This blog offers something that even Wikipedia will not publish: opinions! All my own, too. So far, most postings are about books -- mainly fantasy and science fiction. The posts are by Agamedes Consulting: "Problems? Solved." For solutions to problems (or document reviews!) -- email nickleth at gmail dot com. No worries :-)
Monday, June 19, 2023
Old Man's War 1&2, John Scalzi
(Old Man's War)
#1 old man's war (c) 2005
#2 Ghost Brigades (c) 2006
by John Scalzi
space opera
rated 7/10
Okay, I read #1 perhaps a year ago.
Now I have read / re-read them both, in the correct order. Which does help to understand what's happening...
These two can each be read out of order, or alone
... They make more sense when read in order.
Without really thinking, I just started reading. I thought I was reading an old book from, perhaps, the 1960s. Till it mentioned Terminators. I did a double-take. But really -- the style is very much Heinlein. The author admits to the influence.
It's a space war with super-tough heroes, super-powerful weapons, weird aliens.
Perhaps I should have noticed... there are also super-tough heroines.
So it's good fun space opera for a modern audience.
A central piece of science is the ability to transfer consciousness into a cloned body There is also a reasonable amount of examination of the psychological (and social) problems this may cause.
Although. Good grief. The characters are unreal. Or, possibly, very old stereotypes. There is a sweet little girl who is just too cute to be believed. Almost sickening.
Then there is the first-person hero who likes to make jokes. His "jokes" are more... macho, I'm-so-clever, stupidities. Which I would not have noticed if the hero had not pointed out that he was being "funny".
These are not great books. They are enjoyable and exciting. Set in a world that is entertaining and thought provoking.
Good, traditional, science fiction.
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Tuesday, June 13, 2023
Lord of the Changing Winds, Rachel Neumeier
Lord of the Changing Winds
(The Griffin Mage #1
by Rachel Neumeier
fantasy
rated 7/10: ####
So far, I've read about two thirds of this book. I've enjoyed it so far. I'm not sure if I will finish it.
First, a heroine who is (if my understanding is vaguely correct) mildly autistic. This makes her a sympathetic, rather likeable, character. There are signs that she will develop, develop her strengths and her ability to decide, to do. So far... she is rather boring.
Now the stronger characters, kings and such, have discovered where she has gone, what has happened to her. And no-one thinks to tell her family, the sister who is left at home, grieving. This is unforgiveable.
Now the major character (who may be a hero) is faced with a moral dilemma. He has chosen the easy but immoral path. Yes, with great regret but...he has lost my support.
I was enjoying the book. In particular I appreciate the griffins: the author makes them understandable -- yet still completely non-human.
The book is easy reading. Lyrical, almost poetic in style. The characters are likeable, sympathetic. Unfortunately, the "hero" seems set on a nasty, not evil just nasty, path. Which I do not enjoy. It's purely my personal preference: if he goes from bad to worse, I will stop reading.
I read for enjoyment.
Saturday, June 3, 2023
phoenix falling, laura bickle
phoenix falling
--
(wildlands 5 of 5)
by Laura Bickle
fantasy
rated 6/10:
For key characters, magic is an accepted part of their everyday life. For others, magic is a symptom of their insanity. And magic is everywhere. With a few people staunchly refusing to see it.
The magic is varied, there is no central method of magic, it varies with the individual. Which is a lot of fun.
Most characters are neither good nor bad but a realistic mix. One character in particular seemed to me to be good but everyone else thought he was bad. I would have understood him better if I had read the earlier books. That said, I read this book as a standalone -- and it was enjoyable and complete. Although... As I finished, I did wonder if it was a rather weak to be continued. But no, I now believe that loose ends are tied up, that supposedly dead characters will not reappear in a next book. Which makes this a very satisfying book, with a solid conclusion both for the book and for the series.
An enjoyable book. If I find other earlier books, I will be glad. But if I don't, well I won't be terribly upset... which is, in fact, a sign that the characters are well introduced in this final book.
.
Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
...
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If everyone is thinking the same way, then someone is not thinking.
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If everyone is thinking the same way, then someone is not thinking.
Sunday, March 26, 2023
requiem for anthi, Jay D Blakeney
requiem for anthi
by Jay D Blakeney aka Deborah Chester etc
-- (Anthi#2)
science fiction
copyright 1990
read in March 2023
rated 7/10: ####
The aliens are definitely alien, with enough human characteristics to be sympathetic characters.
The evil aliens are, well, nasty. The humans are... not very nice at all. It's a good mix of galactic characters.
at the start, the hero is cold, driven, unpleasant. Then he exhibits a core of niceness. finally, the book is a pleasure to read.
This is book two. I would have liked to start reading with some knowledge of the planet backstory and various characters. however... only one point is annoying:
when the hero is saved by the timely arrival of the cavalry... was this foreshadowed in book one? As far as I can tell... it is pure Deus ex machina. Not that it really matters :-)
this is not a book of clever but subtle plotting. it is heroic adventures in an interesting alien universe.
27sep23: I read it again. With a better idea of what was happening, it made more sense (which seems obvious, now I think of it :-)
I spent less time wondering what was happening, who was who -- and more time just enjoying the adventure. And appreciating -- understanding -- the backstory. An enjoyable romp in a well-imagined universe, with a solid (for book 2) plot. And still very little warning for the deus ex machina ending.
.
Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
...
