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...this seems rather silly--Deathtrap is tricky in a very predictable way. One has little chance to be confused: Bruhl constantly discusses the theatrical potential of the murders he commits, and ten lines rarely pass without a plot recap. It's rather like the old math problem about the frog in the slippery well who cannot jump three feet without falling back two. In addition, Levin makes his characters as self-conscious as his playwrighting. "Nothing recedes like success," quips Bruhl, and is so taken with the phrase that he writes it down for use by some character...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Death Throes | 2/2/1978 | See Source »

...1940s, medical labs in California imported thousands of African clawed frogs to be used in pregnancy tests for women. Rabbits, however, proved quite significantly quicker and better, so the redundant frogs were released, and jumped along into mud dy coastal waterways and flood control basins from Santa Barbara to San Diego. It was an act of kindness that should have been avoided. Feeding insatiably on fish eggs, minnows, insects and tadpoles of other frog species, the aggressive African guests have upset the ecological balance in a five-county area...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americana: Getting Jumpy About Frogs | 12/12/1977 | See Source »

Three years of control efforts, including massive poisoning, made no headway against the frogs. The only chance left, says James St. Amant, supervisor of the state department of fish and game, is to find "a critter that'll feed on them." That may be difficult since the frog's skin apparently contains a toxic venom and tastes awful. Even an alligator passed up a dish of clawed frogs-legs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americana: Getting Jumpy About Frogs | 12/12/1977 | See Source »

Brzezinski spoke of highlighting "our emerging relationships," but that rationale evoked little enthusiasm at Foggy Bottom. "Typical Brzezinski," scoffed one State Department official. "He has no attention span, so he has the President jumping around like a frog...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Carter Decides to Stay Home | 11/14/1977 | See Source »

...lifestyle of those doomed to live on the rim goes unexplored when it could be the most graphic part of the book. Herbert only touches on the training it takes to be a Legum, how the newly indoctrinated members shed their skins (that is much easier for a frog to do than a human.) Herbert should initiate the reader into his Elysian mysteries but instead, he just whispers a few riddles...

Author: By Mike Kendall, | Title: A Malthusian Fantasy | 10/24/1977 | See Source »

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