Thursday, September 21, 2017

The one that is solely for Jemmerd

The one that is solely for Jemmerd


It is. I am incredibly grateful to our resident old-timer hunter Jemmerd. You see... Ive been running Zul Gurub for a while now (not counting or anything, but this was attempt number 49). I usually need to pressure someone into helping me form a raid - otherwise they wont let me defile it.

This time Jemmerd offered to help out. And fully expecting him to go on a mining expedition, I started killing stuff. I had really not expected him to join me in there - but thankfully he did. It goes so much faster if you have a proper dps class along and dont have to rely on the massive protection warrior dps.

Far less than half the time for the raptor boss. And of course, being here for the first time in ages, it dropped the mount.


These are my lovely guildies we are talking about (and loot was set to free for all), so of course I offered to roll for it. I have to admit a certain amount of unhappiness, but that doesnt matter. But look. Lookatit! He just laughed and congratulated me. Wheeeeeeeeee!



All mine!

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Monday, September 18, 2017

The Image That You See Here Is Not a Photograph

The Image That You See Here Is Not a Photograph


 photoreal image

You may not believe your eyes but the image above is not a photograph, its just a painting of a non-real person done using airbrush, not Photoshop.

Dru Blair took around 70 hours to paint this beautiful photorealistic image - look at the eyes, skin tones, hair curls.. they look so real.

Dru has the details on how he completed this painting dubbed "Tica" - Photorealism at its best.

Related: Fake or Real Photos


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Sunday, September 17, 2017

The Ten Facebook Groups That Are Funny But Quite Popular

The Ten Facebook Groups That Are Funny But Quite Popular


Following are some of the most interesting groups on Facebook that are very popular and their descriptions can make you smile:
When I was your age, Pluto was a planet - This is a group dedicated to the kids who were taught that Pluto was the 9th planet from the sun. It will soon hit the 1 million member mark on Facebook.
People Who Always Have To Spell Their Names For Other People - This group is for anyone with an unusual spelling or an unusual name.
Slammed by Valleywag - This is for people who have been slammed by Valleywag or who dream of getting slammed by the ever-alert team of Nick Douglas and Owen Thomas..
I Use my Cell Phone to See in the Dark - For those that cant live without their cell phones - whether its to schedule appointments, see in the dark, use as an excuse to leave a conversation to "take an important call", figure out the waiters tip, keep as a clock, take pictures, or simply to use as a device to converse with others - as it was originally designed to do.
Unlike 99.99% of the Facebook population, I was born in the 70s. - The group for the "oldies" not your grandpas age but who are in 30s. [Facebook for Senior Citizens]
I Flip My Pillow Over to Get To The Cold Side - This group is not only limited to flipping our pillows, but is all about the ridiculous things we do to our pillows or bed for that matter, in order to get a good nights rest.
Enough with the Poking, Lets Just Have Sex - People dont understand why "poking" exists on facebook. Its pretty clear that its facebooks classy way of flirting, none of this "I was just thinking about you." [Most Popular]
Six Degrees of Separation - Stanley Milgram suggested that two random US citizens were connected on average by a chain of six acquaintances. That is, on average, a friend of a friend of a friend of a friend of a friend knows the president of the United States, or the Queen of the Netherlands, or the president of France or Osama and so on.
Techmeme Hats Me - I crave validation. And Techmeme doesnt deliver it. Techmeme hates me. So I hate Techmeme. Techmemes dad Gabe is also a member here. [How to Get on Techmeme]
If this group reaches 4,294,967,296 it might cause an integer overflow - Assuming that Facebook uses unsigned 32-bit integers to represent the size of a group. If so, 2^32 = 4,294,967,296.

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Sunday, September 10, 2017

The one that took a while didnt it

The one that took a while didnt it


Well� the reports of my death are highly exaggerated. Or rather, not so much, as I died a lot lately � but that is not what I meant and you know it.

