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1 y

Trump Still Within Striking Distance In Blue State GOP Hasn’t Won in 20 Years, Despite National Harris Surge
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Trump Still Within Striking Distance In Blue State GOP Hasn’t Won in 20 Years, Despite National Harris Surge

'Virginia is in play'
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CNN Political Commentator Calls Out Network’s Fact-Checker On Air
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CNN Political Commentator Calls Out Network’s Fact-Checker On Air

'Just a couple fact checks'
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EXCLUSIVE: New Docs Reveal Biden Admin Knew Fauci’s Agency Lied To Cover Up Dog Torture Experiments
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EXCLUSIVE: New Docs Reveal Biden Admin Knew Fauci’s Agency Lied To Cover Up Dog Torture Experiments

'Fauci is the poster child for government corruption'
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Kamala Harris Voted Against Trump-Era Bill That Expanded Child Tax Credits She Champions
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Kamala Harris Voted Against Trump-Era Bill That Expanded Child Tax Credits She Champions

'She has no ideas'
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Disney Agrees To Wrongful Death Trial After Facing Blowback For Trying To Dodge Case
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Disney Agrees To Wrongful Death Trial After Facing Blowback For Trying To Dodge Case

‘It would be more embarrassing for the company to litigate that issue and then lose’
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Strange & Paranormal Files
Strange & Paranormal Files
1 y

Possible WHITE HUMANOID Photographed in West Virginia (VIDEO)
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Possible WHITE HUMANOID Photographed in West Virginia (VIDEO)

Stan Gordon states that on August 1, 2024, he received an email report from a family member from West Virginia, about the sighting and photograph of an unknown white humanoid.Was A Small Mysterious Humanoid Creature Photographed In West Virginia? (July 31, 2024)From: Researcher Stan GordonOn August 1, 2024, I received an email report from a family member from West Virginia, concerning a strange incident that had taken place the previous evening. There was another family member who was involved in the incident. I was provided some general details of what had reportedly taken place. I also was sent a photo of something quite unusual and was told that this was what witnesses reported observing and why I was contacted.As soon as I looked at the picture it immediately caught my interest. Over the years I have received numerous alleged photos of UFOs and even supposed cryptids, While some of those pictures were interesting, many were out of focus or were of distance views with little detail. This picture was noticeably clear and detailed.Later that day, I was able to interview the person who had contacted me, and also the witness who was a minor. That young witness provided me with an incredibly detailed account of what took place. That witness came across as very credible and explained in great detail the observation of two short, odd-looking, “snowy white” humanoid beings that several children watched running around that evening.It quickly became apparent to me this case would require a lot of investigation. There was a lot of research that needed to be done, and I was quite a distance away in Pennsylvania. It was determined at that time that the family would be contacting Ron Lanham of the Wild & Weird West Virginia research group to investigate the incident.This strange occurrence occurred in July, at the same time that Ron had been receiving UFO/UAP reports. Here in Pennsylvania, July has also been highly active with detailed UFO/UAP incidents being reported and also some cryptid incidents as well. I am awaiting further details, and I will be posting more information on my website at a future time.Ron has completed his investigation. You can view the photo and listen to Ron’s evaluation of the photo and the details of what took place. Ron also describes another anomalous event that also took place that same evening at another location in West Virginia. Ron talks about some other recent UFO incidents he is looking into that occurred in August.**********PHANTOMS & MONSTERS VIDEO LIBRARYPOLL: WHAT DO YOU THINK? Vote & comment on paranormal, cryptid & unexplained mysteries!NEAR-DEATH EXPERIENCES - CLOSE TO THE SCYTHE | LIVE CHAT | Q & A (PROFOUND REAL-LIFE PERCEPTIONS)LISTEN TO NARRATIONS OF PHANTOMS & MONSTERS REPORTS & CASES - PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, LIKE & SHAREPHANTOMS & MONSTERS RADIO Podcasts on SpotifyPHANTOMS & MONSTERS READING LISTCHICAGO MOTHMAN / O'HARE BATMAN YouTube PlaylistHave you had a sighting or encounter?Contact me by email or call the hotline at 410-241-5974Thanks. LonJOIN AMAZON PRIME - Unlimited Movie/TV Streaming& FREE 2-Day ShippingRegister a SNAP EBT CardTry Audible PlusBigfoot and Other Cryptid Videos on YouTubeLYCANS! - PENNSYLVANIA'S CRYPTID CANINES UPDATE'KILLER BIGFOOT' HUNTED BY U.S. SPECIAL FORCES / GLIMMER MAN / MANTIS HUMANOIDSCRAWLER HUMANOIDS - GRUESOME INVADERS! (REAL EYEWITNESS ENCOUNTERS!)WEREWOLVES: DO THEY EXIST?'DOGMAN IN OUR YARD!' - AN OHIO FAMILY'S 12-YEAR SAGA WITH CRYPTID CANINESHey, folks. Thanks for the congrats on 'The Mothman Revisited' episode on Unsolved Mysteries. As a result, we are receiving more sighting reports and are very excited and grateful for the new information!I sincerely thank the Unsolved Mysteries team and Netflix for allowing us to tell the world about this phenomenon.If you have information about this or any other cryptid or unexplained sighting or encounter, please feel free to contact me by email or at 410-241-5974. Thanks again! LonCHICAGO MOTHMAN / O'HARE BATMAN YouTube PlaylistChicago / Lake Michigan Winged Humanoid Regional Interactive Map----------Become a Phantoms & Monsters Radio member - just $2.99 monthly, and receive these perks. Thanks for your support!-Members-only live chats-Exclusive members-only videos-Priority reply to members' commentsHave perks suggestions? LMK-----YOUR SUPPORT IS APPRECIATED! THANKS
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Strange & Paranormal Files
Strange & Paranormal Files
1 y

