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Daily Wire Feed
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34 w

Ranked Choice Voting Goes Down In Flames
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Ranked Choice Voting Goes Down In Flames

Last Tuesday, voters in six states decisively rejected ballot measures that would have brought ranked choice voting to future elections. In Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Oregon, RCV went down in flames. National groups spent millions on campaigns promising RCV would enhance democracy and empower the people, angling for an election day triumph. Instead, the voters handed them a rout. Adding insult to injury, Alaska appears on track to repeal RCV after using it for just two years. Missouri, meanwhile, became the first state to ban it at the ballot box, and the eleventh state overall to bar RCV. In fact, the number of states to ban RCV more than doubled this year. Ranked choice voting, a complex scheme, seems better suited to a laboratory than a voting booth. It eliminates the “one person, one vote” principle and asks voters to rank multiple candidates for each race. If no candidate gets a majority, the one with the fewest votes is eliminated, and their ballots are redistributed to the voter’s next choice. This process repeats until someone claims a majority. Voting takes longer with RCV. Voters must learn about and rank numerous candidates in multiple contests on each ballot. Counting ballots also takes longer, as final tabulations can’t begin until all ballots are received, and some states allow mail ballots to arrive after Election Day. Some states lack voting systems that can handle this process; Idaho’s secretary of state estimated the cost to replace the state’s equipment at $40 million. The results are difficult to audit and just as hard to explain, especially when ranked choice voting catapults candidates who got the second- or third-most votes into office after numerous rounds of elimination. In fact, RCV is so confusing that the wrong winner can be certified. That actually happened in Oakland, California in 2022. The one thing RCV does reliably is push politics to the left, particularly when this scheme is paired with California-style jungle primaries. That’s the system Alaska uses, and in the special congressional election of 2022, more voters cast ballots for Republicans but Democrat Mary Peltola went to Congress.  Small wonder, then, that left-wing megadonors decided to push RCV nationwide despite its obvious flaws. They built up an array of organizations to lobby, petition, and ultimately to campaign for ranked choice voting. Those efforts culminated in ballot measures in six states, fueled by an astonishing $99 million, or nearly $30 for every $1 spent in opposition. Nearly half of that extraordinary sum came from groups tied to liberal billionaire John Arnold and his wife, Laura. The pair spent at least $39 million propping up ranked choice voting measures this year alone. What did these donors get for their millions? Not much. Nearly 70% of Idahoans voted against RCV. Colorado and Oregon, both liberal states, rejected the measures by double-digit margins. And in the presidential battlegrounds of Arizona and Nevada, ranked choice voting went down harder and faster than Kamala Harris. Meanwhile, nearly 69% of Missourians voted to proactively ban ranked choice voting. In Alaska, the Arnolds and other RCV megadonors poured in almost $15 million to defend the scheme against a repeal effort. Despite that, the repeal vote is winning as ballots continue to come in. Washington, D.C., was the only bright spot for RCV advocates, where a citywide ballot measure passed by wide margins. That may not be the win proponents imagine. After all, “they use it in the swamp” isn’t much of a rallying cry. MATT WALSH’S ‘AM I RACIST?’ NOW STREAMING ON DAILYWIRE+ Is this the end of ranked choice voting? It should be. But with the left, there is no such thing as a permanent defeat. In fact, RCV has endured expensive, high-profile failures before—a $10 million loss in Massachusetts in 2020, for instance—only to rebrand the scheme as “instant runoffs” and “open primaries,” and spend 10 times as much this year. RCV backers are already promising they will be back, even telegraphing they will focus instead on lobbying state legislatures to impose the scheme that voters just decisively rejected. So much for all their talk about “democracy.” Lawmakers would be wise to head that effort off by banning ranked choice voting next year, instead. Left-wing billionaires spent millions trying to buy a new form of democracy that would cater to their politics and interests. Fortunately, the American people spoke loud and clear: our election system is not for sale. * * * Jason Snead is the executive director of Honest Elections Project Action. The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The Daily Wire.
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34 w

