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Exploring America’s Libraries, Churches, and Casinos.

October 1, 2023 by Exangel

by Cal LaFountain.

Libraries, churches, and casinos are everywhere, and they offer more than knowledge, faith, and fortune. These institutions fashion the world in disproportionate secrecy. Each invites you to engage its gods and fuels a striving for more.

Seeking a new loop of mind, spirit, and wallet, I’m exploring these places across America and extracting whatever meaning I can from them. I want to show the people who frequent them, the rituals that uphold them, and the presence they impart to communities.

Libraries and Human History

Neomania is a prevalent, unrecognized cognitive bias. It is the tendency to believe whatever is new is always better than what came before. This isn’t true, new things aren’t good just because they’re new. From the wheel to the wood table, quality inventions enjoy future use equal to or greater than their past use.

Three years ago on this site, I argued for audiobooks as a necessary vehicle to progress literature. I still believe this, as audiobooks recycle oral history, a tradition more evergreen than printed words. But I’m now curious to defend printed books as the sharpest knowledge spear.

Physical texts contain something like the raw essence of a person unanchored across time. In this frame, cultures, eras, and stylistic choices act more as filters than endpoints. Instead, the endpoint of a book is an elusive expression of mortality leveraged by precise language. That thing you can’t name—the unflippable switch—it’s known when it’s read.

Until some new media overturns the intimate power of written words, libraries, and their unspoken mission of tracking human history and guarding truth across time, possess infinite relevancy. As more of the world goes online, physical spaces, particularly ones that don’t require capital output to enjoy (like libraries), become more scarce. They thrive, even in their lowest forms, as places to sit and expire an hour with no pressure to spend money.

Embracing Church and Resisting ‘The Church’

Church is different from “The Church.” One is ancient and loving, sheltering anyone during the inevitable crashes of life. The other is a crooked racket curtaining humanity’s most atrocious acts.

To see into religion is to see past its nastiness. The core of belief systems and how their believers tarnish them require constant separation. Weaponizing faith for conquest is the failure of the practitioner, not the idea system. As a veil for crooked deeds rallied in the name of selfish gain, religion leaves a sour taste for many.

These perversions stand as proof of religion’s necessity in a flawed species. History has cabinets full of dogmatic campaigns that highlight this fact: humans will confiscate anything for personal benefit. To abolish religion and church is to clarify how a moral protocol combats primal failings.

Religions of all kinds, housed in the gothic fronts and ethereal beacons of churches around the globe, exist as reminders to strive beyond puny mortal fences. The failures of “The Church” then become nothing more than a scab falling off in the shower. Try to see past the gnarled skin and admire the clean layer beneath.

I’ve witnessed an identical glee light a man’s face when an ace hit the green felt of the blackjack table, and when the tithe money hit the red felt of the offering tray passed around after a sermon—two similar donations to two different gods. In the faces of the jubilant winner and the pious devotee, complex desires distill to a singular hope. Awash in that ecstasy, present equally during the choral exultation and the gutsy wager, how can I admonish anyone for their beliefs or their appetite for risk?

Casinos and Risk

The risks made in casinos and churches are not so foreign to each other. I went to school and learned about everything from Occam’s Razor to Pascal’s Wager, but none of these lofty philosophical frameworks prepare you for real life in the real world. They are no lifeboats when hit with the skin-in-the-game of true risk. When a soul or a bankroll hangs in unseen purgatory, no book, no quote, or therapist can help. It’s maximum life coursing your veins in those moments, and it’s a domain where personal experience reigns above theory.

The precise needle of science demurs personal experience, labeling its fragile nature as biased guesswork. Yet there is value there, one that often fails to fill rational explanations. The call of the improving chime is painful to ignore and ignoring it is like picking your nose with four different fingers: four times the work for four times the horrible reward.

The casino floor invites anyone bold enough to stab at its fruits. Any outcome, even a big win, leads to eventual loss. What’s gained is always a temporary loan on its way out.

Science is good. So is faith. Balance is better. I caution myself or anyone against thinking there are answers to all of life’s phenomena. In my personal experience, it’s more exciting when you’re gifted the good privilege to shrug and say “I don’t know.” More exposure to risk is more exposure to mystery.

Seek It All

In libraries, the conversion of energy to knowledge sometimes means taxpayers run amok at a town hall meeting. As controversial as churches are, tradition sustains them. Casinos are containers for the most extreme pendulums of human joy and misery, rife with ethical dilemmas. The ideas these buildings nourish, the hope they restore, and the connections they gift have staying power.

