Edward Ashton's Blog, page 3
February 10, 2018
Resolve, in Four Heartbeats
DSF has a good one up today.
February 6, 2018
February 5, 2018
Amazon.com: The Only Harmless Great Thing eBook: Brooke Bolander: Kindle Store
So I just finished reading this. I don’t think I can adequately describe it, except to say that it involves love and elephants and the Radium Girls, and you need to read it.
January 18, 2018
Are these guys even the same species? I don’t know anymore.

Are these guys even the same species? I don’t know anymore.
January 14, 2018
January 7, 2018
Happy Sunday night. Here is a dragon who sort of looks like a...

Happy Sunday night. Here is a dragon who sort of looks like a dog.
December 25, 2017
December 19, 2017
A Recommendation
If, like me, you’re excitedly preparing for Jolabokaflod, and you’ve got some SF/F fans on your gift list, you might want to consider the following:
The Dog Stars, by Peter Heller.
This book manages to be lyrical and sweet, while simultaneously being set in a harrowing post-apocalyptic world. It’s told in the first person from the perspective of a brain damaged survivor of an extinction-level plague, and explores the deep weirdness of male friendship, and the depths of both human kindness and human depravity. I’d put this one in the same general space as Station Eleven, but with a lot more adrenaline.
Dying of the Light, by George R. R. Martin.
This book long predates A Song of Ice and Fire, and it may be a little difficult to dig up, but it’s well worth the effort. It’s set in a distant future where humans have expanded into the stars and then partially collapsed, with the result that humans from different planets are nearly aliens to one another. The action takes place among the last inhabitants of an abandoned festival planet, just before it spins off into the abyss. The tone is wistful, the plot is intricate, and the characters are fully formed and unforgettable.
A Deepness in the Sky, by Vernor Vinge.
Every great writer has something he or she does better than anyone else. For Vinge, it’s imagining alien species that are different from us in every conceivable way, figuring out how those differences would affect the way they act and think, and then turning them into fully realized and sympathetic characters. In this book, he does it with giant, tunnel-dwelling spiders on a planet orbiting a variable star. I read this during a sixty inch blizzard years ago, and the idea of the atmosphere precipitating out as snow didn’t seem that crazy to me at the time. Highly recommended.
December 12, 2017
Toasted Cake 162: On Post-Mortem Birds by Natalia Theodoridou - Toasted Cake
There is a deeply strange and beautiful story up on Toasted Cake this week. Give it a listen if you have a chance.






