Friday, January 4, 2019

restaurant: Eureka Chinese / Wilson

restaurant: Eureka Chinese / Wilson
02 Jan 2019

We're here for lunch with my brother and his wife. The restaurant is chosen for (a) about half way between his place and ours and (b) Streetview shows parking right outside.

Apart from that... it's a dodgy looking place. From the outside it's old, worn out, looks cheap. Inside, it's clean and plain.

We order four or five dishes. Each dish is absolutely delicious :-) Freshly cooked, tender meats, just enough spiciness where expected. An excellent meal.

A bit of a surprise at the end: no coffee. The only hot drink is Chinese tea. Which is fine by me.

There is one solid meal's worth of leftovers, we take it home. Okay, when heated it's no better than takeaway from our local Chinese. Still tastes good but not exceptional. Perhaps we need to eat more often in actual restaurants.

We enjoy the meal. We would go out of our way to eat there again. Though we may not get there again -- simply because it really is quite a long way to travel from our home.





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

"All the world's a stage, but the script needs new writers" … Ginger Meggs

===

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


cafe: PsychoMug / Subiaco

cafe: PsychoMug / Subiaco

Okay, we went there at least a week ago -- and can no longer remember what we ate. It was, however, our standard coffees & shared cake. I seem to remember that both coffee and cake were good. So, worth the visit :-)

Then the important question: is it hipster? Nooo… Trendy, yes. Hipster, no.

The walls were smooth, clean, painted. Sure, pictures on the wall but the pictures were large, glossy, commercial. Mostly. There was a more interesting bit of artwork at the back, pity I can't remember it.

Staff were pleasant, efficient. The barista had blonde hair ends, looked like he worked out but no visible tattoos. Quite a few of the customers also looked gym-fit, that could just be the location and the day. I think it was a Saturday. Morning.

The special psycho coffee -- which we did not have -- came in a skull mug. Nice :-) Good to see a "psycho" theme. Though they could have been Phantom mugs...

A pleasant experience. If we're in Rokeby Road we are likely to go again. We would not go out of our way for the experience. Which means a rating of two out of three.




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

"All the world's a stage, but the script needs new writers" … Ginger Meggs

===

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


Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Mongrels / Stephen Graham Jones

Mongrels
by Stephen Graham Jones

fantasy, horror

copyright 2016
read (a little bit) in December 2018

rated 5/10: readable but only if there's nothing else. Though I should add a reminder: this is *my* rating for *my own* enjoyment of the book.

From the book's title I was not surprised to find that this is a book about the "trailer trash" of the werewolf world. No-hopers who can't hold a job, whose preferred response is to fight. Who live short and brutal lives. Mongrels. Not characters to like.

They have a problem with reproduction, the mother always dies giving birth. It doesn't stop them from breeding, just limits each mother to one child. Then that child is brought up by the father. Or by various surviving relatives. There are early hints that this may be a problem with a solution, a solution which is not widely known. I wonder why not?

The style of the book is -- I guess -- representing the occasional thoughts of the central character. There are jumps and discontinuities, lots of unstated happenings -- though it is quite easy to follow.

Maybe this book is a deep and insightful analysis of the difficulties of actually being a werewolf? In a similar way to HG Wells' invisible man: it's not as good as you'd think, to be invisible or a werewolf. Okay. And there may be improvements as the story and characters develop. Maybe.

I didn't read far enough to appreciate the analysis nor to find the improvements. If there is anything positive -- any hope for the coming-of-age werewolf -- I did not reach it.

So far, it's a bit miserable. I'm not interested in reading any further.




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

"For every action there is an equal and opposite government program."

===


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



Monday, December 24, 2018

Humans, Bow Down / James Patterson

Humans, Bow Down
by James Patterson, Emily Raymond

science fiction, subadult

copyright 2017
read in December 2018

rated 4/10: bad but could be read

Good grief. What a load of rubbish. A social message slathered on with a trowel. Thick but with no depth.

Take a bundle of stereotypes. A bunch of standard scenes. Drag them completely over the top. Provide a violent either-or solution: kill them all before they kill all of us. Then end with one person escaping and planning to create book two. Sheesh.

"Young adult" fiction aimed, perhaps, at the young adults who believe that wearing grunge clothes and joining a violent gang are the height of independent thinking.

Then there is the embarrassment of authors:

I've named two of them. Patterson is presumably there to sell the book, Raymond has the "young adult" writing experience. There's also, "with Jill Dembowski". Plus illustrations by Alexander Ovchinnikov… the illustrations are well suited to the moody, tough teen style of the book. Well suited to a target audience who would rather read a comic.