Religion requires a total kneeling to the unknown cosmic belch from which we all bubbled into our stresses and traumas, waiting to pop. Christ said, “Be in the world, not of the world.” The capacity to express faith, whether contained in piety, knowledge, or luck, represents humanity’s most redeemable feature.

No one stays on this Earth journey forever. The great meeting places of humans across time, fleeting as the bricks and fulcrums that built them, display the brightest desires of a thinking species. Compassion, selflessness, and understanding are present where people gather. Seek one and the rest follow.

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In This Issue.

  • Who Was Dorothy?
  • Those Evil Spirits.
  • The Screaming Baboon.
  • Her.
  • A Tale of Persistence.
  • A Conversation with Steve Hugh Westenra.
  • Person Number Twelve.
  • Dream Shapes.
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  • Spring.
  • The Greatness that was Greece.
  • 1966, NYC; nothing like it.
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  • The Withering Weight of Being Perceived.
  • Broken Clock.
  • Confession.
  • Francis Coppola’s Apocalypse.
  • Sometimes you die, I mean that people do.
  • True (from “My Life with Dogs”).
  • Fragmentary musings on birds and bees.
  • 12 Baking Essentials to Always Have in Your Poetry.
  • Broad Street.
  • A Death in Alexandria.
  • My Forked Tongue.
  • Swan Lake.
  • Long Division.
  • Singing against the muses.
  • Aphorisms from “What Remains to Be Said”.

In The News.

That cult classic pirate/sci fi mash up GREENBEARD, by Richard James Bentley, is now a rollicking audiobook, available from Audible.com. Narrated and acted by Colby Elliott of Last Word Audio, you’ll be overwhelmed by the riches and hilarity within.

“Captain Sylvestre de Greybagges is your typical seventeenth-century Cambridge-educated lawyer turned Caribbean pirate, as comfortable debating the virtues of William Shakespeare, Isaac Newton, and compound interest as he is wielding a cutlass, needling archrival Henry Morgan, and parsing rum-soaked gossip for his next target. When a pepper monger’s loose tongue lets out a rumor about a fleet loaded with silver, the Captain sets sail only to find himself in a close encounter of a very different kind.

After escaping with his sanity barely intact and his beard transformed an alarming bright green, Greybagges rallies The Ark de Triomphe crew for a revenge-fueled, thrill-a-minute adventure to the ends of the earth and beyond.

This frolicsome tale of skullduggery, jiggery-pokery, and chicanery upon Ye High Seas is brimming with hilarious puns, masterful historical allusions, and nonstop literary hijinks. Including sly references to Thomas Pynchon, Treasure Island, 1940s cinema, and notable historical figures, this mélange of delights will captivate readers with its rollicking adventure, rich descriptions of food and fashion, and learned asides into scientific, philosophical, and colonial history.”

THE SUPERGIRLS is back, revised and updated!

supergirls-take-1

In The News.

Newport Public Library hosted a three part Zoom series on Visionary Fiction, led by Tod.  

And we love them for it, too.

The first discussion was a lively blast. You can watch it here. The second, Looking Back to Look Forward can be seen here.

The third was the best of all. Visions of the Future, with a cast of characters including poets, audiobook artists, historians, Starhawk, and Mary Shelley. Among others. Link is here.

In the News.

SNOTTY SAVES THE DAY is now an audiobook, narrated by Last Word Audio’s mellifluous Colby Elliott. It launched May 10th, but for a limited time, you can listen for free with an Audible trial membership. So what are you waiting for? Start listening to the wonders of how Arcadia was born from the worst section of the worst neighborhood in the worst empire of all the worlds since the universe began.

In The News.

If you love audio books, don’t miss the new release of REPORT TO MEGALOPOLIS, by Tod Davies, narrated by Colby Elliott of Last Word Audio. The tortured Aspern Grayling tries to rise above the truth of his own story, fighting with reality every step of the way, and Colby’s voice is the perfect match for our modern day Dr. Frankenstein.

In The News.

Mike Madrid dishes on Miss Fury to the BBC . . .

Tod on the Importance of Visionary Fiction

Check out this video of “Beyond Utopia: The Importance of Fantasy,” Tod’s recent talk at the tenth World-Ecology Research Network Conference, June 2019, in San Francisco. She covers everything from Wind in the Willows to the work of Kim Stanley Robinson, with a look at The History of Arcadia along the way. As usual, she’s going on about how visionary fiction has an important place in the formation of a world we want and need to have.

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