THE LOVE OF MY (OTHER) LIFE ON SALE
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THE LOVE OF MY (OTHER) LIFE ON SALE

Right now, Parvati Press is running a promotion: THE LOVE OF MY (OTHER) LIFE eBook is discounted to $2.99. This sale can be found on Amazon, B&N, the iBookstore, and Smashwords.

Here are some review comments about this bittersweet sci fi rom com:

Traci L. Slatton’s The Love of My (Other) Life explores the psyche of a woman who has suffered romantic wounds and is searching for a soul mate. Action-packed and fast-paced, this sci-fi thriller has another side to it, a metaphysical side, and it’s colored by images of the contemporary art world.SouthernLitReview

The story is about the incredible power of love to move, not just mountains, but actual universes, and that it is absolutely never too late for a second chance. Not even if you have to employ quantum mechanics to kick your own self in the teeth….Make yourself a gift of this lovely and sweetly goofy second-chance romance.ReadingReality.net

This was a very interesting story that went back and forth from one universe to another. We learn Brian’s story, then we go back to this universe and Tessa’s story.  There are secrets, romance, art, forgery, and interesting characters.Paranormal Romance Guild

The possibility of a parallel universe is an interesting phenomenon. If such a reality existed, could you cross over and if so would you take such a chance?…As you follow these characters you are drawn to the possibility of their connection. It creates a warmth and yearning as you find yourself encouraging Tessa to choose love over logic.If you enjoy romance and science fiction you will find this a surprisingly lighthearted dose of both. I was charmed by the story although the surprise ending rattled me in a strange way…. This would be a great book for the romance reader, take it along on a trip. An easy read, you may find yourself chuckling over the antics as they unfold. The comedy and romance keep you entertained, with just that small bit of satisfaction.
BlogCritic.org

This book was definitely a fun read.
And it really does make you ask the question: What would you do for the love of your life?Or rather as the description says: What worlds would you move to be with your soulmate?
I was also totally convinced that I knew how the book was going to end. I was wrong. So, the book isn’t a predictable one either!
A fun, quirky read that I’d recommend.BooktoBookReviews

Get it now while it’s hot!


Even the greats screw up: “The New Yorker Plagiarizes itself” by Paul Brodeur
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Even the greats screw up: “The New Yorker Plagiarizes itself” by Paul Brodeur

My beloved, feisty friend Paul Brodeur wrote an incisive, thought-provoking article in the Huffington Post. The article concerned the failure of the fact-checking department at The New Yorker to properly attribute a quote from the late Nobel Prize-winning chemist F. Sherwood Rowland.

Paul had reason to make an issue of this failure on The New Yorker‘s part to do the right thing: the quote has been taken word-for-word from an article Paul himself wrote for The New Yorker.

Read the article here. Even the greats screw up. Looks like The New Yorker ought to do the gracious thing and acknowledge their error–and properly attribute Paul.

 

From the Author’s Guild: The Anti-Google Mass Book Digitization Campaign Goes Global

Authors Malcolm Gladwell, J.M. Coetzee, Michael Pollan, Margaret Atwood, Peter Carey Support Lawsuit Against Google’s Theft of Books Through Digitization
New York, NY- Prize-winning authors, international rights organizations, and legal experts Monday joined the Authors Guild in fighting what they call Google’s dangerous and unprecedented violation of copyright law. They filed eight stinging friend-of-the-court briefs in support of the Guild’s appeal in Authors Guild v. Google, agreeing that Judge Denny Chin’s decision in the case should be overturned.

“Google’s ambitions respected no borders,” said Authors Guild president Roxana Robinson. “Millions of copyrighted books by authors from every major country were swept in to Google’s scheme. As the new filings demonstrate, not just authors but also photographers, visual artists, songwriters, and publishers around the world find it particularly galling that a wealthy American company would try to find a way to use their creations for free.”

