Archive for the ‘Authors & Books’ Category

Just Finished Reading: His Robot Girlfriend by Wesley Allison


17 Feb

I normally write about books or authors I like. Not this time. I read this book because it was free on my eReader- don’t pay money for it.

The writing was mediocre at best. And while I love character driven novels, I need some sort of plot. I need the protagonist to take action, even if that action is purposely doing nothing.

In this book, the only action the protag took was ordering a robot. After that, everything pretty much happened to him. There’s apparently a sequel called “His Robot Wife”. I won’t be reading it, even if it’s free.

My Favorite Books: American Gods by Neil Gaiman


05 Feb

I just finished reading American Gods for the second time. It actually made more sense to me this time around because I was not as busy trying to figure out what was happening and could pay more attention to the little details. Things that never seemed to fit before fell nicely in to place.

This is Gaiman at his adult storytelling best. The book is dark, the characters layered and imperfect. There is no happy ending, only the understanding that life goes on, and the knowledge that even if home could be defined, sometimes, you just can’t go home again.

My Favorite Comics – Girl Genius by Phil & Kaja Foglio (2)


23 Jan

I’ve gushed about Girl Genius before. It remains one of the best things on the internet.

I don’t read it every week. After reading it the first time, when I had a couple years worth of pages to go through, I get frustrated just reading one or two pages at a time. So, I let it sit. I go back every month or two and do all my reading at once.

I always hate when I reach the most recent entry because it means I have to wait again. But it would be even worse if it ever really ended.

The Affinity Bridge by George Mann


15 Jan

My favorite comic book ever is Ruse, a steampunk style detective story; The Affinity Bridge sets up in much the same style. We have a male detective and his female assistant. He is brilliant but she is also more than competent. We have mystery, and hints of the supernatural.

Detective stories are not my usual read, but the characters and relationships were well done and believable. Considering the book labels itself “A Newbury and Hobbes Investigation” I am looking forward to seeing the main characters again and learning more about the minor characters I was just given a taste of.

 

Just Finished Reading: Night Shift by Lillith Saintcrow


07 Dec

This is the first of the Jill Kismet books, and I must say, at this point, I like Jill more than I liked Dante Valentine (not that I didn’t devour those books). Jill seems a little more approachable, a little more relatable in her issues. And I like her love interest more.

In both series, I have a hard time understanding the love interest’s motivations- I’m not certain what he’s getting out of the relationship.

Of course, I don’t think it matters. The books are pulp. They’re action with a little bit of romance thrown in. Saintcrow does that beautifully.

“Dogoirs”


01 Dec

They’re called “dogoirs”, and they’re all the rage. I thought they were books about people and dogs. The article title references Steinbeck, and talks about some modern “dogoirs” but skips my two favorite authors of this genre.

James Herriot: For an animal lover, all his books are worth reading, but Dog Stories is the one I love best.

Jon Katz: I’d argue that more than Marley and Me’s author John Grogan, Katz started the current trend of life with a dog books. A Dog Year, his second work to feature his dogs, came out in 2002, three years before Marley.

Just Finished Reading: Zero History by William Gibson


09 Nov

To a new reader, it may not seem like Gibson is a science fiction writer. Starting with Pattern Recognition, Gibson’s writing has been less in the future, closer and closer to the present. Zero History, you might say, takes place at time that is only 17 minutes from now.

I need to go back and re-read both Pattern Recognition and Spook Country. I wouldn’t call these three books a trilogy, exactly, but they are all tied, and together, I’m hoping, they will provide the base for future Gibson writing. But be warned, soon he’ll be writing only seven seconds ahead.

Just Finished Reading: Anathem by Neal Stephenson (3)


27 Oct

Once the action in the book gets going, everything moves faster, but concepts and philosophical lines of thought are still being introduced. They make sense and don’t require as much thought because Stephenson laid the foundation so very well in the early sections. Still, I have to wonder if I would have benefited from reading the whole book at the pace I went through those first 120 pages; if I had not let the action distract me from the philosophy. It’s a book that I will read again and that I believe will get better with repeated journeys through it.

 

Just Finished Reading: Anathem by Neal Stephenson (2)


26 Oct

Stephenson takes the idea of speculative fiction seriously. He has a bit of an explanation at the beginning and a glossary at the end, but you can choose to forgo reading either of those before reading the body of the book. (I did.) Of course, that means that for the first 120 or so pages, it took me 3 times as long to read a page as normal. I was stopping every 20 pages or so to think about what I’d just read. I needed to sort through the language being used as well as the new concepts being introduced.

 

Just Finished Reading: Anathem by Neal Stephenson (1)


25 Oct

I don’t know if I could define speculative fiction if you asked me to. I’ll leave that to the critics. What I can recognize is good fiction, no matter what you call it. Neal Stephenson is one of my favorite authors, so its not surprising that I liked Anathem, but its a very different book than what you would expect from the author of Snow Crash.

Take a first contact story and wrap it in a philosophical discussion and you have the basic idea, though Stephenson is too gifted a story teller for that description to do the novel justice.

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