I should probably fall in line with all the other bloggers out there and pretend that I am slowing down, going to do something different and stopped playing WoW � but what I actually did was start several new projects. New things that are quite fun doing (most of the time) and require more time than I first thought.

Part one, obviously, is still playing my main. Koch is going raiding and is still working on his 100 mounts. Except � I cannot be bothered to do the argent tournament dailies at the moment, even though that would only be 30 more days and it would finish off the 100 nicely. I do try and pop over to the Brunhildar village every day, hoping against hope to find a shiny polar bear in a little cloth bag, instead of a few snowballs, some rancid Jedi-cheese or some water.

There is also still Zul Gurub. A fine area in the north of Stranglethorn and part of the complimentary troll instance that is due every expansion (you know .. like Zul Gurub.in �vanilla� and Zul Aman in �The Burning Crusade� and Zul Frost in �Wrath of the Lich King�. Oh wait� I was not supposed to give out secrets about the expansion of patch 3.3.4.5.2.6.1.a? Forget I said anything). In theory both the raptor boss and the tiger boss are the proud owners of a rare mount. If they had only learnt that handing it over would mean an end to the senseless murder of their friends and countrymen I would already have moved on. As it is� we are currently at a quote of 48 to none against me.

And there is raiding. We�re still playing Icecrown Citadel every Wednesday and it forms the highlight of my week. You know� I actually enjoy raiding on my little tanky-boi. Of course � I have to admit that I do not quite like ICC as much as I liked Ulduar � and I think I would like to go back one of these days and just trundle around in it and see what happens. Kill Yoggy one of these days? Yeah� I�d really like that.

Part two, not so obviously, was playing my second favourite tank � my little druid. She�s coming along nicely now, raiding in ICC every second week and we�ve finally managed to kill Saurfang on an �Alt Raid�. Which was good. Except � I got to raid as dps � and I can�t say I like it.

Now this requires a bit more explanation, I think. I can appreciate that every class is basically a dps class until you get to the endgame (several footnotes and explanations are in order, but bear with me and wait for Part four). Playing a druid as a dps class does not appeal to me very much � this is partly due to the rather complicated sequence of bleeds, the energy mechanic of rogues and kitty-cats that I don�t particularly enjoy and so on and so forth. There are always moments when this is just cool, though. I do run add-ons that notify me of new high scores for damaging attacks and blowing something up in two goes just has a certain satisfying crunch to it as well (wait for part three, if you could).

In the endgame I pretty much switched all my characters to a tanking main-spec and a dps off-spec at best. The bear has its own strengths and weaknesses (interrupting frostbolt on Lady Deathwhisper, says you? Ha, says I!) and of course so do the paladin and the deathknight and the warrior. Of the three, the dps off-spec of the cat is the most complicated for me, though. Several bleeds and self-buffs to juggle, a consistent energy regeneration struggle and no AoE abilities worth mentioning. If only the spec made up for this complexity by insane dps or super-high numbers on every third rotational pass. But sadly no � it�s just a steady ticking of damaging bleeds, slowly draining the life out of your enemy. I don�t like it very much.

Worse � when I got to raid ICC yesterday it was also quite horribly boring. On Marrowgar I had to move from fires on the ground and otherwise tried to optimize my �rotation� � picking up after each bonestorm. On Lady Deathwhisper I had the pleasure of staying on the boss, first bringing down the mana-shield, then beating up the boss herself. It is the best role for me � as continuous target changing would make my dps even less impressive, but it basically meant I stood still and tried to optimize my rotation. On the gunship battle I got to use a cannon � which still amuses me, but then sadly had the same annoyance on Saurfang again. Stand in one location, don�t bother switching targets to the blood beasts and generally try not to mess up my rotation. That�s it.

