tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36231299007218716382023-11-27T09:36:56.363-08:00The Nail on Diogenes' BarrelHelgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.comBlogger21125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-81559269836526217262016-07-11T20:33:00.000-07:002016-07-11T20:52:20.307-07:00An Atheist Reads "Surprised by Joy"<div class="content">
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<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Surprised by Joy</dd>
<dt>Subtitle:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Shape of My Early Life</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="https://www.cslewis.com/us/about-cs-lewis">C. S. Lewis</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich (1966)</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">978-0-15-687011</dd>
</dl>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="font-style: italic;">
To reveal art and conceal the artist is art's aim. ~ Oscar Wilde</blockquote>
<p><a href="https://www.cslewis.com/us/about-cs-lewis">C. S. Lewis</a> is the author of <i>The Chronicles of Narnia</i>. He's also known for his 20th Century writings on Christian faith. He had a fairly ordinary childhood for an upper crust Protestant Irish kid, became a big deal at Oxford University, and was friends with J.R.R. Tolkien, the author of <i>The Hobbit</i> and <i>The Lord of the Rings</i>. His actual given names were Clive Staples, but people mostly just called him Jack. He was born and raised in Ireland and his mother died of cancer when he was still quite young.</p>
<p>He was, for a time, an outspoken Atheist. <i>Surprised by Joy</i> is not his first account of turning from Atheism to Christianity. That was <i>A Pilgrim's Regress</i>, written more than two decades earlier. The earlier book is allegorical. <i>Surprised by Joy</i> was written to be a much more personal account, published at a time when he moved from Oxford to Cambridge.</p>
<p>The book takes its title from a poem by Wordsworth.</p>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="font-style: italic;">
Surprised by joy—impatient as the Wind<br />
I turned to share the transport—Oh! with whom<br />
But Thee, long buried in the silent Tomb,<br />
That spot which no vicissitude can find?</blockquote>
<p>In those few lines Wordsworth describes a feeling perhaps many people who have lost someone they loved are familiar with. Feynman describes it in <i>What Do You Care What Other People Think?</i> in a passage concerning the time after his wife had passed away from tuberculosis. I have experienced it after my best friend from high school passed away.</p>
<p>For Lewis the concept of Joy becomes a term of art in this book, a word that he uses in place of a more cumbersome description. He does not mean happiness or delight. He begins the project by describing a handful of specific experiences he has as a young child, when he was transported on a moment of feelings that were, as he puts it, not connected to this world. Lewis makes a point of referencing an Other World, a realm perhaps defined by myth, yet as real as ours. When Lewis was young he wrote of fantasy lands, long before Narnia, but they were not this Other World. Not even Narnia is this Other World. Lewis describes Joy as a glimpse of this Other World, a surprising glimpse as it comes unexpectedly and unsought.</p>
<p>It was to me helpful to see the connection between Lewis's Joy and Wordsworth's joy - both are surprising, both have a sting of pain. In spite of that sting, Lewis describes how much of what he set out to do he did in the hopes of experiencing that Joy.</p>
<p>Lewis spends an inordinate amount of time telling of his time growing up. There was a horrible little public school, later an unremarkable prep school followed by a horrible college (what Americans would call high school). The main point of these stories is that Lewis wants his readers to understand how he came to be an atheist. He also writes that he became a "prig," a person who thinks he is better than those around him. Later in his telling that is also an important feature of his youth. But most importantly, Lewis writes that his time at college turned him into an atheist. The way he describes it it was not the fault of the setting and the people around him, but that he himself had turned his religious observances in to a chore, so he just stopped doing them.</p>
<p>After he has spent a short time at college he persuaded his father to send him to a private tutor, Kirkpatrick, a man his father calls "the Great Knock," and whom Lewis refers to as Kirk. Kirkpatrick was an atheist and a materialist, of whom Lewis writes,</p>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="font-style: italic;">
"I hasten to add that he was a "Rationalist" of the old, high and dry nineteenth-century type. For Atheism has come down in the world since those days, and mixed itself with politics and learned to dabble in dirt."</blockquote>
<p>Kirkpatrick proceeded to school Lewis in sorting out his arguments. Lewis describes this time as a very happy time.</p>
<p>In the meantime the First World War started. Lewis' older brother joined up, and Lewis himself went to Oxford to get a scholarship and enter officer school. Very little of real importance to his conversion story seems to happen at this time, though he does mention some people he met who demonstrated to him the virtue of living a principled life.</p>
<p>Lewis was injured and returned to England to recuperate. The war ended before he was ready to return to battle, and he went back to Oxford to resume his studies. He talks about finding various authors who convinced him to discard or reexamine this or that belief he had. It's these readings that he is referring to when he writes,</p>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="font-style: italic;">
"A young man who wishes to remain a sound Atheist cannot be too careful of his reading. There are traps everywhere - "Bibles laid open, millions of surprises," as Herbert says, "fine nets and stratagems." God is, if I may say it, very unscrupulous."</blockquote>
<p>These readings, he writes, brought him to deism, to theism, and finally to Christianity.</p>
<p>Yes, that is all.</p>
<p>I found the book to be an immense disappointment. For some reason Christian reviewers write of it in terms that made me think there might be more to it, that Lewis would deliver himself of something more personal than a list of authors he read, but ultimately Lewis was dishonest with himself.</p>
<p>I kind of guessed that Lewis was going to be dishonest. Right at the outset of the book he warns readers that if they cannot apprehend this Joy that he is talking about then there's no point in continuing to read his account. In a scam the mark can be softened up by creating in him a desire for a shared experience, so that at some point later the scammer may argue, "but you stayed on with me, surely you did so because we share this thing in common!" Lewis may not be consciously attempting a scam, but the setup is the same.</p>
<p>This sort of dishonesty pervades the story. It's an intellectual brag. It's all tell, no show.</p>
<p>I think Lewis never really was an atheist, except that he found it easy to assume that stance in the company he kept. When he had enough friends around him to make him feel safe to take a different stance, that's what he did. The rest is rationalization.</p>
<p>Perhaps for Christians in particular to understand what was going on, a bit more needs to be said about Lewis. He was a remarkable enough man, reading and writing and learning languages - these accomplishments got him his post at Oxford, and his later his post at Cambridge.</p>
<p>For all that Lewis was well spoken and well read, educated, published, he betrays himself as remarkably opinionated and parochial. His notion of what atheism is, in particular, suggests that he never really understood why Kirkpatrick was an atheist.
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="font-style: italic;">
"I was at this time living, like so many Atheists or Antitheists, in a whirl of contradictions. I maintained that God did not exist. I was also very angry with God for not existing. I was equally angry with Him for creating a world."</blockquote>
<p>If he ever uttered such nonsense to the Great Knock, he would have gotten intellectually flayed for it.</p>
<p>It's a caricature of atheism. Atheism was a popular thing among intellectuals at the time, but there is no "Common Book of Atheist Prayer" or "Catechism for Atheists." When a thing is tossed around carelessly, it easily becomes a caricature of itself, and because Lewis's atheism was a caricature it was easy for him to dismiss it in favor of "something else."</p>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="font-style: italic;">
"Perhaps (oh joy!) there was, after all, "something else"[...]"</blockquote>
<p>There isn't much else to add at this point. In spite of the intriguing title (considering its origins) I can't see recommending the book to anyone. It is just disappointing.</p>
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Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-57643217436698609202015-11-10T14:07:00.000-08:002015-11-10T14:08:19.747-08:00A Future Imperfect<div id="content">
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<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Series Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Subterrene War Trilogy</dd>
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Germline</dd>
<dd class="booktitle">Exogene</dd>
<dd class="booktitle">Chimera</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.tcmccarthy.com/">TC McCarthy</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Orbit, 2011, 2012, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">978-0316128186</dd>
<dd class="isbn">978-0316128155</dd>
<dd class="isbn">978-0316128179</dd>
</dl>
<p>The future isn't just the undiscovered country (Hamlet), but also a boot stamping on a human face (Orwell),
and nothing (Vonnegut). If you look for things people say about the future you find a lot of optimistic and positive
things, but you also find Einstein musing about WW IV fought with sticks and stones. </p>
<p>But science fiction, at least in the beginning, was an essentially optimistic literature. It was all about
American exceptionalism and manifest destiny, and the technology that was going to give it to us.</p>
<p>Well, if the past few decades have taught us anything, it's that we're not that special. Once other nations
gain access to our technology they quickly catch up, and the might that we once had deluded ourselves was ours
alone we now share with dozens of nations, and another hundred are rapidly climbing up to meet us. </p>
<p>It should be an uplifting image. If you are Gene Roddenberry, you see a bright future, with all of us
standing shoulder to shoulder to strive together for common goals.</p>
<p>If you're TC McCarthy you see people fighting each other for scraps on a resource depleted planet.</p>
<p>The Subterrene Wars, a series of three books that are not so much linked by plot as by setting, concern,
as Bug Resnick realizes, the genetic suicide of mankind. We first learn of the nature of this suicide in
<em>Germline</em>, where Oscar Wendell, a drug addled journalist hoping for Pulitzer Prize material, is
embedded with a group of American marines who are fighting Russian soldiers for access to Rhenium mines
in Kazakhstan.</p>
<p>Most of the weapons we see the soldiers use against each other are just advanced forms of the weapons we have
now. The marines, as well as Wendell, wear suits of armor reminiscent of space suits, covered with high tech
camouflage skin, and equiped with powerful computers and communications gear. They carry Maxwell carbines
which fire streams of flechettes, and the artillery uses shells filled with gel that will burn through anything
and fusion generated blobs of superheated plasma. There are orbital kinetic kill weapons and tactical nukes.</p>
<p>Wendell is familiar with all that, and so are we, in the same sense that no one has to explain to us Han's
blaster or Luke's light saber.</p>
<p>But then Wendell meets his first unit of genetic troups: several dozen girls, identical to each other, whose
bodies have been genetically engineered to be faster, stronger, and tougher than the best "nonbred," the
name the genetics use for humans. They grow to physical maturity, in much less than their apparent age of
sixteen, are trained to war by teaching machines wired directly into their brains, and undergo a horrendous
and violent training program after they emerge from their tanks. When the training is over a few weeks later
they are shipped to wherever the fighting is, and two years after they leave the tanks their bodies are
programmed to self destruct. </p>
<p>At that point they are allowed to request discharge, which is, for the genetics, a euphemism for
execution.</p>
<p>No one likes the genetics. The soldiers resent them. The brass don't trust them. And civilians have what
can only be described as a racist attitude for them. Wendell, drug addled, horrified by the violence of war,
doesn't see genetics that way. Where the soldiers around him look at them in disgust, Wendell falls in love
with them.</p>
<p>It is in my opinion a master stroke by McCarthy, because my sympathy was with the genetics from the
moment they appeared on the scene. Wendell is not a likable character. He's not brave. He's not very smart.
