Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 47
City: TOMBALL
State: Texas
Country: US
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Tuesday, August 04, 2009
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I collected a read many of the Doc Savage Pulps when I was a kid, and, though a box was misplaced or lost during a move, I still have many of them. There are 180+ Doc Savage stories, which is second only to Germany's Perry Rhodan in longevity. Doc's traits and influence can be seen in Batman, Superman, James Bond and many other "modern" super heroes. On my website I have, for your viewing pleasure: - my sortable table of Doc Savage titles, with 1st publish date, Bantam book date and Philip Jose Farmer (plus Win Scott Eckert filling in the blanks) chronology; - Reviews of: -- Doc Savage #1 The Man of Bronze-- Doc Savage #5 Brand of the Werewolf-- Doc Savage #8 The Land of Terror-- Doc Savage #23 Fortress of Solitude-- Doc Savage #95 The Red Spiderand more to come.
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Friday, April 10, 2009
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My novel, Dusk Before the Dawn, won the AmazonClicks.com  Reader’s Choice Award for March. Full detail can be seen at the AmazonClicks web site.Thanks very much to all who voted, and for your support.
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Saturday, January 10, 2009
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Hi All. A reader nominated my novel, Dusk Before the Dawn for a Reader's Choice Award. The site
is British (they do try to sell the books, through Amazon.co.uk, in pounds vs.
dollars) so it may have been one of the five and a half people in Britain who
have read my book (thanks Mark, Marty, Hugh, Margaret, Margaret's Dad,
Margaret's Dad's Dog).
If you wouldn't mind following the instructions
below (from their website) to send them a
vote, I would appreciate it.
If you see a book already listed and
wish to support it, enter the title of the book as listed in the 'subject' field
of your email. This is not the main body where you usually type your messages it
is the field that shows the subject of an email when you receive it before it is
opened. Then send the email to votes@amazonclicks.com .
Thanks!
Larry
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Saturday, September 27, 2008
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Blogging before, during and after the lovely embrace of Hurricane Ike. The power was out for 11 days, but we got by with a generator and lots of cooperation with our neighbors. Before: - with all of our technology, we still have no idea where a hurricane will hit.During - reading about Zombies by candlelight (The Living Dead anthology)- house and family safe, fence and tree not so muchAfter - making a cup of coffee with no water or power- how I wired my generator to my house power, grew a hurricane beard and other dangerous experiments. Hope all my other SE Texas friends fared well. Larry
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Friday, September 12, 2008
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Insert your fav weatherman joke here…man cannot accurately predict the weather or the future. We are about to create black holes, and maybe Higgs bosons at the LHC in CERN, Swizerland…but we cannot tell with anything approaching accruacy what path a hurricane will take. It's quite humbling for us homo sapiens. In Thursday morning's Houston Chronicle: Ike's forecast 60 hours before landfall called for a Palacios landfall. Rita's forecast three days before landfall called for a Palacios landfall, and it struck the Texas-Louisiana border 190 miles away. During the Rita evacuation, I was driving down I-10 to Austin via hwy 71 on my way to a meeting…tooks almost four hours for what is normally a two and a half hour trip, as the gulf coast was evacuating (along formal evacuation routes and informal). When my meetings were over, I headed back to lovely Tomball…I was the only car going SE, and there was a traffic jam from Houston to Giddings. I got home, tied everything down, move possible projectiles, and waited…. Nothing happened. At least not in Tomball in NW Harris County. Hurricane Rita went east, so we were on the 'clean' side of it. So here we go again: gas stations out of gas (even the neighborhood ones here in good ole Tomball), newscasters on 24/7 about Ike (a decent replacement for round the clock McCain/Obama, but I turned both types off after a few minutes of repetition), evacuations and dire predictions. Like before, everything that could be a serious projectile (except them damn acorns) has been put up or tied down. I like the fact that we collectively do not know where this thing is going, just like we don't know if a black hole or Higgs Boson will appear at the LHC. There are 'too many variables' (you anti-mathies remember variables? I love variables, best thing ever for a Math Major) to accurately predict many outcomes. It's a good humbling thing for the human race to not know or be able to predict everything. Originally posted at DuskBeforeTheDawn.net.
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Friday, September 05, 2008
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Hosted By: Larry Ketchersid When: Saturday Oct 11, 2008 at 10:00 PM Where Trinity University One Trinity Place San Antonio, Texas|44 78212 United States Description:Larry Ketchersid Click Here To View EventOnce again, a book signing in my home town of San Antonio...for some reason, the only place I ever do them! And, for the 2nd time, with my friend and teacher Robert Flynn. Hope to see you there!!!
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Saturday, August 02, 2008
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Category: Blogging
I've just finished two very different but very satisfying reads: An Expert in Murder by Nicola Upson, and the anthology Seeds of Change edited by John Joseph Adams.
I used to read Agatha Christie murder mysteries, but I tired of the genre because it was too predictable, the reads too similar. An Expert in Murder, the first in a new series, features London settings, the West End and the stage, an excellent historical period (England between WWI and WWII). What more could you ask for? Well, for one, a plot where you cannot guess "whodunit", which is the main reason I do not read very many mysteries. But Ms. Upson does herself proud: the plot is intricate and well thought out, the characters engaging and flawed, and the scenery described in detail but not boringly or intricately so.
I also enjoy short fiction, hanging on to my trusty collection of old Analog magazines. Following up to his fantastic Wastelands, John Joseph Adams with Seeds of Change has assembled an excellent set of stories that, instead of being about future paradigm shifts, are projections of current issues or ailments (racism, global warming, corporate spies and piracy) into the future but also contain new shifts brought about by new technology and ethical issues about usage (how should we or even should we not) of these new technologies.
