The Bleeding Edge has a cartographic (or printing) origin
Erik T. Burns
eburns at gmail.com
Sat Jan 5 03:56:49 CST 2013
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0786028076
"The Shady Hill Mobile Home Park isn't shady or hilly - this is West Texas
after all. To military vet John Howard Stark, it's home. And worth fighting
for. A vicious Mexican drug cartel starts terrorizing the residents of
Shady Hill - retirees mostly - leaving severed heads in vegetable gardens
to scare them out. As usual, the Feds and the local police run for cover.
The good people of Shady Hill make a stand, electing Stark as their chief
of police. One a rancher, always a Texan, Stark and his fellow patriots
send the Mexican cartel into a bloodthirsty fury by daring to fight back:
the bad guys start slaughtering innocent high school students. The
God-fearing folks of Shady Hill are totally on their own and deep in the
heart of a bloody battle that can only end in a fight for survival,
liberty...or death."
On Sat, Jan 5, 2013 at 8:40 AM, Dave Monroe <against.the.dave at gmail.com>wrote:
> http://www.bgcarto.com/full-bleed-maps-and-crop-marks-in-arcmap/
>
> On 1/5/13, Don Higgins <bencanard2000 at yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> > Bleed n. The edge of a map or chart on which cartographic detail is
> extended
> > to the edge of the sheet. Also called BLEEDING EDGE. bleeding edge. . See
> > BLEED.
> >
> > Hope it takes place in the 1860s and is long.
> >
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://waste.org/pipermail/pynchon-l/attachments/20130105/83e88c26/attachment.html>
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list