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Tuesday, 23 November 2010

British Library release publishing records to public domain

The British Library has released three million records from the British National Bibliography into the public domain using the CC0 public domain waiver. The British National Bibliography contains data on publishing activity from the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland since 1950. JISC OpenBibliography has made this set downloadable at CKAN; in addition, the Internet Archive also offers the data for download.
This is a tremendous move on behalf of the British Library and the JISC OpenBibliography project, and we would like to congratulate them on their contributions to open data. From the JISC OpenBibliography project blog,
“Agreements such as these are crucial to our community, as developments in areas such as Linked Data are only beneficial when there is content on which to operate. We look forward to announcing further releases and developments, and to being part of a community dedicated to the future of open scholarship.”

Geezer in a pub

Smoking and drinking - those were the days
This still comes from the BBC television series, The Indian Doctor which has just been shown over here in the UK. You know I think I preferred the 60's to the modern world - oh if only I had a time machine.

The Tarnished Star Linford edition available March 2011

The original hardback edition (Robert Hale Ltd)
  •  The Linford Trade Paperback edition of my début western The Tarnished Star has been confirmed for publication in March 2011. No details of a cover image as of yet, but you'll get to see it here as soon as available.
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  • Publisher: Linford Western (Mar 2011)
  • ISBN-10: 1444805894
  • ISBN-13: 978-1444805895

Monday, 22 November 2010

CUJO - STEPHEN KING

This is the first time I've read this book and although I enjoyed it, particularly the last quarter of the book when the suspense was cranked up to maximum it left me a little puzzled. The book starts of by telling us about a monster who once came to Castle Rock - he was not a vampire, werewolf or ghoul but a cop named Frank Dodd with mental and sexual problems. This is in relation to the character in a previous King novel, The Dead Zone .  Dodd killed himself after being discovered by the extra sensory perception of John Smith. We are then told that one day a monster returned to Castle Rock. However this seems to have no relevance to the rest of the novel and I'm not sure what King was trying to say here - some people have said that the spirit of Frank Dodd possessed Cujo and made the animal go crazy but as King's painstakingly outlines the development of the rabies infection I just don't buy that. It's almost as if King started the book intending to use Dodd is a much more central fashion., indeed there seem to be some vague hints that Dodd is possessing Cujo, but then gave up on the idea and took the story in another direction.


I just can't figure out what one had to do with the other - in his memoir, On Writing, King claims not to remember having written Cujo and that it was during the height of his drink and drug problems, but if that is so then surely an editor should have picked up on this. You know maybe King is just saying that there are many kinds of monsters but it just does seem odd, particularly as Dodd isn't mentioned at all in the later parts of the novel. The again maybe King is just saying that Dodd has achieved a kind of bogey man status in Castle Rock, but as I say it seems to have no relevance, or at least none that I could find, on the novel, Cujo. Of course there is always the possibility that King used the references to the character in order to create a feeling of the Castle Rock universe and that's fine but it seemed odd to mention it in the first paragraph, giving the feeling that this was an important point to the story that follows when it clearly was not.

".I had added drug addiction to my alcohol problem, yet I continued to function, as a good many substance abusers do on a reasonable competent level. I was terrified not to; but then I had no idea how to live any other life." Stephen King.

Nevertheless King is a superb writer and he deserves kudos for dealing with his drug and drink problems so honestly in his memoir and Cujo is certainly not a bad book - on the contrary it is excellent but I thought I'd mention the Dodd thing as, after reading the book, I'm still puzzled and wonder if I missed some salient point.


Cujo is a stunning read and the character of the dog is brilliantly handled, provoking much sympathy for the creature as it transforms realistically from a lovable hunk of a dog to a rabid killing machine. A large part of the book concentrates on the two main characters trapped in their broken down car while the dog runs rampage and these scenes are absolutely thrilling. Not for nothing is King one of the bestselling writers in the world - the man has the common touch with his narrative and makes each and every character seem as real as the guy or gal next door, and that makes everything all the more terrifying. I think any writer would give away a limb to possess only a fraction of the seemingly natural, instinctive talent Stephen King (the lucky bastard) possesses.

Overall I thought this was an exceptional book but I'm sure I missed something with the Frank Dodd thing.

Give an eBook this Christmas

Amazon are hoping to shift a lot of eBooks over the festive season and have now brought out an option that allows users to gift an eBook - Starting today, anyone can buy a Kindle book as a gift just by clicking the "Give as Gift" button when you check out. Enter the recipients' email addresses, and just like virtual gift cards, your pals will be notified of their gifts, and can download their books right away.

Tainted Stats

Weekly Stats Report: 15 Nov - 21 Nov 2010
Project: THE TAINTED ARCHIVE
URL: http://tainted-archive.blogspot.com/


 MonTuesWedThurFriSatSunTotalAvg
Pageloads3974323293433463933572,597371
Unique Visitors3043142602872702962942,025289
First Time Visitors2702812162552362662741,798257
Returning Visitors3433443234302022732

Sunday, 21 November 2010

Did I tell you of the time I scored the winning goal in the FA Cup final

Now this is something to be proud of - A Google search of Cardiff City brought up the following entry. I am now listed on the Cardiff City homepage as the actor who played legend Hughie Ferguson when we recreated the game for Welsh television a few years back.
  • Cardiff City FC become the first football team from outside of England to win the F.A Cup beating Arsenal FC 1-0 in the final. The goal was scored by Hughie Ferguson who was played by Gary Dobbs in the 2007 Welsh TV recreation of the famous match.
Come on you Bluebirds