Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Regeneration, Volume One by J.D. King

Amazon Affiliate Link

I just finished reading the first of three volumes of J.D. King's Regeneration, a history of divine healing in the Christian Church. Volume One surveys faith healing from the first century to the first few decades of the twentieth. I was surprised at just how much evidence there is for healing throughout the Middle Ages, but documentation is sparse for obvious reasons. Until the invention of the printing press, there was no easy way for a commoner to tell us how his dysentery vanished when traveling missionary prayed for him. In the nineteenth century, printing became much more accessible; a ministry could pay to have books or periodicals printed and distributed around the world. King understandably uses a lot more of his own ink discussing the faith healing movements of the late 1800s and early 1900s.

This history of divine healing is both encouraging and discouraging. Every era of Christian history has had miracles and dramatic healings, but they come in waves. A new faith healing movement arises, sets the world on fire, and then burns out in controversy and scandal or fades away into institutionalized religion.

With so much evidence, it's hard to argue that miraculous healings don't happen, but it also leaves the reader with some serious questions. Why then and not now? Why him and not me? When God uses such imperfect people to perform miracles, how do we tell charlatans from legitimate people of faith? Should we expect miracles all the time or are they temporary measures that God uses to advance a cause or make a point, like wilderness experiences designed to move his people from here to there?

I'm looking forward to reading Volume Two, but Volume One wasn't light reading. It took me a couple of years and I expect the sequel to take as long.

2015 Hugo Award Nominees

I'll keep this post updated as I read through the 2015 Hugo Award Nominees. I have a lot of reading to do in a short period of time because I had only read one of the written works before it was nominated. My comments will be in blue.

Update 5/18/2015: Just downloaded my Hugo packet. Got some reading to do...

Best Novel - No contest. The Three Body Problem. It only remains to determine which I'll rank below it and which won't even make my ballot.
  • Ancillary Sword, Ann Leckie (Orbit US/Orbit UK) - I'm not going to bother reading a book by an author who thinks calling everyone "she" is clever or poignant. It's moronic. Worse, it's evil, and that's not hyperbole.
  • The Dark Between the Stars, Kevin J. Anderson (Tor Books) - ★ I got 14% of the way through the ebook and decided my free time is too valuable to waste on a mediocre novel with shallow characters and sluggish plot. There is some SJWism going on, but it's half-hearted, as if Anderson doesn't buy into it enough to make it real.
  • The Goblin Emperor, Katherine Addison (Sarah Monette) (Tor Books) - ★ Better than Dark Between the Stars. At least I made it through 25% of this one. It started alright but got bogged down in too much exposition about who ascended which stairs in what order and wore what color combination to which social event. The place names are a mouthful, but as long as you don't actually try to pronounce them, that's not fatal. What is fatal is that the protagonist probably would have lost his head, literally, in the first two chapters if any of the court conspirators actually cared about the power they appeared to be pursuing. He's a naive, effeminate nice-guy who would be helplessly out of his depth in a real political situation.
  • Skin Game, Jim Butcher (Orbit UK/Roc Books) - Since the entire book wasn't included in the voter's packet, I saved this one for last. Unfortunately, I don't think I'll have time to read it. I've heard good things about it.
  • The Three Body Problem, Cixin Liu, Ken Liu translator (Tor Books) - ★ Fantastic book. I loved the glimpses into Chinese culture, but especially the way that Liu unfolded one dimension of insanity after another. Some of the characters seemed pretty cardboard, some seemed very odd (but that might be cultural or linguistic barriers), but I thought that the two primary protagonists (is that the right word?) were very well done. I might take a look at the other nominees, but I seriously doubt that any will surpass this one.