Check out the whole text here.  [http://tinyurl.com/nlkv6g7]
Copyright infringement is a serious ethical problem. Authors, like musicians, have to make a living. Taking an author’s work and scanning it for public use is theft. It is exactly the same as when a burglar breaks into a home and steals Great-grandma’s pearls, or when a shoplifter takes expensive clothes from a boutique. It is the same as when a grifter cons you out of your life savings or when a pickpocket lifts your wallet and runs up all your credit cards. It is no different.
Copyright infringement is theft. It is wrong.
What Google has done in appropriating artists’ works without payment goes far beyond Google’s usual creepy invasiveness. In the words of 15 groups representing textbook authors, visual artists and photographers:
“One group cannot simply be allowed to take from creators and give works to the public for free with impunity. This undermines the very purpose of copyright law and ultimately of fair use.”
I personally am depreciating my gmail accounts, partly as protest for the massive copyright infringement to which Google feels, mystifyingly, entitled, and partly because I’ve had enough of their creepy invasiveness. Check out runbox.com, a Danish company under the umbrella of strong Danish privacy laws. I’ve been happy with runbox.

Questioning or Criticizing Obama is Sedition and Makes You Bad: How to create a totalitarian state

No, I’m not going to voice in any lengthy way my outrage and concern about the NSA’s spying on ordinary private citizens. It is thuggery, it is wrong, and it reminds me of how the NSDAP read every letter into, out of, and through Germany during WWII.

For anyone who doesn’t know, the NSDAP were the Nazis.

What concerns me right now is the huge split I see in the United States.

I have friends–highly intelligent, educated people of great moral conscience–who fall on both sides of the fence: far right and far left. Ne’er the twain shall meet.

What worries me is that so few people see how this very split is playing out to deprive us of fundamental, Constitutionally guaranteed rights as citizens of the United States, because healthy dialogue and inquiry are being shut down by the assumption of complete moral rectitude by those on the left. Friends and relatives who are Obama-ites have actually said to me, “You’re a bad person if you don’t like Obama.”

Obama health care is a nightmare. It’s wildly expensive, it’s driving up health insurance costs, it’s making conscienceless health insurance corporations even richer, and it badly hampers doctors who are doing their jobs. It will kill people. Doctors at first class medical institutions have told me that they now have to deal with Obamacare overseers who have no medical training whatsoever and yet have veto power over the decisions for which doctors undertook 10 years of medical education to make.

I’ve also read several reports that claim that health insurance companies get to keep more money under Obamacare.

But this is perfectly in keeping with Obama’s large, ponderous federal government with too much power concentrated within it. He has gone after the states to weaken them, and he has pandered to the large corporations. He pandered to the large corporations with the bail-outs on Wall Street, too.

Any thoughtful person MUST WONDER: how much does Obama owe to large, multi-national corporations that function as independent nation states without oversight or accountability?

But we don’t hear much about this, because the liberal media has conspired to give Obama a free pass for his entire administration.

Listen to this interview of reporter Sharyl Attkison, who left a 20 year job at CBS because her bosses at the network would not let her do her job: report on Obama’s administration. Anything that might potentially embarrass him, such as Benghazi and Obama-care, was not aired. See the video here.

I have also read articles saying how the Obama administration limits the access that reporters have to him, because he is so concerned about his image.

Why don’t we hear more about this cowardice on Obama’s part? A Republican president who behaved this way would be skewered mercilessly.

Don’t people see how close we are getting to a profound dystopia with this craven failure of the fourth estate to do its job?

If you read the European media, as I do, you will see many more articles critical of Obama, because they are actually reporting on the Obama administrations’ antics, such as the outrageous sums that are expended on vacations and foreign visits, and the often silly behavior of the president and his wife abroad.

I am also not fond of the Democratic Pothead Agenda. Despite what George Soros’ millions of dollars devoted to legalizing marijuana would have you believe, a stoned citizen isn’t a citizen, he or she is a subject. Very easy to control and not thinking deeply about serious issues, sure–maybe that’s one reason a totalitarian state wouldn’t mind having a stoner population?

Has no one read history, and does no one remember that the British promoted opium in China as a way to control the Chinese populace and to further British imperialist aims? Control people by getting them hooked on drugs: an ancient tactic.

But perhaps western media is concerned about suffering Ben Carson’s fate: being harassed by the IRS for criticizing Obama.

The Republicans are no better, and they’re probably worse. I attended a few events at a Republican organization around the time of the last election, because I was so disgusted with the Democratic party. While there were some very fine people there, I couldn’t shake the impression that it was Rich People Hanging on to Their Money.

And really, Romney? Ugh.

