sbisson: (Default)
2018-01-02 02:21 pm
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Books Read 2017

In chronological order, as recorded in Librarything, the 63 novels and graphic novels I read in 2017. Favourites were Walter Jon Williams' Investments, a bridge between the two Praxis trilogies, both novels in Paul McAuley's near- and far-future Jackaroo series, and Malka Older's political post-cyberpunk Infomocracy.

On to 2018!

About A Dragon Aiken, G. A.
The Dragon Who Loved Me Aiken, G. A.
Impulse Bara, Dave
Linesman Dunstall, S. K.
Karen Memory Bear, Elizabeth
Dark Run Brooks, Mike
Chaos Choreography McGuire, Seanan
StarBridge Crispin, A. C.
Only Superhuman Bennett, Christopher L.
Cibola Burn Corey, James S. A.
A Closed and Common Orbit Chambers, Becky
Fields of Fire Kloos, Marko
The Collapsing Empire Scalzi, John
Lucky Penny Hirsh, Ananth Ota, Yuko
Lovers Quarrel Busiek, Kurt Anderson, Brent
Investments Williams, Walter Jon
Something Coming Through McAuley, Paul
Into Everywhere McAuley, Paul
Dark Mind Douglas, Ian
The Getaway God: A Sandman
Slim Novel
Kadrey, Richard
Date Me, Baby, One More Time Rowe, Stephanie
Kris Longknife:Defiant Shepherd, Mike
Bookburners Gladstone, Max
Cosmic Powers: The Saga
Anthology of Far-Away Galaxies
Adams, John Joseph
A Tyranny of Queens Meadows, Foz
Luna: Wolf Moon: A Novel McDonald, Ian
Rise: A Newsflesh Collection Grant, Mira
Arabella of Mars Levine, David D.
Injection Burn Hough, Jason M.
Escape Velocity Hough, Jason M.
Kris Longknife: Resolute Shepherd, Mike
The Adventures of Superhero
Girl
Hicks, Faith Erin
Aquablue: The Blue Planet Cailleteau, Thierry Vatine, Olivier
Kris Longknife: Audacious Shepherd, Mike
Kris Longknife: Intrepid Shepherd, Mike
Kris Longknife: Undaunted Shepherd, Mike
Land of Mist and Snow Doyle, Debra
The Black Ice Connelly, Michael
Queen & Country: The
Definitive Edition, Vol. 1
Rucka, Greg Fernandez, Leandro|Rolston, Steve|Hurtt, Brian
Queen & Country: The
Definitive Edition, Vol. 2
Rucka, Greg Alexander, Jason|McNeil, Carla Speed|Hawthorne, Mike
Sovereign Sansom, C. J.
Die Like an Eagle Andrews, Donna
The Fifth Season Jemisin, N. K.
Revenger Reynolds, Alastair
Lucifer Vol. 1: Devil in the
Gateway
Carey, Mike
Lucifer Vol. 2: Children and
Monsters
Carey, Mike
Giant Days, Vol. 3 Allison, John
Steal the Sky Keefe, Megan E.
Who Wants to be The Prince of
Darkness?
Boatman, Michael
Delilah Dirk and the Turkish
Lieutenant
Cliff, Tony
The Uploaded Steinmetz, Ferrett
Skyfarer Brassey, Joseph
Infomocracy: A Novel Older, Malka
The High Ground Snodgrass, Melinda
The Ark Tomlinson, Patrick S.
Zeroes Wendig, Chuck
The Wrong Stars Pratt, Tim
In Evil Times Snodgrass, Melinda
The Medusa Chronicles Baxter, Stephen
Gentleman Jole and the Red
Queen
Bujold, Lois McMaster
Shattered Warrior Shinn, Sharon Ostertag, Molly Knox
Raising Caine Gannon, Charles E
Hunger Makes the Wolf Wells, Alex
sbisson: (Self Portrait)
2015-06-01 04:45 pm
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Not a Puppy, but I still eat Nutty Nuggets from time to time.

As a left-of-centre voting European I'm pretty much the Sad/Rabid Puppy definition of a SJW, a definition that owes more to the US Culture Wars than anything else. And yet, looking at the pile of books I brought back from a recent trip to the US, it's clear that my mix of Nutty Nuggets and other cereals (for a balanced diet) make my reading habits a lot closer to the Puppy ideal than they think...