His one virtue is that he survives, so we see the story of the first book through his eyes. He reacts to the
war with the emotions of a civilian, and, more importantly, a civilian with <em>our</em> moral skills still
intact.</p>
<p>So by the end of <em>Germline</em> we're ready for <em>Exogene</em>.</p>
<p>Now that we have met the genetic soldiers and have recognized that they are as human as we are, McCarthy
tells the story of Catherine, a genetic who, long before reaching her discharge age, decides she doesn't want
to die. Together with a sister genetic Catherine escapes from the fighting. There are a number of flashback
scenes where we learn Catherine is not just any genetic, and then Catherine realizes that there is a reason
why the human military is hunting them. She is special.</p>
<p>Genetic soldiers are programmed with a religious faith that is supposed to make them fearless of death,
but Catherine has started to doubt the truth of that faith. As she flees the pursuing American assassins,
into the arms of Russian genetic forces, male eunuchs who live in a work camp in a remote part of Siberia,
Catherine rebuilds her faith. Together with Margaret, another captured genetic, she escapes the work camp,
and eventually makes her way to Thailand. We know already, from the earlier book, that Thailand welcomes
escaping genetics.</p>
<p>If there was any doubt that Wendell recognized the essential humanity of genetic soldiers, we now know
that their humanity is a fact. Catherine struggles with the same doubts we all have about our purpose in
life. Hobbled as she is with no ordinary life experience to speak of, she finds her place in the scheme of
things as she sees them, the same as we all do. The difference is that, for her, the scheme of things is
about killing. Yes, she resents that humans made her that way, but she accepts her place, knowing she has
no other place.</p>
<p>So who are these assassins who chase down escaping genetics? Meet "Bug" Resnick. He lives to kill. He
has a family in the States, but he spends as little time there as possible. When his wife tells him she is
bearing another man's child, it doesn't bother him. He lives for his missions.</p>
<p>And the missions are always killing genetics.</p>
<p>Bug is sent to find out what the Koreans are up to. In a round about fashion he ends up in Thailand
to hunt Margaret, who leads genetic forces there. Then he's told that Margaret is not to die, because
America needs her to help defend Thailand against the Chinese.</p>
<p>Where cybernetic soldiers were hinted at in <em>Exogene</em>, in <em>Chimera</em> we meet them face
to face - except a machine doesn't need a face. It needs cameras and other sensors and weapons for close
up fighting. If genetics are clearly human, Bug realizes the creature China is building are too
different for him. He can fight side by side with genetics, even if he hates them, but he recognizes
genetic suicide when he sees it.</p>
<p>It is a conflicted finale to the series. Bug wants humanity to inherit the future, but he will fight
with the barely human against those he believes are not human at all. We know by then that the Chinese
cyber soldiers have human emotions. They suffer pain and fear, even if we experience their suffering only
insulated by the armor that the cyber soldiers wear. They are, like the genetics, slaves for war, created
by humans who want to beat the slaves for war other humans have created.</p>
<p>I finished the series, and I thought McCarthy is a god of war stories. He doesn't make this horror
seem heroic or exciting or adventurous. It's merely something people try to survive. McCarthy seems to
believe it, from the way he made me believe it. In the three books there are no heroes that I cheered
on, but there are human beings that I hoped would survive.</p>
<p>I'm frankly surprised that I hadn't heard of these books before - apparently people did talk about them.
For what it's worth, these are well written and interesting stories. You'll put them down only because you
will need to sleep every 48 hours or so...</p>
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Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-63964318154636184012014-12-25T22:43:00.000-08:002014-12-25T22:43:23.437-08:00A History of Existential Angst<div id="content">
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<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Why Does the World Exist?</dd>
<dt>Subtitle:</dt>
<dd class="subtitle">An Existential Detective Story</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Holt_%28philosopher%29">Jim Holt</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Liveright, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">0871403595</dd>
</dl>
<p>Philosophy, so says Neil DeGrasse Tyson, is useless. I wonder if he means it the way it sounds, because,
as a scientist, or even just a thinking human being, you can't really get away from it. The most basic questions
that a scientist has to ask are bound up in philosophy. Consider, for example, this question: Why do I bother?
No matter what your speciality is, you will have colleagues who are up against it: problems so tough they are
apparently beyond current human ken, and there is no evidence that the situation is likely to change.</p>
<p>Why do they bother?</p>
<p>Why not accept what <a href"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Ghazali">Abu Hamid al-Ghazali</a> said five
hundred years ago - along with many Christian scholasticists in earlier centuries:
That what happens is the will of God. If a fire burns, it's because God wills it. If you find DNA in flies is
similar in important ways to the DNA in humans, it's because God wills it. If you find that the rotation of
galaxies doesn't seem to obey the laws of gravity that we're familiar with, it's because God wills it.</p>
<p>Why bother looking further?</p>
<p>The very process of answering that question is one of philosophy.</p>
<p>I suspect the main reason why Dr. Tyson doesn't like philosophy is because you cannot easily stick one of
these questions under a microscope or aim a particle accelerator at it to see if the answers you picked hold
up to further investigation. Mostly, the answers lead to more questions, more philosophy. It's an intensely
dissatisfying position to be in, for a scientist.</p>
<p>One of the most basic questions we've been asking ourselves, at least for all of human recorded history, is how
the world got to be. I mean, not just the way it is - why is water wet, or why do elephants have trunks, or
why is the sky blue - but why is there anything at all? All human cultures that we know of, and that either
bothered writing it down or were around long enough for anthropologists to ask them about it, have stories
about the reason for our existence.</p>
<p>Only some of them are similar to the Abrahamic legends of creation. Many of the other stories are far more
chaotic, describing struggles among supernatural entities that produced our world by mere accident. A few
others suppose that the world as such always existed. (That one seems to be a difficult concept for the
human mind to wrap itself around.)</p>
<p>So what is the current state of knowledge about the origin of our universe? Jim Holt goes and chats with
a number of his philosopher colleagues. If you thought that modern philosophy was a field where all the
answers are pat, you'd be surprised. Holt talks with philosophers who have various theistic or deistic
notions, others who have a more naturalistic bent, and some who think the the problem isn't really one that
we should spend all that much time on. Holt has his own thoughts on the topic, of course, and after talking
with about a dozen people he spends some time laying out his own arguments.</p>
<p>In addition to the origin of the universe Holt also spends a little time at the end of his book on the
question of our own existence. It's question that in most people's minds is probably not related to the
question of existence, but Holt points out that if there has to be a reason for the existence of the
entire universe it's not unreasonable to ask if there is a reason beyond brute biological facts for our own existence.</p>
<p>Holt's tone throughout is intimate and personable. There's never a hint that here's a philosopher of some
accomplishment laying things out. It's a voyage of exploration. Holt chooses locations in France and England
to make his exploration more visceral. This isn't a dry lecture hall with students in rows trying not to fall
asleep.</p>
<p>So if you've been wondering why the world exists, or even if you think you know, give this book a whirl.
Maybe Holt will stir a new notion, or maybe he'll help you organize how you think about one of life's
knottiest questions.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-6612949310166633042014-11-03T10:29:00.000-08:002014-11-03T10:29:02.585-08:00Three Books for October<div id="content">
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<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Cusanus Game</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfgang_Jeschke">Wolfgang Jeschke</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Tor, 2013</dd>
<dt>Original (German):</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Droemer Verlag, 2005</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">9780765319081</dd>
</dl>
<p>Yes, I'm a German, and here I'm reading an English translation of a book that was originally published in German.</p>
<p>The process of reading is for me a mixture of language and story, and it's entirely possible for me to enjoy the
story thoroughly while the language leaves me cold, or vice versa. So let's start with the important part: Ross Benjamin,
the translator, does a very fine job. The book doesn't read as if it was originally written in English. Benjamin chooses
words and turns of phrase that give the book not so much a German accent, but rather the promise of a good beer.</p>
<p>Jeschke's story takes place in a fairly near future, a fairly mundane world, with the usual technological advances that
we expect, given smart phones and 3D TVs and meta materials. In this future a horrific nuclear accident has scattered deadly
fallout across large parts of central Europe. Refugees choke the surrounding areas with their needs. At the same time
terrorists and nationalists of various persuasions are battling each other at the margins of a shrinking Europe. </p>
<p>Into this depressing picture walks Domenica Ligrina, a mostly unremarkable young woman who is studying botany at a
university in Rome. The city is under assault by terrorists from the South, and the pope has already retreated to
Salzburg. Domenica and her student friends seem to drift through their lives, pretending that nothing particular is
happening to their world. Domenica is near graduation, when she receives a mysterious job offer from people connected
to the Catholic Church for a project they are calling the "Pontifical Institute for the Rebirth of God's Creation."
Since nothing much else is available to a newly graduated botanist in these uncertain times, Domenica barely hesitates,
in spite of not really knowing anything about the job.</p>
<p>Jeschke's skill in telling a story shows in how he lays out what is going on using an impressionist's palette of scenes,
recollections, and flashbacks. Some of those scenes repeat, and as the story progresses we learn that the mysterious
business of the Institute involves time travel. Evidently the things that have happened in the past may happen in any
number of ways. Some of the ways are impossible to change, which is why the nuclear accident doesn't just disappear.
Other things, like the torture and execution of time travelers in 15th Century Europe, exist in overlays of probabilities.
Jeschke's story becomes a filigree of these scenes, and the only thing we know for certain is that Domenica is going to be no
ordinary time traveler.</p>
<p>I thoroughly enjoyed the story. The titular game, which apparently involves rolling marbles along tracks at just
the right speed, in a fashion reflects the mindfulness Jeschke employed in advancing story's plot. My biggest annoyance
is that Jeschke, writing in German, will never become as well known in the USA as he deserves.</p>
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0066CBG9A/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B0066CBG9A&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=KIXHB4CVGIAXPHRK"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=B0066CBG9A&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B0066CBG9A" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Knights Dawning</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.pendantbooks.com/james_batchelor/">James Batchelor</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Pendant, 2014</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">9780984004430</dd>
</dl>
<p>I won this book in a drawing, which is a great way of getting reading material to pile up on the side of my bed.
However, even though this is a historical piece, and I'm not a fan of historical pieces, the story captivated
me and drew me in. So here's what it's about:</p>
<p>Crusades.</p>
<p>Well, mostly it's about the people who went on the crusades, and the people who had to fight them off.</p>
<p>The Dawnings are a recently powerful baronial family from England. Several of the family's young sons go off to
fight in what I think are the fourth crusades, around the outset of the 13th Century. King John is running things
in England, and pope Innocent III is pulling the strings in Rome.</p>
<p>Crusades are a great thing if you win the battles and bring home loot - that's what the first Baron Dawning
managed to do. Now his sons, in an attempt to emulate their father, have depleted the wealth their father had
accumulated to travel to the Holy Land and bring back more loot.</p>
<p>As the wildest of them gets himself captured, news gets back to the Dawnings, and several of the remaining
brothers go to rescue him. What they don't realize is that it's all a plot to capture the power of their family
to punish the crusaders. There are politcal intrigues and pitched battles.</p>
<p>Batchelor's account of presumably fictional events are grounded in the real history of the late Middle Ages.
