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What Else Are You Reading?
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What Else Are You Reading - November 2018
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Rob, Roberator
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Nov 01, 2018 02:53AM

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Anyway back to your regularly scheduled monthly book readings.




Off too... Something. Not sure what, yet

I've also listened to two Hannah Swensen books lately. I've needed light books with some life stuff going on.
I'm hopping on a plane tomorrow for work and have Zeroes on Kindle and audio, and another two Hannah Swensen books in audio, too...

The book is Libertarian to its core. I learned about it at Worldcon during a consuite conversation when a fellow congoer pointed out the acceptance speech the author provided for winning the Prometheus award that year. I did love L. Neil Smith's expressly Libertarian book Probability Broach and several of the sequels were pretty good, so I picked it up.
This book covers what could happen when committed Libertarians have to organize to fight off a common threat. It's where ideological rubber meets the road. There are some pretty interesting discussions of historical precedents, not just the American revolution but also the founding of Iceland by refugees from Harald Fairhair back in the 10th century.
Many current sociological trends are sent up. There's a conniving female President who used to be a talk show host. Combat divisions include handicapped people. Trust fund kiddies go around lecturing refugees on how they should live while those refugees think they're coping just fine.
At 650 pages the book has a whole lot of time to explore these ideas. The pace crawls sometimes despite lengthy action sequences.
There's a nascent artificial intelligence and some uplifted Dogs, leading to a discussion on what constitutes personhood. All well done, but a fair deal more detail than I needed.
At the end of 650 pages the book ends on a cliffhanger. I can't fault the author since Peter Hamilton does this regularly. While Travis Corcoran isn't quite in the same league as Hamilton, he's fairly close and that's an accomplishment in itself. There's a few too many conversations as data dumps, but then, that's a common problem in SFF.
The book explicitly references Moon is a Harsh Mistress several times. One character is fairly obviously based on the provocateur Bernardo de la Paz. Just to confuse me, there's a character named Mike who ISN'T the lunar computer.
Science is handled well, lunar orbits and Earth to Moon physics work. Reduced gravity features in several scenes.
I'll show up for the sequel and likely the third book, being written now. But, since nothing is resolved at the end of the first book, I feel a bit like I just read a 650 page prologue. That's partly personal experience. I'm an old fart who remembers books that started and ended within 200 pages, and if you went over 300 you had better be established and have something significant to say, like with Stranger in a Strange Land. Plenty of good reading in this book, just went on too long for my tastes. But that's a sign of the times.


Reading Zeroes now.

These have been fun little snippets of story featuring a highly capable Security Bot with crippling social anxiety. Along the way Murderbot spends significant amounts of time trying to save humans who just don't have any sense in a crisis. Parts of this are a great analogy for geek life.
This installment ties the threads together nicely. The first half dragged a bit, mainly because it felt like a retread of what was done in the other installments. The second half broke new ground and led to a satisfying conclusion. And, finally some humans WEREN'T inept!
The door was left just a little bit open at the end, in case there is a clamor for more Murderbot. And there might be, it's a great setup. I dunno if people will keep paying so much for it though. The novella format was great to start with. Following the success of the first, I expected a book. Well, we got one, kinda, but it was in three installments. Each of those cost the same as a full length novel. I dunno how long Macmillan will be able to convince people to do this. Looking at the Amazon sales rank, currently 1,405 in all of Amazon a month after release, perhaps a long time.


That sounds interesting. To the TBR list, Robin!

🦑🦑🦑🦑
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I finished All Yesterdays: Unique and Speculative Views of Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals - 4 out of 5 dinosaurs!
🦕🦕🦕🦕
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Also finished Howling at the Moon - 5 out of 5 dieselpunk robots!
🤖🤖🤖🤖🤖
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Currently reading Marvelocity: The Marvel Comics Art of Alex Ross - which is already going to be 5 out of 5 Spider-men. 🕷🕷🕷🕷🕷

Continuing on with Alliances since my hold came up on this while reading Harry August.

1. The Hollow of Fear, the 3rd Lady Sherlock book in audio. Not S&L, but I'm loving these gender swapped Sherlock stories.
2. The Monster Baru Cormorant in hardback from the library. While I remembered enjoying the first book, I had to read some reviews to reacquaint myself with everything.
3. The Sudden Appearance of Hope in audio. This was suggested to me a while back, and I figured I'd give it a go since I could get it from the library without waiting at the moment.
4. The Grey Bastards in hardback. I have no idea if I'll like this one, but I plan to pick it up after The Monster Baru Cormorant.
I also started The Wolf by Leo Carew a while back and wasn't really invested in the characters. I may try picking that up again.




Pondering what I want to read next...


Jumping into The Fated Sky next. Then I'll have terrible book hangover.

Same! Perfect summation.
Why aren’t we GR friends? Request sent!

You were right about Jade City. Got it on the list.

Our takeover plan is nearly complete! Mwa-hahahaha-
Um, did I say that out loud?
Nevermind, people. Nothing to see here. Move along. These are not the droids you’re looking for.