The more I think about it, the more I'm sure that the Puppy position is pushing people away from their view of the Hugos. Most of us readers read widely, and read for different reasons. I read some books to be challenged, some to be entertained, some because friends recommend them, some because I liked a review. My recent reads are easy enough to find, and they cover a wide selection of the genre, from milSF to fantasy to humour to crime to, well, the uncategorisable.

You can see a selection of my recent purchases below. There's a lot that there that I'll enjoy, and a lot that I wouldn't consider to be awards quality. Some will be books for the bath, some will be my Hugo voting reading, some will be because it's the latest instalment in a saga I enjoy, and some because, well, just because. And yes, some because the cover caught my attention as I walked through a bookstore



Because I don't read because some shadowy cabal makes me read. I read because I love reading. And dear Puppies, you're not making reading much fun at the moment.

sbisson: (The Norm: Writing)
2011-02-01 03:48 pm
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January Booklog.

From our LibraryThing and my one-liner Twitter reviews...

Mills, K.E.

Witches Incorporated
K. E. Mills pseudo-Edwardian magical spy capers continue with colliding mysteries in an airship factory.

2009
Crowther, Pete

Postscripts
Peter Crowther's anthology series starts off with a mixed bag of the PS publishing usual suspects.

2005
Strahan, Jonathan

Engineering Infinity
Jonathan Strahan's collection of modern hard SF hits more than it misses. Stross and Barnes stand out.

2010
Lovegrove, James

The Hope
James Lovegrove's first novel wraps dark parable in its horrific eternal ship on an infinite ocean. Powerful.

2002
Harris, Charlaine

Grave Secret
Charlaine Harris' mystery finally reveals what happened to Harper's lost sister. Dark family secrets will out.

2010
Boyett, Steven R.

Elegy Beach
Steven Boyett's tale of a post-apocalyptic magical California adds rave culture to Earth Abides. Excellent stuff!

2009
Ishida, TatsuyaSinfest Volume 1
Tatsuya Ishida's early webcomics collected. Irreverent goodness with a moral core.
2009
Paul, Graham Sharp

The Battle for Commitment Planet
Graham Sharp Paul's milsf sets Helfort as guerilla as he tries to rescue his girl. Book 4.

2010
Lovegrove, James

The Age of Odin
James Lovegrove delivers Life on Mars on Asgard with squadies and a Bob Calvert soundtrack. Awesome!

2010
Hoyt, Sarah A.

Darkship Thieves
Sarah Hoyt's Heinlein-lite SF romance fails to ignite. Mildly competent SF at best, sending in the clones.

2010
Kadrey, Richard

Sandman Slim
Richard Kadrey delivers post-Gaiman urban fantasy noir. Punching and snark in LA with the ultimate ex-con.

2010
Briggs, Patricia

Bone Crossed
Patricia Briggs pits Mercy Thompson against a renegade vampire in Spokane. A well-written urban fantasy.

2010
Also read (on my phone), thanks to the CD-ROM archive at Fifth Imperium, a couple of Baen ebooks, Into The Looking Glass and Vorpal Blade. By John Ringo and Travis Taylor, they turned out to be rather fun milsf planetary romances. Still, I'm not sure if I'd have read them any other way...
sbisson: (Default)
2010-09-03 08:09 pm
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Shockwave Reridden

Re-reading John Brunner's seminal The Shockwave Rider it occurred to me how much the novel owed the ur-internet of PLATO. The whole veephone interface is straight out of TUTOR, along with the programming model that Nick uses to build his worms - along with the privilege-escalating user ID model behind the novel's ID codes.

That's another tick in the box for one of my favourite novels, a book that seems to orbit the same countercultural gyre that I find myself looping in and out of...

Besides the obvious influence of Toffler's Future Shock so far I've noted that Precipice CA, the home of the Samaritans-like organisation Hearing Aid, is inspired by both the Portola Institute/Point Foundation and the Claremont Colleges (which seem to have lent their name to the town's predecessor organisation Claes College), while the novel's background Disasterville USA monographs seem to come out of CoEvolution Quarterly and the Whole Earth Catalogs.

An always fascinating novel, which unveils new facets on each re-read.
sbisson: (Default)
2009-10-01 08:32 pm

Read This: Lord of Stone

Keith Brooke's Lord of Stone is hard to find, but well worth it when you finally get hold of a copy. It's a fantasy that lives in that corner of the fantasy graph rarely colonised, and then only by the bravest writers. The results, like Colin Greenland's The Hour of the Thin Oxand Geoff Ryman's The Unconquered Country, are often wonderful allegorical works, that delve deep into the heart of darkness.