(VIDEO) UNKNOWN HUMANOID Recorded on Cancun, Mexico Beach
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(VIDEO) UNKNOWN HUMANOID Recorded on Cancun, Mexico Beach

An unknown humanoid was heard, then recorded, on a TikTok video by a witness. The incident occurred on a beach in Cancun, Mexico. A YouTube video is also provided."The account identified as @el_t0ny31 published a video where two young people are seen talking while lying on lounge chairs under a palapa on a beach in Cancun, the moment becomes murky when the surprised young people begin to scream and run upon seeing a humanoid creature.The strange being passes behind the beds showing its elongated limbs, which has unleashed different theories among users who mention that it could be a demon or an alien.Users have reacted to the strange being that has already accumulated more than 14.5 million views on the TikTok platform. Some of the comments that can be read in the publication are the following:“I saw one like this swimming at Punta Esmeralda beach, Playa del Carmen”"The day it really happens to them, they won't even be able to run"“It was my uncle looking for his flip-flop”And “No way! Incredibly, they saw one.”Although it is unknown whether it could have been an extraterrestrial or paranormal being, several Internet users continue to share the strange humanoid being." - Young people are chased by a strange humanoid creatureVIDEO: Humanoid recorded in Cancun, Mexico**********PHANTOMS & MONSTERS VIDEO LIBRARYPOLL: WHAT DO YOU THINK? Vote & comment on paranormal, cryptid & unexplained mysteries!NEAR-DEATH EXPERIENCES - CLOSE TO THE SCYTHE | LIVE CHAT | Q & A (PROFOUND REAL-LIFE PERCEPTIONS)LISTEN TO NARRATIONS OF PHANTOMS & MONSTERS REPORTS & CASES - PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, LIKE & SHAREPHANTOMS & MONSTERS RADIO Podcasts on SpotifyPHANTOMS & MONSTERS READING LISTCHICAGO MOTHMAN / O'HARE BATMAN YouTube PlaylistHave you had a sighting or encounter?Contact me by email or call the hotline at 410-241-5974Thanks. LonJOIN AMAZON PRIME - Unlimited Movie/TV Streaming& FREE 2-Day ShippingRegister a SNAP EBT CardTry Audible PlusBigfoot and Other Cryptid Videos on YouTubeLYCANS! - PENNSYLVANIA'S CRYPTID CANINES UPDATE'KILLER BIGFOOT' HUNTED BY U.S. SPECIAL FORCES / GLIMMER MAN / MANTIS HUMANOIDSCRAWLER HUMANOIDS - GRUESOME INVADERS! (REAL EYEWITNESS ENCOUNTERS!)WEREWOLVES: DO THEY EXIST?'DOGMAN IN OUR YARD!' - AN OHIO FAMILY'S 12-YEAR SAGA WITH CRYPTID CANINESHey, folks. Thanks for the congrats on 'The Mothman Revisited' episode on Unsolved Mysteries. As a result, we are receiving more sighting reports and are very excited and grateful for the new information!I sincerely thank the Unsolved Mysteries team and Netflix for allowing us to tell the world about this phenomenon.If you have information about this or any other cryptid or unexplained sighting or encounter, please feel free to contact me by email or at 410-241-5974. Thanks again! LonCHICAGO MOTHMAN / O'HARE BATMAN YouTube PlaylistChicago / Lake Michigan Winged Humanoid Regional Interactive Map----------Become a Phantoms & Monsters Radio member - just $2.99 monthly, and receive these perks. Thanks for your support!-Members-only live chats-Exclusive members-only videos-Priority reply to members' commentsHave perks suggestions? LMK-----YOUR SUPPORT IS APPRECIATED! THANKS
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

