Blogcritics Editors' Picks - July 30 to Aug. 5

Part of: Editors' Picks

(For the week of July 30 to Aug. 5)

Picks - we got 'em.

If you are listed below, please feel free to use the button below on your own site for picks this week. Right click this image to get the URL. gif first, jpg second

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(See here for our selection guidelines.)

" You cannot build character and courage by taking away a man's initiative and independence." — Abraham Lincoln

"Sandwich every bit of criticism between two thick layers of praise." — Mary Kay Ash

CULTURE/TECH | VIDEO | BOOKS | MUSIC | POLITICS

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CULTURE/ TECH Lisa Hoover's picks of the week.

A Little Pop Culture from the Week Just Passed – by Patfish, Aug. 5
Anyone with a 15-inch waist deserves a second look.

Some of The Best Posts on Blogcritics – by Aaman Lamba, Aug. 4.
If you can’t find something great to read on this list, then you’re just not trying.

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POLITICS Lisa Iannucci's picks of the week.
--- NONE PICKED ---

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VIDEO: Eric Berlin's pick of the week.

Region 1 DVD Releases for 2nd August 2005 by David Thomas, Aug. 1.
After the Duke resigned from writing up annotations and anecdotes related to the weekly DVD release rundown, I depaired. But the despair has turned over to joy, as David Thomas rocks a nimble and nifty take on everything from ancient empires to ancient sitcoms.

John Waters: A look at His Career - the Good, the Bad and the Ugly (Divine in a Dress) by Gena, Aug. 2.
This bright and shiny look back on John Waters' career is definitely no drag. Okay, bad joke, but read the review anyway!

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BOOKS: Pat Cummings' picks of the week
WARREN KELLY (Asst. Books Editor filling in for Pat Cummings, who is suffering from a fried computer. Not tasty.)

Abundance: Prayer For Profit by gypsyman, Aug. 2.
Anyone who is attempting to show the Word of Faith/"name it, claim it" heresy for what it is deserves mention. This belief system is a cancer in Christianity, and gypsyman calls it as he (and many others) sees it.

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Article Author: Temple Stark

A graphic designing wordsmith, with a decade-plus career in community journalism behind me. Take a mean photo, have a new camera, and have been riding the wave of Twitter for more than a year.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Joanie

    Aug 08, 2005 at 2:31 am

    Thanks, Temple. You gotta listen to the whole version of "Love Hurts" to get just how gutsy of a move it was for Little Milton to take on the song. (I actually like it and I'm a die-hard Nazareth fan from way back.)

  • 2 - Al Barger

    Aug 08, 2005 at 2:56 am

    Thanks Temple. It's always good to get a little recognition for my efforts.

  • 3 - Aaman

    Aug 08, 2005 at 9:01 am

    This is one of the best selections of editors' picks - and not just because I'm in it - fine reading herein, folks.

    I also recommend The Duke's IRA-related moonage daydreams

  • 4 - Matt Paprocki

    Aug 08, 2005 at 9:23 am

    Wow. I didn't think that inteview was anything special. Thanks!

    And why the Killing Stone question?

  • 5 - Temple Stark

    Aug 08, 2005 at 9:35 am

    For this site, (almost) any interview is special. Add to that, Bryan's a big name. As I stated I like seeing what other people ask. With most of the interviews done for newspaper journalism the questions are silent. I just liked your questions and wanted to pick one and that was one.

  • 6 - gypsyman

    Aug 08, 2005 at 3:13 pm

    Wow, thanks so very much both Wally and Temple. Quite an honour to picked twice in one week.

    Maybe I should have been switched to pending long ago, and had editing help. Thanks to those editors with the patience to deal with my backwards brain.

    Oh and on a Love Hurts note: You haven't lived until you hear Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris' duet of that song. Of course Lisa left a comment in my Emmylou review that she and Elvis Costello did it together in concert. I hope someone somewhere recorded that moment.

    gypsyman

  • 7 - Pam Avoledo

    Aug 08, 2005 at 8:44 pm

    Thanks, Temple! I'm glad you enjoyed it!

  • 8 - Aaron, Duke De Mondo

    Aug 08, 2005 at 9:51 pm

    yet more reasons for keep a fella glued to blogcritics. and Aaman, thanks a lot, man, for that nod right there!

  • 9 - behzad

    Aug 17, 2005 at 2:49 pm

    Dear Editor ;


    I noticed that blogcritics online has a book review section, I wanted to introduce "The Quince Seed Potion". The Quince Seed Potion is a novel by Morteza Baharloo ,Published by Bridge Works Publishing . I am looking for the process of having a book review/author interview in your book review section based on this novel. Would you mind letting me know about this process ?
    The Quince Seed Potion , set against the backdrop of Iran's turbulent modern history, is a saga of an indentured servant's devotion and love for his masters during the years 1928 to 1981. The changes in the fortunes of the protagonist, Sarveali Jokar, as he dedicates his life to serving the Shirlu khans, great rural landowners and farmers, mirror the changes in Iran and the disintegration of the wealth and power of the family dynasty as the Islamic Revolution of 1979 unfolds.

    Sarveali, like his country, experiences violence and humiliation, recounted in a series of episodes reminiscent of Tales of the Arabian Nights. In the face of contempt and cruelty, he remains loyal to his masters, the only family he ever knows, through their own travails. His homoerotic affection for his favorite master and boyhood companion, Teimour Khan, although rejected, sustains Sarveali through the years. His adventures, including marriage to a cousin, her repeated promiscuity and eventual murder, his opium addiction and imprisonment, recall the ups and downs of Voltaire’s Candide. As the Khans are forced into exile or assassinated and Iran is transformed from a monarchy to an Islamic state, the reader is asked to decide if Sarveali's selfless life is totally tragic or suggests a kind of redemption for both the servant and his country.

    Morteza Baharloo was born in Iran in 1961, emigrated to the U.S. in 1978, and now lives in Houston, Texas. He is chairman and co-founder of Healix, Ltd., a 400-employee international provider of pharmaceutical and health-care services, based in Texas. He returns periodically to Iran, where he is restoring rural estates built by his grandfather and great uncles in the 1920s.

    The Quince Seed Potion :
    The household cock crowed, heralding the exact moment when darkness surrendered to dawn, just as two tiny limbs emerged from the laboring woman's dark orifice. The semi-somnolence of Fatima, the Bald Doula, shattered. “I see them!” she yelled. “I see them! I see them!” she repeated, as if competing with the noisy cock. The collective shouting of the female spectators blended with the painful cries of the woman now deep in labor, and the clamor of preadolescent girls who were present to observe their own procreative destinies. As the neighboring cocks crowed in concert, the doula turned her attention from the spectators in the cramped room to the laboring woman. What the doula saw terrified her...
    For more information please, visit : www.mortezabaharloo.com
    Would you mind letting me know about your book review process ?
    Sincerely Yours,
    Behzad

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