Just to bring the tone back down, I've nearly finished "The Owl meets the Devil" by Bryan Rodney. This is one of a short series of books with The Owl as main hero/protagnist, from 1950's. A British, good guy safecracker with an owl mask who rights wrongs and gives the proceeds of his robberies to charity. The usual Scotland Yard detective type (a la Saint) on his trail. I have a notion to read more of this entertaining, low brow stuff and the next will be a Silk story - and, yes, you've guessed it, this is a masked character, acting for good, outside the law. A few years ago I read " The Crimson Clown" and "Thunderbolt" stories by Johnston McCulley and I'm putting them back on the reading pile. This has also put me in the notion for Bulldog Drummond (by Sapper) and for those who don't know, "The Black Gang" features a group of hooded, robed, masked crimefighters, led by Drummond. Fast, exciting writing, if you can get around the extremely non-pc stuff that was prevalent at the time.
I understand narfstar's comment and I also try to see the other person's point of view but it becomes more difficult as I get older. Listening to the litany of disaster, war, murders and the dire state of our economy every morning on Radio Scotland, really puts a strain on my ability to accept those other lifestyles and views. That's why a heavy dose of action packed pulp fiction is one of the great antidotes.
We've got elections for the Scottish Parliament next week and it's going to be very interesting to see how the SNP (they're the nationalists, going for independence) do, as it looks as if they might just get a majority. Interested to follow it?