That's the road Brooke takes, giving us a novel that's dark and angry, a tale of civil war, of revolution of madness, and of the gods we make. His Trace is a place where revolution and war are tearing the world apart, lost in the fog of conflict - where millions die and where terror lurks. A foreigner, Bligh, finds himself driven to sign up in an International Brigade, and descends into his own personal hell.

There's an earlier version of the book online.
sbisson: (Default)
2009-07-02 02:05 am
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Fifteen

Fifteen books that will always stick with me?

That's a tricky one, seeing how much I read. However there are some books I keep coming back to, keep rereading. So, without further ado:

  1. Hardwired - Walter Jon Williams: Written as a homage to Zelazny, this is cyberpunk as country-and-western song, with Cowboy riding panzers across a balkanised USA accompanied by Sarah and her weasel.
  2. The Saga of Pliocene Exile - Julian May: All four books, taken as one here. May mixes Jungian archetypes with The Ring Cycle (and a dose of pure 50s SF) to deliver a remarkably fun science fantasy series that takes mitteleuropean myth and drops it into deep time.
  3. Don't Look Down - Jennifer Crusie and Bob Meyer: a romance author (albeit snarky) and an ex-Green Beret men-with-guns-save-the-world writer collaborate on a delightfully funny romantic thriller. Contains Wonder Woman bondage scenes.
  4. Vacuum Flowers - Michael Swanwick: a picaresque journey around a far future solar system, where changing your mind is as easy as slipping on a new shirt. Underneath it all is the question "What does it mean to be human".
  5. Understanding Comics - Scott McCloud: McCloud's look at the semiotics of sequential art is also one of the great textbooks of design. It's better than Tufte if you're working on the web.
  6. The New Dinosaurs - Dougal Dixon: Dixon's speculative evolutionary books take a turn into a world where dinosaurs didn't become extinct.
  7. Managing Internet Information Systems - John Udell: This is the book that built UK Online. It's also as relevant today as it was nearly 15 years ago.
  8. Computer Lib/Dream Machines - Ted Nelson: The book/s that pretty much made me who I am today - and shaped the trajectory of my career through the intertwingled worlds of engineering, computing and writing.
  9. Neuromancer - William Gibson: "The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel." Enough said, this is the seminal cyberpunk novel.
  10. Between Planets - Robert Heinlein: A favourite juvenile, with Heinlein mixing colonial politics with the story of a violently suppressed revolution. The Venusian dragons are one of his finest creations.
  11. The Ophiuchi Hotline - John Varley: Another solar system picaresque. Here it's Varley's Eight Worlds that is centre stage. A fine book for a 13 year old islander to read (if you want to blow his tiny little mind). Clones, invincible alien invaders and the hierarchy of life. Humanity is learning its true place in the universe, and it's a particularly lowly one...
  12. The Terror - Dan Simmons: The most recent book on this list, but a powerful and extraordinarily well-written slice of secret history that delves into the lost years of the Franklin expedition. Simmons mixes Victorian rationality with the myths of the Esquimaux to deliver a post-modern, post-colonial take on the monster story wrapped up in a homage to Edgar Alan Poe.
  13. The Shockwave Rider - John Brunner: The most optimistic of the futures in the Club Of Rome quartet, this mixes Toffler's Future Shock with the Whole Earth Catalog (and the Point Foundation) to give us a book that defines the modern security industry.
  14. The Bridge - Iain Banks: This is the book that should have an "M". A never ending bridge, a Glaswegian barbarian, and the nameless life of a man on the road to disaster converge in three parallel stories. And it's got knife missiles!
  15. Moominvalley in November - Tove Jansson: The best of the Moomin books doesn't contain the titular family, off at sea fulfilling Moominpapa's dreams. It's a sad, wistful novel that's really a tale about growing up and finding your own way in life. No wonder it's the most adult of the Moomin novels.
That's a start. You can find most of what I read on my LibraryThing.
sbisson: (Default)
2009-04-19 11:17 am
Entry tags:

Recent Reads

As catalogued on LibraryThing:

  • Cowl by Neal Asher (link)
  • The Bogie Man by John Wagner (link)
  • The Moomins And The Great Flood by Tove Jansson (link)
  • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier by Alan Moore (link)
  • Plague War by Jeff Carlson (link)
  • Hoot by Carl Hiaasen (link)
  • Debatable Space by Philip Palmer (link)
  • Red Chrysanthemum: A Thriller by Laura Joh Rowland (link)
  • Scott Pilgrim, Vol. 2: Scott Pilgrim Versus The World by Bryan Lee O'Malley (link)
  • Scott Pilgrim, Vol. 1: Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life by Bryan Lee O'Malley (link)
  • Hunter's Run by George R. R. Martin (link)
  • Nature Girl by Carl Hiaasen (link)
  • The Third Claw of God by Adam-troy Castro (link)
  • Dragonfrigate Wizard Halcyon Blithe by James M. Ward (link)
  • Scott Pilgrim, Vol 5: Scott Pilgrim vs The Universe by Bryan Lee O'Malley (link)
  • Scott Pilgrim, Vol 4: Scott Pilgrim Gets It Together by Bryan Lee O'Malley (link)
  • Blood Engines by T.A. Pratt (link)
  • The Assassin's Touch by Laura Joh Rowland (link)
  • The Quiet War by Paul J. McAuley (link)
  • Dogs and Goddesses by Jennifer Crusie (link)
  • Fish Out of Water by MaryJanice Davidson (link)
  • Trick or Treat by Kerry Greenwood (link)
  • Ragamuffin by Tobias S. Buckell (link)
  • The Third Lynx by Timothy Zahn (link)
  • Wyrmhole by Jay Caselberg (link)
  • Flash by L. E. Modesitt Jr. (link)
  • The Ship Avenged by S.M. Stirling (link)
  • War Surf by M. M. Buckner (link)
  • Mister Monday by Garth Nix (link)
  • Summer Knight by Jim Butcher (link)
  • An Accidental Goddess by Linnea Sinclair (link)
  • Wren's Quest by Sherwood Smith (link)
  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer (link)
  • People of Darkness by Tony Hillerman (link)


  • 34 in total in this batch. That's 52 for the year so far.

    6 of the books were graphic novels, 4 were YA, 5 were thrillers, 5 were fantasy, 1 was literary fiction, 13 were SF.

    Stand outs from this batch:

    Hoot, Carl Hiassen writing YA with the same verve and passion as his adult thrillers. The Third Claw of God, Adam-troy Castro doing interesting things with the SF mystery, in a locked space-elevator. Blood Engines, T.A. Pratt offering a decidedly noir take on the modern urban fantasy (and a lovely approach to San Francisco). The Quiet War, Paul McAuley finally filling in the promise of his Quiet War short fiction with a novel full of metaphor and gravitas. Trick or Treat, Kerry Greenwood's baker sleuth deals with rivalry in the world of Melbourne bread and a mystery left over from a forgotten piece of the Holocaust. The Moomins and the Great Flood, Tove Jansson's first Moomin tale, a novella of hope written first on the eve, and then in the aftermath, of war.

    (The recent redesign of LibraryThing has added a little too much JavaScript to make working with their table HTML easy, so I'm now using the mobile view as my source for these posts.)
    sbisson: (Default)
    2008-08-01 03:12 pm
    Entry tags:

    Booklust fulfilled!

    After several years of looking for a copy, I have finally acquired future histories, the much recommended, but oh-so-hard-to-find, SF and essay anthology Nokia commissioned back in 1997. The idea behind the book was to explore the future of communications, something it did very well indeed. In fact it got at least two stories into that year's Gardner Dozois Best SF of the Year anthology (including Nancy Kress' "Steamship Soldier on the Information Front"), and several others into the recommended reading list.

    With stories by many of my favourite writers, among them Steven Baxter, Pat Cadigan and David Marusek, along with essays by Arthur C. Clarke, William Gibson and Bruce Sterling, it fills a very nice hole in my collection...

    Time for a small "w00t!".
    sbisson: (Default)
    2008-06-18 04:50 pm
    Entry tags:

    Road Books

    I seem to read a lot when I'm travelling. Here's the booklist from our last US trip, which comes in at 22 books read (with two started and soon to be finished not on the list)...