Fauci Got $15M In Taxpayer-Funded Security Services — After He Retired: Report
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Fauci Got $15M In Taxpayer-Funded Security Services — After He Retired: Report

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) who retired in December 2022, reportedly got $15,000,000 in taxpayer-funded security services — after he retired. The services were provided between January 4, 2023, and September 20, 2024. The government watchdog organization Open The Books, which states its mission is to “work hard to capture and post all disclosed spending at every level of government – federal, state, and local,” found the evidence in a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the U.S. Marshals service and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) via a Freedom of Information Act request, a new report states. Open the Books’ Deputy Policy Editor Amber Todoroff and The Dossier investigative journalist Jordan Schachtel reported that money covered “Salaries and benefits for deputies and administrative personnel assigned to Fauci’s protective detail; costs related to transporting Fauci, and law enforcement equipment.” The MOU acknowledged that there was a possibility that the contract could be extended. MATT WALSH’S ‘AM I RACIST?’ NOW STREAMING ON DAILYWIRE+ “From 2019 to 2022 he was the highest paid federal employee,” Todoroff and Schachtel noted, adding, “Fauci retired from the federal bureaucracy with a record $480,654 salary. In 2022 Open the Books estimated his pension would be about $355,000 per year, adding to the considerable fortune of $11 million amassed over his 54 years of government service.” “We could find no other cases of a former federal employee receiving this level of protection,” they noted succinctly. In April 2023, Fauci said in an interview that people should stop blaming public health officials for mistakes that were made during the pandemic. CNN’s Christiane Amanpour asked Fauci what he thought he and the scientific community “got wrong” with the policies that they pushed and implemented. “What are the real takeaways, the real lessons for public health?” she asked. “I think we have to get away from the blame game because so many of the things that you have mentioned were unknowns at the time,” Fauci responded. “It’s so easy.” “This is really big time Monday morning quarterbacking here, which is what it is,” he claimed. “So, rather than have a blame game, and that’s one of the things that we have to stay away from because there were things that happened and it was a moving target and there were things that you did not know at the time and you had to, out of necessity, make a decision.” RELATED: Dr. Fauci On Mistakes Made During The Pandemic: ‘We Have To Get Away From The Blame Game’
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Daily Caller Feed
34 w

Trump Chooses GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik As US Ambassador To UN
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Trump Chooses GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik As US Ambassador To UN

'I shared how deeply humbled I am to accept his nomination'
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34 w

‘No Clear Favorite’: CNN’s Enten Breaks Down How Democrat Party Has No ‘Heir Apparent’ For Next Presidential Primary
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‘No Clear Favorite’: CNN’s Enten Breaks Down How Democrat Party Has No ‘Heir Apparent’ For Next Presidential Primary

'That is really unusual'
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34 w

GOP Senators Rally Behind Newly-Elected McCormick As Schumer Refuses To Invite Him To Orientation
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GOP Senators Rally Behind Newly-Elected McCormick As Schumer Refuses To Invite Him To Orientation

'I’m willing to personally escort Dave McCormick into the Capitol'
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
34 w

Texas Woman Sets Record for Donating Almost 700 Gallons of Breastmilk
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Texas Woman Sets Record for Donating Almost 700 Gallons of Breastmilk

An extraordinary woman from Texas has claimed a Guinness World Record thanks to her generous heart, and a little help from some other organs. Alyse Ogletree has set the world record for the most amount of breastmilk donated by a single person—2,645.58 liters—or just about 700 gallons. It was a record she had previously broken […] The post Texas Woman Sets Record for Donating Almost 700 Gallons of Breastmilk appeared first on Good News Network.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
34 w

Meet Bo, Americaand#039;s Hero Dog Of 2024
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Meet Bo, Americaand#039;s Hero Dog Of 2024

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Pet Life
Pet Life
34 w

How Cats Respond to the Television: Olga’s Occasional Reactions
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How Cats Respond to the Television: Olga’s Occasional Reactions

