Wordless Wednesday (07.15)

Filed Under (Wordless Wednesday) by Morbid Romantic on 15-07-2009
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Flowers in a vase

Book Review: For Cory’s Sake by Carolyn Wada

Filed Under (Library, Review) by Morbid Romantic on 15-07-2009
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Title: For Cory’s Sake
Author(s): Carolyn Wada
Genre: Fiction – Dystopia
Finished: July 14, 2009
Rating: 3 Stars

Roci lives the life of a slave, forced to work day in and day out in a factory. He is not allowed pleasure, family, or freedom. All he can do to escape the misery of his existence is create a world in his head of people who are trying to save him and his planet Cory. With the threat of a bomb that no other planet has the technology to match, Cory is enslaved by the Borrynzian race. The family in Roci’s head, the Bentler’s, led by father William Bentler, are a pre-invasion family who work subversively against the government to spread outrage of Cory’s enslavement. They also hope to build a weapon to match the bomb of the Borrynzians. Some work as lightening rods to write articles about what is happening to the Coryans, some infiltrate the Borrynzian infrastructure, and others pretend to be good citizens while harboring secret facilities in their basement. Punishment for sedition, administered under the regime of Captain Prackerd, consists of caning, whipping, and then a rod-like device that shoots electricity into the spine and leaves one with lasting damage.

For Cory’s Sake is a dystopia. The people on and about the different planets lived in peace and came to believe war as a thing of the past. With nothing but optimism in their hearts, they destroyed the technology that helped Earth and then them create weapons. That is what left them open to the bomb of the Borrynzians, and left them so far behind that they struggle to come up with something to counter the threat.

For Cory’s Sake is also a story of how there are good people and bad people, but even those people can contradict their nature and do good and bad things interchangeably. Captain Prackerd, for example, keeps the Coryans enslaved and punishes anyone who goes against their order. Yet, the ultimate punishment is never death. And Captain Prackerd loves his son Kerry in his own way, spoiling him with material things even though his own punishments are physical and harsh. I never understood why lightening rods are necessary. If the goal was to create another bomb to use to save the Coryans, then the Bentler family could have saved themselves a lot of trouble if they just continued to work on that in secret and pretended to be a law abiding family. There was no reason for William Bentler to let his children be punished for speaking out in support of the Coryans. The articles of sedition published never seem to do any good, only bad. Maybe they helped sway people… I don’t know. It was still a brave thing to do, for sure.

The story is original and compelling. I very much enjoyed that every character is different, complex, consistent, and unique. Wada had a vision for each of her players and executes it perfectly. Even characters like Terrance, who seems harsh and unforgiving, you come to understand as deep and sensitive. The ending, too, is startling but still sweet. The twist Wada gives to the end of the book still leaves one with a sense of victory, but makes you question the nature of everything done for it. I don’t want to give specifics because I don’t want to give away what the ending is, but you feel terrible for the characters who have sacrificed so much for it. Yet what this sympathy does is make you consider what the sacrifices are ultimately worth and why they are nevertheless very necessary. It is not a clean and clear victory, easy to justify, and I like that about it.

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Disclaimer(s):

- More can be found in my Reviews section.
- If you would like me to review your book, send an email to me at morbidromantic@gmail.com. Read my Book Review Policy for more information.

A widget for fun family events

Filed Under (PPP) by Morbid Romantic on 15-07-2009
Post Word Count: 255
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It is summer time and kids around the country are sitting around at home with nothing to do. They could spend their vacation indoors playing video games or surfing the internet, or parents can look around and find good, family friendly things for their entire family to do together. The ParentsConnect.com widget is the perfect tool for parents to search for great things to do with their children. All you do is install the widget code on your website– a matter of just copying and pasting a little script. Anyone who goes to your page can then use your widget to find events in their area, so you are helping parents around the country find excellent events to attend, and helping children get out of the house to experience life.

Take a look at what the widget looks like:

As you can see, the widget finds family friendly events that are occurring within 60 miles of the zip code that is inputted. A user can then use the arrows next to the date to move forward or backward on the calendar. So, if something is needed for the weekend, all one must do is type in the zip code and arrow the date over to the weekend wanted.

There is also a great contest running at the widget site. Put the widget on your site and register where you placed it on the website. The person/website that receives the most views will win $1,000.

Post?slot_id=41773&url=http%3a%2f%2fsocialspark

Teaser Tuesdays (07.14)

Filed Under (Teaser Tuesdays) by Morbid Romantic on 15-07-2009
Post Word Count: 44
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TEASER TUESDAYS asks you to:
Grab your current read.
Let the book fall open to a random page.
Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between lines 7 and 12.
You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given!
Please avoid spoilers!

It felt good to predict the effects that would likely follow a particular cause, just as it felt good to feel the rain on her face. A predictable future meant that any previous change had not been too severe.

- Liberation (Joanna Scott), pg. 124