    Buettner, RobertOrphan's Journey 2008
    Anderson, PoulOperation Luna 2000
    Preston, DouglasTyrannosaur Canyon 2005
    Brown, Eric Helix 2007
    Campbell, JackFearless2007
    Weber, DavidWe Few2006
    Sawyer, Robert J.Rollback2008
    Steele, Allen M.A King of Infinite Space 1999
    Hiaasen, CarlBasket Case2005
    Name, Mark L. VanOne Jump Ahead2008
    Davidson, MaryJaniceUndead and Uneasy 2008
    Reynolds, AlastairGalactic North2008
    Douglas, IanStar Marines 2007
    Chabon, MichaelSummerland 2004
    Brust, StevenDzur 2007
    Traviss, KarenJudge 2008
    Traviss, KarenAlly 2007
    Butcher, JimGrave Peril 2001
    Butcher, JimFool Moon 2001
    Fraser, George Macdonald Flashman And The Mountain Of Light1991
    Oppel, KennethAirborn 2005
    Kenyon, KayBright of the Sky2008


    A few thoughts:

    Carl Hiassen's thrillers are definitely part of the Florida soundtrack, while Chabon's Summerland is a uniquely American fantasy. Mark Van Name's first novel is an interesting take on the boy and his dog style of tale (and very much in the Pip and Flinx mode, with the main character hiding his enhancements from the rest of the universe). Dzur is Vlad having a very good dinner, along with what happens when you're tasked with killing your god and still have to save your ex-wife from your mistakes. Meanwhile, Steele's A King of Infinite Space wraps up the Clarke County saga with a tip of the hat to his next major project. Karen Traviss's Wess'har novels wrap up nicely with Ally and Judge, and I ended up finding the story of Eddie Michallat the glue that held the series together. Brown's Helix was disappointing (and very 1970s British SF at heart).

    Total read so far in 2008: 64 books (not counting uncatalogued rereads)
    sbisson: (Default)
    2008-02-01 02:55 pm
    Entry tags:

    On the Road Reading

    Here's a list of January's new books (there were some additional re-reads) along with one-line capsule reviews. The stand outs were the Sherwood Smith, the Karen Traviss, the Sean McMullen and the Elizabeth Bear.

    Smith, Sherwood - Inda
    Fascinating cultural fantasy of a militarised society (that keeps making me think of Sikhism) wrapped up in a complex tale of relationships and historical forces.

    Green, Roland J. - Voyage to Eneh
    Contact novel crossed with Napoleonic naval fiction. Meh.

    McDevitt, Jack - Odyssey
    The politics of starflight funding conflicts with first contact with another star faring race.

    Fowler, Christopher - Seventy-Seven Clocks
    The Peculiar Crimes Squad cuts its teeth on a 1973 case involving London guilds and some very strange murders.

    O'Connor, Tom - Mommy, Why is There a Server in the House?
    Microsoft's spoof "educational" picture book from CES 2008. Hilarious for geeks.

    Niven, Larry - The Magic Goes Away Collection: The Magic Goes Away, The Magic May Return, and More Magic
    All the Magic stories in one place making an enjoyable take on scientific fantasy with a telling resource management message for these greener days.

    Bear, Elizabeth - Undertow
    Bear uses the conventions of the thriller to tell a tale of colonialism and revolution - all spiced up with a dose of Voudon in an alien bayou.

    McMullen, Sean - Voidfarer: A Tale of the Moonworlds Saga
    McMullen's lightweight fantasy series gets its teeth into H.G. Wells and shakes hard, while all the time having great fun.

    Stirling, S.M. - The Sky People
    An alt.space alt.history of a planet stories Venus in a modern solar system.

    Traviss, Karen - Republic Commando: True Colors
    The Star Wars Bravo Two Zero gets another instalment as Traviss gets down and dirty with the throw-away clone troopers.

    Keep up with what I've read at LibraryThing...
    sbisson: (Default)
    2007-08-01 09:42 pm
    Entry tags:

    So Far So Read (Books Read 2007)

    This is actually an incomplete list, as I've not been tracking the re-reads (which have included a pile of Jennifer Crusie and Daniel Keys Moran's Continuing Time novels), nor the books borrowed and read whilst staying at friends - [livejournal.com profile] saffronrose's book room is especially good!)

    So I'm go for another year where I've beaten the 50 book challenge with several months still on the clock...