“I love you guys, but you’re all assholes” — The Umbrella Academy’s Final Season
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“I love you guys, but you’re all assholes” — The Umbrella Academy’s Final Season

Movies & TV The Umbrella Academy “I love you guys, but you’re all assholes” — The Umbrella Academy’s Final Season A truly happy ending was never in the cards for the Hargreeves kids… By Keith R.A. DeCandido | Published on August 20, 2024 Credit: Netflix Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Netflix One of the hallmarks of The Umbrella Academy—both the comic book by Gerard Way & Gabriel Bá and the Netflix TV show whose fourth and final season just aired—is that it’s a deconstruction of superhero stories and an examination of family. This final season of the Netflix show—which is the only one of the four that isn’t at least loosely based on one of Way & Bá’s comics miniseries—takes that to its extreme, and also comes with a bit of satire on the recent trend toward embracing a multiverse. What’s not entirely clear is whether or not it’s a success or not. The season is abbreviated, only six episodes as opposed to the ten the three prior seasons had. That, at least, is a benefit, as each previous season had a lot of meandering and filler. More impressively, this season also manages to balance the cast nicely. All three prior seasons suffered from cast bloat, occasionally losing track of some characters or writing them out of the storyline for lack of anything for them to do. (This was at its worst in season three, when they added an entire new team of Sparrow Academy kids, and the story had to move quickly to get rid of a bunch of them so the story had room to breathe.) That doesn’t happen in season four, despite having pretty much the same main cast back. We’ve got all of the Hargreeves children who were inexplicably born on the same day to women who weren’t pregnant when the day started and who all had super-powers. We left them at the end of season three having changed the timeline for the umpteenth time and winding up back in 2019 without their powers. They jump the timeline forward a few years, which is a relief, as the actors have all aged, and this is the first time the characters have been permitted to do so as well. (Particularly an issue for Aidan Gallagher as Five, who is finally allowed to be as old as the now-twenty-one-year-old actor is.) In the five years following their return, Viktor (Elliot Page) has opened a bar in Canada and appears to be happy and content. Allison (Emmy Raver-Lampman) has been a working actor, mostly in commercials, while taking care of her daughter. In the latter, she has been aided by Klaus (Robert Sheehan), who has been clean and sober—and also become a paranoid germophobe. Now that he’s no longer able to recover from being killed, he’s scared of pretty much everything. Diego and Lila (David Castañeda and Ritu Arya) are now married with children and living a suburban life, the former as a delivery truck driver, the latter as a housewife. Ben (Justin H. Min) ran a Ponzi scheme involving cryptocurrency and spends most of the time between seasons in jail. Five is an agent for the CIA (though the work he’s doing is more the type of thing done by the FBI). And poor Luther is squatting in the condemned building that used to house both the Umbrella Academy and the Sparrow Academy and working as a male stripper. Of course, circumstances contrive to give them all their powers back, though many of them have altered powers. The reason for them having powers again is that they’re needed to save a young woman named Jennifer, who has apparently been kidnapped, at least according to a man claiming to be her father (David Cross). However, Jennifer is being protected by Hargreeves Enterprises employees. Sir Reginald Hargreeves (Colm Feore) is an industrialist in this timeline, having abandoned the notion of raising a team of superheroic children. It turns out that Jennifer—who was found inside a giant squid decades ago (which is hilariously shown in a flashback news story)—is a harbinger of The Cleanse. The entire half-dozen-episode season is about The Cleanse. There’s a cult known as the Keepers, led by Gene and Jean Thibedeau (brilliantly played by real-life husband-and-wife Nick Offerman and Megan Mullally) who are trying to bring about The Cleanse faster. And the reason for all this is that there have been too many time-travel shenanigans. Time travel has been a theme of all four seasons of Umbrella, and history keeps being altered and changed and destroyed and reset. The Keepers are all people who can sense that the timeline is wrong and needs fixing. We’ve been seeing this in a lot of superhero screen fiction lately. The Marvel Cinematic Universe first pitched many-worlds theory in Avengers: Endgame, and it’s been a significant theme in the Loki TV series and the recent movies featuring Spider-Man, Doctor Strange, Ant-Man & the Wasp, and Captain Marvel. DC made it a big part of their “Arrowverse” TV shows, as well as the recent movie starring the Flash. And, of course, we’ve seen it in the comics a lot, going back to DC using “Earth-2” to explain why there was a Justice Society during World War II featuring Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman, but also a Justice League in the 1960s featuring the same trio. And The Umbrella Academy’s answer to it is to burn it