I'm no historian, so all I'm qualified to say is that "it could have happened." In any event, it's quite
entertaining, and if you enjoy stories about knights and their world, this book is for you.</p>
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0441016537/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0441016537&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=M3YMOWY6U7UK5YV7"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0441016537&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0441016537" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Knights of the Cornerstone</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://jamespblaylock.com/">James P. Blaylock</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Ace, 2008</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">978-0441016532</dd>
</dl>
<p>On a bend of the Colorado river is a small settlement of the Knights of the Cornerstone whose history goes back
to the Knights Templar. Some people have gotten wind of the fact that the settlement is literally sitting on a
deposit of almost pure silver, and they have been engaged in a lengthy campaign to gain access to that silver.</p>
<p>Calvin Bryson stumbles into this situation when a distant uncle or cousin of his sends him a package to deliver
to another uncle who lives in that settlement. In spite of cryptic warnings Calvin has really no idea what he's
getting into, but little by little he does get involved in a confrontation that gathers steam rapidly and culminates
in a pitched battle for the possession of the silver mine.</p>
<p>As crypto histories go, this one is fairly mild. In fact, it reads quite a lot like those Christian fantasies
that try to entice their young readers with stories of miracles that happen when you're pure of heart. I have no
idea if that was Blaylock's intent - given some of his other stories I'm thinking I may have missed a satirical
point of some kind. But like all of Blaylock's stories, it reads well, and entertained me from cover to cover.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-57440367652348167132014-08-18T22:27:00.001-07:002014-08-18T22:27:33.445-07:00Fairy Tale<div id="content">
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00MRANX5A/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B00MRANX5A&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=AFDAMJ3AFWOI3MVI"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=B00MRANX5A&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B00MRANX5A" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Dark Dancer</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://jaletacleggauthor.blogspot.com/">Jaleta Clegg</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Amazon Digital Services, 2014</dd>
<dt>ASIN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">B00MRANX5A</dd>
</dl>
<p>How did the realm of Faerie ever become the place where children's stories take place? Even J.M. Barrie
has Peter Pan surrounded by dangers that should give a sane person nightmares. It's the charm of his story
that we think Peter is going to be OK. But in Faerie there are no guarantees.</p>
<p>I think the most dangerous realm of Faerie I've ever read about was Greg Bear's <em>The Infinity
Concerto</em>, and its sequel, <em>The Serpent Mage</em>. In those pages the "fair folk" are inscrutable,
chaotic, and deadly. Think of the quisatz haderach test from <em>Dune</em>, but it doesn't end, and there's
not just physical pain involved. That depiction has sort of stayed with me, so when I come across stories
that take place in that realm, Bear's take is one of my main touch stones.</p>
<p>In Jaleta Clegg's <em>Dark Dancer</em> the story starts out the way a horror movie might, with an innocent
child dancing in a meadow. Mysterious magical things happen next, and before we know it, Sabrina is
living with her aunt Dianna and her cousin Katie, with no memories of what came before. Things seem to be
going perfectly, until the summer before college. Sabrina and Katie return to Sabrina's abandoned home, and
when Katie starts dancing in that meadow it triggers a series of events that propel Sabrina into a life she
hadn't dreamt of, and wasn't prepared for. Her childhood memories turn out to be real. There are dangerous
elves after her for the magical powers she didn't know she had. And there are swoon inducing leading men
to lose her heart to. Not to mention a prophecy to fulfill.</p>
<p>Betrayal. Intrigue. Magic. Adventure. The story is a fun mix of everything we want in our lives. Well, except
for the betrayal. Most of us would be cool if we never experienced it. But, hey, if it means adventure, what
price, eh?</p>
<p>Sabrina, as the viewpoint character (there are a few interruptions with scenes involving the main bad guys)
is a likeable young lady, old enough to appreciate what is going on, but not terribly sophisticated. She's
about to start college, but her life with aunt Dianna hasn't prepared her for dealing with treacherous elves,
nor, apparently, taught her the meaning of the word "consort." Oh, never mind. I know people like that on
Facebook.</p>
<p>The world itself has many of the familiar characteristics of realms of Faerie. It's small, parochial, and
magical, with all the creatures we're accustomed to from stories - fauns, nymphs, dryads, pixies, and, of
course, elves. They take their accustomed places without any complaints, it seems. It's a shortish story.
There is the occasional feeling of getting railroaded from plot point to plot point; no doubt that's how a lot
of people feel when things keep happening to them. In most but not all cases it's a believable form of
zugzwang - events are being pushed along by the mere presence of Sabrina in this world.</p>
<p>I really wanted to like this story. There are many parts of this story that I did enjoy. But overall it seems
a bit sloppy, with copy editing errors left behind, and several places where I think an editor would insist on
more work. The scene where Sabrina meets Mordentius. The part where Sabrina meets Joren - there's got to be
more to that for the end to make sense emotionally. The interactions with Dianna and Balakyn. Saber fencing
and freeclimbing skills from seemingly nowhere. And especially the matter of Katie, and how she ends up
conveniently in place for the final scenes - that part really contributes to the feeling of narrative
railroading.</p>
<p>I read an Advance Reader Copy, so I don't know how much of this can be changed as the ebook is already
available on Amazon. But right now I can't recommend the book.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-75074273655084152492014-08-08T20:19:00.000-07:002014-08-08T20:19:03.673-07:00Not Your Grandpa's History!<div id="content">
<div id="bookone">
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451639406/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1451639406&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=WDY5C7TBWBEBXWCV"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=1451639406&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1451639406" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Forever Engine</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://space1889.blogspot.com/">Frank Chadwick</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Simon & Schuster, 2014</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 1451639406</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<p>Time travel stories come in several flavors, mostly hinged around the paradox where someone travels back in time to kill their grandfather. I think the earliest time travel story I read was the version where any tiny change in the past irretrievably changes the course of history. It was a short story by <a href="http://www.raybradbury.com/">Ray Bradbury</a> called "Sound of Thunder," where someone accidentally kills a butterfly (of course). There's <a href="http://www.asimovonline.com/asimov_home_page.html">Asimov</a>'s novel <em>End of Eternity</em>, where time engineers intentionally change history. Finally there's <a href="http://www.sftv.org/cw/">Connie Willis</a>' Time Travel stories, where historians travel into the past, always fearful of accidentally changing things, and yet it always turns out that the changes they introduce were actually part of history. Willis' most recent stories in that series, <em>Blackout/All Clear</em>, make clear that the universe may in fact be using the time traveling historians to make sure things go as intended.</p>
<p><a href="http://space1889.blogspot.com/">Frank Chadwick</a>'s story <em>The Forever Engine</em> concerns the adventures of Jack Fargo, a former US Marine who fought in Afghanistan, but is now teaching history, trying desperately to forget the past he lived. Jack gets summoned to a small town in England where a wartime buddy of his is working on a secret weapon that apparently is also a time machine. The troubling thing is, the time machine seems to show that, somehow, the past has been changed, and the present as we know it may be on the brink of destruction! But before Jack even has a chance to look into matters, a huge explosion flings him into oblivion, and when he wakes up it's 1888, and ironclad battle ships are floating in the sky above a smog shrouded London.</p>
<p>The story's main characters, Jack Fargo, and Gabrielle Courbiere, the beautiful French spy, are well realized heroic figures. Jack's main motivation is making sure that the future in which his daughter exists is restored to reality. Gabrielle's motivations are far more mysterious. Since she's a spy it's not all that surprising. Still, when all is revealed towards the end of the book she doesn't suddenly pop. It's more a case of getting a new perspective on someone you thought you knew well.</p>
<p>Since this story's history is different from our past there isn't a good way of judging if Chadwick did his research. And since I'm no historian I don't really care all that much. We meet a few people that are known to us in the here and now, and their presence serves as a kind of anchor in a story that would otherwise have us all adrift.</p>
<p>I can't say more about the story without spoiling things. Jack's competences as a former Marine and history professor are both called upon repeatedly, for a series or cracking good adventures with thrills and spills. If you like steampunk I think you'll love this story, but it's a great read just from a general action adventure angle, as well.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-14938240726229589262014-08-04T20:51:00.000-07:002014-08-04T20:51:33.776-07:00Bad Choices<div id="content">
<div id="bookone">
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0312943636/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0312943636&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=IUVQSAFW7M3Y2MEJ"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0312943636&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0312943636" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Demon Bound</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caitlin_Kittredge">Caitlin Kittredge</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">St. Martin's, 2009</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0312943636</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<p>I am obsessed about having something to read. Anything. I'll read the side panels of cereal cartons if there's nothing else. My kind of OCD, I guess. I know bookstores love me because of that. They ought to treat me the way casinos treat people with a gambling addiction.</p>
<p>So a few weeks back I'd been waiting for Elysa to finish shopping. There was a dollar store nearby, so I decided to just see if I'd stumble across something interesting there. I ended up in the book aisle, which typically consists of various editions of thesaurus and dictionaries, maybe a Bible story book, that sort of thing. But this time I noticed a number of paperbacks on the shelf. Browsing through them I noticed a story by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caitlin_Kittredge">Caitlin Kittredge</a> entitled <em>Demon Bound</em>. Browsing the first couple of pages I realized it was yet another occult detective story - no surprise, since Jim Butcher left a nice blurb right on the front cover. While I'm really really really looking for new ideas in SF&F, I was rather desperate for something to read, and it was only gonna cost me a buck, so I picked it up.</p>
<p>One of the best dollars I've ever spent on reading material, I can tell you that.This was a truly lovely read. A lot of occult detectives are disgustingly competent, hardly working up a sweat while beating their opponents. Only in the boss battle do they have to bleed. (Above mentioned Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden is one exception.) It's not that occult detectives can't be competent, but it kind of spoils the thrill. Kittredge's Jack Winter (the name initially put me off, it did) is no magical n00b, but magic in his world is hazardous at the best of times, and a demon is gunning for him.</p>
<p>We meet Jack and his girlfriend Pete doing a little spirit raising to pay the bills. The scene beautifully sets the mood for the rest of the story, establishing Jack's competence, as well as his limits, and the prickly relationship he has with Pete. It's that relationship that drives the rest of the story. Thirteen years ago Jack made a deal with a demon to save his life - he didn't want to leave Pete without a mentor. His time is almost up, and he's desperately looking for a way out. But this demon is nobody's fool. As Jack tries to keep Pete from discovering what is going on while he negotiates with the denizens of hell I found myself getting drawn into the story. There's a showdown in the end, of course, and I suppose if I'd read the first novel in the series, <em>Street Magic</em>, I might not have been quite so surprised at the ending. Suffice it to say, Jack has more than the demon after him, and in the end he has to make that choice.</p>
<p>I loved Kittredge's characterizations. Jack, a lowlife ex-addict whose principles don't really extend much further than a personal debt to Pete. Pete, an ex-cop who is just learning about her particular powers, and whose relationship to Jack is a lot more than just rescuer and caretaker. Kittredge doesn't waste a lot of energy on the other characters. Jack and Pete and their complicated relationship are center stage. When it comes to this kind of a story, that's a rare and wonderful thing.</p>
