Me, too, apparently. I didn't realize I'd get quite so pissed about it, but, then again, no other acquaintance has had the lack of sense to go out of their way to let me know that they dislike the subject of my book.
The grumpy old man in me wants to tie it back to the easy-breezy empty criticism of Internet comment threads. I assume that if you spend time reading the forums at Pitchfork or The Onion, you may begin to believe that everyone would be happy to hear your idiotic half-thoughts. I mean, some of us nutty people out there think that there's a difference between having the unexamined realization that you like or dislike something and actually having something meaningful to say about it.
The grumpy old man in me wants to tie it back to the easy-breezy empty criticism of Internet comment threads.
Coupled with the relative anonymity. It's a dangerous combo.
Now that's a rude thing to call me, Laga. I've been posting here a long time, and... oh, sorry, I get it.
who tell me I did something wrong in my books.
Reminds me of the story of the Bradbury Defense:
One dreadful boy ran up to me and said:
"That book of yours, The Martian Chronicles?"
"Yes," I said.
"On page 92, where you have the moons of Mars rising in the east?"
"Yeah," I said.
"Nah," he said.
So I hit him.
Ivar said that things like "straight edge" and "emocore" all started as jokes that people outside the original DC scene took way too seriously.
Ha! This sounds about right.
Buzz Aldrin once decked a guy who was insisting that the Moon landing was a hoax.
Which reminds me that I heard Os Mutantes in a McDonald's commercial the other day. A very WTF moment!
Seriously? That's nutty.
Seriously! (I had to look it up just to make sure I hadn't dreamed it.)
Favorite 70s Video This week: "I Lost My Heart to a Starship Trooper" by Sarah Brightman and Hot Gossip.
Oh, WOW. God bless YouTube, for real.
Deerhoof released a song from their upcoming album, as sheet music. They've been encouraging their fans to send in their own versions of the song.