all down. It’s established that Five has tried several times to restore the timeline, including—as previously established—founding the very Time Commission that he worked for as a time-displaced mercenary. In this season, we see that several alternate versions of Five have settled in a diner because they’ve given up trying to fix things. And they try to convince our Five to do so, but instead he realizes that there’s a solution: let The Cleanse win. Getting there has the usual Umbrella Academy tropes of the family fucking up, of Luther trying to be earnest and heroic, of Diego trying to be a badass and mostly (but not entirely) failing, of Klaus getting into all kinds of trouble because he makes bad choices, and of Five being the only grown-up. In addition, this season in particular we have Allison avoiding the rest of the family because of her awful behavior last season, Ben (who is the Ben who was with the Sparrow Academy, not the Ben they all knew, who was killed as a kid) not giving a shit about anybody but himself until he finds his soulmate, and Viktor trying to be a better sibling and save people. What’s interesting here is that Viktor is the only member of the family who’s trying to be a hero. Which is especially fascinating given that Viktor was, in essence, the villain of season one. But throughout, Viktor is focused on trying to save people rather than harm them, which puts him one up on his siblings, all of whom rack up quite the impressive body count. Page does an excellent job with Viktor’s passion to do the right thing, an urge that is sadly unique in this particular group of people… Five also gets something he hasn’t had at any point in the show’s run: happiness. It’s short-lived, of course, because nobody on this show is allowed to be happy for long. But there’s a period where he and Lila are trapped in various alternate timelines. Five’s powers, when they’re restored, change to enabling him to jump to a subway that goes between alternate timelines. It takes him and Lila almost seven years to find their way back home, and they take refuge in each other’s arms quite a bit, with Five falling in love. Lila, however, is kept (relatively) sane by thinking of Diego and her kids and getting back to them. So when they finally return, Five’s heart is broken. I can’t sing enough praises of the work Gallagher has done in this series, and he kicks it up a notch here. Already he has consistently presented Five as almost effortlessly competent, by far the smartest and most capable person in the ensemble. Here, he gets an emotional through-line to go with his usual plot-heavy one, and Gallagher plays it magnificently. So does Arya, whose Lila gets a lot more depth this season as well. She’s not just the crazy person she’s been in previous seasons, she’s a wife, a mother, and a talented operative. But she’s also found a family, people to love and cherish, which gives her life a purpose she hadn’t expected—and which she doesn’t really appreciate until she’s taken away from it for more than a dozen years. Mention should be made of Sheehan’s Klaus, whom I didn’t take to initially, but who is brilliant in this final season, beautifully playing the de-powered Klaus’ paranoia and the powered Klaus’ spectacular ability to fuck up his life. As usual, he winds up running a scheme, though this one works because he genuinely is a medium who can talk to the dead… Other highlights include a very well-done flashback to when the Umbrella Academy were kids, as we see the mission where Ben died, a sequence that reminds us just how much of an asshole Sir Reginald is; pretty much every scene with Offerman and Mullally, who are comedy gold; and Diego’s constant frustrations with everything, which is extremely well-played by Castañeda. The season works really well until the end, and that’s where I have a hard time getting my arms around it. As has happened every season, Five is the one who either presents the problem to the team or who comes up with the solution, or both. In this case, it’s the second option, as he realizes that they need to let The Cleanse win and destroy everything. More to the point, the six of them need to be removed from the timeline completely, as their existence is what messed everything up. So after four seasons, our heroes finally fix everything by doing absolutely nothing. On the one hand, it’s incredibly on-brand. The Hargreeves siblings are, bluntly, shit at being superheroes. Always have been. So it is incredibly appropriate that the best thing they can do for the space-time continuum is to do absolutely nothing. But it’s also incredibly unsatisfying as the conclusion of a TV show. I mean, seriously, they just stand there and let a bunch of goo cover them all? On the one hand, they do sacrifice themselves to save the universe. On the other hand, they do so by just standing there and it’s so incredibly anticlimactic. A truly happy ending was never in the cards for the Hargreeves kids, and to provide one would’ve felt false. So maybe this was the only way to make it work: a happy ending for the universe, at least, as they are finally able to get it right and save everyone, but done in a truly half-assed and fucked-up manner. So maybe it is the right ending…[end-mark] The post “I love you guys, but you’re all assholes” — <i>The Umbrella Academy</i>’s Final Season appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