<p>I don't know if you'll be able to find this book for a dollar, but even if you pay full price, I think it's money well spent.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-34278145591823794752014-07-18T10:51:00.000-07:002014-07-18T10:51:15.541-07:00Hits and Misses<div id="content">
<div id="bookone">
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0756407583/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0756407583&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=LKR7DPGPKGTK6GQ3"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0756407583&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0756407583" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Alien Collective</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.ginikoch.com/bookstore.htm">Gini Koch</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Daw, 2014</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0756407583</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<hr />
<div id="booktwo">
<div style="float:left">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0451463978/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0451463978&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=Q6MCUYGGR3MV7I2P"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0451463978&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0451463978" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate" style="float:right">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Introducing Garrett, P.I.</dd>
<dt>Includes</dt>
<dd>Sweet Silver Blues (1987)<br />
Bitter Gold Hearts (1988)<br />
Cold Copper Tears (1988)</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glen_Cook">Glen Cook</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Roc, 2011</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0451463978</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<hr />
<div id="bookthree">
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0765368544/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0765368544&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=3AKOD7Y74DNWTYQQ"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0765368544&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0765368544" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate" style="float:left">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Alloy of War</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://brandonsanderson.com/">Brandon Sanderson</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Tor, 2011</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0765368544</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<h2>So Many Names!</h2>
<p>While I was bulling through the <a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2014/06/if-i-picked-hugos-2014-edition.html">Hugo nominees</a> the stack of books next to my bed was growing steadily. I do have a Kindle, but there's something visceral about holding a chunk of dead tree in my hands, of putting those pages up to my face and smelling the faint spice of paper. And then it makes me sneeze and I try to remember if I took my allergy meds.</p>
<p>The topmost book in my stack was <a href="http://www.ginikoch.com/bookstore.htm">Gini Koch</a>'s <em>Alien Collective</em>. It's book nine in a series already ten books long. Apparently ditzy former high school cheerleader Kitty Katt-Martini is an ambassador for aliens from Alpha Centauri, who joins in a protest against a candidate for President of the USA, and is spirited away from there by police who have been tipped off that there will be a series of bomb attacks. That's how the book starts, and it pretty much keeps it up for all 500+ pages. If you haven't read the previous eight (I haven't, either), then you'll be doing some catching up, but Koch makes sure you have all the necessary information. In fact, sometimes it seems that there are pages and pages of backstory (from the previous eight books) being dumped on the reader. There is a cast of characters a mile long, and after the first dozen I didn't even try to keep up.</p>
<p>When the action finally picks up things start moving more smoothly, and Koch shows that she can maintain a consistent impersonation of Kitty's ditzy personality without making her too unbelievable. The people who really are unbelievable are the aliens around her, who married her (it's a part romance, part SF adventure story), who made her their ambassador, and the current president of the USA, who treats her with more deference than members of his own cabinet. If you can swallow all of that then Kitty isn't a problem.</p>
<p>Even though Koch's writing has an easy breezy style I found the story a bit of a slog. I wondered if the fact that its target audience more than is usually the case must be women was what was tripping me up, but my wife didn't have a different verdict.</p>
<p>I make an effort to pick books by authors with whom I'm not familiar. Sometimes I find a gem. Sometimes I bite on a rock. This isn't a terrible story, but it wasn't the kind of book I enjoy reading. If you think you might like the series, I recommend starting at the series' beginning, with <em>Touched by an Alien</em>.</p>
<h2>And then there was the Dame</h2>
<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glen_Cook">Glen Cook</a>'s "Garrett, P.I." fantasy series isn't what all the other fantasy detectives are based on, but it's not hard to see how Simon R. Green's "Nightside" series, China Mieville's "Bas-Lag" series, or Jim Butcher's "Dresden" series got some of their heritage from Cook. Garrett (that appears to be all of his name) is a veteran of a long running war between two kingdoms, chronicling his life in the first person. He is now making a living for himself as security consultant for a brewery and negotiating the release of kidnap victims. Cook seems to pay an homage of sorts to Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, among others, by tossing female characters into the story that are treated with a sort of retro sexism - not something you'd usually expect in a story written even as early as 1987. Garrett also uses words like darko, breed, and halfblood to refer to non-human and half-human characters. He seems to pride himself on not killing people when he can avoid it, even though he associates with others who have no compunction about killing, and often employs them to assist him.</p>
<p>Garrett's first adventure sends him out of town to track down the heir to a fortune of stolen silver. The second story starts as a kidnapping of the son of a powerful wizard, but things quickly get complicated. The last story pits the local crime boss against an ancient religious fraud, and Garrett ends up in the middle. All stories are entertaining and well written, moving along at a good pace. If you're a fan of Mieville or Butcher, Glen Cook will be worth your time.</p>
<h2>Steel vs Gold</h2>
<p>The magic in Glen Cook's world is the hand-wavey kind. Garrett buys it from wizards and hopes it works when he needs it. More recent fantasy authors who put magic in the hands of their heroes put considerable thought into how that magic is supposed to work, probably influenced by games like <a href="http://www.dndclassics.com/">Dungeons and Dragons</a>. My next author, <a href="http://brandonsanderson.com/">Brandon Sanderson</a>, even wrote a <a href="http://brandonsanderson.com/sandersons-first-law/">blog post</a> describing his methods for including magic in his stories, and of his stories the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0575118563">Mistborn</a> series is probably best known for its magic system, which allows certain people with the right genetics to swallow various kinds of metal to do magic.</p>
<p>Brandon writes in the acknowledgements of <em>The Alloy of Law</em> that he was planning all along to write two further trilogies to take place in the Mistborn setting. He says that the present book is not part of those two trilogies. It takes place some years after the initial stories finished. Technology has advanced to the stage of electric lights and internal combustion engines, and people with the right genetics to use magic have become more common since no one is killing them off, anymore. Lord Waxillium, Wax to his friends, is able to use two powerful kinds of magic, and has made quite a reputation for himself as an effective lawman. Now that he's back in the big city he finds that he can't simply be an aristocrat and run his businesses in peace when a mysterious gang of robbers starts interfering with his life.</p>
<p>This was a great story, full of derring do and veiled romance and mystery. For me it's so far the favorite of the Mistborn stories, and, while it's not part of one of the promised trilogies, its ending makes a sequel necessary. I'm definitely looking forward to that!</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-83178259748877499332014-06-22T17:47:00.000-07:002014-06-22T17:47:12.702-07:00If I Picked the Hugos, 2014 Edition<p>I don't know what the limit is of the number of books that may be nominated for "Best Novel Hugo" in a given year. This year there were nineteen. Let's have a look, in the order that I read them.</p>
<p>The "Wheel of Time" series concerns three youngsters who are caught up in events far beyond their ability to handle, and in adventures spanning a continent and several years manage to save the world from certain destruction. The story is rightly termed epic fantasy, and the characters are all engaging and well realized. The plot itself, a struggle against a nemesis from mankind's dimly remembered past, doesn't really become clear until book two opens, but that's OK, since book one was kind of an appetizer to get people started reading. Jordan writes well, and Sanderson has no flies on him, either.</p>
<p>Charles Stross' <a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2014/05/homo-economicus.html"><em>Neptune's Brood</em></a> is a space opera combined with a mystery, diving from the edge of a solar system into the crushing depths of an ocean world. On the way we learn a little about economics, about meta humanity, and about a relationship a mother might have with her daughters that might have moved Nancy Friday to write something considerably more caustic than <em>My Mother Myself</em>. The story kept me engaged from cover to cover, and the ending was satisfying and amazing.</p>
<p>In the very near future of Mira Grant's (Seanan McGuire) <a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2014/05/cousins.html"><em>Parasite</em></a> scientists genetically engineer a symbiotic tapeworm that can do everything from dispensing life saving drugs to suppressing dangerous allergies. Sally, a tapeworm host who's been in an accident, discovers that there's a lot more to these tapeworms than anyone realizes when people start turning into zombies.</p>
<p><a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2014/06/humming-betrayal.html"><em>Ancillary Justice</em></a> by Ann Leckie is a leisurely paced journey of discovery. While I was discovering the world of One Esk, One Esk was discovering about moral responsibility and being human. The book engaged me on several levels and didn't disappoint me with its ending, either.</p>
<p>If you want magical battles with humongous guns then Larry Correia's <a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2014/06/world-war-noir.html"><em>Warbound</em></a> is your ticket. Jake Sullivan teams up with the Knights of the Grimnoir to save the world from an invading extradimensional monster. Get your battles here!</p>
<p>So which one would I pick to win?</p>
<p>Robert Jordan's "Wheel of Time" series started with a transparent rip-off of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, <em>The Eye of the World</em>, down to one-to-one mappings of plot and characters. The series picks up after that, but never actually shakes the sense that this is a kid writing a Tolkien fanfic - writing well, mind. Sanderson, working from Jordan's notes, can't really rescue the story from its fate. It's all well written, but I can't get past the fact that this story has already been told.</p>
<p>Larry Correia's "Grimnoir Chronicles" are a lot of fun to read, but I was frankly surprised to find it in the Hugo short list. Larry writes well, don't get me wrong, and if I were to measure this book up against some other action adventure series it would do well. But Larry's story avoids making hard choices. The ending employs the most blatant of deus ex machina, and then reverts everything to a kind of base state, as if none of what happened before mattered. It's what's done on TV all the time, but I personally expect more from serious SF&F.</p>
<p>I'm not really tired of zombies if Grant is going to serve them up with a fresh spin each time. <em>Parasite</em> really has me looking forward to the next one, and I have really no complaints about it. Grant brings her characters to life and doesn't stint on the rest of the story. It's obvious from almost the very beginning where the story is headed, but that's ok because I was looking forward to the journey. The book deserves to win, even if I don't want to pick it as my top pick.</p>
<p>Lecki's <em>Ancillary Justice</em> does start slowly, and the pacing is a bit uneven throughout, but the character One Esk is perhaps the best of her kind I've ever read about. For that reason I was really hard put to choose between her break-out novel and the one I'm picking this year.</p>
<p><em>Neptune's Brood</em> was kick butt from the very start, as I've come to expect from Stross. His cast of characters is sparse and carefully chosen, and the ones that matter come to life as they make their way. Stross doesn't stint on describing a future that is plausible and amazing. Yes, he might be giving a small political fillip to some people, but I think it's subtle and fully part of the story. He does have to devote more pages to explication than someone writing about more familiar SF tropes would do, but I'm not holding that against him by any means.</p>
<p>If Lecki or Grant win the Hugo I'll be plenty happy. Both have written deserving books, but my pick this year is Stross's <em>Neptune's Brood</em>.
Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-83440775123576796342014-06-11T12:40:00.001-07:002014-06-11T12:40:38.940-07:00World War Noir<div id="content">
<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1476736529/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1476736529&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=1476736529&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1476736529" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Warbound</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://monsterhunternation.com/">Larry Correia</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Baen, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 1476736529</dd>
</dl>
<p>There's a certain nostalgia to the stories and films from the 1930s - the time when my mother was born and lived through WW II. I enjoy the films, the stark lighting, the soundscapes, even the caricatures that peopled the story, like Hammett's Thin Man, or Chandler's Marlowe. Just the thing for a cozy evening.</p>
<p>So it's of course no surprise that even fifty years after the last bonafide film noir ran off the reel people are still occasionally imitating the style. <a href="http://monsterhunternation.com/">Larry Correia</a>'s <em>Warbound</em> is an excellent example.</p>
<p>The Grimnoir Chronicles started with <em>Hard Magic</em>, where me meet Jake Sullivan, a former private eye who is doing hard time for murder. Jake has magical powers that let him manipulate gravity, and his warden thinks he's a good guy, which is why J. Edgar himself recruits Jake into a magical secret society, the Grimnoir.</p>
<p>Now it is not all that much later, and Jake has become convinced that an extra-dimensional monster that wants to suck all magic out of Earth is getting ready to attack. Chairman Tokugawa's Iron Guards aren't ready to fight because Tokugawa has been replaced by an impostor. The Grimnoir Knights must kill the impostor to save the world.</p>
<p>This latest of the Grimnoir Chronicles is a little less focused than the others, perhaps because we know more of the characters, and they are all doing important stuff, just not all in the same place. Still, it seems as if at least Francis' part of the story, which isn't central to the novel, should have just been left off stage. There isn't enough of it to be obnoxious, but it is noticable and interrupts the narrative flow.</p>
<p>Faye's part of the story is much more central. Like Luke Skywalker training with Yoda you know she will just arrive at the action in the nick of time, and it's not really possible to just ignore her until she does. My main complaint about Faye is really that I think she violates <a href="http://brandonsanderson.com/sandersons-first-law/">Sanderson's First Law of Magic</a>. It's not as if Correia has to obey Sanderson's rules - I don't even entirely agree with Sanderson's First Law - it's just that this seems to be a case where that Law really has to be obeyed. Because Correia flouts the Law, Faye becomes little more than a deus ex machina. Correia doesn't lose all control over the plot's central tensions, but they are a lot less than they could have been.</p>
<p>This is the fourth of the 2014 Hugo nominees that I've read. It is not a novel about thinking or answering difficult questions. Might makes right, and the best answers come at the end of a set of magically enhanced knuckles. Testosterone oozes from between its pages. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the story. If you like this sort of thing, give it a try.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-29972661102268536722014-06-04T12:48:00.000-07:002014-06-04T12:53:59.505-07:00Humming Betrayal<div id="content">
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/031624662X/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=031624662X&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=ELP3U7SCDKSZY7A6"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=031624662X&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=031624662X" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Ancillary Justice</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.annleckie.com/">Ann Leckie</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Orbit, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 031624662X</dd>
</dl>
<p>I don't particular like war stories. Futuristic war stories are no exception. Typically authors who indulge in military scifi focus on weaponry, and they love to write about how fast a missile flies, or how quickly a defense reacts. There is obviously a market for that sort of thing, but it ain't me. So when I realized that <a href="http://www.annleckie.com/">Ann Leckie</a>'s book <em>Ancillary Justice</em> was about a soldier I was a bit disappointed.</p>
<p>But I judged too soon.</p>
<p>One Esk is a troop of slaves, human bodies that were killed for any number of reasons and harvested to become ancillaries, slave soldiers ridden by the omniscient AI that runs the warship Justice of Toren. Everyone treats ancillaries as if they were mindless, with no will of their own, but maybe everyone is mistaken. As One Esk is forced to be party to two monstrous acts of betrayal it decides to test its freedom to act, and exact its justice for the betrayals. This will be a bit of a challenge, since the target is the empire's omnipotent tyrant.</p>
<p>So, no, it's not military scifi. While Leckie has to mention weapons and armor in the course of the story, they aren't the featured characters that I worried about. Instead Leckie concentrates her attention on the real character: a slave, newly freed, who must discover that she is as human as anyone she meets, and has the freedom to act, and, more importantly, be responsible for her actions. It's a marvelous examination of moral responsibility and what it means to be human.</p>
<p>The story takes place against the background of an empire on the cusp of rebellion. It's the first book of a loose trilogy, and Leckie allows us to glimpse beyond the frame of her story, giving the feeling of a larger story waiting to be told. I particularly enjoyed her description of the starting setting, a small town, recently conquered, and divided against itself by tradition and prejudice. It's the background against which we get to know One Esk, and realize that there may well be more to these slave soldiers than their masters guess.</p>
<p><em>Ancillary Justice</em> is the third of the 2014 Hugo nominees that I've read. It is Leckie's breakout novel, and it fully deserves its nomination. I strongly recommend it, and I'm looking forward to reading its sequel, <em>Ancillary Sword</em></p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-4638217422802948672014-05-26T20:28:00.001-07:002014-06-04T12:14:38.461-07:00Cousins<div id="content">
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0316218952/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0316218952&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=QCRMXZYTIXIW33YK"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0316218952&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0316218952" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Parasite</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://miragrant.com/">Mira Grant</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Orbit, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0316218952</dd>
</dl>
<p>In her first foray into the land of zombies (Newsflesh), Grant proposed a scientific reason for zombies that seemed scarily plausible. She did her homework then, and now she's done even more homework. If you haven't heard of the idea that too few parasites are bad for us, you might read up on <a href=" http://www.wormtherapy.com/theory.html">Helminthic Theory</a>. Yep, sounds legit. </p>
<p>But seriously, there are people looking into the question if there is such a thing as being too clean. Whether this turns out to be anything other than a crackpot notion I have no idea. While I'm not about to start swilling sewer water, it's also true that bacteria compete with each other, even in places like our mouth and our gut, and if not enough of the good or at least harmless bacteria are around, then nasties will take over and wreak havoc.</p>
<p>In Mira Grant's book <em>Parasite</em> (book one of the Parasitology series), Doctors Banks, Cale, and Jablonsky have developed a genemod variety of tapeworm, the Intestinal Guardian (TM), which, if ingested by a human being, will keep the host healthy, supplying drug dosage if needed, and suppressing excessive immune responses like dog or cat allergies. The story's main character, Sally Mitchell, also has one of these tapeworms when she gets into an accident. She's in a coma from brain damage, and her family is about to disconnect her, when she sits up in bed. </p>
<p>As far as anyone knows, the tapeworm will not resurrect you from the dead.</p>
<p>The action catches up with Sally six years later. She has by now relearned to speak. Reading is still very difficult, but from all appearance things are looking up. She even has a boyfriend who cares for her. And then people start getting the sleeping sickness (a lovely euphemism for turning into zombies), and SymboGen, the makers of the tapeworm, seem to be hiding something.</p>
<p>I kind of started suspecting what was going on almost from the beginning - this is a story by Mira Grant, after all. Still, rather than making everything predictable, Grant kept me on the edge of my seat for all five hundred pages. Sally is a recovering amnesiac, and her recovery may strike people who know a little bit about, for example, retraining TBI patients or stroke victims, as if Sally is doing far too well. The mystery ingredient is obviously the tapeworm, but we don't know quite what role it is playing until about halfway into the story (when it's still a mystery to Sally and her friends). </p>
<p>Yes, from that point on you'll probably know what is really going on, and you'll be wondering how Sally and her boyfriend Nathan haven't caught on yet. Well, there are perfectly good reasons, of course. Meanwhile the mere fact that you know will not at all detract from the story. </p>
<p>Grant's story takes place in a near future California. We're not told what all has happened, but a fair amount obviously has. Maybe some of that backstory will be featured in the sequels, but it doesn't really matter. It's a believable version of the future. You will feel right at home, I'm sure.</p>
<p>This is the second of the Hugo nominees I've read. It is definitely a worthy nominee, and I highly recommend it.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-86173414725896469072014-05-26T17:45:00.000-07:002014-05-26T19:18:14.928-07:00Homo Economicus<div id="content">
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0425256774/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0425256774&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=IF2SW2KJ6KQWXCLH"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0425256774&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0425256774" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Neptune's Brood</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.antipope.org/charlie/">Charles Stross</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Ace, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0425256774</dd>
</dl>
<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_economics">Classical economics</a> mostly consists of theories concerning the price of goods, the value of money, and what governments should or shouldn't do about them. More recently <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_School">critiques of economic theory</a> like to point out that people, individually, or even in the aggregate, do not follow simple mathematical formulas. We don't have the processing capacity for all of the relevant information, even if it were available, and we evidently do not act on that information even when we do have it.</p>
<p>So what would the world be like if we were truly economical beings? </p>
<p><a href="http://www.antipope.org/charlie/">Charles Stross</a> spins a great tale in <em>Neptune's Brood</em>. It's thousands of years in the future. The human race - the biological species that is us - has become extinct three separate times, but our offspring, metahumans (not the ones from DC Comics), carry our legacy forward. </p>
<p>Metahumans have some of the characteristics of humans, but they are <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_economicus">homo economicus</a>, entirely subordinate to economic laws, down to their very cells. Their desires are driven by the laws of debt and liquidity. That doesn't make them totally inhuman, but it means that Krina Alizond 114, a fraud specialist looking for the lost proceeds of the biggest fraud ever committed, has interesting and surprising motivations as she attempts to solve the mystery of her sister's disappearance while dodging an assassin and various parties who have gotten wind of the missing treasure.</p>
<p>Stross tells a story of people who appear to be quite a lot like us, until Krina stumbles across a couple having sex, or when she considers the prospect of food, or the alteration of her body plan. Homo economicus is quite obviously not human. The resulting story is remarkable for that reason. Stross isn't writing about humans like us, but we still want to sympathize with Krina and we're cheering her quest. Meanwhile, as the story progresses it becomes increasingly clear that Krina is like no one we've ever known.</p>
<p>Most of the story takes place in a single planetary system orbiting a star mostly like our Sun. Stross's description of the environment is inventive and fun. We get a taste of interplanetary travel as well as interstellar travel (which happens mostly by lightspeed laser transmissions), and what life might be like on the surface of a watery superearth. </p>
