St Live Nude St Live Nude St Live Nude

Forum 1stlivenude Nudity Ro Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' 'bio') St Live Nude Rocheblog

Forum 1stlivenude Nudity Ro Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' 'bio') St Live Nude

about reading music and Braille. The Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' 1stlivenude osearchu Nudity 1stlivenude u Forum i Nudity ysearchn Nudity ssearcha Nudity c Nudity r Forum 1 Nudity t 1stlivenude i Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' sesearchrhSTAR233 ssearchl Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' vsearchn Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' d Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' searchs Forum arsearchhmaF 'bio') esearchr Forum hsearchssearcha 1stlivenude csearchrt Forum o Forum STAR233osearch Forum hesearchB 'bio') i Forum d also has an interesting page on the Louis Braille bicentennial -- Braille was born in 1809.

Incidentally, Louis Braille went blind at age 3 following an accident with an awl... the same implement he later used to invent the language that bears his name, beginning in 1821 -- when he was 12. He finished the language when he was 15, and the first book in Braille was published when he was 20.

Back to the blues: I highly recommend taking a moment to listen to some of the best blues harp ever played, some great guitar playing, more great guitar, the Father of the Texas Blues, some of the best jazz piano in history, and, of course, "Superstition. I can never resist that one. Monday, October 12th, 200910:59 pm
Happy Birthday, Lester Dent

The Man of Bronze
Originally uploaded by Thomas Roche
Pulp fiction author Lester Dent, born October 12, 1904, died 1959, was better known by his pseudonym of Kenneth Robeson. Under this pseudonym Dent wrote 170-ish novels featuring his most popular character, the "Man of Bronze," Doc Savage -- a character he didn't actually create, but adopted from the publisher and an editor at Street & Smith, one of the big pulp publishing enterprises from the time.

Doc was a two-fisted adventurer and brilliant scientist who was the model for a zillion later heroes -- most notable among them, to modern readers at least, being Indiana Jones. Doc became the star of radio, movies and comic books.

Born in Missouri, Dent became a telegraph operator in 1924 and later, while working as a telegrapher for the Associated Press, found out one of his coworkers had sold a story to a pulp magazine. It paid $450 -- a strong incentive for Dent, who already read a lot of pulp fiction, to try his hand.

After a small number of sales, Dent found himself solicited by Dell Publishing for a $500 a month job writing exclusively for Dell publications. He and his wife Norma moved to New York. But it was Street and Smith who later poached Dent to write a novel series, a gadget-driven take-off on The Shadow, for $500 per novel. The resulting character was Doc Savage, who became the lead character in a series that would run from March, 1933's The Man of Bronze to July, 1949's Up from Earth's Center, and beyond.

Dent also wrote for Black Mask, the legendary pulp magazine where the hard-boiled style was all but invented. His book Honey In His Mouth, is a grifter-thriller I have not yet had the pleasure to read; it came out recently from Hard Case Crime. Dent's also one of the characters in Paul Malmont's pulp meta-novel The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril.

Though I love the idea of Doc Savage and many of the influences he wrought, every early Doc Savage novel I've read is a gooey, pulpy, likable but ultimately bewildering mess -- like first season Buffy, writ lantern-jawed and steel-thewed. Dent was really cranking them out in those years, and I understand the later books have a certain charm that's missing from the early ones I've read.

My very favorite Doc Savage book is not a Doc Savage book at all -- it's the fictional biography, Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life, in which Philip Jose Farmer both reminisces about his experiences reading the series as a youth, and treats it as if it's all bloody real. It's a wonderful pulp study, and the most fun I've ever had with Doc Savage.

That said, Dent is still one of the originals, an architect of the pulp landscape. Remember him with reference, and while you're at it, Friend him on MySpace.
Thursday, July 30th, 20097:42 pm
On Extended Hiatus Visiting With Bigfoot and/or Elvis

Life Behind Bars
Originally uploaded by Thomas Roche
Those of you who follow this blog may be asking yourselves, "Is he ever going to post again?"