Best Novella - And the winner is... Big Boys Don't Cry!
  • Big Boys Don’t Cry, Tom Kratman (Castalia House) - ★ High-caliber, SciFi gun porn at its finest. Good, solid science fiction, and the message resonated with me. I've never been where Maggie was, but I saw the possibility and walked away.
  • “Flow”, Arlan Andrews, Sr. (Analog, 11-2014) - ★ I got about 1/3 of the way through "Flow" and couldn't stand it anymore. It appears to be entirely written from the POV of an effectively blind and retarded midget. 
  • One Bright Star to Guide Them, John C. Wright (Castalia House) - ★★★★ A little rambling at times, it seemed that Wright was trying to cram a trilogy into a series of flashbacks. This story and "The Plural…" both seemed to be exercises in the advice Wright gives in his "Patented One-Lesson Session in the Mechanics of Fiction" from Transhuman: lots of contextual gaps for the reader's own imagination to fill in. For the most part, he does a great job with the technique, but I think that sometimes he pushes it a little too far. The main fault I found with this story is that it is much too large in scope. Unfortunately, none of his nominated works quite measure up to Awake in the Night Land, which I thought was brilliant.
  • “Pale Realms of Shade”, John C. Wright (The Book of Feasts & Seasons, Castalia House) - ★★★★ Overall, this was a very good story. Wright's Catholic theology leaks through all over the place, so if you find that offensive, you'll have a hard time appreciating the story. I thought this was the best of the three Wright novellas.
  • “The Plural of Helen of Troy”, John C. Wright (City Beyond Time: Tales of the Fall of Metachronopolis, Castalia House) - ★★★★ Fascinating world! I'm definitely going to want to read more of City Beyond Time. On the other hand, some of the theological flourishes seemed tacked on as if the story changed destinations midstream.

Best Novelette - I'm not super excited about any of these stories, but only two of them warrant being left off the ballot so far. Hopefully I'll get to Flynn's story before I vote.
  • “Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust, Earth to Alluvium”, Gray Rinehart (Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show, 05-2014) - ★ Entertaining story with an interesting take on human-alien relations. Not inspiring or jaw dropping, but good, entertaining SF.
  • “Championship B’tok”, Edward M. Lerner (Analog, 09-2014) - ★ Not a bad story idea & the writing is competent, but not great. Too many awkward subordinate clauses and word orders plus an overly abrupt cliff-hanger ending left me unsatisfied. The story would have been much better without the Interveners. Lerner didn't relate the two major conflicts in any meaningful way.
  • “The Day the World Turned Upside Down”, Thomas Olde Heuvelt, Lia Belt translator (Lightspeed, 04-2014) - ★★ Juvenile, narcissistic, pointless, and creepy. Heuvelt gives us a thinly disguised revenge-porn fantasy with a very dream-like feel. Almost everything about this story rubbed me the wrong way except for the way the water didn't fall up unless it was separated from the main body. The technical writing--grammar, vocabulary, etc--itself isn't terrible.
  • “The Journeyman: In the Stone House”, Michael F. Flynn (Analog, 06-2014)
  • “The Triple Sun: A Golden Age Tale”, Rajnar Vajra (Analog, 07/08-2014) - ★ Cross-cultural miscommunications take center stage in a fun first contact story told in a light-hearted voice. Unfortunately, Vajra lost a lot of points with the abrupt ending. I flipped back and forth several times trying to figure out where the missing pages went.