Looking forward to delving into this month's pick next.


I wanted more of the world building with the connection to the outside world and didn't get it. The two sequels are fine as stories, but they don't advance the universe. That left me disappointed even though the individual stories were okay.

After finishing Nobody Cares I trekked onto Cloud Atlas. I genuinely enjoy it so far but the beginning has been such a slog because I've had to pop open my phone dictionary at least 15 times in the first 10 pages. I consider my vocabulary pretty decent but I unfortunately was not familiar with harridans or tatterdemalions yet in my life. I'm assuming this is just because the beginning is old-timey and that once I get past this it will move along with less interruption *fingers crossed*

The quality of the stories is variable and his parents weren't kidding when they called him Christian

But anyhoo, I found all of the original run of Weird Tales plus one in Fantasy Fan collected in a book available at the LAPL. Am now about 40% of the way through, representing half of the titles. Some longer works in the later stories.
I can see the reason for the enduring interest in Conan. He's a compelling character, amoral but not unmoral, and lives by his own code. He is better than the average warrior but not so far out of reach as to be superhuman. Conan seems to owe a lot to John Carter of Mars, and one story involves an isolated city that lives on superscience suspiciously like a later Barsoom story.
Conan created the Sword and Sorcery genre, and the stories stand up today. Conan works best as "Conan the King," a former warrior who governs well because he understands the lower classes as well as the machinations of the aristocracy. In only one case did I find him unsympathetic, in one of the "pirate" stories when he killed a ship captain without apparent reason.
The stories take on a sameness when consumed all at once. Conan barely escaping death on account of his sinewy sinews; force of attack overcoming skill; a supernatural menace, dimly understood but killable only by one of Conan's strength and wiliness; and half the time a beautiful female, who is routinely incompetent for the adventure they are on. If one of my library books come in I'll take a break and read it first, not because the stories are bad but because they deserve to be savored. Each installment follows a pattern, yes, but the differences are enough to make each story stand out.
It's worth noting that Howard went out of his way to avoid the racism of the times. Where he has extradimensional black skinned almost-human evil characters he notes regularly that they aren't African (Howard says they weren't "Negroes" which was about as unracist a term as you could find in the 1930s.) I give Howard a lot of credit. In this he was Burroughs' and Lovecraft's better.

Reading Shadow Puppets now.

And he was only 30 when he killed himself in 1936. His output in such a short time was amazing, and it would have been interesting to see his reaction to WWII and the Civil Rights era.

I read things about Howard and don't know how much to agree with them. For instance, it's been said that he was unable to cope on his own, which is why he lived with his mother. Well, he got $130 for the first Conan story which is about $2K in today's cash. That by itself indicates he wasn't earning enough to live on his own, so different interpretation. He's also said to have channeled Conan while writing, and felt he *had* to write or Conan would punish him. Not sure if that is allusion or not.
He's also said to have relied emotionally on his mother. That he killed himself when she fell into an unrecoverable coma lends credence to that idea. Or perhaps it was his moody temperament that made him a good writer and that temperament overcame him. In any case, a great writer cut short.

Also really enjoying Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis and The Stone Sky by N.K. Jemisin. Very much looking forward to reading the next Milkweed Triptych book and so sad that this wraps up the amazing Broken Earth series.
Having a hard time getting into Zeroes, possibly because reading alongside the other two, which I absolutely love.

Anywho, I started a book recommended to me because it has archery in it, The Ruins of Gorlan.
I've been traveling and busy with work and other stuff and as such I've done even more audio books than normal, and fallen behind on reviews. A lot of good stuff, and I especially enjoyed the Lady Astronaut books.
The Calculating Stars - ★★★★☆ - My Review
The Fated Sky - ★★★★☆ - My Review
Foxglove Summer - ★★★½☆ - My Review
Children of Time - ★★★★☆ - My Review
I also did finally manage to finish reading The Queen of Crows with my eyes, though it's been a bit of a struggle - ★★★½☆ - My Review
The Calculating Stars - ★★★★☆ - My Review
The Fated Sky - ★★★★☆ - My Review
Foxglove Summer - ★★★½☆ - My Review
Children of Time - ★★★★☆ - My Review
I also did finally manage to finish reading The Queen of Crows with my eyes, though it's been a bit of a struggle - ★★★½☆ - My Review



Dara, this reminded me of a Twitter exchange I was part of recently:
Meredith Ireland
@MeredithIreland
Bookish person: 50 pages remain. The end is nigh. No distractions. No sleep. Neither hell, water wraith, nor skunk fire will keep me from the quest to conquer this book
Normal person: you can just finish later, you know
Bookish person: first of all, how dare you
-------------------
John Taloni
@JohnTaloni
Also Bookish Person: 15 pages remain. It is the epilogue in which I find out the ultimate fate of the characters. Though the main plot is over I can not face this book ending. I shall wait until the morrow to read and savor this last morsel.
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