You may find yourself asking this with considerable frequency over the next few weeks. I have been on extended hiatus at an undisclosed location with Bigfoot in either Eastern Washington state or the Southern Himalayas -- seems like they always black out the windows on those god damned black helicopters so I can't honestly be sure. That is to say, I'm making a concerted effort to focus on two principle areas of great interest to me lately: 1) more challenging fiction projects, and 2) finding a day job. To this end, I have been rather holed up lately and have been sitting tight as far from the blog, really, as possible. Some day in the future -- weeks, months, years, decades, maybe centuries from now if this brain-freezing stuff works out -- I'm quite sure one or both of those -- or something else entirely -- will come to fruition. Then I'll have something substantive to report.

Or I'll go back to posting brief missives on Central Asian archaeology and alien sightings in Texas, which is pretty much the same thing. Bless you all; keep your tinfoil shiny.
Saturday, July 18th, 200911:14 pm
Nude Aid Tomorrow Needs Artists

Nu féminin allongé Amélie
Originally uploaded by Thomas Roche
The organizers of Nude Aid, a benefit for the Center for Sex & Culture, inform me that they would like to add some artists for tomorrow's event. And hey, while you're at it, why not attend if you're just interested in being an attendee? But you might want to get your tix in advance through Brown Paper Tickets, see the link at the end in the info below:



7/19 -- NUDE AID! a Live Artmaking and Takeaway Benefit for the Center for Sex & Culture

A private party at 1286 Folsom

STILL SEEKING ARTISTS, ART & AUCTION ITEM DONATIONS

Info Line 415-255-1155

Website event/73326 -- space will be limited!


Monday, July 6th, 200910:09 am
July 25: Perverts Put Out

thomas_roche_my_sucky_valentine
Originally uploaded by Thomas Roche
I'm performing again at this summer's Perverts Put Out, before the Dore Alley Fair. If any of all y'all are in town for the event, please be sure to grab me and say hello. I'll try to read something new -- I usually do, though admittedly it doesn't always work out. These events are often raucous and always a good time!

PERVERTS PUT OUT!

Perverts Put Out!, San Francisco's long-running pansexual performance series, is rearing its swollen head yet again.

The next PPO, on Saturday, July 25th, will be the traditional
pre-Dore edition, celebrating in word and deed San Francisco's
kinkiest, most hardcore street event, the Up Your Alley Fair.

Performers will include Greta Christina, Jeff Stroker, Thomas
Roche, horehound stillpoint, Steven Schwartz, Hew Wolff,
emcees Carol Queen and Simon Sheppard, and more!

Saturday, July 25
7:30 pm
CounterPulse
1310 Mission Street, San Francisco
$10-15 sliding scale, no-one turned away for lack of funds.

(Please feel free to forward and/or repost. Keep track of this
and other shows at: simonsheppard.com.)
Thursday, June 25th, 20097:57 am
Pulp Culture: Hardboiled Fiction and the Cold War

Pulp Culture
Originally uploaded by Thomas Roche
I recently slogged through this book from 1996, back when hardboiled crime novels were for the second time in a decade the cause célèbre of arty pricks who intoned the words "Baudrillard," "Foucault," and "Motorhead" with measured distinctness and casual self-importance while swilling microbrews at the local fuckface hipster bar. My first anthology, a hipster fuckface book of erotic crime-noir, came out that same year, so I probably should have read it then. But doing so would have been unthinkable at the time to me, as reading about writing was something I studiously avoided. Oh, how we change.

Anyway, I have mixed feelings about it.

While Pulp Culture: Hardboiled Fiction and the Cold War is invaluable to me for its many mentions of forgotten noir classics. It's also got some political observations of varied value. Unfortunately, most of it falls into the let's-dissect-the-text category of literary histories, which I find only vaguely interesting at the best of times and astonishingly tedious most of the time.
uForum 1stlivenude Nudity Ro Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' 'bio') St Live Nude Rocheblogt k St Live Nude Music St Live Nude cForum 1stlivenude Nudity Ro Javascript:showModel('Tenderness' 'bio') St Live Nude Rocheblogj u St Live Nude x Youtube Nude