No juggling threat, no watching for debuffs on the off-tank, no pre-emptively using cooldowns when the healers had to deal with more trouble, no stunning bloodbeasts, no keeping an eye on the threat meter, no spamming heroic strike when rage is above a certain value, falling back to a more simple sequence of events below. It was just �meh� compared to the thrill of tanking.

I don�t know� I�ll try it again, of course, and maybe next time with a different class, to see if smashing hits with a big axe make everything more interesting � but dps-ing was not really for me.

Disclaimer: I had a lot of fun during the raid � but that came from chat and teamspeak, not the engaging game-design as such.


Part three has taken the most time out of my schedule lately. And I admit I started doing it all because of big numbers and DPS. Which ... err� does not sound all that clever after part two, but Booyaah! playing a mage is completely different.

See� I started a new alt. Had a bit of room still, so there is now a spacegoat mage-girl running around Azeroth, decked out in heirlooms with a mad glint in her eye and a pyroblast at the ready. And it�s fun!



I mean � if I don�t miss the pyroblast. I get to blow stuff up � with fire � and then with more fire! None of that wussy slowing and snaring and freezing and things � a hot girl has to use hot spells!

She is currently burning down the forest in Stranglethorn � an old favourite quest area of mine for the sheer killability of it all. Kill things, kill their daddies, kill their mommies and then their elder brothers who joined the army. With fire! It�s brilliant.


Now I admittedly am not very good at this �being a squishy in a sissy robe� yet, but I�m working on it � and enjoying it. And it seems I�m not alone. A lot of people seem to have abandoned their �mains� lately, going back to more relaxed playing times or more alts and such. The auction house is dealing in twink items again � a market that was almost dead for a while after ICC came out. There are frogs that need to be sold, and  patterned bronze bracers and blue pearls.

Well and then there was project four. I stumbled across Pugging Pally a while ago. At first I thought there was a masochist at work. Then I played on for a bit without giving it much thought. Then I still thought there was a masochist at work, but I considered giving it a go. And of course I ended up doing the exactly same thing � don�t tell me you expected anything else after the long-winded introduction.

So I rolled a healer. A paladin healer, in fact, because I think it is the most durable and aggressive healer class I can currently think of. I mean� you actually get to rush in and judge light on your groups target � and when you�re there you might as well plop down a consecration. And you get to wear plate � which is nice, because I have all those plate heirlooms already. Okay� they are useless heirlooms for a healer and I should buy the mail stuff, but I refuse. I will not be a dress-wearing paladin. Hmm. I actually did put on all those cloth items with intellect on and such, but the point still stands � I am a mighty paladin and I will not wear shoulders or chest armour that is not plate and gives +10% experience. Or rather� I would if I could afford the mail ones, but I can�t so I won�t.


There� that summed it up nicely.

So anyway� I had to level the poor little thing to level 15 traditionally � swinging a big enchanted hammer at everything that looked at me funny � in the name of healing and the light. Which worked fine.

Then I got to level 15 and got to join my first instance group. Not entirely surprisingly it turned out to be Ragefire Chasm � and it was with a great tank and decent dps and a pleasant cruise through the whole thing � except sometimes a tad nerve-wracking because I really have no idea how to heal and the tank pulled appropriately large groups to generate enough rage. Clever man orc � but boy that was scary. Almost nearly got all the way to level 16 as well. And I�m still going strong. I will learn how to heal. I seriously want to. It�s an entirely scary business (and I may possibly have tanked one or two mobs by pulling healing aggro and then just continuously healing myself instead of doing the sensible thing and run to the tank screaming) but I shall not be defeated!

Soon�. Soon I will be level 16 and then the good stuff starts. Err� or so I hope.

This healing addons (I downloaded healbot, because I could remember someone mentioning it � it�s not simple and I�m not sure I like it) are a weird business as well. But we shall see. It�s all under control. So far.

Beats grovelling at those blue girls for a bear anyway.

