Friday, November 16, 2018

The Friday 56: Elevation by Stephen King




Rules

Grab a book, any book.
Turn to page 56 or 56% in your eReader.
Find any sentence, (or few, just don't spoil it).
Post it.
 Add your (url) post below in the Linky at: www.fredasvoice.com
Add the post url, not your blog url.




"That subject is closed. What needs to be closed is your behavior. We don't need you standing up for us in the local grease-pit, and restarting a lot of talk that had just begun to die down."

page 56, Elevation by Stephen King


  My Thoughts

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

DVD Review - Buffalo Girls


Mill Creek Entertainment * Amazon

Do remember when CBS cranked out one Larry McMurtry miniseries after another?

While I do recall the Lonesome Dove miniseries and its sequels/prequels, I have never seen any of them. And I have never read any of the books they are adapted from. The only Larry McMurtry novels I have ever read are the four books in The Berrybender Narratives.

Mill Creek Entertainment recently released Buffalo Girls (NR; 182 minutes; $14.98) to DVD + Digital, which is a 1995 two-part miniseries based on the 1990 novel of the same name by Larry McMurtry. Directed by Rod Hardy, the miniseries starred Anjelica Houston, Melanie Griffith, Sam Elliott, Gabriel Byrne, and Reba McEntire.

Buffalo Girls is the fictionalized story based on the real-life Calamity Jane (played by Anjelica Houston), a woman who dressed, talked, and acted liked a cowboy. She's most famous for being "linked" to Wild Bill Hickok (played by Sam Elliott in the miniseries). In McMurtry's version, Calamity gave birth to a daughter after Hickok was murdered and later gave the child to a British couple.

Part One of the miniseries centers around Calamity, who regrets giving up her daughter, and Dora DuFran (played by Melanie Griffith), a madam of a brothel/hotel in Deadwood, who has an on-again off-again relationship with Ted Blue (played by Gabriel Byrne). Part Two mostly centers around Calamity joining  Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, which takes her, along with her friends Bartle Bone (played by Jack Palance) and Jim Ragg (played by Tracey Walter), to England, where she gets to visit her young daughter.


Final Thoughts

Facts About DCC




At the heart of any DCC station is the command center. Many people who are new to this technology may not know the facts behind these devices so this article will be a basic breakdown. A throttle command sends signals which are relayed to the main device. The device then proceeds to process the signals and then after this, they create a standardized packet of DCC information that is then sent to the decoders on the main unit. The DCC command center does not do any of the actual work, they are more or less there to direct traffic.

When DCC was first created, the devices were of a standalone nature. There were two pieces that were essential to the technology and the success of the device. These were the command center and the booster. Connected to the command station was the throttle network. The booster connected itself to the command station output. The output that the booster put forth was connected to the DCC track. However, in the early 1990s, there was a new invention in that the two separate units were combined into one single device. By blending them into one single device, the cost of the technology was actually reduced by about 20%. The nickname of the command station was used in conjunction with this new integrated device and subsequently stuck.

The only drawback was that the nce DCC command station needed a booster to actually operate. This when a further integrated unit, one which combined the booster into the command center, was invented. This new technology went a long way toward maximizing power.

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Tuesday Picks!



Welcome to my Tuesday Picks! post, where I'll be picking out my favorite books and movies that are being released this week.


Books

 

The Noel Stranger 

by Richard Paul Evans 

BARNES & NOBLE

Power Rangers: The Ultimate Visual History

by  Ramin Zahed and Jody Revenson 

BARNES & NOBLE

Then She Was Gone 

by Lisa Jewell

BARNES & NOBLE

My Thoughts

I don't know where Richard Paul Evans comes with with all his holiday romance stories, but here he is with another another book, The Noel Stranger. I'll probably send a request to the publisher about reviewing the book. 

Power Rangers: The Ultimate Visual History looks like a fun coffee table book, if you're a Power Rangers fan.

Then She Was Gone by Lisa Jewell looks like an intriguing thriller.


 Movies / TV Series


Monday, November 12, 2018

It's Monday! What Are You Reading?

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? is a weekly meme 
hosted by The Book Date.


What Am I Currently Reading?



I just started reading the eBook Lizzie Borden, Zombie Hunter 2: The Axe Will Fall by C.A. Verstraete.


I'm still reading American Mirror: The Life and Art of Norman Rockwell by Deborah Soloman. I'm currently on page 50.


What am I reading next?

Review - 18 Wheels of Science Fiction

*This is a sponsored post. All opinions are 100% mine.

312 pages; $14.99; Amazon
I've only read a handful of science fiction novels during my lifetime. While I don't mind watching a good science fiction movie, I'm just not really into the reading books set in the genre, except for the occasional anthology, like the recently released 18 Wheels of Science Fiction.

Published by Big Time Books and edited by Eric Miller, 18 Wheels of Science Fiction features 18 short stories about futuristic truck driving.


Here's the official blurb from the back cover:

An alien fuel additive shows just how fast a big rig can go... A disembodied driver wages war on self-driving trucks... A haul through time takes an unexpected turn... Reality shatters for a trucker using an experimental delivery device... Stargazing gives an overweight driver a new lease on life... A young girl risks her life to hitch a ride out of an apocalyptic wasteland...

Take a trip through the imaginations of 18 visionary writers as they explore the future of trucking in these speculative tales. The highways of the universe will never be the same.

The short stories are:

The Wreckers 
by John DeChancie

Speed Trap 
by Jeff Seeman

Thin Ice
by Bond Elam

Q-Bits
by Lucio Rodriguez

I, Truck
by Gary Phillips

Over Flat Mountain
by Terry Bisson

Wheels Of Wrath
by Janet Joyce Holden

Shotgun Seat
by Paul Carlson

Job No. 34264
by Lisa Morton

Essential Oils
by Michael Bailey

Big Rig, Big Rip
by Alvaro Zinos-Armaro

A Flicker of Bright Light
by Del Howison

Hit/Run
by Edward M. Erdelac

Everything Looks So Small
by Carla Robinson

Silent Passenger
by Kate Jonez

Indica Asterion & The Wizard Of Ozymandias
by Sean Patrick Traver

Human, Trafficking
by Michael Paul Gonzalez

Drive
by Eric Miller

Final Thoughts

Sunday, November 11, 2018

Sunday Post: November 11, 2018

Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by Kimberly @  Caffeinated Book Reviewer!


Good Evening, Everyone!


My Current Reads!

Last week was an extremely busy week for me. Between running errands, taking care of my grandmother's issues, my television dying, and planning Thanksgiving dinner, I decided to redesign this blog, which took me 36+ hours to complete. Since I didn't have any free time, I made the decision to delay last week's reading schedule.

Books on my agenda this week are: Lizzie Borden, Zombie Hunter 2:The Axe Will Fall by C.A. Verstraete, Elevation by Stephen King, and Girls of Paper and Fire by Natasha Ngan.

I had planned on reading Lizzie Borden 2 and Elevation last week, but those were the two main books I shoved aside in order to work on the blog's redesign. 

Reading Update

I haven't opened up American Mirror: The Life and Art of Norman Rockwell since last Sunday, so I'm still on page 50.

 

Last Week's Reviews

(book)

(Blu-ray)

(DVD)

(Blu-ray Steelbook)

 

In The Mail