2 posts from October 2007
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Some Death Note rules:
- The Human whose name is written in this note shall die
- this note will not take effect unless the writer has the person’s face in their mind when writing his/her name therefore people sharing the same name will not be effected
- if the cause of death is written within forty seconds of writing the person’s name it will happen
- if the cause of death is not specified the person will simply die of a heart attack
- After writing the cause of death, details of the death should be written in the next six minutes and forty seconds.
What if you found a notebook that gave you the power to kill anyone you wanted with just the stroke of a pen? Would you take advantage of this ability? How would you use it? Would you use your power for good – or for your own benefit?
This is exactly the dilemma that Light Yagami, a Japanese high school student, faces when he finds a death note that has been dropped into the world by a Shinigami – a death god.
Light decides to use his power to make the world better and kill criminals. But soon, people start suspecting that someone who they call Kira is behind the mysterious deaths of criminals.
Can Light keep his identity as Kira a secret when the world’s greatest detective gets on the case? What if the world’s greatest detective is another teenage boy?
Christopher is a whiz at numbers. He can name all the prime numbers up to 7.057 and multiply 251 x 684 in his head (171,684) and win the Expert version of Minesweeper in 99 seconds.
He also has behavioral problems.
Here are some of his behavioral problems:
- not talking to people for a long time (once, he didn’t talk to anyone for five weeks)
- not eating or drinking anything for a long time
- not liking to be touched
- screaming when he is angry or confused
- refusing to use his toothbrush if someone else has touched it
- not noticing that people are angry with him
- not smiling
- hating France
Christopher is autistic, which means he doesn’t look at the world in the same way as other people. For example, if you were standing in a field in the countryside, you might think:
- I am standing in a field that is full of grass
- There are some cows in the field
- There is a village in the distance
Christopher thinks:
- There are 19 cows in the field, 15 of which are black and white and 4 of which are brown and white.
- There is a village in the distance which has 31 visible houses and a church with a square tower and not a spire.
One night, he discovers his neighbor’s dog Wellington dead, with a garden fork sticking out from his body. He’s going to solve the mystery. He’ll write a book about solving the mystery. This is Christopher’s fabulous, unusual, CURIOUS book, told by a character that is unlike anyone you’ve ever met.