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Wednesday, September 6, 2017

The one reason that got me wanting to buy the Halo Graphic Novel

The one reason that got me wanting to buy the Halo Graphic Novel


The storyline in which we figure out how the hell Sgt. Johnson made it out of the first flood infested Halo alive. That right there is enough to get me to buy the novel and yes, I know Im a Halo geek.

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The Suffering Ties That Bind Playthrough

The Suffering Ties That Bind Playthrough


The Suffering: Ties That Bind - Playthrough



I know I could have done a better job in making this video but I ran into so much trouble that I think i did a good job by even posting this. first there are technical difficulties with running this game on windows 8.1 no not as much as you get in The Suffering 1 but still a lot, then we while recording this longplay the power went out in my house so 2/3 of recorded data got corrupted so i decided to push out this version of playthrough. 

Well about the game, it is slightly different from the previous game. You can only carry 2 weapons and you have to make a decision what they will be. Game is much more optimized but there are still problems.
 Graphic wise it is a huge step up however I think the sunde design took a step back, its so bad that it is hard to understand from what side is the sound comping from, and other general sound dont intimidate you as much as they did.
 Yes the graphics is better but i think the art design want back and because of this the game isnt as scary as the previous one.

So I recommend you playing the first game, and if you will like it then you can play this game but its not as good as first one.

Here is the good ending of the Suffering 2 (It kept skipping couldnt record it)
https://youtu.be/79L61nO5_fc

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Wednesday, August 30, 2017

The Internet Lies To You WHEN WILL YOU GET THAT! !

The Internet Lies To You WHEN WILL YOU GET THAT! !


My heart is singing a joy song.

Take a moment to Google "iOS 7 waterproof". Do it. Its worth it.

Yes. Someone Photoshopped some fake iOS 7 ads to tell people that a software update would make their phone waterproof. And some other people, who may in fact not be as insightful as they possibly could be, believed it. So now thousands of articles saying that, no, a software update will not change the physical properties of your phone.

Anonymous evil ad maker with Photoshop, I wish I could shake your hand. Heres why.

The Internet is an immensely new, hugely important mode of human communication, but we dont yet know how to use it. People dont understand this about the Internet: It is half lies. At best.

Most people who saw the fake ad read it, smiled, and moved on. A few people, however, believed it. They took their phone in the shower. The device was destroyed. They learned a valuable lesson, in a way that wont soon be forgotten, and all it cost them was a few hundred bucks.

And you know something? Maybe they will be less like my older relatives, who never read anything in e-mail so ludicrous they didnt believe it.

I promise you this. One of these days, someone who trashed their phone will get a message saying vaccines are killers, or a guy in Nigeria wants to give them a hundred million bucks, or that they should quit the chemo for their Stage 3 breast cancer because eating enough lemons will take care of it (yes, real example). Maybe, dare to dream, when this happens they will think about their phone and maybe, just maybe hit Delete. Like they should.

It is a small price to pay for a lesson of such value.

Oops. Sorry. What I meant to say was, its real. You can install iOS 7 on your iPhone and give it to your kids to play in the bathtub. Go try it. You know its true, because you just read it.

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Sunday, August 27, 2017

The Fair Point from Devin Nunes That Trump Critics Don t Want to Acknowledge

The Fair Point from Devin Nunes That Trump Critics Don t Want to Acknowledge



Rep Devin Nunes, Intelligence Committee Chairman One-On-One with Jake Tapper.

The Point Devin Nunes Is Making That Trump Critics Refuse To Acknowledge

Its perfectly fair to ask whether the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee should be traveling to the White House to brief the president when the FBI Director just announced that there is an ongoing investigation into whether there was any collusion between the presidents campaign and a foreign government in the past year.

But everybodys whacking Rep. Devin Nunes around like a piata right now, and its easy to forget hes raising a perfectly valid concern.

