Wednesday, May 29, 2019

A Wrong Turn etc / Jane Rawson

A Wrong Turn at the Office of Unmade Lists
by Jane Rawson

fantasy

copyright 2013
part read in May 2019

rated 6/10: read to pass the time

As a dystopian story of post-environmental disaster, this is quite a pleasant book. It's also an unusual mix of nasty and nice... For example:

There's a dead body in the gutter, the heroine steps on it before she notices that it is there. But she is not shocked, this is just part of the dystopia. Then she asks a stranger to help drag the body off the road; he does help. They share the money found in the corpse's pocket. The heroine then attempts to find the dead man's family so that she can return the money. Meanwhile, she is near starving due to having no money of her own... A mix of nasty and nice.

The dystopia is due to environmental collapse. Standard climate disaster warning. There are rich people, very rich people and the desperately struggling poor. All interacting, mixing in their everyday lives. Yet the people are still very nice, very kind, helpful as far as they are able.

Then the fantasy hits -- and it is also rather pleasant. Very weird fantasy but -- as far as I read -- illogical and leading nowhere. I'm sure it's going to lead to a very nice ending, for the heroine at least, possibly for others. I stop reading...

The book is easy to read. Pleasant. The environmental message is heavy but not overwhelming. I simply fail to get involved; it is very easy to stop reading. I stop reading. I am not interested in reading to the end. So I don't.

Perhaps a suitable word for this book is, worthy. A nice message, a weak story.




====    Dr Nick Lethbridge  /  Consulting Dexitroboper
Agamedes Consulting / Problems? Solved.
===

"Like all men of power, when he talked of prices worth paying, you could be sure of one thing. Someone else was paying." … Takeshi Kovacs in Altered Carbon
===

dying for you to read my blog: notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au :-)
====
   

Monday, May 27, 2019

The Bands of Mourning / Brandon Sanderson

The Bands of Mourning
(Mistborn #6)
by Brandon Sanderson

fantasy, subadult

copyright 2016
read in May 2019

rated 6/10: read to pass the time

It's a good continuation of the series.  As a standalone story -- I don't think that it would make sense. It would still be fun... confusing fun.

Super-powered characters, unbelievable adventures, unreal escapes. Okay, it's fantasy :-) As sixth of (I believe) a seven book series -- quite acceptable fantasy.

As ever -- with this author -- there are messages for the young adult. Not shouted messages, just quiet asides -- and good examples -- which smoothly fit the plot.

Yes, read to pass the time. Or, read the entire series and it's more: the series itself is, well worth reading. So this book is definitely well worth reading for its place in the Mistborn series.



Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
...        Agamedes Consulting / Problems ? Solved
===

"Why be difficult? Be impossible." … Ginger Meggs

===


Dying for you to read my blog, at https://notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au/ :-)



The Wounded Guardian / Duncan Lay

The Wounded Guardian
(Dragon Sword Histories #1)
by Duncan Lay

fantasy

copyright 2009
read in May 2019

rated 6/10: read to pass the time

Hero with troubled past, little girl with mysterious powers, magic sword. Lots of stereotypes yet lots of fun. It's an enjoyable story as the hero learns to put his violent past behind him. Unfortunately, his learning is largely driven by the threat of death if he does not reform.

There's a similar problem with the entire book: the hero "must" be non-violent yet every chapter forces him to violence. And no, I don't accept that it's okay -- acceptably non-violent -- to stand back while telling others to go out and slaughter.

The theme is the search for non-violence. Non-violence is achieved -- for the hero -- by raising large armies to do the killing. Under his command. This is not good.

Other than that, it's an enjoyable book. Sword & sorcery, confused goodie, really nasty baddie. Sneaky ambushes and blood-soaked battles. One villain still to be defeated, plenty more villains already on the horizon.

Not a great book but good reading. And I hope to read more in the series.





====    Dr Nick Lethbridge  /  Consulting Dexitroboper
Agamedes Consulting / Problems? Solved.
===

"Like all men of power, when he talked of prices worth paying, you could be sure of one thing. Someone else was paying." … Takeshi Kovacs in Altered Carbon
===

dying for you to read my blog: notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au :-)
====
   

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Cafe: Momo / Subiaco

Cafe: Momo / Subiaco

A pleasantly ordinary café...

A few signs of tending-to-trendy but really, it's a café. Nice, nothing special -- except for "the back room".

Walk in from Rokeby Road. Place your order, keep on walking... to the very pleasant open area at the back. Where you order is narrow, possibly crowded, limited by the counter. The back room is relatively spacious and -- for our taste -- much more pleasant. Open and less crowded.

Coffee is coffee. Banana bread is nice -- butter provided as a blob on top, interesting. The bread itself is... too smooth. No texture. No possibility of lumps of banana, could be any sweet loaf. Enjoyable but uninteresting.

Rated 2 out of 3: we enjoy our visit. Okay, we will be happy to go back again -- but only if we are already in Subiaco.



Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
...        Agamedes Consulting / Problems ? Solved
===

"Why be difficult? Be impossible." … Ginger Meggs

===

Dying for you to read my blog, at https://notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au/ :-)


Wednesday, May 15, 2019

The Forever Watch / David Ramirez

The Forever Watch
by David Ramirez

science fiction

copyright 2014
read in May 2019

rated 9/10: really really good

Wow! There's a serial killer loose on a generation starship... Well, even I can guess that this is a red herring.

The truth is revealed -- step by step, a logical chain of discovery. And what a truth it is. Start with a what-if which stretches the bounds of belief -- and all that follows is logical, reasonable, absolutely believable. 

Sympathetic characters... The author (as I read it) likes the characters, I like the characters. Yes there is suffering but not just for impact, it's essential to the story.

The science... is, well, amazing :-)  A bit magical -- but explained by the book's underlying what-if.

Ah, good... a quick web search -- Ramirez has written another book. I must look for it!




Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
...        Agamedes Consulting / Problems ? Solved
===

"Why be difficult? Be impossible." … Ginger Meggs

===


Dying for you to read my blog, at https://notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au/ :-)