Let us not forget that the Republican party has a terrible record concerning the rights of women, gays, and minorities. If they don’t modernize their fundamental notions about human and civic rights, how can they expect to attract people who may be fiscally conservative but who are definitely socially progressive?

Rep. Steve Israel recently claimed that the Republican base contains racist elements. He’s right. The problem for me is that he pulled out that claim in an effort to completely shut down the right’s concerns about Obama’s agenda.

To call someone racist in our culture is to completely invalidate them and to disenfranchise them from expressing their opinion. It’s a neat tool for the left: anyone who dislikes Obama’s far left agenda is “racist.” All dialogue is shut down. There is no more back and forth.

We did that a few decades ago with the word “communist.” Remember McCarthy? Same tactic, different label.

So what is a person to do if he or she believes in the rights of individuals, not the rights of groups; in a small federal government with an appropriate division of power among legislative, judicial, and executive branches; in the Constitution; in the privacy of citizens; in small American businesses; in the rights of women to determine their reproductive lives; in the rights of any two people of whatever gender, race, or religion to marry, as long as they have attained their majority; in giving opportunities, not handouts; and in a true meritocracy?

Is there a place left for real inquiry in these United States?

Emsun Review of COLD LIGHT
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Emsun Review of COLD LIGHT

A Review of Cold Light.

I love this review by thoughtful, energetic Jen Rothmeyer on the vibrant Emsun.org site:

Slatton did it once again. Halfway through the book, after I’d started and then blinked a mere one time, I realized that I’d forgotten to jot down notes as I’d gone along. Her writing style is unnaturally engrossing and very descriptive, leading me along and tugging me through the story.

Check it out here.

 

Peppe Voltarelli rocks out Subculture on Bleecker Street
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Peppe Voltarelli rocks out Subculture on Bleecker Street

Last night, with great anticipation, my husband Sabin and I took the subway down to Bleecker Street. We made our way to the basement of number 45, where Subculture NYC was hosting Calabrian musician Peppe Voltarelli. Peppe is a friend of Sabin’s, which is why we weren’t sculpting–we usually work at night, but we took the night off for Peppe.

There was a lively crowd, mostly Italians, all happily keyed up to listen to this unique and wonderful singer. I was excited, too. I love Peppe’s music, which is a combination of rocked up folk songs and original ballads and other sprightly tunes.

@Subculture_NYC tweeted it best, and I happily favorited and retweeted: Tonight! Italian troubadour @peppevoltarelli sings his way through heartache and triumph. Tix: http://bit.ly/R3ByxQ  pic.twitter.com/Y1Cjhug9lC

We shook Peppe’s hand in the Green Room before the show, and Sabin and Peppe chatted in Italian. I couldn’t resist the impulse to show Peppe a picture of my daughter, who is a huge fan of his. Peppe was gracious and agreeable about her, as only an Italian can be about someone else’s children.

Peppe opened the show with Sta Città, and I almost rushed the stage, I was so delighted! At home, we blast that song on our speakers at least once a week. “Tickety ta, sh-boom!”

The consummate entertainer, he played the guitar while singing, then switched to piano for a few songs, telling us that the Steinway on stage would suit his Calabrian dialect “like jazz lives in New Orleans.” Some of the songs were in dialect, one was even in German. All were spirited and the audience joined in, clapping and hollering and sometimes singing along.

One rousing tune concerned anarchists, and how they get knocked down and keep popping back up. That song fired my heart with joy. I consider myself an anarcho-capitalist these days. I can’t abide the culture of dependency and entitlement and big brother NSA spying thuggery that the Democrats promote, nor can I align myself with the “let’s protect our money and prevent women and gay people from having rights” mindset of the Republicans. American politics has sadly degenerated into a sham of democracy, and it’s the end of the American empire and Pax Americana as we drift further and further off course, away from the noble ideals of our founding fathers.

But there’s music to soothe my unease, the warm-hearted, human music of Peppe Voltarelli. I recommend it to everyone.

By the way, if you haven’t seen his song Italiani Superstar on Youtube, check it out! It’s a splendid example of what music can be: human, community-oriented, wry, heartfelt, and engaging at the same time. It’s music for the soul.
http://youtu.be/EhuMUjL09Qo

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