<p>The characters populating the story, though evidently not human like us, are still human enough that we can sympathize with them and understand them, even the communistic squid and the piratical bats. Like Alice in Wonderland we discover people we've never imagined.</p>
<p>This book was a page turner, in spite of its abstruse messages about economics. It's also been nominated for the Hugo, and it's one of the best Hugo nominated books I've read. Highly recommended.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-63214262861348478632014-05-26T16:35:00.000-07:002014-05-26T19:12:55.122-07:00The Long Story<div id="content">
<div id="bookone">
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0062068687/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0062068687&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=B5YGHLVL3IPLYYG7"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0062068687&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0062068687" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Long Earth</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.terrypratchettbooks.com/">Terry Pratchett</a> and <a href="http://www.stephen-baxter.com/">Stephen Baxter</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Harper, 2013</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0062068687</dd>
</dl>
</div>
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<hr />
<div id="booktwo">
<div style="float:left">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0062068695/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0062068695&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20&linkId=QXI3XYE6H2RR72YL"><img border="0" src="http://ws-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0062068695&Format=_SL250_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://ir-na.amazon-adsystem.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0062068695" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</div>
<dl class="bookplate" style="float:right">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Long War</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author">Pratchett and Baxter</dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Harper, 2014</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0062068695</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<p>If you've ever heard of the "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation">many worlds theory</a>," the idea that any event that could have turned out more than one way creates a split in the universe so that the event turns out each of the possible ways, then you know the basis of a subgenre of science fiction folks call alternate history. You could just see alternate histories as fantasies with no particular basis in reality, but the many worlds theory, which came from quantum theory, is the basis for these stories. </p>
<p>Even some time travel stories tackle it: you go back in time, accidentally make a consequential change, and the future you return to is different. What happened to the future you came from? It's probably still there. You just can't reach it anymore, unless you travel even further back in time to prevent the first change.</p>
<p>One fairly rare take on the many worlds is the ability to travel laterally between them. Instead of flying to the stars to find a new planet, you travel from our planet to a probabilistic neighbor. It's got everything Earth has, except people. No pollution, no overcrowding, all that good stuff. So far a few stories have been written considering this idea, but most if not all of them are short story treatments. I know of none that explored the subject as thoroughly as <a href="http://www.terrypratchettbooks.com/">Pratchett</a> and <a href="http://www.stephen-baxter.com/">Baxter</a> do in <em>The Long Earth</em> and <em>The Long War</em>. </p>
<p>Some time in the near future the world changes. A scientist posts plans on the internet for building a stepping box, a simple device, apparently powered by a potato, which allows the wearer to step from this world into an alternate world. The worlds stretch out in two directions, for infinity, it seems, and at first appear to be completely devoid of any intelligent life, though in other respects life flourishes on most of them.</p>
<p>The stories' main character, Joshua Valienté, accompanied by a computerized simulation of a Tibetan mechanic named Lobsang sets out to explore the Long Earth, and perhaps discover its purpose. The fairly mundane task of exploration is leavened by a continuous conflict between Joshua and Lobsang arising from Joshua's distrust of this machine that appears to have an indecent amount of power over the lives of people. The story finishes with a perhaps predictable event that has nothing to do with the main plot, but that's actually OK since it leads to the sequel.</p>
<p>The sequel takes place a couple of decades later. Human prejudices against trolls, gorilla-like intelligent beings who live in the Long Earth, naturally stepping between worlds, are resulting in the withdrawal of the trolls from most places in the Long Earth. Sensing a threatening war between humans and non-humans, Joshua and his computerized friend set out again to see if they can broker a treaty. This story also has enough unfinished business at the end that it's obvious there's going to be a sequel - <em>The Long Mars</em>. </p>
<p>Which I haven't read. Yet.</p>
<p>Anyway, stylistically both books show the hallmarks of a collaboration. Both Baxter and Pratchett are stylistically competent, as is this book. The prose doesn't evoke either author's distinctive style, though both authors toss in occasional sly references to their own works - just not anything that disrupts the flow of the narrative itself. The result is a consistent and even flow of narrative that is easy on the mental ear.</p>
<p>There is a large number of characters who make their appearances as the plot advances. Each get a fair amount of time for development, and in the end, paradoxically almost, the one character that remains a cypher is Lobsang, who plays the role of cat's paw in both books. Instead of developing as a central character, the AI acts as a foil against which many of the other characters measure themselves. Since the books are not actually about computerized intelligences, that's as it should be.</p>
<p>Pratchett and Baxter include many different worlds in the story. I enjoyed the descriptions of the varied animals and environments found on the Long Earth, even the idea of Jokers, places that are unusually different from the surrounding Earths, was a great idea. While the story starts with the appearance that humanity is alone on the Long Earth, there are hints early on that we've got company. The second book even presents a scientific rational for this state of affairs. And of course stepping itself has a number of limitations, which are addressed in a variety of ways.</p>
<p>The books are not the usual thing to expect from either author. It might be a good idea to approach the books while pretending you had read nothing by either author before. The books deserve to be seen in their own light.</p>
<p>Overall I strongly recommend the stories. </p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-1170355235604083222013-08-29T14:00:00.000-07:002013-08-29T14:01:04.623-07:00There's Always Time for the End of the World<div id="content">
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</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">The Fuller Memorandum</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.antipope.org/charlie/">Charles Stross</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Ace, 2011</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 044102050X</dd>
</dl>
<p>The world isn’t what we think it is. There are secrets known only to a few of us, and if you stumbled across them you might go insane.</p>
<p>That’s the rational behind a particular subgenre of urban fantasy that includes such diverse fare as the successful <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000226/">Will Smith</a> vehicle <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119654/">Men in Black</a> and <a href-"http://www.amazon.com/Tim-Powers/e/B000APYVZ0/">Tim Powers</a>’ fantastic <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0062221396/">Three Days to Never</a>. The genre is itself a branch off the horror story genre. </p>
<p><em>The Fuller Memorandum</em>, book three of the <em>Laundry Files</em>, holds true to the best form of this type of story. Our intrepid hero, Bob Howard (not his real name), is an agent working for Her Majesty’s Occult Service, where he deals with everything from random hauntings to demonic possession. But there’s a leak in his department, and he’s the bait. Before long everything goes fantastically pear shaped, which is the best way for stories like this to go. After all, what’s more horrifying than finding that your best laid plans are missing essential details, or have been anticipated by the enemy?</p>
<p>I had read a Laundry Files short story a little while ago, but none of the novels. I’m also a big fan of Stross’s stories, and this story was no disappointment. Stross writes a judicious mix of first person account (as Bob Howard’s memoirs) and third person (framed as later reconstruction), all set in the familiar streets of London that turn into a maze beset by crazed cultists. The book makes occasional references to the Lovecraft mythos (like Bob Howard’s pseudonym), without making this a Lovecraft fanfic. The tone is light and chatty - Bob Howard explains that’s necessary to keep him from going insane from the horror - but that doesn’t lessen the tension one bit. </p>
<p>One particular feature of the story, the main villain, was especially fun. This is a character that starts out in a good light in the story, and not until the last few dozen pages is the villain’s identity revealed. The best villains don’t actually believe they’re doing anything wrong - can’t make omelettes without breaking a few eggs - and this villain is no exception. </p>
<p>Although The Fuller Memorandum is book three in a series, it’s perfectly readable without having read the previous two books. For that matter, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/042525643X/">The Apocalypse Codex</a>, the fourth book in the series has just hit the shelves. Unless you need to satisfy your OCD itch not to read books in a series out of order, you should be OK to just dive into that one. </p>
<p>And dive in you should.</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-49258589516573715742013-06-30T21:03:00.000-07:002013-06-30T21:09:13.664-07:00If I picked the Hugos, 2013 Edition<p>
I just realized today that I've read all the nominees! Woohoo!
</p><p>
Well, let's have a look, in no particular order.
</p><p>
Mira Grant's <em>Blackout</em> came out early last year, and I read it on the spot. It's number three of her "Newsflesh" series, an innovative and fun zombie thriller that follows the lives of a team of professional bloggers. In book three, a number of reveals have already happened, and the one that remains is unmasking the conspiracy that has been driving the zombie infestations. The heroes bring it off, although they can't avoid a tragic death.
</p><p>
John Scalzi's <em>Redshirts</em> is a fantasy about getting writers of TV shows to give their characters a bit more thought. The title makes fun of the observation that many Star Trek fans have made that characters who join the captain on a mission, but who wear a red shirt, have a terrible life expectancy. Well, Ensign Dahl is quickly clued in how to avoid falling prey to bad writing, but tragedy still strikes. Dahl contrives to journey to the Real World<sup>tm</sup>, where he and his friends confront the people responsible for their meaningless lives.
</p></p>
Lois McMaster Bujold's latest entry <em>Captain Vorpatril's Alliance</em> is another addition to her "Vorkosigan Saga." It concerns Captain Ivan Vorpatril, an easygoing fellow her fans met earlier in <em>A Civil Campaign</em>, who once again gets unwillingly dragged into an adventure by Byerly Vorrutyer, whom fans also met in the earlier book. Ivan is the sort of guy all guys wish they could be - competent, cool under pressure, able to see through mind bending plots - and apparently is being shoved into a bit of a screwball romantic comedy in this case. There's some danger to life and limb, especially towards the end, but as long as we get the requisite happy ending, it's all cool.
</p><p>
Kim Stanley Robinson's decidedly hard SF entry <em><a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2013/04/diamonds-in-sky.html">2312</a></em>, set, obviously, 300 years in the future follows a handful of characters around the solar system, a place that's at the same time exotic and familiar, well settled and filled with intrigue. The story starts with a death, and intimations are that the death wasn't entirely natural. When that event is quickly followed by what appears to be a sophisticated terrorist attack, our characters head off in various directions with varying levels of purposefulness to try and nab the bad guys.
</p><p>
And, finally, there's Saladin Ahmed's <em><a href="http://nail-on-diogenes-barrel.blogspot.com/2013_04_01_archive.html">Throne of the Crescent Moon</a></em>, a Dungeons and Dragon-esque adventure in the world of One-thousand-and-one Arabian Nights. Wizard Adoulla, with the help of a holy fighter and a shapeshifting desert girl, faces down an evil wizard who has designs on the khalif's throne. The story has a number of battles and finishes with a battle royal at the khalif's palace.
