You loved/tolerated Steampunk Star Wars: now it’s Baroque Star Wars! (Plus a side order of Calamity Jon robots.)
Martin Melosi on “machine space”: Why vast swaths of our cities are inhospitable to human life.
Grab your turbo-pistols, snap on your big bubble space helmet, and rocket to adventure in the Astounding year of 1963!
How not to get and keep readers.
The great American elevator inspector novel and other memorable reads.
The Ronald Reagan alternate history film festival.
You loved/tolerated Steampunk Star Wars: now it’s Baroque Star Wars! (Plus a side order of Calamity Jon robots.)
The Unit Upgrade
Mark Rayner’s latest is a funny in-joke for recovering Civilization addicts like myself. Related: uh-oh.
Liberal Arts Education or Sleep Aid, You Decide
I generally mistrust blogs whose every post is a list of stuff from elsewhere, but this is a nice (big) collection of history lectures you can watch online.
Did Alexander the Great Fight the Yeti?
As my man Head 58 says, “I don’t want to live in a world where he didn’t.“
Holden's History of the United States
At Hilobrow, for J. D. Salinger & Howard Zinn.
The Black Pyramids of Georgia
BLDGBLOG on messianic architecture, by way of Tama-Re, the Egyptian city built by an Afro-supremacist UFO cult in rural Georgia.
Sticky Meme
The always worthwhile Zunguzungu is on a Teddy Roosevelt kick of late. Here he goes looking for the origins of Teddy’s big stick.
Everything Was Open-Source, Once
This blog post at Attic #42 hits several of my sweet spots: telephone history, KGB surveillance, a plea for open-source technology, and a gripe about PDFs.
Secede, Suppress, Survive
Not especially funny as Onion articles go, but it actually could be a TV show: New Alternate Reality Series on Island Where South Won Civil War.
The Other KKK
Mystic anti-war boy scouts? Fascist futurist theosophists? What was up with the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift?
The Red Peril
Snarkout’s annual post is as keen as ever: an appreciation of Santa Claus Conquers the Martians becomes a link-happy history of literary invasions right back to Saki and Wells.
© 2001–2009 Rob MacDougall

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1 Star Wars, the baroque version // Dec 12, 2007 at 10:15 pm
[...] (Via Old is the New New.) [...]
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