Showing posts with label author:anderson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author:anderson. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2011

The High Crusade / Poul Anderson

The High Crusade

category: science fiction, author:

Poul Anderson


original copyright 1960,
read in Sep 2011

Agamedes' opinion: 7 out of 10

A small group of low level lords, plus all of their vassals and villagers, head off for the Crusades. Instead... they end up in space. Where they promptly begin to "civilise" various planets and peoples.

It's a lot of fun -- and a good book, too.

Is it just a little, well, unrealistic? Or is it possible that space is populated by aliens with not too many street smarts... Is The High Crusade an example of a book based on the natural superiority of the good ol' US of A?

Not to worry: it's a book based on the natural superiority of the British !

There are some interesting aspects to this book...

Sunday, March 7, 2010

The Edge of the World / Kevin J Anderson

The Edge of the World

(category: fantasy)
book 1 of Terra Incognita by

Kevin J Anderson

published by Orbit in 2009
Nick read a new book, in March 2010

Nick's rating: 6 out of 10


Nick's opinion:

About half way through this book I began to think, Will anything ever happen? Yes, there were people getting in trouble, getting almost out of trouble, getting killed... but so what? Then I realised what was missing: plot! Yes, there was quite a bit happening but it was hard to believe it -- because there was no coherent thread; it was leading... apparently... nowhere. Ten different people having ten different adventures, in a shared world. (When I say "adventures", well, some chapters could be summarised as, "This character carried on what they were doing in several previous chapters.") To be fair, it was fairly interesting. Luckily, however, there were no characters who I really cared about: people tended to be killed suddenly. But who cared? There were no characters that I even liked, not even amongst those who survived to the end of this book. There are two major civilisations, the "Europeans" and the "Arabs". They go to war due to a series of accidents -- a good point to be made -- and the war escalates due to the unthinking religious intolerance on both sides. Each side then sets out to explore the world -- with the main aim of finding more people to draw into their war. What a miserable premise for exploration! What's worse, the explorers act like a bunch of kids on a picnic: minimum planning, no backup resources, no guards in the isolated desert camp, no disaster planning... The problem is, this is not a novel. It's a soap opera -- with no main characters, no key objectives, no single challenge to be overcome. Just a lot of inter-related threads with the only possible end to a thread being the death of every character involved. Though if further books are still selling, I can see the children stepping forward to avenge imagined wrongs against their parents. If you want to fill in some time with light entertainment, read this book. If you want a novel -- with plot and characters and logic and conflict and resolution -- try something else.


..o0o..

These reviews are provided by Agamedes Consulting.

For an independent and thoughtful review of your own documents,
email nick leth at gmail dot com.