Best Short Story - I'm undecided between "Samurai" and "Turncoat" right now, but these are all excellent stories. 
  • “On A Spiritual Plain”, Lou Antonelli (Sci Phi Journal #2, 11-2014) - ★★★★ Good story. The questions of spirituality of humans on other worlds doesn't get enough serious treatment in the industry.
  • “The Parliament of Beasts and Birds”, John C. Wright (The Book of Feasts & Seasons, Castalia House) - ★★★★ If Aesop were more concerned with telling a good story, his fables might have looked something like this.
  • “A Single Samurai”, Steven Diamond (The Baen Big Book of Monsters, Baen Books) - ★ Great adventure story highlighting honor and virtue. 
  • “Totaled”, Kary English (Galaxy’s Edge Magazine, 07-2014) - ★ I really enjoyed "Totaled." My only complaint is that I never really felt like I was inside Maggie's head, but then neither was Maggie. It could have been me. I dunno.
  • “Turncoat”, Steve Rzasa (Riding the Red Horse, Castalia House) - ★ Great story. I stumbled a bit on the idea that an extremely advanced AI unable to understand that particular bit of text. (If you've read it, you know what text I mean.) The bare meaning seems pretty straight forward. Perhaps if TX had instead understood it perfectly but wrestled with whether the meaning of the text has legitimate applicability in his own existence.
Best Related Work - Transhuman is the hands down winner in this category.
  • “The Hot Equations: Thermodynamics and Military SF”, Ken Burnside (Riding the Red Horse, Castalia House) - ★★★ Practical technical advice on writing hard SF in space vs fantasy in an SF setting. Reminiscent of Michael McCollum's nitty-gritty how-to series from more than a decade ago.
  • Letters from Gardner, Lou Antonelli (The Merry Blacksmith Press)
  • Transhuman and Subhuman: Essays on Science Fiction and Awful Truth, John C. Wright (Castalia House) - ★★★★★ Fantastic writing advice, biting & humorous criticism of SFF works, intellectual consideration of SFF themes... Excellent work.
  • “Why Science is Never Settled”, Tedd Roberts (Baen.com)
  • Wisdom from My Internet, Michael Z. Williamson (Patriarchy Press) - ★★ Otherwise known as The Collected Proverbs of MZW, Who is Very, Very Different than MZB. Wisdom is full of biting truths that every liberal should have tattooed on the palms of his hands, but the only thing that makes it more related to science fiction & fantasy than to westerns or mystery is the author's credentials as an SFF writer.
Best Graphic Story - Who reads this garbage? I looked at three of these works and decided this entire category needs to be destroyed. No Award.
  • Ms. Marvel Volume 1: No Normal - ★ Boredom, action, woe-is-me, boredom, action, boredom, woe-is-me. Islam is a religion of peace and apple pie. Not terrible, but not terribly interesting either. Existential naval gazing is fine to an extent; there's room for a bit of it in almost any super hero story. But can we get back to comic book heroes who are actual heroes already?
  • Rat Queens Volume 1: Sass and Sorcery - ★ Pretty decent artwork. Trash, otherwise. Stick-limbed, wide-hipped womynz who are still stronger, faster, & smarter than everyone else, but talk about little more than sex and penis jokes.
  • Saga Volume 3 -
  • Sex Criminals Volume 1: One Weird Trick - ★ Pornographic comic book with only competent artistry. No SF or F at all that I could tell, but then I did skim over 95% of it.
  • The Zombie Nation Book #2: Reduce Reuse Reanimate -
Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form
  • Captain America: The Winter Soldier - ★★★ Entertaining action movie. Unfortunately, it's been too long since I watched it to remember much more than that. One thing to remember with almost all super hero movies is that they are more fantasy than science fiction. As long as you keep that in mind, they're pretty enjoyable.
  • Edge of Tomorrow
  • Guardians of the Galaxy
  • Interstellar
  • The Lego Movie
Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form
  • Doctor Who: “Listen”
  • The Flash: “Pilot”
  • Game of Thrones: “The Mountain and the Viper”
  • Grimm: “Once We Were Gods”
  • Orphan Black: “By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried” - ★★★ Orphan Black didn't have a single positive portrayal of a straight, white male until season 2, and then it was only 1. Every single "positive" (using the word very loosely) character was female, gay, or black. There's nothing inherently wrong with that, except that the SJW subtext is so overpowering, it's clear that it was a deliberate slight and not just incidental to the story. It was such a promising idea for a series, it could have been great. Instead, by the middle of season 2, it was piling stupid on top of stupid. Despite that, I still give this episode 3 stars because it wasn't as stupid as some of the others.
Best Editor, Short Form
  • Jennifer Brozek
  • Vox Day - ★ Five stars not because his technical skills as an editor are so outstanding, but because of what he's done to the field at large. I'm going this way in the short form category because Riding the Red Horse is an outstanding collection, and that because it brings usefulness & relevance back to science fiction, not necessarily because the contents are so brilliantly composed.
  • Mike Resnick
  • Bryan Thomas Schmidt
Best Editor, Long Form
  • Vox Day - ★ See my comments on Editor, Short Form.
  • Sheila Gilbert - ★ I haven't read anything that Ms. Gilbert has edited, but that's no coincidence. Browsing through her titles, I noted that very few of them looked like anything I'd care to read.
  • Jim Minz
  • Anne Sowards
  • Toni Weisskopf - ★ I've read more BAEN books in the last few years than from any other SFF publisher.
Best Professional Artist - A lot of great work from all nominees. I'll have to decide between Greenwood and DouPonce for first place.
  • Julie Dillon - ★ Not a bad artist. Sci-fi & fantasy featuring very masculine women, men primarily in visually inferior position, lots of people of color. As I've said elsewhere, there's nothing wrong with any of those things, but I do wonder at the artist's motivation.
  • Kirk DouPonce - ★ Great stuff. Sci-fi & fantasy. Detailed realism with dream-like qualities
  • Nick Greenwood - ★ Warhammer-like dark fantasy, sci-fi, & book covers.
  • Alan Pollack - ★ Book covers, sci-fi, fantasy, gaming, etc. High adventure, action-oriented images. Nice. Mildly irritating that his website is completely nonfunctional without enabling javascript from a dozen different domains.
  • Carter Reid - Comics, zombies, and more zombies. No art was included in the Hugo packet. Reid was nominated in the Graphic Story category also, so maybe there's something there. More later.
Best Semiprozine
  • Abyss & Apex
  • Andromeda Spaceways In-Flight Magazine
  • Beneath Ceaseless Skies - ★★★ Some good stories sometimes, but some really awful stories too.
  • Lightspeed Magazine - ★★★ Some good stories sometimes, but some really awful stories too. A little heavy on the SJW preaching.
  • Strange Horizons
Best Fanzine
  • Black Gate
  • Elitist Book Reviews
  • Journey Planet
  • The Revenge of Hump Day
  • Tangent SF Online
Best Fancast
  • Adventures in SciFi Publishing - ★★★ I've been listening to this show for about a year and I'm still getting caught up on old episodes. I think they do a great job overall. They usually stay away from politics, which might keep them from being SJW targets temporarily, but it's not in the nature of SJWs to allow neutral parties. Today's moderates become tomorrows intolerable "extremists". Best of luck, guys.
  • Dungeon Crawlers Radio - ★★★ The interviews can be good, but the endless banter makes this show too annoying for regular listening.
  • Galactic Suburbia Podcast
  • The Sci Phi Show
  • Tea and Jeopardy