On January 12, the Washington Post columnist David Ignatius wrote:

According to a senior U.S. government official, Flynn phoned Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak several times on Dec. 29, the day the Obama administration announced the expulsion of 35 Russian officials as well as other measures in retaliation for the hacking. What did Flynn say, and did it undercut the U.S. sanctions? The Logan Act (though never enforced) bars U.S. citizens from correspondence intending to influence a foreign government about disputes with the United States. Was its spirit violated? The Trump campaign didnt immediately respond to a request for comment.

This is a leak of classified information. Michael Flynn was not, as far as we know, a target of any U.S. government surveillance. He was one of the figures whose conversations was incidentally recorded, presumably as part of the regular monitoring of Kislyak.

People within the U.S. government are not supposed to take the information that is incidentally recorded and then run to David Ignatius because they dont like the American citizen who was recorded. Thats not the purpose of our domestic counterintelligence operations. Even if Flynn had violated the Logan Act which, as we all know, no one has never been prosecuted for violating there are legitimate avenues for dealing with that, namely going to law enforcement and a prosecutor.

(Invoking the Logan Act in this circumstance is particularly nonsensical, because the interpretation Ignatius floats would criminalize just about any discussion between a presidential candidate, a president-elect or his team and any representative of a foreign government on any matter of importance. If you ask a foreign official if his country would make a concession on Issue X in exchange for a U.S. concession on Issue Y, BOOM! Call out the SWAT teams, weve got a Logan Act violation!)

There are a lot of reasons to not like Michael Flynn, but that doesnt change the fact that somebody broke the law and leaked classified information in an effort to get him in trouble. That is wrong and that is illegal, and nunes is right to point out were going down a dangerous road when information collected by U.S. intelligence agencies about American citizens starts getting strategically leaked for partisan purposes.

Heres what Democrats and their friends in the media are too shortsighted to recognize: any skullduggery they excuse now will be used against them in the future. Anything that the Obama administration did during the transition can be done by figures in the Trump administration against future Democratic candidates.

Just about any serious presidential campaign and any presidential transition is going to speak with someone under U.S. government surveillance at some time. It seems reasonable to think that every ambassador and representative of a foreign government, but particularly those of Russia, China, and any other not-always-friendly country, is monitored 24-7 or as close to that as possible. Executives at foreign and international companies, scholars, retired officials anyone connected to a foreign government is probably a potential source of intelligence and a potential target of surveillance.

The default setting for most of the media right now is, well, the eavesdropping on Trumps transition team was incidental; no harm, no foul. But leaking of even incidental eavesdropping is harmful and is a foul. Nunes has a right to be angry, and to remind us that this strategic illegal leaking should bother us as well.

Source: http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/446023/fair-point-devin-nunes-trump-critics-dont-want-acknowledge


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Saturday, August 26, 2017

The Vagrant CodeCross Two Indies that need your help

The Vagrant CodeCross Two Indies that need your help


If youve been following NGR over the years and youve seen my posts personally, then you may know that I like to support people who are out there trying to do their own thing. I guess I just sort of relate to them. Most of the projects Ive been involved with were ones that started alone, but slowly over time friends began to lend a helping hand, and others got involved as well. I know what its like to have friends, and I know what it is like to have the support of others in general. Even the smallest thing can go a long way, and thats why from time to time Ill spread the word of indie games that are still trying to make the first step. Sometimes the developers contact us here at NGR, but other times its friends or you (the reader) who bring these games to our attention, and this is exactly one of those times. When Cheerfuljochan (whom used to be a writer here at NGR) showed me the following two games and asked me to spread the word, I couldnt say no. So with that being said, lets get on with what this is really about.

Today Id like to take a little time to show off two indie games that are trying to get funded, with the first one being a game called "The Vagrant." While you can find out more information over at the games official Kickstarter page (which includes concept art, trailers, and more), the basics of this game is that it is a hack and slash. Drawing inspiration from games like Dragons Crown, the game uses a unique art style with fast pace arcade style hack and slash action. The game has a handful of characters/classes for you to choose from, each with their own skills and abilities, and what appears to be some challenging end stage boss battles (as one may expect from one of these arcade style beat em ups). Really if youre a fan of Dragons Crown, or beat em ups in general, this may be something youll want to look into. Its interesting, and it would be nice to see if it got funded.

