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How Silicon Valley, the dark net, and digital culture have affected
our relationship to knowledge, history, language, aesthetics,
reading, and truth. In October 2013, twenty-nine-year-old Ross
William Ulbricht was arrested at the Glen Park Public Branch
Library in San Francisco, accused of being the "Dread Pirate
Roberts" and mastermind of a dark net drug marketplace known as
Silk Road. Ulbricht was an ardent libertarian who believed Silk
Road-described by the New York Times as "the largest, most
sophisticated criminal enterprise the internet has ever seen"-was
battling the forces of big government. He was convicted two years
later of money laundering, computer hacking, and conspiracy to
traffic narcotics and sentenced to life in prison. Art historian
Pamela Lee reads this event as a fairy tale of disruption rather
than an isolated episode in the history of the dark net, Silicon
Valley, and the relationship between public libraries and digital
culture. Lee argues that the notion of "disruptive" technology in
contemporary culture has radically affected our relationship to
knowledge, history, language, aesthetics, reading, and truth.
Against the backdrop of her account of Ulbricht and his exploits,
Lee provides original readings of five women artists-Gretchen
Bender, Cecile B. Evans, Josephine Pryde, Carissa Rodriguez, and
Martine Syms-who weigh in, either explicitly or inadvertently, on
the nature of contemporary media and technology. Written as a work
of experimental art criticism, The Glen Park Library is both a
homage to the Bay Area and an excoriation of the ethos of Silicon
Valley. As with all fairy tales, the book's ultimate subjects are
much greater, however, and Lee casts a critical eye on collisions
between privacy and publicity, knowledge and information, and the
past and future that are enabled by the technocratic worldview.
Holy Snappin' Trilogy Synopsis-Book 1 Call me J. Contemporary
historical events and pop-cultural reminders abound and mingle with
the lives of this 'seemingly' typical Boomer family in this first
book of the family chronicle trilogy as it delves in deeply,
helping the reader fall in love with each character of the Magyar
family. Father Max is a first generation Hungarian Canadian. Mother
Lily a fierce and loving spirit. The five children are as unique
and varied as a box of crayons with protagonist, Annalee introduced
in the Prologue as she spends mysterious moments in a Gypsy
tent-her life laid out before this cloistered teen. The imagery and
sometimes minute detail pull the reader in, engaging them from the
beginning 'til the last breathless words on the last page of this
fat read of Book 1, Call me J. Often, pre-publish readers point out
they were, themselves, brought back and firmly planted again in
THEIR lives in those dozens of moments in time the authour
highlights and peppers throughout the novel. Remembering when.
Example--what DID happen in the average household after the J.F.K.
assassination? How DID parents react? Initially, in chapter one and
into chapter two, the manuscript reads like an idyllic and charming
sitcom of the "happy-days' of a 7 member gentleman farmer's family.
Reality sets in in chapter three, "Nice guys finish last' when a
graphically described tragic, dramatic happening lands on too many
laps, bringing to bear how close-knit if not close proximity clans
circle their wagons when the chips are down. Annalee begins to
journal in earnest here and speaks her mind in spades. Chapter
four, 'Lily's in the Valley', will have readers thinking.."OMG I
cannot IMAGINE I couldn't COPE if that happened to OUR family "
Chapter 5 brings unwanted new beginnings, leading the reader to a
place where they cannot WAIT for book 2. Spanning and including
over 50 years, this funny, forthright, down-to-earth but
melodramatic chronicle begins in the early stages in protagonist
Annalee's family's lives, with the infamous Hurricane Hazel of 1954
as it swept through HER place in life, taking young child Annie
right on through to her stormy mid-thirties in Book 1, Call me J
where Annie has found her Prince in shining amour, birthed three
children; two who, with the aid of father Robert, are in hot
pursuit of eventual NHL fame. Within the trilogy, the author takes
a naive high school dropout country gal on unexpected journeys so
varied as to be pooh-poohed as unlikely in one lifetime. Annie,
born different from her sibs with a soul set on flight-mode more
often than not, still happily approaches a decided future settled
in a small manufacturing town in southwestern Ontario, Canada. She
ventures, instead, to a life of magical adventure. Or misadventure.
Reader's choice. This honest, memoir-style trilogy will have you
saying NO WAY again and again as you follow Annie through a
lifespan that brings her and hers many more ups and downs than you
would expect in a typical dramatic narrative. This manuscript
brings itin multiples. Put twenty people in a room; all will have
had something immense touch their lives. It could be murder,
interference and the potential horrors of stranger danger,
disfigurement, addictions, violent domestic breakdowns and other
tragedies. Or windfalls, exotic locales, puppies on Christmas
morning, found loves and tight family circles. Annie Bell and her
clan can claim ownership to all 20 of those biggies. Or 30.Or more.
All this you will find within the pages of this saga as you lose
yourself in Annalee's story. Settings: Central and Eastern Canada,
Sarasota, Florida and beyond
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