The Sword and Laser discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
What Else Are You Reading?
>
What else are you reading - November 2020

They'd be enormous Tribbles!"
Are they treble the size?

(David Gerrold wrote the original Star Trek "Trouble With Tribbles" episode.)

The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James
Ring Shout by P. Djeli Clark
Know My Name by Chanel Miller
Untrumping America-Dan PFeiffer
Finished:
Even If We Break by Marieke Njikamp-The premise of a thriller about a group of teens with a tumultuous friendship going to a cabin to play one last weekend of their role playing campaign sounded very promising. Events within the past few months had separated the group so this was their one last chance to just enjoy the world they've created before the seniors moved on. Appreciated the diverse cast and they're relationships but the thriller aspect came up fairly short for me.
If This Isn't Nice, What is? by Kurt Vonnegut-A collection of Vonnegut's graduation speeches from throughout the years. The speeches are all individually *very Vonnegut* but after you read a few they all pretty much repeat the same handful of ideas. Still a fast read so I didn't have any issue plowing through all of them in two days. Definitely worth reading a couple at the least.
Rivers of London-Hoo boy where to start. First of all I'm glad this wasn't picked for the group (and I voted for it most rounds I believe). It's disappointing because I really loved so much of this book. The writing is witty, fun, creative and just hits the right notes. The main issue is the male nerd wish fulfillment (I am a male nerd to be clear) and that shortcoming just kind of becomes more glaring throughout the book. There was also a line about a woman who was so fat/ugly that she had to have a wonderful personality or the alternative was suicide. Yikes. I thought this book was like 20 years older than it was after hearing that.



I got that as part of a one those mail order sci-fi book clubs where you got like 10 books for a couple of dollars, but had to send in the post card to cancel the new one each month for a year. I remember liking it at the time (25 years ago) and even picked up both it and the next in the series for cheap on kindle a while back. Been meaning to reread it, but haven’t yet. Sorry to hear it may not be as good as I remembered.


Peace Talks was decent as a standalone. I didn't love it but was glad to see that Jim Butcher had broken through his block and was writing Harry D..."
I have never been able to get over the scene in one of the Dresden books where he's battling a ghost in "the basement of the UChicago library." As a UChicago alum who worked in the ILL department, my brain is like "Which one? There are at least 5" (depending on the pub date, Harper was probably still in use, but Mansueto hadn't been built yet). The most likely candidate is the Reg, which has two belowground floors, one of which holds a 24 hour study area, the other has a vast expanse of mobile shelf bays. Although my money would be on Crerar to be the haunted one, and the basement was the only area shelved by Dewey instead of LOC...

Look forward to seeing what you think.. the audio version is brilliant. I can forgive a great deal for an Urban Fantasy that is completely multi cultural. It is actually set in the real London, not some mythical London where only white people live.

Like other authors, Butcher avoids specific settings to keep readers from being dicks and visiting places mentioned and bothering the people who live there. That’s why novelists often create streets and landmarks, to throw people off. He has specifically said he also does this. That may be part of what’s happening there.
Of course, if a fictional address becomes popular enough, municipalities may actually create it to draw tourists. Sherlock Holmes lived at 221B Baker Street when there was no such place. Eventually London created it due to its fame, and the Sherlock Holmes museum is there. The area of York which inspired Diagon Alley has bowed to the inevitable and opened three Harry Potter stores.

Look forward to seeing what you think.. the audio version is brilliant. I can forgive a great deal for an Urban Fantasy that is completely multi cultural. It is actually set in the real London, not some mythical London where only white people live."
I concur that the audiobook is terrific. Kobna Holdbrook-Smith does an amazing job. He was the physical therapist in Doctor Strange, and I thought he was American, underscoring his talent.

My late cousin was a huge Cherryh fan, so I read Foreigner when it came out and did not like it at all. It put me off reading anything else by her.

I know her style isn't to everyone's tastes. If you do ever want to give her another shot, I'd suggest Alliance Space: Merchanter's Luck and Forty Thousand in Gehenna (Company Wars #2) (Merchanter's Luck in particular, but these days it's mostly available in an omnibus with 40,000 in Gehenna) or Gate of Ivrel (the first of the Morgaine novels, which read like fantasy but have SF underpinnings).