The second, and final game Cheerful showed me, is one called CrossCode which also has its very own crowed unding page. This one, well, its an RPG Maker game... But thats not a bad thing. I personally have experience with the program and have done quite a few things with it, and I know better than anyone that it really comes down to how creative you can be with your games. Theres a lot of great RPG Maker games out there, and this one does do some creative things of its own. Its a fast paced action game for one, and it has some pretty deep customization elements as well (from what theyve shown off so far at least). The game is basically a sci-fi top down action RPG similar to PC classics such as Ys, so if youre a fan of that sort of thing you may want to look into this as well.

Well, that about covers it. Two more indie games you guys might like to try -- if they get funded that is. Maybe you can help these developers make their dreams come true?

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Wednesday, August 9, 2017

The Vault is the Gift that Keeps on Giving

The Vault is the Gift that Keeps on Giving



A nice little Legendary Gem I got after killing Greed from The Vault is this "Boon of the Hoarder". At rank 12, it gives 43% chance on killing an enemy to cause an explosion of gold. At first it didnt seem like much, but when I tried it, it was amazing. When it said "explosion of gold" it wasnt kidding! At 43%, nearly half of monsters I kill give up an incredible amount of gold.

Heres what gold I got from simply finishing a cursed chest bounty:


I got around 650 thousand gold from this!

A typical Torment 1 run on a Nephalem Rift gives me anywhere from 1-3 million gold!

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Monday, July 31, 2017

THE MASK THAT SANG by Susan Currie

THE MASK THAT SANG by Susan Currie


Susan Curries The Mask That Sang was released on September 6, 2016, from Second Story Press. She dedicates the book to her "birth aunt, Bev Huzzard, who handed me the gift of my own identity."

That dedication--referencing a birth aunt and identity--prompted me to visit Curries biography at the Second Story website. There, I read that:
Susan is an adopted person who made contact with a birth aunt a few years ago and subsequently learned about her Cayuga heritage. The Mask That Sang grew out of the experience of discovering those roots, and of learning that her grandmother attended residential school. 
On goodreads "Ask the Author" page, Currie writes that:
My most recent book, "The Mask That Sang," was inspired by my own experience of learning that I was Haudenosaunee. Because I was adopted, I did not know about my roots until I went searching for answers, and made contact with a birth aunt. She shared with me about my Cayuga heritage. It changed my life!  
And on her website, Currie writes that:
An important part of my history has to do with the fact that I am adopted. I have had a wonderful upbringing with my parents, Jean and Martin, and with my two brothers, David and Mike. As an adult I felt I wanted to know more about my own unique history. Following some detective work, I made contact with my amazing birth aunt, Bev (my birth mother, Louise, had passed away). She then provided me with the great gift of my own personal history. I was astonished and thrilled to learn about my own Haudenosaunee background. I am of Cayuga descent. My grandmother, Marjorie Hill, grew up at Six Nations and attended residential school in Brantford.
My heart aches for all the Native people who were taken from their parents and communities when they were infants or children.  We dont know the details of Curries adoption. She may not have been part of that forceful removal. We do know, however, that the governments of the United States and Canada were determined to turn Native people into White people. These governments were determined to undermine our nations and our sovereignty. Some government programs, like the boarding schools (residential schools in Canada) are becoming known.