The post How Cats Respond to the Television: Olga’s Occasional Reactions by Christopher Bays appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com. Hi, I’m Christopher! Read my introduction to learn more about me and my silly Russian Blue cat, Olga. Unlike their owners, most cats aren’t fascinated by television, which is probably good because the feline obesity problem would be much worse. Some indoor cats don’t get enough exercise, and if they are glued to the tube instead of chasing catnip mice and racing through their homes, they’ll gain weight. Olga isn’t too interested in watching TV, but sometimes she gets irritated by sound effects and soundtracks. Young Olga’s Courage As a kitten, Olga seemed fearless. She wasn’t easily frightened until the 4th of July, and she ordinarily ignored the stereo and television. If I was too focused on a film, she attacked my feet or climbed to the top of the chair to smack me in the head. Like many young cats, Olga only had two speeds: high gear and park (asleep). Christopher, are you watching Monty Python without me? Her First Response to TV When I moved to a new house with more space, she was almost a year old. I set up a stereo with a powerful subwoofer, and the first movie I watched sent Olga running for cover. The volume was too loud, and the MGM lion’s roar made her hop in the air and run under the bed in the other room. She only reacted to the roar once and determined the sound was not coming from a giant, wild cat. Some animal experts recommend leaving a TV or stereo on when you leave to comfort your pets. Since I’ve never filmed Olga when she’s alone in the house, I’m not sure a nature program or 24-hour feed of the world’s largest aviary would help her separation anxiety. Turn the television off! It’s past your bedtime. Adult Ambivalence She doesn’t bat an ear when she hears bird calls or nature sounds on the television, which is strange since she looks confused and irritated when she hears Pink Floyd’s Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving With a Pick. It’s also odd that Olga doesn’t react to the sound of fireworks on television. She freezes in fear when she hears them going off in my neighborhood, but explosions and gunfire don’t phase her when they’re not real. Please turn the volume on the stereo down. It’s disturbing my peace. Deep Bass Annoyance Sometimes, the sound effects from movies grab her attention but rarely make her run away. She doesn’t like the sound of the self-destruct siren at the end of Aliens or the screaming at the beginning of the original House on Haunted Hill with Vincent Price. However, the only sound that makes her move closer to the speaker and question her sanity is a low, rumbling bass. David Lynch’s films often include a prolonged rumble to build suspense or lead up to a shocking scene, and Olga isn’t fond of his sound effects. I have to turn down the volume to prevent her from clawing up the subwoofer. As for the images on the television, nothing seems to interest Olga, whether there are songbirds chirping or rodents squeaking. Leaving the TV on may help some cats when their owners leave, but Olga prefers humans to flatscreens. This article is a part of Christopher and Olga's series. Read his previous article: Cat Grooming Challenges: Olga’s Battle With the Brush The post How Cats Respond to the Television: Olga’s Occasional Reactions by Christopher Bays appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
34 w

Here Are the Winners of the 2024 Ignyte Awards
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Here Are the Winners of the 2024 Ignyte Awards