I'm currently listening to Howl's Moving Castle and enjoying it. I'm also reading The Answer Is…: Reflections on My Life. RIP, Alex Trebek :(
Trike wrote: "I nominate @LeVarBurton to take over Jeopardy.— Trike (@Trike) November 12, 2020 "
I'd think the best player ever should take over. Which would obviously be Watson 😉
I've never been a fan of the arse-about nature of the question/answer format of Jeopardy 😕
I'd think the best player ever should take over. Which would obviously be Watson 😉
I've never been a fan of the arse-about nature of the question/answer format of Jeopardy 😕

Do you also hate motherhood, democracy and pie? 😡

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9s7V8...
Trike wrote: "Tassie Dave wrote: "I've never been a fan of the arse-about nature of the question/answer format of Jeopardy "
Do you also hate motherhood, democracy and pie? 😡"
I don't hate Jeopardy. Just the format 😉
Mark wrote: "I thought it was baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9s7V8..."
The aussie equivalent was "Football, Meat Pies, Kangaroos & Holden cars"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGW-W...
General Motors was a co-partner with Holden in Oz. Hence the shared ad jingle.
Do you also hate motherhood, democracy and pie? 😡"
I don't hate Jeopardy. Just the format 😉
Mark wrote: "I thought it was baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9s7V8..."
The aussie equivalent was "Football, Meat Pies, Kangaroos & Holden cars"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGW-W...
General Motors was a co-partner with Holden in Oz. Hence the shared ad jingle.

Kodna Holdbrook-Smith was fantastic. Meant to mention that in my initial post. The majority of this book was really good I was just mostly bummed about the off putting things and would have a hard time recommending it with caveats. Like the proverbial "I'm not mad just disappointed" lol. It was still an easy 4 star read for me. Will definitely listen to the next two books too (especially being on Libby).

Apparently there was also a South African radio jingle too. Their Chevy cars were rebadged Holdens. I wonder how many variations are out there?
Braaivleis, Rugby, Sunny Skies and Chevrolet
https://youtu.be/x1wvQ7ERXhY

Covid, T.P., TBR and Fantasy"
We didn’t start the fire....

If you listen to audiobooks I really enjoy the George Guidall narration for this series.
I watched the first couple of episodes of the show but it never really grabbed me.


I'm looking to finish reading Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong—and the New Research That's Rewriting the Story today or tomorrow (in advance of the work book club meeting at 6:30 p.m.), which will leave me plenty of time to be ready for Rhythm of War on Tuesday. I'm not actually enjoying "Inferior" very much but it's for a work book club for women in engineering. The next book they're reading is The Calculating Stars, which I may re-read to be able to discuss with them (and not mix and match things that happen in the other books).
I'm really looking forward to Rhythm of War. I have two other friends that will be reading it at the same time. One who reads much faster than I do (well, he listens, and he makes more time for listening than I do) and another who reads more slowly. So it should be a good time discussing with both.