There were other efforts, too, by which Native children were taken from their communities. Adoption and child welfare service is one by which thousands of Native children were removed from their homes. In Canada, newspapers report on the Sixties Scoop, a term used to refer to the adoption of First Nations and M�tis children in Canada, from the 1960s to the mid-1980s. The reports include interviews with adults who are being reunited with their families. The accounts are searing. In Indigenous Writes, Chelsea Vowel writes that (p. 88):
When these people want to learn more about their culture, they have to wade through so many inaccuracies that it can feel impossible at times to reconnect.
As Curries biography indicates, she was adopted and only recently became aware of her Cayuga heritage and that her grandmother was in residential school. As I read her book, I had empathy for Cass (her main character) and the struggle she was going through, but I also feel that the parts of the story about the mask sound very much like ones written by people who arent Native.

Heres the synopsis for the book:
Cass and her mom have always stood on their own against the world. Then Cass learns she had a grandmother, one who was never part of her life, one who has just died and left her and her mother the first house they could call their own. But with it comes more questions than answers: Why is her Mom so determined not to live there? Why was this relative kept so secret? And what is the unusual mask, forgotten in a drawer, trying to tell her? Strange dreams, strange voices, and strange incidents all lead Cass closer to solving the mystery and making connections she never dreamed she had.
Remember: The Mask That Sang is inspired by what Currie learned as an adult.

Currie said that she found out about her identity through research. Cass, however, finds out because of a mask she finds in a dresser drawer in a home that is left to her and her mom by her grandmother, who has passed away. That grandmother is likely based on Curries own grandmother, the one who went to residential school. In The Mask That Sang, we learn that Casss mother was abandoned by her own mother, and she ended up in the foster care system (p. 10):
My mother abandoned me as a baby, she gave me up to Childrens Aid and never tried to find me. Ive been in over twenty foster homes, and Ive lived at about as many addresses since.
It makes me wonder if Currie herself was abandoned by her birth mother.  Curries grandmother, at residential school, would not have been able to maintain her Cayuga ways of being. She may have lost touch with the Cayuga community. From Curries website, we know she gave birth to Curries mother (she is deceased) and two other children. When Currie found that birth aunt, Bev, she began learning about her Cayuga heritage from her, but I wonder what Bevs sources are? Did she reconnect with the Six Nations community? Did she relearn ways of being Cayuga?

I pose that question because of what Ive read about the ways that the Haudenosaunee peoples (this includes the nations in the US and Canada) treat the masks. Back in 1991, in their I is not for Indian bibliography, Naomi Caldwell Wood and Lisa Mitten, president and secretary of the American Indian Library Association wrote about Welwyn Wilton Katzs False Face. They said:
"Katz conjures up a ridiculously evil power that is supposed to inhabit the false face mask and alter the personalities of characters who attempt to possess the mask. This personalities of characters who attempt to possess the mask. This goes beyond the wild fantasies of a creative author. False face masks are an integral part of traditional Iroquois religion practised today on the very reserve that Katz describes so well. Her description of the mask as an absolute evil amounts to religious intolerance and goes far in fostering the conception of native, non-Christian religions as savage pagan rituals. A very harmful book."
Currie does that, too. In The Mask That Sang, Cass enters the house that had belonged to her grandmother. When she goes inside she hears "a mischievous purr" (p. 23) that becomes a hum and then a song as she nears the dresser where the mask is. It seems that the song she hears tells her that she wont be lonely anymore.

When she finally opens the drawer and unwraps the mask, she screams. Mr. Gregor, a neighbor theyve just met, tells them it is a false face. Casss mom says it is an ugly face, and Mr. Gregor replies that it is an Iroquois healing mask and that theres a large Aboriginal population in their new neighborhood. He asks if theyre Aboriginal and they say no, because at this point in the story, they dont know theyre Native. Cass thinks, though, that she somehow feels like she recognizes the mask.