Yet the book is readable. Short, snappy chapters. No boring passages, all action. Like watching a train wreck, just wondering what will crush next.

At one point I did almost give up. I was wondering at the stupidity of two kids -- having never driven before -- stealing a car and leading a high speed chase through dangerous roads. No, that's not what nearly stopped me...

The stolen car is a two-seater, the heroine clearly states that there are no back seats. Several chapters later -- there are two people sitting in the back seats of that same car. That is rubbish. The rest of the book is just silly.

And yet... I read to the end. The story is embarrassing. I'm embarrassed. But it's readable.





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

"For every action there is an equal and opposite government program."

===


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



Heat Stroke / Rachel Caine

Heat Stroke
(Weather Warden 2)
by Rachel Caine

fantasy, chicklit

copyright 2004
read in December 2018

rated 7/10: well worth reading

Well worth reading ? Well, not strictly for its literary merit. Not that there's anything wrong with the way it's written...

This is chick lit fantasy -- done well. Sure, the heroine changes clothes -- but not for each new page. And she is willing to repeat outfits. Sure, the heroine is madly in love (hot, lingering looks, melt in his arms stuff) and she has the hots for just about every man she meets. But love and lust are not the only plot devices.

There's the bit where the heroine is an absolute slave to her man -- and to others. I find this trope to be embarrassing, slightly nauseating. But it is not something that this heroine *wants*.

The fantasy chick lit tropes are there -- but not overdone. They do not spoil an entertaining book. And that's why I rate it as a seven...

There's plenty of magic. I have decided that this is "illogical as-required" magic. That is, there is no "logical" explanation as to how it works. And when the heroine "requires" extra-strong magic -- there it is. Enough to solve the current problem, with little explanation. The "all good fun" style of magic :-)

And that's what this book is: all good fun. Goodies & baddies. Some sympathy for each. A heroine who just will not give in. Ridiculous, sympathetic, action-packed... enjoyable.

This book is worth a six, read to pass the time. Then I give it an extra mark because the standard tropes are used well.

Oh, and I like the way that the author deals with the necessity for "growth" of the heroine. You know, the heroine gains extra powers in each book, so the next book must have bigger threats... Harry Dresden, for example, starts simple and grows to absolute super-powers.

I've only read one Weather Warden book. But I really like the way that this need-for-growth appears to be being managed. Another trope used well.




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

"For every action there is an equal and opposite government program."

===


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



Friday, December 21, 2018

Sleeping Giants / Sylvain Neuvel

Sleeping Giants
(Themis Files #1 of 3)
by Sylvain Neuvel

science fiction

copyright 2016
read in December 2018

rated 7/10: well worth reading

A slow start, gradually building to sudden action -- then it slows again. Yet it keeps my attention all the way. Definitely first of a series -- a trilogy -- yet with reasonable closure at the end of this book.

The book starts with lots of traditional sf, a few stereotypes working on a scientific project. As the project gains success, the characters gain a bit more depth. And the complexities of real-world politics intrude. Not too suddenly, not too subtly.

I never really get to empathise with the characters. Like, yes, empathise, no. I'm not sure why, perhaps too many of them with not enough depth. Actions and motives are clearly -- perhaps unrealistically -- linked. My strongest empathy is negative -- dislike of -- the chief villain.

The author uses interviews to link the various threads -- interviews by one linking character with each of the others. This works very well. I have very little trouble following what is happening.

It's an enjoyable book. A variation on hard sf with occasional flashes of humour.

One character in particular, though, plays too much as deus ex machina… because he is there as a lead-in to the next books. I do hope to read the following books in the trilogy.




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

"For every action there is an equal and opposite government program."

===


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



The Real-Town Murders / Adam Roberts

The Real-Town Murders
by Adam Roberts

science fiction

copyright 2017
read in December 2018

rated 8/10: really quite good

An interesting take on virtual reality. A murder-mystery with good ideas. An enjoyable use of language, including very descriptive colours and sounds. I enjoyed this book.

The hero and her partner are -- nothing unusual here -- somehow constrained in their actions... a completely unbelievable constraint yet entirely acceptable. (Hmmm... the constraint is revealed on the back cover. Pity about that.)

The denouement is a bit rushed: on first read it made no sense, though a more careful re-read did make it all fit together nicely.

The only part of the book that I disagree with is the constraint on the partners. It is used as a common thread for (potential) further stories, further adventures of this partnership. Okay, that will work. But even if the constraint can't be resolved, I would prefer just a bit more explanation.

An enjoyable book, well written and described, set in a very interesting -- and surprisingly complex -- world.





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

"For every action there is an equal and opposite government program."

===


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