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Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: freeus who wrote (1131)11/23/1999 11:16:00 PM
From: Drew Williams  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12231
 
I was just digging around AMAZON.COM to see what was new and found GREENHOUSE SUMMER, by Norman Spinrad, a very well respected SF author.

amazon.com

Reviews
From Booklist , November 1, 1999
The future isn't much fun, even for the rich, in old sf hand Spinrad's satiric ecothriller portraying a time after the ice caps have melted and raised sea levels worldwide. A sort of prosperity has crept over Siberia, one of the few areas where agriculture is possible. New York City survives behind a high sea wall; no one can afford the rent, but seafood is plentiful. Third World countries at the Equator (the "Lands of the Lost") are hot, dry, and poor, suitable only for the cultivation of marijuana in domes by First World "syndics." None of this matters, however. "Condition Venus" is imminent, in which the planet will suddenly become so hot that all life will boil away. Monique Calhoun--scientist, pampered First Worlder, and reluctant employee of the syndic Bread and Circuses--rushes to save the world, along with an unlikely assassin, "Prince" Eric Esterhazy. The two are almost a love story, but love stories are beside the point in Spinrad's caustic, gleeful, meticulously modeled scenario of doom. John Mort
Copyright¸ 1999, American Library Association. All rights reserved
From Kirkus Reviews
Global-meltdown yarn, part satire, part political comedy, part sober admonition, from the Paris-resident author of Russian Spring (1991), etc. Thanks to global warming, deserts are spreading, coasts are flooded, and icecaps are melting, but Siberia has blossomed into the most prosperous region on the planet. Scientists predict the onset of a runaway-greenhouse Condition Venus that will render Earth uninhabitable. The ineffectual annual UN climate conference moves to tropical Paris. But this year, the sponsors (the Big Blue Machine, the unreconstructed capitalists who run the planet) have hired Bread & Circuses to handle spin and gloss, and are providing lavish funding. Monique Calhoun of Bread & Circuses is told by Big Blue bosses to hire a party riverboat owned by the Bad Boys, a benevolent outgrowth of mafias, triads, and drug barons, fronted by Eric Esterhazy. The boat's crawling with surveillance devices. The Bad Boys agree to a joint party with Bread & Circuses, each hoping to spy on the other's clients, while Monique and Eric attempt to seduce one another in a complicated game of bluff and counterbluff. Clearly, the Big Blue Machine is desperate to grab Siberian money for their climate control schemes -- but to save their own financial hides, or to save the planet? For all his eccentricities, this time he's too obviously infatuated with Paris. Spinrad has a social conscience and isnt afraid to exercise it in public. The upshot's often shapeless, but funny, caustic, and dead on target. -- Copyright ¸1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.



To: freeus who wrote (1131)11/23/1999 11:33:00 PM
From: freeus  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12231
 
A Thanksgiving letter to myself (and anyone else who wants to "listen")

This, my favorite holiday of the year, is a tribute to gratitude. Thank you, Silicon Investor.
I joined S.I. in December, 1996, a raw newcomer to investing in stocks, fresh from mutual funds. I held 3 individual stocks (Coca Cola, McDonalds, Sara Lee) because as Peter Lynch suggested I "knew" them.
My first ventures into semi-unknown were U.S. Robotics (I knew what a modem was) and North American Scientific (I didnt know much about prostrate troubles).From the sublime to the ridiculous perhaps with USRX about as hot as a stock could get, and NASI still a BB stock. The USRX thread was my first S.I. home, and what a kind, supportive group they were. I can't imagine a better place to start posting. They were like family, and ready to accept newcomers cheerily. (And often "off topic") USRX was a roller coaster up 8 down 7 in a single day type of stock.
I'm dramatic anyway and the drama of that stock's movement engaged my emotions which went up and down with the price. Through it all, steadier members of the thread supported and comforted me. I held that stock until the dreaded merger with 3Com.
Not so with NASI which would have been my first 10 bagger. Even after visiting the company's plant, and being very impressed with management and execution, I was not sure enough of it and got out one day before a large movement up. (How come its always the same day or next day that things I buy go down and things I sell go up?)
After that mistake, I took on short time buying of split candidates and pre-splitting stocks. That stumbled me onto the Dell Computer thread where the cheerleader Kemble urged me to hold not trade Dell (as did Tim Luke). The Dell thread became my cyber home. I had friendships,tutorials and even a one year romance there. I made every mistake new investors make, violently vacillating from joy to dispair and selling low only to buy back high! Through it all, my portfolio was somehow growing and I began to venture ino the world of MARGIN.
Through ensuing hope, dispair and excitement new S.I. friends counselled, cajoled and mentored me. There was always someone to teach me new slants of investing-Leaps, covered calls and selling puts. I learned about Brown & Co from other clients. I heard (still not sure I Learned) about emerging and changing technology from knowledgeable (and not so) people working in the industries or using the technology. I learned about valuation and 10 k's. When I emoted strongly, for every poster who said "that doesnt belong here" came 2 public and 3 or 4 private messages saying "Keep writing: I often feel like that too but can't express it". When I thought (and wrote) that being female predisposed me to acting emotionally in stocks, males wrote and assured me they went through that too.
Now I think I have an investment style and strategy that works (Gorilla investing, based on the book "Gorilla Game" by Moore) and aided by the Gorilla and King thread here at S.I.
To all who post and all who lurk: thank you! To everyone who helped and help me..thank you!. To all the friends I've made here-thank you. I even thank the people who get annoyed: after all controversy makes the site more fun when you get down to it.
And to Brad, Jeff and Jill- a gigantic thank you for making all this possible with your vision and carry through in entreprenauring, as our t shirts say, www.techstocks.com

Happy Thanksgiving to all:
Freeus