That night at bedtime, Cass opens the drawer and looks the mask in the eye, telling it that she thinks she likes it, but "lets not go too far" (p. 37). The voices in the mask sing to her:
Too late, the voice seemed to sing, filled with satisfaction at their own funny selves, pleased with the mischief they had played while hiding and being found. Now they had a new playmate, and they darted around Cass as if they were strings binding her. But friendly strings, friendlier than what waited tomorrow.
"Tomorrow" is a reference to Casss first day of school. Shes dreading it because at previous schools, shes been bullied. As she drifts off to sleep, the masks earlier message of her not being alone, is chanting as she falls asleep and into a dream where she and others are trapped in a school "like animals" who are "being groomed for something" and who are not "free creatures anymore, because free meant wild" (p. 40). She wakes, realizing the mask is singing to the children in her dream, comforting them. They were also telling Cass to go to school, and to be brave, chanting and "looping about Cass like an incantation."

As the story continues, the voices speak to her at key moments. They tell her to stick up for Degan Hill, a Cayuga boy she meets at school. She does, and the two become friends. He tells her about his aunt, who is a healer and has dreams. He tells her that dreams, spirits, and healing are part of their traditional ways. She tells him about the mask and he tells her that his aunt says theyre tricky, that they move stuff, turn lights on and off, and that the masks can go either good or bad. She takes him to her house to show it to him but it is gone. Her mother has pawned it to get money to buy a computer.

The story, from there, is about recovering the mask. Cass continues to have dreams, and, Cass and Degan use the dreams to find the mask. At one point, Cass is feeling sorry for herself and tells her mother that her life would have been better if Cass had never been born. She feels intense rage, brought on by the mask. It music is now "deadly and dangerous" (p. 120). Her dreams also include the children she saw in the first dream. One night, she sees them, trapped by fire.

The ways that Currie is writing about the masks feels wrong. Turning lights on and off? That sounds more like a poltergeist story, and the use of some words, like incantation, puts the masks--as presented by Currie--into an inappropriate framework of Eurocentric magic and supernatural stories. It reminds me of what I saw in Shadows Cast By Stars. That author, Catherine Knutsson, is similar to Currie in this way: both came to know their Native heritage as adults. Knutssons book has paranormal qualities to, it, too that feel inappropriate. I saw similar problems with dreams in Tara Whites Where I Belong.

I really want to read stories from people like Currie and Knuttson and White, who come to know their heritage, later in life, but for me, they lose their potential and value when they sound just like the stories that White people write. Their stories can inform readers about racist programs and histories, but when those stories enter this magical and mystical thread, they misinform and even denigrate the very people their stories are about. These writers have not moved beyond the inaccuracies that Vowel referenced in Indigenous Writes.

On goodreads, Currie writes that shes working on another book:
I am beginning to work on a new story exploring the residential school experience. At present, it is starting to shape into a bit of a time travel story in which two parallel events are occurring - in one timeline, we follow a young girl in residential school who is fighting to hang onto her culture, and in the other, we follow a young girl in the foster care system who is searching for her missing mother. How these two timelines come together, and how the girls become friends, is tied up in visions and magic and the power of traditions....
Seeing "magic" there points, again, to a framework that I think is Eurocentric. I do think a time travel story that explores these two different periods of time would be one Id want to read but I hope that Currie picks up a copy of Love Beyond Space, Body, and Time to see how other Native writers write that sort of storyline. That book is exquisite. It isnt for children. Older teens, yes. The full title is Love Beyond Space, Body, and Time: An LGBT and Two-Spirit Anthology. Ive not yet reviewed it for AICL, but did a Storify on it a few days ago. In fact, anyone who wants to write Native characters ought to read that book. I highly recommend it.

In sum: I do not recommend Susan Curries The Mask That Sang.

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For further reading, see:

Haudenosaunee Confederacys policy on false face masks, published in 1995 in Akwesasne Notes. 

Cayuga Museum Receives Replica Wampum Belt for Returning Haudenosaunee Spiritual Objects, published in 2013 at Indian Country Today. 

Indigenous Writes: A Guide to First Nations, M�tis & Inuit Issues in Canada by Chelsea Vowel, published in 2016 by Portage & Main Press.

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