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		#31 | |
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			 Grand Sorcerer 
			
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		 Quote: 
	
 And while information is certainly easily accessible nowadays on the Web, it's also often contradictory and inaccurate and overwhelming. Bottom line is, the author is responsible for the details.  | 
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		#32 | |
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			 Addict 
			
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		 Quote: 
	
 ![]() Mary  | 
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		#33 | 
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			 Feral Underclass 
			
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		#34 | |
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			 Feral Underclass 
			
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		#35 | |
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			 Old Fart In Training 
			
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		 Quote: 
	
 But most would not care or even notice, and let's not even get into slang, like they shot several rounds, or there were several shells in the gun.    There also can be such a thing as too much detail!  
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		#36 | 
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			 Fanatic 
			
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		#37 | |
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			 Readaholic 
			
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 ![]() On the subject of movies, if Martial Artists talk about how good a movie is or isn't, it has nothing to do with the plot. I was always ticked off with The Highlander Television Show because McCloud's hands were positioned incorrectly. He had them touching each other. The Katana is held with the right hand touching the Tsuba (guard) and the left hand grasps the other end with the pinkie off and curled tight. If your hands are together you do not have any leverage. They finally corrected it during the last two years of the show. Thank you for listening to Apache's latest rant.   ![]() Apache  | 
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		#38 | 
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			 Zealot 
			
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			Yes! There are a couple of books that are absolutely tainted for me because of these silly little mistakes that author's make.  
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	I just recently read Sara Gruen's Ape House, which I would have loved if it wasn't for the few times that the character ordered a "Double Shot Grande Skinny Latte". This book is set in America, and although I'm a Canadian, I'm pretty sure "Grande" refers to Starbucks. Having worked at Starbucks I know that Grandes automatically come with two shots, and even if they didn't, it would still properly be called a "Double Grande...". This ridiculous double redundancy merely grated on my nerves until a Starbucks employee character actually corrected another character by stating that this is how the drink should be named. From that point on I just felt the writing was sloppy.  | 
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		#39 | 
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			 Addict 
			
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		#40 | 
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			 intelligent posterior 
			
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			A major character frequenting Starbucks would be enough to turn me off a novel  
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	![]() Sorry, that's the lifelong patron and ex-barista of independent coffee houses talking.  | 
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		#41 | |
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			 Cozy Bumpkin Stories 
			
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		#42 | 
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			 Junior Member 
			
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			My pet peeve incorrect science in science fiction.   
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	If your explanation makes no sense scientifically, don't bother explaining the technology. I much prefer a black box approach to lots of details that can not possibly work. The last memorable one I read was Matheson's The Shrinking Man. I would have been much happier with the book if it had never explained why the guy was shrinking, as opposed to blaming it on mutated chemicals causing the body to loose nitrogen.  | 
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		#43 | 
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			 intelligent posterior 
			
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			This always bugs me in zombie stories, like the CDC episode of The Walking Dead. Guys, it's not a virus. Saying it's a virus doesn't make it more plausible; it just demonstrates your feeble grasp of fundamental concepts in biology and physics, and/or your lack of respect for the audience.
		 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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		#44 | |
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			 Wizard 
			
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			 Quote: 
	
 And to get a real fright - but no handbrake - a big old Vincent, even unfettled, could easily put years on you. In particular a supercharged dragbike job called Nero, campaigned by George Brown in the 60's, which was possibly the first one to use a slick on the rear, and was the quickest thing in it's class in the world at one time.... ![]() I think "screech" would easily apply there - they had to pour oil on the startline to stop the thing revolving around the rear wheel !  | 
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		#45 | |
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			 Guru 
			
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		 Quote: 
	
 The typical WWI rifle (bolt action) was loaded directly from a stripper clip. You would place the stripper clip, with 5 rounds, into a holder, push down, and the 5 rounds were loaded into the internal magazine. With the M1 Garand, you push the entire enblock clip of 8 rounds into the firearm, and the clip is ejected after the last round is fired. For the M-16, you load the detachable box magazines from stripper clips, using a small adapter tool. Each stripper clip holds 10 rounds, and with one push, they get loaded into the magazine. The magazines typically hold 20 or 30 rounds, so 2 or 3 clips worth. Most magazines are loaded from individual rounds. Put one in the opening, push down and repeat until full. Then there are the drum magazines for the classic Thompson submachine gun. Those, you removed the back cover, dropped in the rounds, replaced the cover and wound up the spring in the magazine to feed the rounds. And finally, there are clip for revolvers. When the .45 ACP was introduced in 1911, they could not produce them quickly enough, so they produced a revolver that fired the same round. Except that revolvers need a round with a lip (rim) to keep the round from slipping right through, and semi autos require rounds without a rim (rimless). So they made a half moon clip, that was semi circular and would allow 3 rounds of .45 ACP to be snapped into to hold them. Two such clips would be used in the revolver. Later, some people would weld two such clip together, making a full mooon clip, that allowed a very quick reload.  | 
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