Best Fan Writer - It seems to be like much of the included matieral ought to be in the Related Works category, leaving this one for fiction, but whatever. Not my call. Or maybe they should have named this the Mad Genius Club category this year. I haven't read any of these writers' fiction, but I've read most of their blogs at least once before. Sarcasm, SF history, politics, and more. I don't know quite what to write about the individuals, so I'll leave most of them blank. Jeffro Johnson will get the top spot on my ballot.
  • Dave Freer - ★★
  • Amanda S. Green - ★★★ 
  • Jeffro Johnson - ★ Analysis of historical greats in SF. Johnson's articles bring back some memories.
  • Laura J. Mixon - ★ A little obsessive and possibly unbalanced, but Mixon's expose of Requires Hate is an important addition to the anti-SJW case. The Clarion story... I don't know what to think of that just now.
  • Cedar Sanderson - ★★★   

Best Fan Artist - Elizabeth Leggett will get my vote in this category. I have my doubts about whether she should be in the "Fan Artist" category, but of the nominated artists, I like her work the best.
  • Ninni Aalto - ★ Pen and ink (or a reasonable facsimile thereof), comics, and lots of rabbits.
  • Brad W. Foster - Pen and ink, comic books, book covers, and more. Not bad.
  • Elizabeth Leggett - ★ Lots of really cool work.
  • Spring Schoenhuth - ★ Jewelry and painting. I'm not impressed by the one painting included in the Hugo voter packet, and, although the jewelry doesn't look bad, I don't know enough to judge it fairly.
  • Steve Stiles - Comic books, covers, and caricatures. A little retro, which is cool and understandable since Steve's been at it a long time. Overall, not bad.