News ignyte awards Here Are the Winners of the 2024 Ignyte Awards Congratulations to the winners! By Molly Templeton | Published on November 11, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share The winners of the Ignyte Awards were announced on November 8th; these awards celebrate “celebrate the vibrancy and diversity of the current and future landscapes of science fiction, fantasy, and horror by recognizing incredible feats in storytelling and outstanding efforts toward inclusivity of the genre.” The awards’ shortlists are selected by a jury 0f 20 readers, reviews, FIYAHCON staff, and previous winners, and for the young adult and middle grade categories, a jury of readers between the ages of 12 and 17 also voted for the shortlist. Voting for the winners is open to all. Congratulations to all this year’s winners! Outstanding Novel: Adult Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon – Wole Talabi (DAW Books) The Water Outlaws – S.L. Huang (Tordotcom) WINNER: The Saint of Bright Doors – Vajra Chandrasekera (Tordotcom) To Shape a Dragon’s Breath – Moniquill Blackgoose (Del Rey) We are the Crisis – Cadwell Turnbull (Blackstone Publishing) Outstanding Novel: Young Adult WINNER: I Feed Her to the Beast and the Beast Is Me – Jamison Shae (Henry Holt & Co.) That Self-Same Metal – Brittany N. Williams (Harry N. Abrams) Funeral Songs for Dying Girls – Cherie Dimaline (Tundra Books) Beholder – Ryan La Sala (PUSH) Sing Me to Sleep – Gabi Burton (Bloomsbury YA) Outstanding Middle Grade WINNER: Abeni’s Song – P. Djèlí Clark (Starscape) Just a Pinch of Magic – Alechia Dow ‎(Feiwel & Friends) Keynan Masters and the Peerless Magic Crew – DaVaun Sanders (Inkyard Press) Lei and the Fire Goddess – Malia Maunakea (Penguin Workshop) The Sun and the Star – Mark Oshiro, Rick Riordan (Disney Hyperion) Outstanding Novella Off-Time Jive – A.Z. Louise (Neon Hemlock Press) Green Fuse Burning – Tiffany Morris (Stelliform Press) WINNER: The Lies of the Ajungo – Moses Ose Utomi (Tordotcom) The Mimicking of Known Successes – Malka Older (Tordotcom) Sordidez – E.G. Condé (Stelliform Press) Outstanding Novelette “A Short Biography of a Conscious Chair” – Renan Bernardo (Samovar) “Ivy, Angelica, Bay” – C L Polk (Reactor) “Imagine: Purple-Haired Girl Shooting Down the Moon” – Angela Liu (Clarkesworld) WINNER: “Spell for Grief and Longing” – Eboni J. Dunbar (FIYAH) “Zhuangzi’s Dream” – Cao Baiyu, translated by Stella Jiayue Zhu (Clarkesworld) Outstanding Short Story “Tantie Merle and the Farmhand 4200” – R.S.A. Garcia (Uncanny) “Window Boy” – Thomas Ha (Clarkesworld) WINNER: “A Witch’s Transition In The City Of Ghosts” – Oluwatomiwa Ajeigbe (Beneath Ceaseless Skies) “Lips Like Sugar” – Cynthia Gómez (Luna Station Quarterly) “Thin Ice” – Kemi Ashing-Giwa (Clarkesworld) Oustanding Speculative Poetry “Helen after Helen” – Rasha Abdulhadi (Apparition Lit Magazine) “Imported Entry Into An Android Cosmos” – Nwuguru Chidiebere Sullivan (FIYAH) “Aborteras del Viejo Mundo | Aborting the Old World” – Claudia Vaca, translated by Brittany Hause (Samovar) “Alternate Rooms” – Nwuguru Chidiebere Sullivan (Nightmare) WINNER: “My Mother, she ate me” – Akua Lezli Hope (FIYAH) Critics Award Aigner Loren Wilson WINNER: Alex Brown Archita Mittra Bookbaddiebri The Blerd Library Outstanding Fiction Podcast PodCastle – The Podcastle Team Old Gods of Appalachia – Steve Shell and Cam Collins Cast of Wonders – The CoW Team Simultaneous Times Podcast (Space Cowboy Books) WINNER: Levar Burton Reads Outstanding Artist WINNER: Rovina Cai Cathy Kwan Paul Lewin Godwin Akpan Dante Luiz Outstanding Comics Team Whisper of the Woods – Ennun Ana Iurov (Mad Cave) Brooms – Jasmine Walls, Teo DuVall, Bex Glendining, Ariana Maher (Levine Querido) Mage and the Endless Unknown – S.J. Miller (Iron Circus Comics) WINNER: Kill Your Darlings – Ethan S. Parker, Griffin Sheridan, Bob Quinn (Image Comics) Suee and the Strange White Light – Ginger Ly and Molly Park (Abrams Fanfare) Outstanding Anthology/Collected Works Never Whistle at Night – Shane Hawk, Theodore C. Van Alst Jr. (Vintage) Night of the Living Queers – Shelly Page and Alex Brown (Wednesday Books) WINNER: No One Will Come Back for Us – Premee Mohamed (Undertow Publications) Out There Screaming – Jordan Peele, John Joseph Adams (Random House) Who Lost, I Found – Eden Royce (Broken Eye Books) Outstanding Creative  Non-Fiction “The H Word: The Fear Horror of Change” – L. Marie Wood (Nightmare Magazine) WINNER: “The Magic is in the Roots: Cultural Reconnection Through Magical Realism – Lysz Flo” (FIYAH) “Symmetry, Horror, and Identity” -Tania Chen (Apparition Lit) “To Every Other Jobu Tupaki After Jamie Lee Curtis’s Oscar Win” – Maya Gittelman (Reactor) “The Substitute” – Yi Izzy Yu (Unquiet Spirits) The Ember Award for Unsung Contributions to Genre WINNER: Sheree Renée Thomas DaVaun Sanders Kate Elliott Kwame Mbalia A.C. Wise The Community Award  for Outstanding Efforts in Service of Inclusion and Equitable Practice in Genre WINNER: Khōréō – The Khōréō Team Voodoonauts Summer Fellowship – Shingai Njeri Kagunda, Yvette Lisa Ndlovu, LP Kindred, Hugh “H.D” Hunter Stone Soup: Personal Canons Cookbook – Sarah Gailey Samovar Magazine – Laura Friis, Sarah Dodd and Greg West Awesome Black – Awesome Black Team [end-mark] The post Here Are the Winners of the 2024 Ignyte Awards appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
34 w