At these links, you can find the full reviews on my website: - An Expert in Murder by Nicola Upson- Seeds of Change, edited by John Joseph Adams
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Tuesday, April 01, 2008
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Category: Blogging
My friend, Dr. Paul Levinson, tagged me. Under normal circumstances, I only play tag outside...but, this is Paul, and I do owe him a beer. And he tagged me with some fairly auspicious company (Robert J. Sawyer ... Sylvia Engdahl ... Obama Girl (!!!!)... Barack Obama ... James Harris ... Idris ... Scott M. Sandridge ... Ebony ... Soulful Pen).So I will play along, or Paul might call it two beers! The game is to list ten little or unknown things about me. Thus:1. I met my wife on a Rugby field (must be a pretty good place to meet someone after 19 years of marriage). 1a. I still play Masters (read: old guys) Rugby. It is still the most enjoyable sport I have played.
2. I’ve met Paul in person,in Second Life, in MySpace, on Facebook, at LinkedIn, and probably a couple of other places...and I do actually owe him a beer! 2a. I’ve met Sierra Waters in almost as many places, just at different points in time....
3. (showing lack of humilty): I went through my first black belt test in Soo Bahk Do with no ACL in my right knee; the test included a jump spin back kick.
4. I’m mostly American Indian, but not sure which kind...first mom said we were Choctaw, then said we were Cherokee. It’s hard to track back when you’re not sure which branch to follow!4a. I thought I was Dutch on my father’s side, because my Grandpa’s nickname was "Dutch"...I received a rude awakening on my first business trip to Holland...nothing like my last name in the phone book, and my Dutch business associates assured me my last name wasn’t from around those parts...much good Dutch beer (and a couple of Belgian ales) was consumed that evening.
5. As a kid, I sat on the roof of our house in Indian Harbor Beach, FL with my mom, brother and sister and watched several Apollo missions launch (my Dad was down in the South Atlantic at a place called Ascension Island waiting to examine the Apollo stages).
6. I played classical and jazz piano until breaking my right pinky finger twice playing basketball....I still make noise on the box, and will one day, through the miracle of future medicine, play Beethoven once more.
7. I wrote my novel, Dusk Before the Dawn, on several Continental Airlines flights between Houston and Paris while closing a software contract with Bull (you can only watch Lord of the Rings so many times). 7a. I would go back to Paris in a second.
8. I’m such a serious geek I’m not even sure I qualify as a closet geek! I’ve administered Unix, Linux, Windows, databases; programmed in many languages (including lately in XML and Java); built hardware; played with gadgets...the only thing I haven’t done is programmed my own Roomba (not the store bought one, but the one with the software dev kit!drool!)
9. Almost an 8a...I worked at Compaq Computer Corp. for 15 years, and with some help have collected most of their classic portables: the Compaq Portable (the first one that looked like a sewing machine), the SLT286, Portable III, Aero Laptop, just to name a few).
10. I’ve seen in person one Super Bowl (thanks to my wife!), one NCAA Final Four (thanks to my bro), two NBA Championships (thanks to the Rockets). Still on the list is to attend a Rugby World Cup, which I almost got to do this past year but the travel plans didn’t work out.
Okay. That was painless, don’t you think?
I’m supposed to tag ten folks. I’ll tag Hogg Shedd and Louie Y ... RJ ... Andy who is Chelsea’s Dad ... Tim Reynolds (who I saw in Oxford) ... Shaun at Adventures in Sci Fi Publishing ... Alonzo Bodden ... Carly ... Shawna ... Sean Harris (who just sold a book!!) and Nebula nominee Tobias Buckell.
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Sunday, February 17, 2008
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Category: Web, HTML, Tech
My wife calls me a nerd, or a geek. I won't deny it. I've been working with computers for about 30 years (and no, Ernie, I'm not ancient), programming, operating, building. I have my own current geek job, running a security software and solutions company.
But I do get full of geek envy at other peoples cools jobs. I've been collecting and documenting a mostly serious (or mostly not) list of them. Let me know if you have any others that you know of and I'll add them to the list.
geek job 3: Fixing Galactica and Pegasus computers geek job 11: Computer Jock at the LHC geek job 17: Driving the NASA Mars Rover geek job 19: Acquiring beer for developers
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Tuesday, January 22, 2008
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Category: Blogging
SFSignal is running their Tuesday Mind Meld feature with the question: are we headed for a Technological Panopticon?My response is there, along with the august company of Vernor Vinge, Charles Stross and David Brin (none of whom I believe are Vulcans either). Part of my entry (be sure and go read the others): I'm not sure that technology alone will allow the little guy to fight back, but innovation, ingenuity and man's sense of self-preservation will. A panopticon is a prison where everyone can see you; in the case of privacy it's a voluntary prison, one of choice. Given such a choice, some people in the world will not worry about it, some will believe it is inevitable; people are proving this today as the herd mentality brings acceptance of national security cards, CCTV cameras, the poorly named "Patriot Act" and other privacy intrusions. This acceptance is driven by governments who are using terrorism and 9/11 as proof that violating privacy is "for your own good". Privacy International publishes National Privacy rankings each year on surveillance/lack of privacy by country; though they focus on the European Union, they include some of the large international countries. Almost all are "deteriorating" in privacy provided to the individual (see the 2007 ranking here. But others will not want to give up their privacy, and will make the choice to do something about it. Participation in most parts of the panopticon is by choice; sometimes these choices are inconvenient, but they are different paths just the same. If I know that the movements are my car can be easily tracked by going on to the Toll Roads with an electronic Toll Tag, I either pay for my toll in coin or stay off of the toll roads completely. If there is a technology that I feel is impinging on my privacy, I can choose to avoid it, create/invent a way around it, or use the good ole Internet to find a like-minded individual who are already figured it out, and either adopt or modify their work.
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