John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer
  • Wesley Chu - ★ The included work wasn't to my taste.
  • Jason Cordova - ★ I enjoyed Hill 142. I'm mostly impressed that it is as good as it is apparently unedited. With some polishing it could be great. There is the problem of overgrown arachnids, however. See Hank Davis' introduction to "The Baen Big Book of Monsters."
  • Kary English★ I was very impressed with "Totaled."
  • Rolf Nelson
  • Eric S. Raymond


King Sears: Isaac Sears in the American Revolution

Compared to George Washington, Thomas Gage, and some others, Isaac Sears was a minor player in the Revolution. The lives and activities of these seeming "extras" can offer an informative and entertaining glimpse into facets of the Revolution that you don't normally see in history textbooks. The following actual newspaper articles are excerpted from Diary of the American Revolution, volumes I & II.



Captain Sears and John Case


Rivington's Royal Gazette, January 12, 1775


JANUARY 3--THIS morning, Mr. John Case, an old man of near sixty years of age, from Long Island, was entreated by an acquaintance of his to go to the house of Jasper Drake, tavern-keeper near Beckman’s Slip, where he was told Captain [Alexander] Mac Dougall, Captain [Isaac] Sears,1 and others wanted to converse with him on politics. He went, and soon entered into conversation with Captain [Alexander] Mac Dougall, who attempted to convince him that he was in an error, but not being able to effect it, politely left him. Captain Sears, with several other persons, then attacked him with the force of their eloquence and noise, but Case said he was an unlearned man, and but of few words, that he could not reply to above one. That he judged, however, the fairest way to come at the truth would be to recur to the origin of the present contest between Great Britain and the Colonies, and to trace from the time of the stamp act, the encroachments of ministerial power, and the increasing demands for provincial privileges. This was objected to by Captain Sears, as it would require too much time and attention to discuss. He said that he would question him a little, and asked Case whether the king had not violated his coronation oath? Mr. Case replied, that he thought he had not, and reasoned on this and other matters in as cool a manner as possible, in order not to irritate Captain Sears, who, however, soon grew warm, and branded Case with the appellation of Tory, and told him that if he was in Connecticut government he would be put to death. Sears then demanded of Case whether, if the Bostonians were to take up arms, he would fight for the king? Case answered, that if he fought on either side, he would certainly fight for no one else, as he conceived King George to be his lawful sovereign, for the minister a few days before prayed for our rightful sovereign Lord King George the Third, on which Sears replied he was sorry that he had turned churchman, where such prayers were used; Case replied, these expressions were delivered the preceding Sunday by Dr. Rodgers2 at the Presbyterian meeting, for he himself was a Presbyterian. After a few more queries and replies of a similar nature, Sears told him that he would not suffer, a Tory to sit in company with gentlemen, placed a chair in the chimney corner, caught Case by the arm, and forced him into it. He then called for a negro boy, who belonged to the house, and ordered him to sit along with him; for that he (Case) was only fit to sit in company with slaves; but the negro had too much understanding to comply. Mr. Case then called for some wine, and offered it to the company, but Sears refused to accept of it, pushed him down in the chair where he before had placed him, and ordered the rest not to drink with a Tory; and further, that whoever spoke to Case, should forfeit a bowl of toddy, which was exacted by him from two persons who happened to disobey his mandates. Sears then told Case that his age protected him, for if he was a young man, he would have placed him on a red-hot gridiron; and after he had detained this old man as long as he thought proper, he dismissed him.3

1 Afterwards called by the loyalists, King Sears.
2 John Rodgers, D. D., pastor of the Wall street church.
3 This account was published in Rivington’s Gazette, Jan. 12, in the form of a deposition, witnessed by Mr. Case. The Royal Gazette was a loyalist newspaper throughout the war.




Rivington's Press Destroyed


Pennsylvania Journal, December 6, 1775


NOVEMBER 29--ON the twentieth of this month, sixteen respectable inhabitants of New Haven, Connecticut, in company with Captain Sears, set out from that place to East and West Chester, in the province of New York, to disarm the principal Tories there, and secure the persons of Parson Seabury,1 Judge Fowler, and Lord Underhill.2 On their way thither they were joined by Captains Richards, Sillick, and Mead, with about eighty men. At Mamaroneck they burnt a small sloop, which was purchased by government, for the purpose of carrying provisions on board the "ASIA." At East Chester they seized Judge Fowler, then repaired to West Chester and secured Seabury and Underhill. Having possessed themselves of these three caitiffs, they sent them to Connecticut under a strong guard. The main body, consisting of seventy-five, then proceeded to New York, where they entered at noonday on horseback, bayonets fixed, in the greatest regularity, went down the main street, and drew up in close order before the printing office of the infamous James Rivington. A small detachment entered it, and in about three-quarters of an hour brought off the principal part of his types, for which they offered to give an order on Lord Dunmore.3 They then faced and wheeled to the left, and marched out of town to the tune of Yankee Doodle. A vast concourse of people assembled at the Coffee House, on their leaving the ground, and gave them three very hearty cheers.