A Boy and His Monster: The Water Horse (2007)
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A Boy and His Monster: The Water Horse (2007)

Column SFF Bestiary A Boy and His Monster: The Water Horse (2007) A lonely kid saves a mysterious animal, and hijinks ensue… By Judith Tarr | Published on November 11, 2024 Credit: Columbia Pictures Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Columbia Pictures I had another article in the works, but current events made me want to find something light and hopeful and heartwarming for this week instead. Thanks to commenter Brian for a recommendation that was just what I needed. I have the best commenters. The Water Horse: Secrets of the Deep was filmed in New Zealand, with local land and waterscapes doing a decent job of cosplaying Scotland. It’s a nice example of the trope of lonely kid who saves life of animal, has to hide it from parental unit or units, animal refuses to not get discovered, hijinks ensue. Extra points if the animal is mythical, magical, and/or extraterrestrial (hello, E.T.!). In this case there’s another trope, the frame story set in the present day. Young couple visiting Loch Ness happens across the iconic “Surgeon’s Photo” of Nessie. Male partner (who looks a little bit like Ted Danson) declares that it’s a hoax. Crusty Old Local lowers his newspaper to declare in his turn that there’s more to the story than anyone knows. And we’re off, back to World War II. Young Angus lives in a stately home beside Loch Ness with his older sister and his mum, who is the head housekeeper. Angus’ father is away in the war. Now the war is coming to them in the form of an army unit. Its mission: to barricade the loch against a German invasion. There’s a whole tangle of human drama. Angus badly misses his daddy, and has built a sort of shrine to him in the shop (i.e. the handyman’s domain). The soldiers billeted in the manor have their own stories, character quirks, and love interests. Ditto the new handyman. But the heart of the film, and the reason we’re all here, is a thing Angus finds while wandering around a tide pool. Angus is both terrified of and drawn to the water. He almost drowned once, and has flashbacks. But a tide pool is safe enough, and he comes across an oddity: a large black egg-shaped object, which he drops into his bucket and carries home to the shop. The black coloring turns out to be a kind of casing. Underneath it is beautiful and gleaming and blue-green. It is, of course, an actual egg. It hatches a Weta creation, a shiny, rubbery, pinkish-black shading to beige creature with a reptilian head and Shrek-like horns, a blobby body, seal-like fins, and a tail ending in a whale-like fluke. This baby, whom Angus names Crusoe because he was found all alone on a beach, is sweet and cute and endlessly hungry. Angus is determined to keep him as a pet, and also determined to hide him, but that doesn’t exactly work out. Angus’ sister quickly finds out about him, as does Lewis the handyman. So does Strunk the army cook’s bulldog, Churchill, who despite his less than athletic build is a determined and ruthless hunter. Churchill (played by canine actor Sid) is one of my favorite characters in the film. There are, inevitably, hijinks, and chases, and drama. Lewis comes from another Scottish town near another loch, and he knows what Crusoe is, thanks to his knowledge of loch lore. Crusoe is a Water Horse, a kelpie. Lewis convinces Angus, with difficulty, to give up the idea of keeping him and release him into the loch. Unfortunately for Crusoe, this throws him into direct conflict with the army’s mission. They’ve rigged a vast net up the loch to catch invading submarines, and have installed artillery down at the other end. Once they reach the testing phase, they start shelling the loch. Angus tries desperately to stop them, but fails. No one believes there’s an actual monster in the loch. Of course there is, and he is sighted by multiple people. One of them is a newspaperman from Aberdeen whose search for fame and