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Starred Up (DVD)
Jack O'Connell, Ben Mendelsohn, Sam Spruell, Rupert Friend, David Ajala, …
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David MacKenzie directs this British drama in which a troubled
teenager and his father bond in the unusual surroundings of a
prison. 19-year-old Eric (Jack O'Connell) has had an extremely
difficult childhood. Taken into care after the death of his mother
and the sentencing of his father (Ben Mendelsohn), Eric's
subsequent struggles with authority are highlighted by the fact
that he has been 'starred up' from juvenile prison to the real
thing, despite his tender years. Eric is happy with the outcome,
though, as it gives him a chance to reconnect with his father and
to demonstrate his toughness. However, with certain prison wardens
not averse to using extreme violence to enforce order and protect
others, Eric may have to tread carefully and pay attention to the
calming words of his father if he is to make it out of the facility
in one piece.
Jack O'Connell possessed an uncanny ability to be at the center of
things. On his arrival in Jordan in 1958, he unraveled a coup aimed
at the young King Hussein, who would become America's most reliable
Middle East ally. Over time, their bond of trust and friendship
deepened. His narrative contains secrets that will revise our
understanding of the Middle East. In 1967, O'Connell tipped off
Hussein that Israel would invade Egypt the next morning. Later, as
Hussein's Washington counselor, O'Connell learned of Henry
Kissinger's surprising role in the Yom Kippur War. The book's
leitmotif is betrayal. Hussein, the Middle East's only bona fide
peacemaker, wanted simply the return of the West Bank, seized in
the Six-Day War. Despite American promises, the clear directive of
UN Resolution 242, and the years of secret negotiations with
Israel, that never happened. Hussein's dying wish was that
O'Connell tell the unknown story in this book.
Jack O'Connell was not the most popular guy in high school. After
failing miserably at fitting in with his peers, Jack made a promise
to himself as he entered college-to become better at meeting girls.
Surviving the College Game details Jack's personal journey from
battling low self-esteem to achieving successful social
interactions with female students. As Jack shares the lessons and
realizations he discovered while on the long road to gaining
confidence, he chronicles how he eventually learned to implement a
system that allowed him to take chances, look girls in the eye,
enjoy a fun and entertaining conversation, build curiosity, dance
with the best of them, and become true to himself in the process.
Through his openly honest and revealing anecdotes, Jack shares both
his social successes and failures during his first two years in
college. From initiating his first real pick-up of a brown-eyed
girl to making out with multiple girls in one night to
transitioning from the friend zone into something more, Jack's
experiences will be relatable to any young male ready to change his
life into an amazing and fun journey.
Why would two Eastern European meatboys want to whack an innocent
cab driver? That's the question that occurs to Gilrein as Raban and
Blumfeld press the gun barrel into his mouth. Does it have
something to do with the ritual death-by-flencing of Leo Tani? Or
does the answer involve Gilrein's ex-lover, now working as a
librarian for a bibliomaniac gangster. Or maybe the whole thing has
something to do with the Inspector, inventor of the notorious
Methodology? And how does Bobby Oster figure in the mix, with his
crew of murder-for-hire rogue cops who call themselves The
Magicians? To find the answers, Gilrein will drive the night
streets of his hometown and face down more than one demon from his
past. From the Vacuum, where child-artists are held captive in veal
pens and forced to forge graphic novels, to the Houdini Lounge,
where the second annual immigrant death-match is being marketed,
Gilrein will wander the underworld, collecting stories and looking
for absolution. In the end, he'll brush up against "Alicia's Tale"
and learn new truths about the terrifying negotiations always
taking place between the storyteller and the audience in the city
of Quinsigamond.
The scene is Quinsigamond, a decaying New England factory town, a
model locale of turn-of-the-century chaos. An activist priest meets
a grisly death in his own cathedral. The crime has all the
hallmarks of a routine Bangkok Park gang killing. But the perp is
no everyday low-life but a demented ex-FBI agent named Speer in
search of the jammers, particularly the infamous O'Zebedee brothers
who have been hijacking local radio airwaves with their singular
brand of subversive diatribe. Detective Hannah Shaw, Bangkok Park's
undisputed overseer, tracks Speer's enraged quest to Wireless, the
funky retro-radio nightclub and epicentre of the diverse jammer
subculture. Shaw and/or the Wireless crew must stop the defrocked
Fed or fall prey to a campaign of censorship, violence and death.
A stunningly original nightmare novel about the impact of a new
synthetic drug - Lingo - on the depressed New England factory town
of Quinsigamond, where it was secretly developed. Besides offering
a potent high, Lingo also delivers a shot to the brain cells
governing linguistic comprehension and verbal skill. Until
murderous rages and babbling insanity take over, this
mind-expanding feature makes the drug dangerously seductive to the
unusually literate cops, scientists and dope dealers competing to
find its distribution source. Written in the cranked up style of
Lingo, Box Nine shows a noir vision of a city that has become a
virtual war zone between warring multi-ethnic drug cartels. The
narrative shifts from one head case to another but never loses
sight of Det. Lenore Thomas, an undercover officer addicted to
speed, rough sex, heavy metal and the feel of her .357 Magnum. A
dark, disturbing book that speaks with a fine fury about the
yearning for forbidden knowledge and the language to articulate the
mysteries it unlocks...
Your only child is lost between this world and the next, and more
than anything you want him back. A controversial doctor and a
mysterious stranger claim they have the answer. Who do you trust?