On their way home they disarmed all the Tories that lay on their route, and yesterday arrived at New Haven, escorted by a great number of gentlemen from the westward, the whole making a very grand procession. Upon their entrance into town they were saluted with the discharge of two cannon, and received by the inhabitants with every mark of approbation and respect. The company divided into two parts, and concluded the day in festivity and innocent mirth. Captain Sears returned in company with the other gentlemen, and proposes to spend the winter at New Haven, unless public business should require his presence at New York. Seabury, Underhill, and Fowler, three of the dastardly protesters against the proceedings of the Continental Congress, and who it is believed had concerted a plan for kidnapping Captain Sears, and conveying him on board the ASIA man-of-war, are (with the types and arms) safely lodged in New Haven, where it is expected Lord Underhill will have leisure to form the scheme of a lucrative lottery, the tickets of which cannot be counterfeited; and Parson Seabury sufficient time to compose sermons for the next Continental fast.4

1 Samuel Seabury, D. D., first Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States. He was born in 1728; graduated at Yale College in 1751, and visited England to study medicine, but relinquished that study for that of the ministry. He was first settled at Brunswick, (New Jersey,) then at Jamaica, on Long Island, and afterwards in Westchester, New York. After the commencement of the war, he fled to New York City, where he remained until the declaration of peace. In November, 1784, he was consecrated as bishop of the Episcopal Church of Connecticut, and for many years after discharged the duties of the office at New London, in Connecticut. He died in 1796.
2 Nathaniel Underhill, Mayor of Westchester.
3 See account of the seizure of Holt’s types, &c., at Virginia; October 7, 1775 (Volume I, Chapter III).
4 Pennsylvania Journal, December 6: --The following recantation of Judge Fowler is printed in the same paper: --Whereas I, Jonathan Fowler, Esq., one of his Majesty’s Judges of the Inferior Court for the County of Westchester, in the Province of New York, did some time ago sign a protest against the Honorable Continental Congress, which inconsiderate conduct I am heartily sorry for, and do hereby promise for the future not to transgress in the view of the people of this continent, nor in any sense to oppose the measures taken by the Continental Congress.
I do also certify, that some time past being at Court at the White Plains, I heard a person say, whom several people present believed to be a lieutenant or midshipman of the Asia, man-of-war, that the captain of the Asia intended to take Captain Sears up, and that there soon would be delivered (gratis) from on board the man-of-war, great quantities of paper money in imitation of Continental currency, which would be printed with the types taken from Mr. Holt, of Virginia. As witness my hand, JONATHAN FOWLER.



General Lee’s Oath


Middlesex Journal, February 15, 1776


LAST Monday, General Lee arrived from Cambridge, at Newport, Rhode Island, attended by his guard, a party of riflemen, and the cadet company of Providence. While there he called before him a number of obnoxious persons, to whom he tendered an oath, of fidelity to the country, which was taken by all of them excepting Colonel Joseph Warton, Jr., Nicholas Lechmere, and Richard Beale, the two last custom-house officers, who refused taking it; upon which, they were put under guard and sent to Providence.1

The following copy of the oath imposed by General Lee, is submitted to the public, who will judge how far it is consistent with that liberty, independence, and right of private judgment, which the Americans pretend they are contending for:

"I, .., here, in the presence of Almighty God, as I hope for ease, honor, and comfort in this world, and happiness in the world to come, most earnestly, devoutly, and religiously do swear, that I will neither directly nor indirectly assist the wicked instruments of ministerial tyranny and villany, commonly called the king’s troops and navy, by furnishing them with provisions and refreshments of any kind, unless authorized by the Continental Congress or Legislature, at present established in this particular colony of Rhode Island. I do also swear, by the tremendous and Almighty God, that I will neither directly nor indirectly convey any intelligence, nor give any advice to the aforesaid enemies described; and that I pledge myself, if I should by any accident get knowledge of such treasons, to inform immediately the committee of safety. And, as it is justly allowed that when the rights and sacred liberties of a nation or community are invaded, neutrality is not less base and criminal than open and avowed hostility, I do further swear and pledge myself, as I hope for eternal salvation, that I will, whenever called upon by the voice of the Continental Congress, or by the Legislature of this particular colony under their direction, take up arms, and subject myself to military discipline in defence of the common rights and liberties of America. So help me God."2

1 Pennsylvania Evening Post, January 16.
2 GENERAL LEE, on his arrival at New York, despatched Isaac Sears to Long Island, to administer the oath to the Tories residing there. The following first report made by Sears to Lee, is taken from George H. Moore’s work on the "Treason of Major-General Charles Lee," now in course of preparation:
JAMAICA, March 17th, 1776.
SIR, --It is a duty that I owe to my Commanr to aquaint him of my proceedings in executg the order he gave me. Yesterday afternoon I arived at Newtown, and tendered the oath to four of the grate Torries, which they swallowed as hard as if it was a four pound shot, that they ware trying to git down. On this day at 11 o’clock, I came here, whare I sent out scouting parties, and have ben able to ketch but five Torries, and they of the first rank, which swallowed the oath. The houses are so scatering it is impossible to ketch many without hosses to rid after thim. But I shall exert myself to ketch the gratest part of the ringledors, and beleve I shell effect it, but not less then five days from this time. I can asure your honor they are a set of villins in this country, and beleve the better half of them are wateing for soport and intend to take up arms against us. And it is my oppinion nothing else will do but removeing the ringledors to a place of secuerty.
From your most obt Humle Sirt
ISAAC SEARS.



New York Records Restored


October 3, 1781


Rivington, in the Royal Gazette of to-day, congratulates the public, and especially the inhabitants of the province of New York, upon the King's gracious restoration of those important records, which General Tryon's care and vigilance secured on board of the ship Duchess of Gordon, in the month of November, 1775. The general, then governor, was apprised of the wicked design to seize that inestimable treasure in the Secretary's office, (for the loss of which no money could compensate,) and to convey it to New England. And that it was upon the point of being carried into execution, by a party of the mob, headed by Sears, who has since profited so much by his plunders.

General Tryon caused such of the books to be selected as put it out of the power of almost every landholder without recourse to them, to give evidence in a court of law of the title to his estate; and these were brought off in strong boxes under locks and seals. They were earned home to England, in 1778, and lately sent back in one of the king's ships to their ancient deposit.

The residue, or general mass of papers, are among the rebels, having been first conveyed by order of the provincial Congress to Kingston, in Ulster county. Mr. Bayard, the deputy secretary, was with them, and watched over them, till the violence of the times wrested them from his hands and consigned them to others above three years ago; since which, they have been exposed to a perilous transportation from one place to another in carts.

It is impossible to say where the mischiefs would have stopped, had Sear's project succeeded, or to describe the wild confusion in property, consequent upon the access of designing villains to these records, in which all the inhabitants of this colony may find the chief links in chain of titles to their lands. It must therefore, be grateful to people of all ranks and classes, to know that these records are safe, and that due care will be taken to prevent their ever falling into the hands of the usurpers, who have already involved this country in so much misery.

Review of the Christ Clone Trilogy

The older I get, the less I enjoy surprises. It isn't so much that I like everything in life to be thoroughly planned and executed, but more that surprises are almost invariably disappointments. The Tribulation Force books surprised me. With all the praise surrounding the series, I expected more than was there. The characters were cookie-cutter heroes and villains and the plot was completely lacking in...well...surprises. It's a good and inspiring story, but its literary quality--or rather its lack of it--disappointed me. And, unfortunately, it's not alone. It is probably a good thing for the genre that there has been an almost unbroken string of apocalyptic films and novels over the last few decades. Without the constant attention, I doubt that many would think twice about the Antichrist or the Mark of the Beast. There certainly hasn't been anything memorable about any of these works individually.