fortune leads him to try for a sighting. When he doesn’t get one, he manufactures it—and that’s the photo we were shown at the beginning. Ironically, while he’s producing his hoax, the real monster is cruising along just out of sight. The real hoax is some years older than the one we’re shown. It does give us a glimpse of how the “monster” was constructed, and it’s nice, and cute, and fits the film. So what exactly is Crusoe? Lewis tells Angus what he knows. The Water Horse is the rarest of animals, he says. There’s only ever one in the world. It reproduces by laying a single egg, and then it dies. It’s always an orphan, and it never knows its parent. It’s a kind of aquatic version of the legendary Phoenix. Although Angus identifies Crusoe as a boy because of his heroic appetite, in fact he’s a they. Both male and female, Lewis says. Which means it basically clones itself. Crusoe grows at an enormous rate. Every time he eats, he gets exponentially bigger. The tiny, kitten-sized hatchling matures into a monster big enough to swamp a torpedo boat. He keeps his horselike head and his Shrek horns, and gains a serrated ridge along his neck. His body continues to be short and roundish, and his fins and tail recall both a seal and a whale. In adult form he has a mouthful of pointed teeth. He eats anything he can get, particularly fish. He does not eat humans, and will only attack them if they attack him first. The shelling traumatizes him and destroys his trust in humans, which breaks Angus’ heart. Before he loses that trust but after he reaches adult size, he and Angus share a few hours of wonder. Angus falls onto his back and is carried off, much like the legend Lewis told of a relative who asked the beast to carry him across the loch. Lewis claims not to recall how the story ended: whether the kelpie did as asked, or whether he carried the man away into the deeps. As it turns out, both things can be true. Crusoe carries Angus down the loch, and then starts diving, swimming through a world of marvels: sunken ships, treasure chests, an underwater Stonehenge. Angus at first is terrified, but soon starts to enjoy it. There’s nothing said about it, and no explicit magic, but Angus manages to both scream and whoop underwater, spends quite a long time down there, and doesn’t appear to have any trouble with oxygen deprivation. Is it possible that Crusoe has a magic about him that lets his rider not have to breathe underwater? Or else extends the rider’s ability to hold his breath without passing out? It appears that Crusoe is an amphibian. He doesn’t quite read as a reptile, and he’s not a mammal—no fur, no mother to provide milk in infancy. He breathes air, but is clearly at home underwater. He swims rather like a seal, or like a dolphin, but is much larger than either. He’s pretty intelligent, too, maybe as bright as a dog. He bonds to Angus and makes friends with Lewis. Shelling of the loch traumatizes him but Angus is able to calm him to an extent, enough to ride him down the loch when the army mistakes him for a German invasion. I thought he might end up saving the loch from the Germans, but the story doesn’t go in that direction. It’s more about letting a wild animal be wild, and setting the kelpie free to be all he’s meant to be. As the story comes to its end, we find out the approximate lifespan of the individual Water Horse. Between sixty and seventy years, give or take, before he lays his one egg and dies. Then there’s another black-cased egg with its jewel-gleam of blue and green beneath. And so the species continues, one egg at a time, one beast at a time, and, it seems, one human rescuer at a time. Maybe that human needs a rescue of his own. He saves the loneliest creature in the world, and helps him live and grow and spread his subtle magic through the loch, and finds friends and family and his own subtle magic in the process.[end-mark] The post A Boy and His Monster: <i>The Water Horse</i> (2007) appeared first on Reactor.
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