ReadMe

ON THE BOOKSHELVES OF THE DIGERATI David M. Reid COO, NextPlanetOver. The Tooth Fairy by Graham Joyce. "This is the most disturbing novel I’ve read in years. Little Sam befriends a mischievous tooth fairy, but when Sam grows into adolescence and starts paying attention to girls, the fairy becomes jealous and violent. It’s ambiguous whether […]

ON THE BOOKSHELVES OF THE DIGERATI

David M. Reid COO, NextPlanetOver. The Tooth Fairy by Graham Joyce. "This is the most disturbing novel I've read in years. Little Sam befriends a mischievous tooth fairy, but when Sam grows into adolescence and starts paying attention to girls, the fairy becomes jealous and violent. It's ambiguous whether the fairy might only be Sam's psychological construction but in my reading he does exist. The Tooth Fairy is certainly true to the horror-book genre. But it's also a touching coming-of-age tale that explores the issue of uncertainty, and the larger literary themes speak to more than just slavering horror fans."

Max Keiser
Chair and cofounder, Hollywood Stock Exchange.
Horton Hears a Who! by Dr. Seuss. "This is the definitive Internet text for the next 10 years. The world has 6 billion people, and network access will be free someday. When most of us make it, I believe we'll achieve a sort of critical mass that God will hear, just like Horton heard the residents of Whoville. We all have a God-consciousness, which now lies dormant. But when human technology awakens it, we'll experience a spontaneous, global spiritual epiphany - what the Bible calls the Rapture. Horton represents that three-billion-and-first person who tips the scales and delivers us to the other side of the digital horizon."

STREET CRED

Dark Passion
I Am Not Just a Camera
Culture Clouds
VCs Unveiled
French in Action
Watch My Shorts
The Blast Shall Come First
ReadMe
Music
Wired at Heart
The Wink-Wink Factoid Conspiracy
Show Your Faces at the Door
Lost and Found
Just Outta Beta
Consuming Images
Go, Speed Racer, Go
Contributors