</p><p>
I had a soft spot for <em>Blackout</em>. The second book in that series, <em>Deadline</em> concerned itself with several interesting philosophical questions, and I thought Mira Grant (Seanan McGuire) just rocked the zombie world with a refreshing take on the science of becoming a zombie, and on the politics that might arise in such a world. Sadly, her conspiracy driven finale fell short of my expectations. Conspiracies are difficult things to write well, and I got the distinct impression that she was letting herself get sloppy, when compared to the tight plotting of the first two novels. Still, it was an excellent book.
</p><p>
John Scalzi writes some cracking good yarns, and <em>Redshirts</em> was a fun read, as well, but it was more a fannish love letter to Star Trek and the like than it was what I would think of as a serious SF&F story. Yes, the story had to be written, and, yes, I'm glad I read it. I compare it favorably with many stories. But because it's mostly an in-joke with some thinly disguised advice to writers, I think it falls short of my admittedly idiosyncratic requirements for a Hugo nominee. That it got nominated is more due to the love fans have for Scalzi the author, I think, than for the quality of this book.
</p><p>
Lois McMaster Bujold's "Vorkosigan" series has such a strong following, that she pretty much only has to publish another book in the series, and her fans will push her into the short list. That's not a slam, but it means that she's had some fairly weak offerings get nominated, like her novel <em>Cryoburn</em>, which I reviewed a few years ago. Happily, <em>Captain Vorpatril's Alliance</em> is a much stronger book than <em>Cryoburn</em>, though setting is still a bit weak, giving us generic city scapes with only a little better sense of place than she managed in the earlier book. But the characters are more fleshed out, and even the somewhat one-sided female characters she introduces are given more stage time. Still, this book falls short for me.
</p><p>
I reviewed Saladin Ahmed's <em>Kingdom of the Crescent Moon</em> earlier. When I describe it as a Dungeons and Dragon-esque adventure, I don't mean it as a slam, but the tropes are transparent enough that anyone familiar with the game will recognize it. What made me happy about the story is that here I had a sword and sorcery fantasy that was not set in a Euro-centric medieval world. We need more like that, and I'd be happy to see this book win for that reason.
</p><p>
However, Kim Stanley Robinson's <em>2312</em> is a true tour-de-force. This is a book with well thought out and well fleshed out characters. It's got plotting, oh heavens it's got plotting. It's got setting, yessir, complete with surfing the frickin' rings of Saturn. And it's hard SF. OK, I'm told the market for hard SF is a fraction of the market for fantasy. That only makes me love this book more: Robinson has not knocked off just another copy of write-by-the-numbers novel. I know all authors pour a little bit of their very soul into their books, but with this book, it shows. Yes, <em>2312</em> also won the Nebula this year, but, hell, it deserved it.
</p>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-69067155771265166292013-06-23T21:04:00.000-07:002013-06-23T21:05:38.829-07:00Prickly Propositions<div id="content">
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</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Justice for Hedgehogs</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Dworkin">Ronald Dworkin (1931-2013)</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Harvard University Press, 2011</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 978-0-674-04671-9</dd>
</dl>
<p>
Morals or ethics are contentious issues that seem to divide us (the people sharing the most general forms of Western Civilization) into two distinct camps.
</p>
<p>
On the one hand there are those who say their guidance to moral behavior is received from a higher power, as transmitted to us by inspired men and women in past ages. On the other, there are those who claim that all behavioral rules are socially constructed, and none are intrinsically better than any others. The disagreements between these two camps are what shape much of the culture wars of the past few decades.
</p>
<p>
Ronald Dworkin stepped into this affray to say that both sides are completely wrong. The title of this book refers to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archilochus">Archilochus</a>' surviving quip, "The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing." Dworkin means to prove that there is a unity of value (one big thing that the hedgehog knows) that we can use to arrive at true rules for moral and ethical behavior (he makes a distinction between the two). He argues that, once this set of true rules has been described, the moral and ethical rules for politics and laws become clear, as well. It's a tall order, and he starts by demolishing the case of the multiculturalists, the moral relativists, and anyone else who might dispute that it is possible to make true statements about morals or ethics.
</p>
<p>
It's a tall order.
<blockquote>
"I will not rely on any assumption that a theory is sound just because it fits with other theories we also find agreeable."
</blockquote>
Everything is up for grabs, but he wants to arrive at an objective truth. He's totally serious about the objectivity of this truth, and spends a considerable amount of time discussing truth in its various forms.
</p>
<p>
Dworkin nails down one principle first and foremost: Hume's Guillotine.
<blockquote>
"[Hume's Principle] requires us to reject the Enlightenment's epistemological code for the moral domains."
</blockquote>
This was a surprising move for me. E.O. Wilson, writing in <em>Consilience</em>, felt certain that the unity of knowledge had to lead to an understanding of ethics. Sam Harris in <em>The Moral Landscape</em> argues that answering questions about ethics by definition means acting so other people don't come to harm, and to the extent that it is possible, ensuring that people in general flourish.
</p>
<p>
But Dworkin means to carve out a new path. In the case of morals and ethics, he says, Hume's Principle doesn't allow us to look for physical evidence that we have arrived at a true statement. (He coins the amusing term "morons" to describe particles that might determine moral truths, the way protons, neutrons, and electrons determine physical truths.) Instead, he says, we must use interpretive reasoning, which he describes as a collaborative process (a social construction, in other words), which has explanatory power (accounts for why we say some act is a moral or ethical act), and conceptually is consistent with other parts of the web of moral truths that we are building.
</p>
<p>
He makes the unique distinction between morals and ethics (this is to make his arguments easier to organize, not because his use of the words is somehow more correct) that morals are rules that govern our behavior towards other people, and ethics are rules that govern our behavior towards ourselves. He starts by looking at morals, where he uses as his foundation Kant's notion that a moral truth should not depend on any benefit that being moral might bring.
</p>
<p>
As I was reading this book I found that his closely reasoned synthesis made a lot of sense. I didn't agree with him in every detail, but certainly a lot of notions that had been floating around in my head became better defined and better understood. I certainly agreed with most of the political program that he derived from his moral and ethical principles - particularly where he argues that a political community is by its very nature coercive, so it must avoid intruding on the ethical realm of people (their behavior towards themselves), while still showing equal concern for all citizens (the moral end of the business).
</p>
<p>
But the fact that I agreed with him here also raised a danger flag. He had arrived here by proposing a principle that, to me, seemed eminently sensible: the Golden Rule. But the Golden Rule is only a small part of what many people use to make moral decisions. The recently developed <a href="http://www.moralfoundations.org/">Moral Foundations Theory</a>, just by way of example, attempts to explain the wide divergence of moral behavior across cultures by referring to six distinct instincts according to which people make moral decisions. The Golden Rule makes use of just some of them: Care/Harm and Fairness/Cheating, and perhaps Liberty/Oppression. This raised the important question of which principles someone to whom these other instincts were more important would start with. Recent studies seem to show that in particular Conservatives depend a lot more on the other instincts, particularly Sanctity/Degradation. Dworkin would expect a Hassidic Jew to build his interpretive web on something other than the Talmud, arguing that by Hume's Principle an inspired person (someone with an intution for moral truths, in other words) cannot exist. But that doesn't mean that it isn't possible to create moral principles that have equal standing with the Golden Rule, and express concerns for Loyalty, Authority, and Sanctity. (They don't disappear under Dworkin's treatment, but they certainly don't hold pride of place.)
</p>
<p>
It surprised me a little to find that, while Dworkin admitted that this interpretive process may lead to more than one set of moral and ethical truths, he carried through his particular program with single mindedness. Not only that, but Dworkin's attack on establishment moral philosophy must have been such a surprise that few people challenged him on that point, even though, prior to his publication, he invited comments from pretty much the entire world, and held a major symposium where his book was <a href="http://www.bu.edu/law/events/audio-video/hedgehogs.shtml">critiqued quite mercilessly</a>. Yes, this is moral philosophy with peer review.
</p>
<p>
But that flaw aside, this book must be one of the most important books on moral philosophy published in the past 100 years. Even if you think you'd rather hang your hat on received moral rules (e.g. <a href="http://quran.com/">Qur'an</a>, <a href="http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/">Bhagavad Gita</a>, <a href="http://www.lds.org/scriptures/dc-testament">Doctrine and Covenants</a>, <a href="http://www.sacred-texts.com/shi/kojiki.htm">Kojiki</a>, etc - the fact that you may realize there are some that I'm leaving out makes my point here, as well as Dworkin's), you'll want to brave the dojo of moral philosophy.
</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-62248383029126977552013-04-26T23:05:00.000-07:002013-04-26T23:08:52.868-07:00Here's Sand in Your Tropes!<div id="content">
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</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Throne of the Crescent Moon</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://saladinahmed.com//">Saladin Ahmed</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Penguin, 2012</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0756407117</dd>
</dl>
<p>
The standard fantasy has a medieval setting. This standard is so pervasive that Orson Scott Card writes that he wasn't able to sell a science fiction story to a science fiction publisher because it started in a medieval setting.
</p>
<p>
That's not the worst of it, though. The worst of it is that standard fantasy has a Eurocentric medieval setting. Even when authors go to great pains to draw maps of non-existent places where the story takes place, it remains essentially Europe, somewhere between a thousand and five hundred years ago.
</p>
<p>
For me any change in that is welcome, so I knew I was going to enjoy Ahmed's story as soon as I started reading. OK, so it's the obligatory medieval setting, with powerful rulers and powerful magic users and powerful fighters. You can practically hear the D and D dice roll, though I don't mean it in disrespect. It's just so very standard, it requires no explanation, which is partly why authors write this way.
</p>
<p>
Adoulla and his loyal assistant Raseed set out to deal with some ghuls that reportedly killed most of a family. They meet up with Zamia, a desert warrior who can shapeshift into a powerful lion. As they compare notes, they realize that they are up against the most powerful evil wizard they had ever encountered. Of course, the wizard knows where they live...
</p>
<p>
What set this story apart for me was that Ahmed had set it in a fantasy Muslim kingdom. The language and setting were all beautifully done, and required no effort on my part to immerse myself into this world. It's vaguely reminiscent of <em>A Thousand and One Nights</em>, which provides an element of familiarity for readers from the West.
</p>
<p>
But Ahmed doesn't simply mine Sheherezade's stories. I found his story full of fresh new ideas, new to me, certainly, but also new to the genre. This is a well written book that ought to set a standard for what authors try to write in the future. It's got fighting and loving and magic and horrible creatures, if you're into excitement. And it has some great characters, like Adoulla, the crude wizard, or Zamia, the shape shifting desert woman. Though in places the story reads a bit like a Dungeons and Dragons adventure module, the writing is so good that even those of us familiar with that game should be willing to overlook it.
</p>
<p>
<em>Throne of the Crescent Moon</em> was the fourth of the 2013 Hugo nominees that I read. I highly recommend it.
