run in the rain this morning with J while the kids stayed at home and played SC2. They kept strangers away with Protoss cannons.
I know it’s corny, but these 5…
I know it’s corny, but these 50 workers remind of Spock in Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan. http://nyti.ms/eLzb8e
Rereading The Man in the High Castle
The first time I read Philip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle was back in high school before the first movie based on Dick’s works, Bladerunner, came out. With the recent publication of his third wife’s memoirs during the period when he wrote The Man in the High Castle and the announcement that Ridley Scott would be producing a 4-part mini-series based on the book for the BBC, I thought it was a good time to reread the book.
As with many of Dick’s works, the main themes of The Man in the High Castle deal with reality and identity. In the alternate universe of the book set in the early 60s when the book was written, Japan and Germany won World War 2, and the U.S. has been split between the two powers. In the book within a book, an author in Cheyenne, Wyoming (the man in the high castle) has written a novel of a world where the Allies won the war. Interestingly enough, this reality is also different from ours since Churchill remains in power 20 years after the end of World War 2, and the U.S. is a close ally with mainland China and Chiang Kai-Shek who won the civil war with Mao Zedong.
I appreciated the book much more upon its second reading because much of the book is set in San Francisco. The first time I read the book, I had only visited San Francisco for a day on a family road trip. Now, I’ve lived in the S.F. Bay area for almost 20 years, and I have more empathy for the scenes set in the city. In the intervening years, I’ve also had a great interest in books and movies depicting the highly influential events and characters of World War 2. Dick does a great job of extrapolating the political intrigue and competition that would have occurred if the Axis powers had won the war much like how Russia and the U.S., once allies, engaged in a long cold war.
Palo Alto Run Club website is …
Palo Alto Run Club website is now powered by NING http://parunclub.com/