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Dying for you to read my blog, at https://notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au/ :-)
The word "boobs" is so scary until you get to the second "b". (Alfred E. Neumann
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Dying for you to read my blog, at https://notdotdeaddotyet.blogspot.com.au/ :-)
The word "boobs" is so scary until you get to the second "b". (Alfred E. Neumann
Wednesday, March 8, 2023
False Value, Ben Aaronovitch
False Value
(Rivers of London #8)
by Ben Aaronovitch
fantasy
copyright 2020
read in March 2023
rated 6/10: read to pass the time
a couple of chapters in and I'm wondering if those chapters have been printed out of order.
Then I notice that chapter titles include a month. okay, so that indicates relative time.
except that the months are January and December. two months apart? Or the start and end of one year? It doesn't really matter but... I realise that by now I am not interested enough to care.
The cover blurb days charming, witty, exciting.
referring to his heavily pregnant girlfriend as the bulge is not charming. somewhat demeaning, perhaps. at best it's twee.
there are plenty of likeable characters who are not developed enough to be charming.
witty? not very. Snide comments on history, architecture, people go straight past witty into not very pleasant sarcasm.
The Hitchhiker's-themed business brings a smile or two but quickly palls. Sarcasm rather than humour, there is no sense of fun.
Finally, however, there is excitement. and that works.
a complex plot, well laid out and developed. plenty of danger and magic enough for enjoyable action. leftover characters from previous books are well used.
the denouement fits. the climax is ridiculous, believable and satisfying.
except that the book ends with more loose ends than... well, the end is satisfying but really... absolutely nothing is finished.
it's an enjoyable book. could probably be enjoyed by itself. but for full enjoyment... read it as one chapter in an as yet nowhere near complete soap opera.
Nick Lethbridge
consulting Dexitroboper
(Rivers of London #8)
by Ben Aaronovitch
fantasy
copyright 2020
read in March 2023
rated 6/10: read to pass the time
a couple of chapters in and I'm wondering if those chapters have been printed out of order.
Then I notice that chapter titles include a month. okay, so that indicates relative time.
except that the months are January and December. two months apart? Or the start and end of one year? It doesn't really matter but... I realise that by now I am not interested enough to care.
The cover blurb days charming, witty, exciting.
referring to his heavily pregnant girlfriend as the bulge is not charming. somewhat demeaning, perhaps. at best it's twee.
there are plenty of likeable characters who are not developed enough to be charming.
witty? not very. Snide comments on history, architecture, people go straight past witty into not very pleasant sarcasm.
The Hitchhiker's-themed business brings a smile or two but quickly palls. Sarcasm rather than humour, there is no sense of fun.
Finally, however, there is excitement. and that works.
a complex plot, well laid out and developed. plenty of danger and magic enough for enjoyable action. leftover characters from previous books are well used.
the denouement fits. the climax is ridiculous, believable and satisfying.
except that the book ends with more loose ends than... well, the end is satisfying but really... absolutely nothing is finished.
it's an enjoyable book. could probably be enjoyed by itself. but for full enjoyment... read it as one chapter in an as yet nowhere near complete soap opera.
Nick Lethbridge
consulting Dexitroboper
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
iPad for Seniors
iPad for Seniors
published 2016
rated 2/10: unreadably bad
The book starts with what reads like excerpts from an Apple glossy brochure. Oh gosh how terrific is this device.
The book brags about the simplicity of "instantly on". Really? Once the device times out you need to (1) tap to wake up(*) (2)rotate to get the white bar at the bottom (3)swipe up (4)fingerprint ID (5) and sometimes type a PIN.
Whatever happened to an on/off switch?
(*) Okay, I may have switched off the way that the device wants to turn on when you look at it. I don't want the bloody thing turning on just because I looked at it. I do not want to be trained like one of Pavlov's dogs.
Then the book describes functions of the Home button and the App Switcher window. It seems that the Home button has been removed since 2016.
That useful window? Open it with a double-tap of the now-missing Home button, no other explanation.
====
This out-of-date information is followed by more excerpts from Apple glossies: models, memory and so on.
The book can't help that the devices have changed.
But it gets worse.
The book is full of jargon. "for Seniors" ?!
Lightning connector (is that a USB or charging cable?) SIM-card tray? widgets? Retina display screens?
Okay, there are lots of simple explanations. Unfortunately I own an iPad and I find it to be annoyingly unusable and steeped in apple-jargon. Do it the Apple way or... forget it. Apple does it *this* way -- with no explanation.
So I don't like the device. Telling me how simple it is... is not going to work. Repeating text from glossies... helps even less.
Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
... Agamedes Consulting / Problems ? Solved
==="Yesterday I knew nothing. Today I know that." ... per Ginger Meggs
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Fools Quest, Robin Hobb
Fools Quest
(Fitz and the Fool #2 of many)
by Robin Hobb
fantasy
rated 2/10: unreadably bad
I picked up this book, did not realise it is book two.
With a good author, book two can encourage the reader to look for book one...
I read a few pages -- it is awful. Slaughtered animals. Tortured humans. No explanation No incentive to read on. It is unreadably bad.
Worse yet... This "Fool" trilogy is the end of a series of 17 books.
Good grief. There's 17 books and one author to be avoided.
Dr Nick Lethbridge / Consulting Dexitroboper
... Agamedes Consulting / Problems ? Solved
==="Yesterday I knew nothing. Today I know that." ... per Ginger Meggs
use pwMapApp to explore for pwLoons
pwMap # Quick Start (pwmapapp.blogspot.com)
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