Not like other genres such as romance, which has Gone With the Wind, and westerns, which have The Virginian, and fantasy, which has The Hobbit. Over my relatively short lifetime, I have read thousands of books, most of them science fiction and fantasy novels. Out of all those books there are a very few which I remember clearly--perhaps one in a few hundred. Tolkien's The Hobbit and its accompanying Lord of the Rings Trilogy; Dan Simmons' The Fall of Hyperion; Lewis' That Hideous Strength. Jewels of literature that are completely unforgettable.

That's why I really didn't expect very much when James BeauSeigneur first contacted me about his Christ Clone Trilogy. From the title, it was obviously another end-times, antichrist story. I was certain he had read my last review of an end-times novel, and, believe me, it wasn't flattering. When I saw the publisher's name, SelectiveHouse, I was impressed even less. Who is SelectiveHouse? A low budget job, for sure. The cover graphics didn't boost the books' first impression. But you know what they say about covers.

With a sigh of resignation, I sat down to begin the first of the series, In His Image. By page one sixty-seven, I already knew that I could sum up the entire series in a single word: Surprise! Apocalypse fans, here is your Hobbit. Every turn was unexpected. The characters were real. The plot was real. And never have I seen the Seven Seals broken with such clarity and imagination--if you think you know darkness, think again.

In His Image follows the life of Decker Hawthorne through the historical examination of the Shroud of Turin in 1978, three years as the hostage of Lebanese terrorists, the Disaster and the ensuing oscillations of the world through chaos, peace, and to chaos again. But to focus on Hawthorne's life is to see only one of many levels of plot. Several years after the trip to Italy, a scientist discovers live skin cells on a sample taken from the Shroud. Cloning these cells results in discoveries that lead to treatments for cancer, AIDS, and many other diseases. It also leads to Christopher Goodman.

Goodman is one of the few characters that take time to become real. At first he was very two-dimensional. With a few exceptions, his actions and dialogue were predictable. But as you watch him grow up--the first book covers a span of about 33 years--he becomes genuinely likeable. He seems a good man, through and through.

There are several characters I instinctively distrusted. Robert Milner, a New Age mystic and the Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations, and Jon Hansen, the Secretary-General, come immediately to mind. But a hallmark of a superior writer is the ability to make you see the good in the bad guys and the bad in the good guys. It's difficult for me to imagine sympathizing with anyone who would promote the United Nations, but by the end of the book I was pleasantly surprised to be thinking of Jon Hansen in the same light as Dag Hammerskjold. How do such good men come to such power in such corrupt organizations?

But the surprises don't end there. In His Image holds surprises in the characters and in their individual stories. The second book, Birth of an Age, holds surprises of a different sort. The fulfillment of the prophecies of Daniel, John, and others begin coming at a faster pace, but rarely in the form I expected. The Seventh Sign, The Stand, The Omen, and Rosemary's Baby all stand out for their complete disregard of Biblical prophecy. Tribulation Force tries to remain Biblically true, but fails for lack of depth and imagination. BeauSeigneur has no problem in either department. You can follow along in John's Revelation, but you will still not know what's coming next. Every prophecy is fulfilled in ways I would never have expected, but that, in retrospect, make so much sense. I won't pretend to be a prophecy expert, but if you subscribe to evangelical eschatology--or for that matter, even if you don't believe in prophecy at all--you won't be able to stop reading. I read the first book in about one week. I read the second book in one night, and the third, Acts of God, in another night.

Birth of an Age kept me guessing as to who were the good guys and who were the bad guys. Acts of God left no doubt. While a little wordy at times, it was fascinating to watch all the threads come together into this complex tapestry. With vast portions of the planet completely uninhabited after two nuclear wars and a series of astronomical disasters, the Beast is finally revealed.

BeauSeigneur is not a perfect writer. His form and structure isn't perfect. His characterization isn't perfect. But it's so close you might not even notice. These are some of the few books about which I can honestly say, "Wow!"

-jay carper, January 17, 2000

SelectiveHouse Publishers can be found at www.selectivehouse.com or at P.O. Box 10095, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20898, or by calling 1-800-CLONE-99 (orders only, please).