</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-7080584870577132032013-04-18T21:34:00.000-07:002013-04-18T21:35:30.968-07:00Diamonds in the Sky<div id="content">
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</div>
<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">2312</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author"><a href="http://www.kimstanleyrobinson.info/">Kim Stanley Robinson</a></dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Orbit, 2012</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0316098124</dd>
</dl>
<p>
Three hundred years ago, in 1713, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schooner">schooner</a> was the height of technology. If you had talked to people back then, even scientists like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descartes">Descartes</a> or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton">Newton</a>, they would have been unlikely to predict our world today: computers, cell phones, satellites, orbiting laboratories, molecular cancer treatments, laser surgery - that's just a very partial list of technological features of the early 21st century of which even knowledgeable people three hundred years ago would have had no inkling.
</p>
<p>
It's not any different now. Science fiction is seen by many as a genre of predictive fiction, and yet only rarely do writers manage to predict the future. Heinlein thought that by 2000 we'd be living on the Moon. Fifty years seemed like plenty of time to him to go from Braun's experimental rockets to lunar settlements. And if he completely misjudged the shape of the future, he's in excellent company.
</p>
<p>
If Robinson worried about getting the future wrong, he's given himself plenty of room. But it's a lovely future he's painting. <em>2312</em> has people living all over the solar system, with access to practically unlimited energy, from solar power stations in close orbit around the Sun to exotic technologies like fusion and antimatter. We travel in hollow asteroids filled with miniature ecologies on cometary orbits between the planets, and life extension is available so that we may live to be almost 200 years old, or older, depending on the subspecies of humanity we belong to.
</p>
<p>
But as Robinson lets us peer more closely at this paradisaical future, the worm in the apple becomes apparent. People are still people, and we still manage to act out on our less lovely emotions. So it happens that the story's heroine, Swan, and her companion Wahram barely survive a deadly attack on Terminator, Swan's home city on Mercury. As Swan, Wahram, and the diminutive Inspector Genette are on the trail of the attackers, more of the worm is revealed. This is especially evident on Earth, where banditry seems to be common and where political and tribal rivalries make life on the solar system's single most hospital planet more precarious than in some tiny terrarium whizzing about the Sun.
</p>
<p>
So there's plenty going on. But Robinson doesn't stop there. In Swan and Wahram he serves up two of the best realized characters in fiction. Swan is a complex woman, mercurial in the proverbial sense. She is believable as a woman with two lifetimes worth of experience, and her self discovery in the course of this story is nevertheless fascinating. Wahram, as saturnine as Swan is mercurial, makes the perfect contrast in their pas-de-deux, as he looks for routine in life, rather than disruptions. It is hard to imagine an unlikelier couple, and Robinson brings it off without a hitch. I think if <em>2312</em> turns out to be as different from the world of this story as the year 2000 was from Heinlein's imaginings, this book will still be worth reading then if only for this well done love story.
</p>
<p>
To be sure, the story has a couple of features that I didn't fully understand. There are a number of interludes, one or two between each chapter, with headings like "Lists" or "Excerpts." The first is lists of words, things, or ideas, without any narrative connection, though usually tied to some aspect of the foregoing chapter. I thought of them as a bit like illustrations between chapters. The excerpts are written as quoted passages, starting in the middle of a sentence, and ending in the middle of another, each passage providing some information, and the entire section serving as an info dump for <em>2312</em>. I didn't think these parts were necessary, since science fiction for a long time now has traded in a set of familiar tropes, and this story is no different.
</p>
<p>
Then there were three interludes with the heading "Quantum Walk," which were more closely connected to the story, but I didn't realize the connection until well towards the end of the book. I had to go back and re-read those three sections. They made an interesting sidelight to the story for various reasons. I have not figured out if I can say the same thing about the "Lists" or the "Excerpts." Suffice it to say that they weren't intrusive, so I didn't see them as detracting from the overall story. I did notice the similarity between these interludes and Brin's interludes in Existence, and wondered if there was a new style developing. (Probably not, though.)
</p>
<p>
<em>2312</em> was the third of the 2013 Hugo nominees that I read. I liked it a lot.
</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-37121759563059312112013-02-21T21:31:00.002-08:002013-02-22T10:36:47.905-08:00Shouting into Silent Space<div id="content">
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0765342626/ref=as_li_tf_il?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0765342626&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20"><img border="0" src="http://ws.assoc-amazon.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=0765342626&Format=_SL110_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0765342626" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
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<dl class="bookplate">
<dt>Title:</dt>
<dd class="booktitle">Existence</dd>
<dt>Author:</dt>
<dd class="author">David Brin</dd>
<dt>Publisher:</dt>
<dd class="publisher">Tor Books, 2012</dd>
<dt>ISBN</dt>
<dd class="isbn">ISBN 0765303612</dd>
</dl>
<p>
A little over 60 years ago, so the story goes, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enrico_Fermi">Enrico Fermi</a> pointed out a problem with our thinking about the universe. Our Sun, he said, is actually quite young. There are billions of stars in our galaxy that are much older. Around our Sun it seems life evolved rather quickly. We don't know of any reason why Earth should be special in that regard. There should be millions of planets in our galaxy that offer similar advantages.
</p><p>
If we accept those premises, then there's a painfully obvious question we should be asking ourselves: where is everybody?!
</p><p>
Since then many scientists have offered up theories to explain the <a href="http://www.brin-l.com/downloads/silence.pdf">Great Silence</a>. Not least among them is <a href="http://www.davidbrin.com/index.html">David Brin</a>. After holding forth on the topic thirty years ago, <em>Existence</em> is a fictional treatment of his thinking on the matter.
</p><p>
The story takes place a few decades in our future, when orbital worker Gerald Livingstone retrieves an artifact that turns out to have come from a non-human civilization. As the story develops, the alien civilization that sent us the artifact turns out to pose an unforeseen danger to humanity, and various actors on Brin's stage struggle to save humanity's future.
<p>
In spite of a large number of interruptions where Brin in the persona of "Pandora's Oracle" muses on the reasons why a technological civilization might not survive to colonize the galaxy (one of the obvious explanations for the Great Silence), the story is well paced. There is a large cast of well developed characters, though some of the more important ones seem to sneak up from the sidelines, like Peng Xiang Bin's wife and child. It is clear by the end of the book that, while writing an entertaining story was certainly one of Brin's goals, it's those interruptions that were the greater purpose.
</p>
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<div style="float:right">
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/055329024X/ref=as_li_tf_il?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=055329024X&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20"><img border="0" src="http://ws.assoc-amazon.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=055329024X&Format=_SL110_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=055329024X" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0000DK4HM/ref=as_li_tf_il?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B0000DK4HM&linkCode=as2&tag=thenaiindioba-20"><img border="0" src="http://ws.assoc-amazon.com/widgets/q?_encoding=UTF8&ASIN=B0000DK4HM&Format=_SL110_&ID=AsinImage&MarketPlace=US&ServiceVersion=20070822&WS=1&tag=thenaiindioba-20" ></a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thenaiindioba-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B0000DK4HM" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
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<p>
Brin is one of those SF authors mother used to warn you about. His SF is political. Until <em>Existence</em> the stories weren't obviously political, but it seems that this time Brin had a number of messages he wanted to get off his chest, and he crammed them into the book. He's done that before, for example with <em>Earth</em>, and with <em>Kiln People</em>, both books which clearly repeated points Brin had made at various occasions. But <em>Existence</em> is different, in that rather than telling a story that includes a larger point, this book explains a larger point and makes it palatable by wrapping it in a story.
</p><p>
Brin's politics aren't easily categorized. He blogs as a <a href="http://www.davidbrin.com/index.html">contrarian</a>, which is apt if you agree with him that every currently fashionable political view in general use in the States and around the world ignores various inconvenient facts about human nature. If you have strong views on political topics, you will knock heads with Brin, no matter what your views are. That makes <em>Existence</em> a little difficult to swallow for many readers. Not only is the story not your typical genre fiction, but there are political ideas in there that Brin defends quite forcefully.
</p><p>
I did enjoy the book. But I know this book isn't going to be everyone's cup of tea.
</p>
</div>Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3623129900721871638.post-28158424452258750342013-02-20T22:04:00.000-08:002013-02-20T22:04:54.126-08:00Introduction<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiMdNydvZ4_LYpKE28JFlInoffEkN9ujM9pO__dqzORAuNuwCy_sJF0s51j_QOp9ZPtTvVhpzzMu1LYBebmxKCVb4gdCuSJ7WPmLfRGpMspiqajU8dG9BvEcj8Y6gfN9elm1tBQCAOlacKk/s1600/diogenes11.jpg" imageanchor="1" ><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiMdNydvZ4_LYpKE28JFlInoffEkN9ujM9pO__dqzORAuNuwCy_sJF0s51j_QOp9ZPtTvVhpzzMu1LYBebmxKCVb4gdCuSJ7WPmLfRGpMspiqajU8dG9BvEcj8Y6gfN9elm1tBQCAOlacKk/s320/diogenes11.jpg" style="float:left; padding-right:20px" /></a><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diogenes_of_Sinope">Diogenes</a> lived in a barrel, about 2,400 years ago, as everyone knows. He was the original <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynicism_(philosophy)">cynic</a>, named for living like a dog. We now take "cynic" to mean someone who questions everyone's motives, and perhaps has himself questionable motives. But Diogenes questioned everyone's values. It is said that he was looking for a single honest man, but that he never found one. He lived in a barrel because he wanted to live a simple life, without possessions. And thereby hangs a tale told by one of the earliest writers of illustrated verse and prose, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Busch">Wilhelm Busch</a>, whom some credit with being the inventor of the comic strip. You'll want to find the story for yourself. I've just included a picture of the relevant panel.<br />
<p>I used to maintain a fairly large personal site, first on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GeoCities">GeoCities</a>, which was bought by <a href="http://Yahoo.com">Yahoo</a>, and when they shut down their personal sites I moved it to some other server, where it kinda languished. Trouble with these sites is that there isn't much to motivate me to keep them up.<br />
<p>While it was sitting on GeoCities/Yahoo I used it to learn about site design. The site evolved from the <a href="http://reocities.com/">typical GeoCities look</a> (too many pictures, and a lot of vicarious mark-up), to one that was fairly sparse with the pictures, and used HTML5/CSS3 standards (before they were standards).<br />
<p>Most of the site was dedicated to book reviews. I started writing book reviews to help me remember which books I'd read. Most of them were short, one or two-line items. But where I was able to think of more to say, I put the review up on my site.<br />
<p>This blog will be dedicated to more book reviews. I'll also try to figure out a way to resurrect the older reviews. We'll see how that works.Helgehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08246599498097260540noreply@blogger.com0