WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
In the meantime, though, don't worry. We're just going to
In the meantime, though, don't worry. We're just going to keep it short.
"The best books, by any standard, are the best science fiction novels ever written," notes Mike. "They're written in English, of course, but it's the best science fiction novels for the time being."
And if you're a writer of all things science fiction, there's nothing we can't do for you if you want to keep up.
(Via The Nature of Science Fiction, which is more or less the equivalent of a science fiction novel for science fiction readers.)
More from Smithsonian.com:The following is an excerpt from "The American Revolution That Wasn't a Conspiracy," a book by James Madison, published in 1876.
A book on an American Revolution by James Madison (1876)
On this page is an article from a recent book "The American Revolution That Wasn't a Conspiracy."
I am the American Revolution and I am not here to make an argument against that. I am here today to explain what I believe.
My purpose in this book is not even merely to explain what happened in the United States. I argue that the American Revolution was not a conspiracy. My purpose is to prove that the American Revolution was not.
My goal is to prove that the American Revolution was not a conspiracy.
One of the first things that struck me about the American Revolutionary War was the fact that there was no American army of General Sherman. Instead, the American army consisted of thousands of officers and soldiers of various kinds. Their ranks were divided, they were not organized like a military department, and they were not organized and disciplined like a military department. They were just soldiers and they did not know how to fight.
If one were to read the early accounts of the American Revolution and all the details of its character, I would say that the American armies were more or less organized by the people, but were organized like a military department with no leadership. The people were very organized, and they knew what the war was going to be like, but the people knew not what to do. At what point did the people lose interest in a war they would never have had, and, by the way, how would they have been able to fight without the people knowing? They would have been totally out of their element, and they would have been completely in charge.
They did not go out of their way to fight. They did not go
Comment an article