Aliens Exist and They Are Absolute Jerks: James S.A. Corey’s The Mercy of Gods
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Aliens Exist and They Are Absolute Jerks: James S.A. Corey’s The Mercy of Gods

Books book review Aliens Exist and They Are Absolute Jerks: James S.A. Corey’s The Mercy of Gods By Molly Templeton | Published on August 20, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share It hasn’t even been three years since James S.A. Corey—also known as Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck—published Leviathan Falls, the final novel of the Expanse. It feels longer, somehow. But three years is a perfectly reasonable amount of time to wait for the followup. The Mercy of Gods arrives as the first of a trilogy, and it also arrives with enough stellar worldbuilding, moral complexity, and high-stakes human drama to make a person wish this series would be nine books long as well. The details of humanity’s arrival on the planet Anjiin are “lost in the fog of time and history,” but for a while there, they had a good run. At the start of The Mercy of Gods, Anjiin’s humans have just achieved a remarkable scientific breakthrough: Tonner Freis and his scientific workgroup have figured out how to translate between the planet’s two “trees of life”—the imported species that came along with humans, and the native biome. The book opens on their celebration, which is shortly overshadowed by complex academic politics. But academic power grabs mean nothing once the Carryx show up. Humans are simply not up to the task of resisting these technologically advanced, galaxy-dominating species, who surround the planet, instantly kill one-eighth of the population, and then take the highest status people—composers, politicians, and, yes, successful scientists—off to an alien world dotted with massive ziggurats in which countless species struggle to earn the right to survive. If the humans can complete an assigned task, they will prove themselves useful to the Carryx, and earn a place in the “moieties.” If not, well, then they have no use. “Usefulness,” their first keeper tells them, “is survival.” The first quarter of this book covers a brief period of normality, the tense invasion, and the miserable, traumatizing transit to the Carryx planet. It’s plenty of time for the authors to introduce the central players and demonstrate their personalities, from Tonner’s dedication to the work and desire for recognition to Jessyn’s struggle with her mental health to the perpetual observational standpoint of Dafyd Alkor, the team’s research assistant. The point-of-view skips around, but Dafyd stays central, and the book makes it clear from the start that he’s the character on whom this story pivots. The first pages are part of a statement from Ekur-Tkalal, “keeper-librarian of the human moiety of the Carryx,” who tells the reader two things the characters don’t know: One, the Carryx empire is going to fall. And two, humanity, and specifically Dafyd, will be the catalyst of that fall. “We did not see the adversary for what he was, and we brought him into our home.” Buy the Book The Mercy of Gods James S.A. Corey Buy Book The Mercy of Gods James S.A. Corey Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget This knowledge is necessary; it’s a beacon of hope that glows no matter how dark and heavy and distressing the novel gets. It lets us read with a vivid curiosity alongside the horror: How, how could humanity, with our fragile little bodies and insufficient tech, square off against an alien species that has subjugated dozens upon dozens of other worlds? But the aliens are not all-knowing. They understand, for example, that humans take showers and use toilets, but they don’t understand the need for pen and paper. They don’t think like humans; none of the other species do. The alien, here, is deeply alien—but it’s also alarmingly familiar. At the start of part two, Ekur-Tkalal says, “When a primitive of your own kind cut a branch from a tree and carved the wood into a tool … The tree had no power to stop you, and so it became a