I didn't hate it, probably because my expectations were so low. Herbert did a great job with the original Dune, then spent the next five books tearing down all the precepts set up in that book. I know the writer's admonition is "kill your darlings," but come on Herbert.
So Chapterhouse Dune is Frank Herbert's answer to a question no one asked. Want to know more about the inner workings of the Bene Geserit? Well...no, actually. But here it is! This group of Bene Geserit seem far more benign than the stark characters we met in the original Dune, so Herbert isn't so much showing us the Bene Geserit of that day, but rather making up a new, softer, more sympathetic Bene Geserit with completely understandable motivations, instead of the power grasping people we saw then.
Sandworms have come to the Bene Geserit Chapterhouse and are slowly killing the entire planet. Well, they're converting it to desert and destroying the existing life. Why is this a good thing? There's even other sources of Spice now. Shai-Hulud seems more a life-destroying villain than something to be revered.
There's plenty to object to in the book. Think the Bene Geserit are bad? We've got something badder! I feel like I'm in a Weird Al video where he spoofs Michael Jackson's "Bad" with "Even Worse."
And if the bizarreness of one-upping the Bene Geserit isn't enough, they're importing a practice from that other group and using sex to control men. Oh yay. But wait, there's more! If you haven't hurled yet, there's sex between an adult and a child. Pardon me, I must go to the vomitorium.
Problems of scale persist as well. The Chapterhouse might have a few thousand people, based on how it is organized and how they serve food in cafeteria lines and so on. Yet another planet is described as having four million Bene Geserit. (BTW this is the book where I finally twigged that "Geserit" has the same cadence as "Jesuit" and which is likely intended. Yay me, only five decades behind the time.)
There's weirdness in the cloning process as well. How is it that a few cells used to create a ghola are enough to contain the memories of the person it came from? Memory is a complex thing. This is a trope out of the worst low-budget SF or Horror movies, where a clone has the memories of the original. At least handwave it, Herbert.
Anyway, it was at least decent insomnia reading. I've given up expecting Herbert to deliver a good Dune sequel. This one at least didn't stink up the joint like some others (Looking at you, God Emperor of Dune!)
As this is the last book written by Frank Herbert, I have to call out the most long-running example of the unfired Chekov's Gun. A phrase which refers to the idea that if you have a gun in the first chapter, by the end of the book it must be fired. In the appendices of the first Dune book there's a tantalizing bit that the actions of the Bene Geserit don't make sense by their own principles, by which the putative appendix writer concludes that there is another wholly unseen group manipulating events behind the scenes. One of my fave bits! So as a young'un I read the next two saying hey, where's this group? No sign of 'em. Reading the six Herbert books now, nope, STILL nothing. Great plot point Herbert, thanks for throwing it in the trash.

So I should like this book! Er...nope. Yes, the dragons live in a society much like 19th century England. But they only grow by eating other dragons. I found this so grotesque that it killed any other enjoyment I might have had from the book. The local lord is allowed to eat any young dragon that has poor survival prospects, by which he grows larger and more powerful. He also parcels out the dragon flesh as he sees fit. I suppose there's an allegory there but the concept so grossed me out that couldn't deal.
There's the usual comedy of manners around marriage, for several couples. But where, say, Pride and Prejudice takes time to develop characters, this book is more like "Monty Hall" redemption. Most characters have only to introduce a little conflict, only to find it redeemed soon after with a great reward.
There's really only one subtle plot point in the book. (Actual spoiler, so spoilertext.) (view spoiler)
I didn't even find it good insomnia reading. I tried to lose myself in the marriage comedy, but never knew when one dragon would wind up eating another one. This book is well loved by many. I am not among them. Think I will back away from this particular author and let her fans have their fun.

In the Victorian era, there were a class of folks that worried all day about marriage, inheritance, their hats and blah blah. The prosperity of that class was due to the newly mechanized farms, mines and factories which literally chewed up the bodies of their workers. That's it. Walton just took the Victorian imperative for economic growth and turned it into a biological imperative for the growth of her dragon characters. Probably there are more specific allusions to Victorian authors or particular novels, but in general I don't think it's generally more complicated than that.

Now is the perfect time to start that series. You can read a book every couple of months for several years and never have to spend the first quarter of each book trying to remember the characters and plot lines.
Of course, you'd have to be able to tolerate Cherryh's tendency to make her protagonists inclined to be hysterical. (Which, IRL might be pretty realistic under the story's circumstances, but not always what I'm looking for in my preferred opiate. But I have read the entire Foreigner series :)


Also true of Longmire novels like Hell Is Empty

The thing that does make the Foreigner series potentially more accessible than a lot of others is the way Cherryh breaks everything into more-or-less discrete trilogies, so I could just read three or six or nine books at a stretch.

Those have always been billed more as mysteries/thrillers than as sci-fi despite taking place in the future. I've always wondered what the sci-fi content is like? Is it important to the story, or just an interesting backdrop to the mystery?

Almost halfway through After Atlas. It's quite slow but the near future world is so interesting.
Tomorrow I will start Dominion: An Anthology of Speculative Fiction from Africa and the African Diaspora which I have been dying to read for months.

Big fan of that series as well but have not done any of the audio.

Next I'm re-reading Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire for our family Harry Potter-themed Thanksgiving.



This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Mount Fitz Roy (other topics)Mount Fitz Roy (other topics)
Regenesis (other topics)
Regenesis (other topics)
The Midnight Bargain (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Scott Sigler (other topics)Scott Sigler (other topics)
C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
Robert A. Heinlein (other topics)
More...
They'd be enormous Tribbles!