Are you willing to risk everything? Are you prepared to enter
Limbo? Part classic noir thriller, part mind-bending fantasy, The
Resurrectionist is a wild ride into a territory where nothing is as
it appears. It is the story of Sweeney, a druggist by trade, and
his son, Danny, the victim of an accident that has left him in a
persistent coma. Hoping for a miracle, they have come to the
forbidding, fortress-like Peck Clinic, whose doctors claim to have
'resurrected' other patients who were lost in the void. What
Sweeney comes to realize, however, is that the real cure for his
son's condition may lie in Limbo, a fantasy comic book world into
which his son had been drawn at the time of his accident. Plunged
into the intrigue that envelops the clinic, Sweeney's search for
answers leads to sinister back alleys, brutal dead ends, and
terrifying corners of darkness and mystery. With The
Resurrectionist, Jack O'Connell has crafted a breakout thriller
that's gripping, suspenseful, and all-out heart-pounding.
A harrowing and ecstatic descent into a breathtaking netherworld
aswirl with the real, the imagined and the absolutely
unforgettable. Amid the post industrial decay of Quinsigamond
glitters a fabulous jewel - Herzog's Erotic Palace - America's most
lavish porn theatre and a gangland laundry for semi-sour cash. But
most of all, Herzog's is the place where dreamers meet and
seductive nightmares find their dazzling realisation. For the
obsessed grunge auteur, the heartsick crime king, the apocalyptic
tele-evangelist and the young woman intent on a capturing a
shrouded past and an onrushing future within a camera's lens, The
Skin Palace will reveal all secrets, in a script fraught with
danger and feverish transformation.
A narcotics detective wages war against a deadly new stimulant The
drug is called Lingo, and it's the most powerful narcotic Lenore
has ever seen. This cheaply manufactured pill races straight for
the brain's language center, supercharging it so that even a
dimwitted person can speak and read at 1,500 words per minute. It
induces giddiness, confidence, and sexual euphoria-with a side
effect of murderous rage. The drug has come to Quinsigamond, a
fading industrial center in the heart of Massachusetts, and it's
going to tear this town apart. Lenore believes she can stop that
from happening. A narcotics detective with a few addictions of her
own-amphetamines and heavy metal, to name a couple-she loves
nothing more than her gun, until she meets Dr. Frederick Woo, the
linguist assisting her on the case. Together they can stop the
drug-if it doesn't take hold of them first. "Stunningly original .
. . Jack O'Connell's vision is spellbinding: by turns hilarious and
terrifying." -James Ellroy "This dark, disturbing book . . . speaks
with a fine fury about the yearning for forbidden knowledge and the
language to articulate the mysteries it unlocks." -The New York
Times "Strong stuff, all right: O'Connell gets so deep inside his
small-town cast that it''s a relief to turn the last page." -Kirkus
Reviews Jack O'Connell (b. 1959) is the author of five critically
acclaimed, New York Times bestselling crime novels. Born in
Worcester, Massachusetts, O'Connell's earliest reading was the dime
novel paperbacks and pulp fiction sold in his corner drug store,
whose hard-boiled attitude he carried over to his own writing. He
has cited his hometown's bleak, crumbling infrastructure as an
influence on Quinsigamond, the fictional city where his first four
novels were set, and whose decaying industrial landscape served as
a backdrop for strange thrillers which earned O'Connell the
nickname of a "cyberpunk Dashiell Hammett." O'Connell's most recent
novel was The Resurrectionist (2008). A former student at
Worcester's College of the Holy Cross, he now teaches there, not
far from where he and his family live just outside of his hometown.
Jack O'Connell was not the most popular guy in high school. After
failing miserably at fitting in with his peers, Jack made a promise
to himself as he entered college-to become better at meeting girls.
Surviving the College Game details Jack's personal journey from
battling low self-esteem to achieving successful social
interactions with female students. As Jack shares the lessons and
realizations he discovered while on the long road to gaining
confidence, he chronicles how he eventually learned to implement a
system that allowed him to take chances, look girls in the eye,
enjoy a fun and entertaining conversation, build curiosity, dance
with the best of them, and become true to himself in the process.
Through his openly honest and revealing anecdotes, Jack shares both
his social successes and failures during his first two years in
college. From initiating his first real pick-up of a brown-eyed
girl to making out with multiple girls in one night to
transitioning from the friend zone into something more, Jack's
experiences will be relatable to any young male ready to change his
life into an amazing and fun journey.
From crimes of heart and crimes of violence, A CITY EQUAL TO MY
DESIRE effortlessly guides you through the narrows of human
existence in all its forms. In this selection of new stories, James
Sallis, author of the acclaimed Lew Griffin series of detective
novels, both entertains and engages the mind with stories that will
linger in memory long after they've been experienced. "Sallis wants
to take your experience of the world, mutate it to the edge of
recognition, and then deliver it back before your eyes like a coin
pulled from behind your earlobe. And in this way, he makes you see
and feel, all over again, the meaning, the beauty-and, pointedly
sometimes, the horror-of being human." Jack O'Connell from his
introduction
From crimes of heart and crimes of violence, A CITY EQUAL TO MY
DESIRE effortlessly guides you through the narrows of human
existence in all its forms. In this selection of new stories, James
Sallis, author of the acclaimed Lew Griffin series of detective
novels, both entertains and engages the mind with stories that will
linger in memory long after they've been experienced. "Sallis wants
to take your experience of the world, mutate it to the edge of
recognition, and then deliver it back before your eyes like a coin
pulled from behind your earlobe. And in this way, he makes you see
and feel, all over again, the meaning, the beauty-and, pointedly
sometimes, the horror-of being human." Jack O'Connell from his
introduction
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