Barckwords

Barckwords
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Wednesday, November 30, 2022

The SwiftPad Takeover predicts Christian Pulisic's goal (raised in Pennsylvania...)

 See more about the first volume of the SwiftPad Saga


Read more about the SwiftPad Takeover




    The SwiftPad App had a whole interactive story based on just such a

boy, raised in rural Pennsylvania, who had never played basketball

or baseball or football, in fact didn’t even know such sports

existed. The App “player” connected with the actor player in the

App (assuming the device had sufficient voice recognition, otherwise

a keyboard popped up). The young boy, Tad Lopstyk, was not

even the star of his youth team, and he worshiped Aldo Donelli.

The SwiftPad Chooser journey was titled The Lopstyk Effect, and it

predicted when the US had 18.7 million young boys like Lopstyk,

the United States would win the World Cup.

    The App player could change history either way, depending on

actions. Italy won the World Cup championship in 1934 and beat

the US 7–1 in the first game. To make it worse, the Cup was hosted

by Italy, or rather by Mussolini.

    But the App’s Journey changes that fact. An old black and white

film print of the game’s highlights morphed into a full 90 minutes,

importing Lopstyk into the 1934 US team’s mid-field. Lopstyk and

Donelli strike again and again, matching Italy’s goal barrage, with

frequent cut-aways to a not-amused Il Duce. In history Italy’s win

was Mussolini’s victory and Lopstyk’s time traveling (i.e., The Swift-

Pad user/Player) changes history. The fascist victory against the US

turns into a 7–7 tie and Hitler’s enthusiasm for the Berlin Olympic

Games two years later was much diminished and with it, Germany’s

love affair with the Fuehrer. The consequences are only hinted at,

because you can only take the Butterfly Effect so far, because…well,

it is still happening.

    Donelli was the shining example of just who Lopstyk wanted to

be. The App, using still shots both real and auto-animated, jumps to

the future and Lopstyk stays on the pitch and scores the winning goal

in his late twenties, in Qatar in 2022. SwiftPad produced a renaissance-

like, high holy scene, with angels blowing trumpets and saints

gazing with tranquility at an animation of Donelli looking down

approvingly at Lopstyk in his interactive uniform that provided a full

sensory playing experience for the dedicated fan. (Available in several

colors, with free delivery, if you order two. In the future you would

catch the highlights in your head, not on ESPN.)


Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Review of “No Way to Die” (Cal Claxton Oregon Mysteries Book 7) by Warren C Easley


A Great Procedural Murder Mystery About the Oregon Coast 

(As reviewed on Goodreads, 11/22/2022)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/49534640-no-way-to-die





“No Way to Die” is set in Coos Bay Oregon, a depressed little seaport that the Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) industry has in its sights as a main tanker terminal on the West Coast. There is money to be made by local luminaries, but local environmentalists are warning about the potential for disaster that the project threatens the community. Cal Claxton is vacationing nearby with his daughter, who is taking a break from a high pressure research project at Harvard. While they are fly fishing in a scenic creek, his daughter discovers a body, hog-tied and floating next to a tree snag. The vacation is over, and we are pulled into local scandals, corruption, drug running and of course murder.

Warren Easley’s Cal Clayton crime stories are getting better and better. “No Way to Die” is a thoughtful, action packed and totally believable story of big money corrupting a small city that is trying to recover its glory. I have read a couple of his earlier novels, and Easley’s writing style compares well against some of the acknowledged masters of mystery writing. If you like John McDonald’s Florida based Travis McGee novels you will fall happily into Cal Clayton’s Oregon. Easley’s characters reveal themselves in their action and dialogue with verve and intelligence. Calvin Clayton, a widowed lawyer who lives in Dundee Oregon (wine country), is slowly but surely becoming one of the great fiction characters of the genre. 

What makes the story “unputdownable” is how Easley skillfully tells the story, making it seem effortless and casual. He weaves together the pressure of running a small law firm, the lives of people struggling on the coast, in addition to following tenuous leads in a murder investigation. The novel unfolds and we are treated to scenic coastal beauty as well as various and surprising depictions of weak people trying to be decent (and occasionally but not always succeeding). We also meet people driven by greed and depravity, but even then we get a glimpse of their humanity. 

Cal is not a rich lawyer. He needs to keep his practice afloat, while working through the dangerous investigation. Oregon itself is ever present, it’s natural beauty and treacherous back roads are always zipping along with the intriguing investigatory details that slowing and deliciously come together. But most of all "No Way to Die" is a brilliant procedural that has to take a wild ride with dead ends and trapdoors galore before it all fits together. 

It is exciting to watch a good writer in the process of becoming better and better. Easley’s Cal Clayton mysteries are on their way to becoming part of Oregon lore. “No Way to Die” is a great read.