a For the Win » Dogberry Pages

Title: For the Win
Author: Cory Doctorow
Sentence:
  • He got three steps before two rocks caught him, one in the arm and the second in the face, a spray of blood and a crunch of bone and a tooth that flew high in the air as the boy fell backwards as if poleaxed.
  • He'd never had much use for art, but he'd been poleaxed by these ones.

Page: 276 & 317

Word: poleaxed
Definition:
  • to attack or fell with or as with a poleax (a long-handled battle-ax)
   Source: YourDictionary.com

Interesting to find this ‘new to me’ word used both literally and figuratively in the book. I have not had much experience with battle axes but am betting my kids have in their virtual worlds.


Title: For the Win
Author: Cory Doctorow
Sentence: He checked to see if he'd laid it on too thickly, decided he hadn't, grinned and namasted to her, just to ice the biscuit
Page: 213

Word: namaste
Definition:
  • a conventional Hindu expression on meeting or parting, used by the speaker usually while holding the palms together vertically in front of the bosom.
   Source: Dictionary.com

Namaste is a combination of two Sanskrit words: nama meaning “to bow” and te meaning “you.”


Title: For the Win
Author: Cory Doctorow
Page: 153
There’s a saying from physics, “It’s turtles all the way down.” Do you know it? It comes from a story about a British physicist, Bertrand Russell, who gave a lecture about the universe, how the Earth goes around the Sun and so on. And a little old granny in the audience says, “It’s all rubbish! The world is flat and rests on the back of a turtle!” And Russell says, “If that is so, what does the turtle stand on?” And the granny says, “You can’t fool me, sonny, it’s turtles all the way down!” In other words, what lives under the illusion is yet another illusion, and under that one is another illusion again.

Title: For the Win
Author: Cory Doctorow
Page: 117
” The important thing wasn’t what they needed or loved, it was the idea that someone else would have something they couldn’t have.

Connor made his second great discovery: Envy, not greed, was the most powerful force in any economy.”

— Who would think that besides a lesson on labor relations, a book written for teens would also explain economic theory using in game buying and selling of elite items.

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