tool in your hand. What you did with a tree branch, we did with you and countless others before you.” How is this different from what humans do? is a question the authors pose more than once. As the Carryx invasion begins, a couple is gardening; one of them thinks about how weeding is killing the plants that don’t suit. It isn’t a subtle comparison, but it is written into an ultimately heartbreaking scene with practical grace. Everything, here, is a question of thinking, of how aliens think, how different humans think, and the different ways minds work, and adapt, and deal with trauma. Dafyd says a lot of telling things at the start, and one of them is about a person’s “pathological move,” which he defines as “the thing people do when they’re working on instinct.” Dafyd’s is, essentially, to try to understand. “I put myself in the other person’s place,” he says. “I think, What would I do if I were them? Or If I was doing what they did, why would I be doing it?” In trying to understand, Dafyd asks a lot of necessary questions, like: Why are the Carryx doing what they do? What do they really want? What are the other species doing? What might the humans do to change or improve their future? What actions will they take in order to survive? What actions might doom them?  This novel is incredibly tense; the clock ticks, incessantly, on the do-or-die science project, and the authors efficiently illustrate each character’s stress response—and branch out beyond the humans. Several chapters give us the Carryx viewpoint, including a different facet of their massive war. From time to time, a different voice appears: The swarm, another alien whose species has been at war with the Carryx for ages. The swarm acts in its own alien manner, and serves as a powerful reminder that close proximity to someone or something vastly different has the power to change both parties, right down to their ways of thinking and feeling.  At times, The Mercy of Gods reminds me intensely of the best parts of the 2004 Battlestar Galactica, another story of survival and compromise. Both ask profoundly difficult questions about what positions a person might compromise on, what sacrifices they might make and what freedoms they might give up, when a whole species’ survival is on the line—and both demonstrate how some people will always default to manipulation, self-serving choices, and destructive pathological moves. There are no easy answers; heroics rarely accomplish much. But there are, sometimes, moments of beauty, pleasure, and connection.  This book, this series, is not the Expanse, but those who love that series should feel at home here. Franck and Abraham are old hands at switching perspectives, at writing the connections and conflicts of an ensemble cast that will also probably wind up flung across the stars. What makes this book—and the Expanse series—work so beautifully is, in part, a finely honed sense of balance, of facing horrors without reveling in them, and in pausing to appreciate those small moments of peace and connection when they come. From the very beginning, this book tells you that those little moments matter, and often more than you expect: “Small moments, unnoticed at the time, change the fate of empires.” The fate of this empire seems hardly to have changed by the end of The Mercy of Gods. But I have a feeling we’ll look back at some small moments and recognize the beginning of its end.[end-mark] The Mercy of Gods is published by Orbit. The post Aliens Exist and They Are Absolute Jerks: James S.A. Corey’s <i>The Mercy of Gods</i> appeared first on Reactor.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
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Vast Stretches Of America Are So Depressed That They Look Like Something Out Of A Horror Movie
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Vast Stretches Of America Are So Depressed That They Look Like Something Out Of A Horror Movie

Vast Stretches Of America Are So Depressed That They Look Like Something Out Of A Horror Movie
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