    Asprin, Robert Myth-nomers and Im-pervections
    Anon. Star Trek Fotonovels: The Trouble with Tribbles
    Various Turn the Other Chick
    Rennison, Nick 100 Must-Read Science Fiction Novels
    Lovegrove, James Binary: "Leningrad Nights", "How the Other Half Lives"
    Rowling, J. K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
    Selden, George The Cricket In Times Square
    Duane, Diane Wizards at War
    Mann, George The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction 2007
    Gilliam, Richard Confederacy of the Dead
    Davidson, MaryJanice Undead and Unpopular
    Rowland, Laura Joh The Dragon King's Palace
    Hiaasen, Carl Native Tongue
    Scalzi, John The Ghost Brigades
    Newman, Kim The Man from the Diogenes Club
    Baker, Kage The Children of the Company
    Baker, Kage In the Garden of Iden: A Novel of the Company
    Davidson, MaryJanice Drop Dead, Gorgeous!
    Baker, Kage Rude Mechanicals
    Barnes, John The Armies of Memory
    Davidson, MaryJanice Hello, Gorgeous!
    McDevitt, Jack Seeker
    Williams, Sean Saturn Returns
    Varley, John Red Lightning
    Fowler, Christopher The Water Room
    Williams, Sean Geodesica: Descent
    Birmingham, John Designated Targets
    Rowland, Laura Joh The Perfumed Sleeve
    Fforde, Jasper The Big Over Easy
    Jansson, Tove Moomin: Book One
    Birmingham, John Weapons of Choice
    Coupland, Douglas All Families Are Psychotic
    Gould, Stephen Reflex
    Modesitt, L. E. The Green Progression
    Talbot, Bryan Alice in Sunderland: An Entertainment
    McCloud, Scott Zot! Book 3
    McCloud, Scott Zot! Book 2
    McCloud, Scott Zot: Book 1
    Niven, Larry The Mote in God's Eye
    Baker, Kage The Graveyard Game
    Simmons, Dan Olympos
    Simmons, Dan Hard as Nails
    Hiaasen, Carl Skinny Dip
    Fowler, Christopher Ten Second Staircase
    Green, Simon R. Haven of Lost Souls
    Powers, Tim Drawing of the Dark
    Ward, James M. Midshipwizard Halcyon Blithe
    Stross, Charles Glasshouse
    Powers, Tim Last Call
    Andrews, Donna Delete All Suspects
    Nesbit, Edith Book of Dragons
    Zahn, Timothy Night Train to Rigel
    Roberts, Adam Doctor Whom
    Weber, David Bolo!
    Bear, Elizabeth Blood and Iron: A Novel of the Promethean Age
    Williams, Sean The Devoured Earth
    Pratchett, Terry Thud!
    Baker, Kage Mendoza in Hollywood

    All links are to LibraryThing.
    sbisson: (Default)
    2007-05-12 01:30 pm

    I sing the body posthuman

    I've just finished reading a couple of Sean Williams' recent novels, Geodesica: Descent (written with Shane Dix) and the first part of his new Astropolis trilogy Saturn Returns. Both of the books were, as always from Williams, excellent reads. There's an interesting underlying theme to Williams' SF, which I can only describe as an investigation into the post-human condition, wrapped up in the shape of convincing, intelligent post-human space opera. That's a rare thing in SF, where a strand of small "c" conservative humanism often delivers is to static distant futures where nothing is truly different from today (Jack McDevitt's Seeker is a prime example of this - an excellent book and a powerful story of misguided idealism that could easily be set here and now, not thousands of years in the future).

    Take the Geodesica books as an example. Most of the viewpoint characters are significantly modified from the human norm - even to the point of being completely alien. They respond to situations in ways we wouldn't, and make choices that we would never consider. As the story evolves a key baseline human (if you can call her that) makes choices to change herself, and ends up becoming something very much of the other. Meanwhile, an engineered guardian discovers how to manipulate hardcoded drives to his own advantage, while another posthuman explores the reasons for his choice in stepping away from the baseline. There's a Darwinian drive to the next in Williams' universes that pushes both the story and the world to change and grow. His worlds may be empty of the alien, but the diversity of his human cultures gives us much that is peculiar.

    Astropolis is an ambitious work. Put aside the character who speaks in Numan lyrics, and you find yourself in a far future, millenia down the line. This is an old future that's run down and torn apart, where the transcendent post humans that guided a galaxy-spanning humanity (in all its modified forms) have been murdered. A near-baseline human main character is resurrected on the edge of the galaxy, and heads inward to find out just why he was killed and why. In a mix of space opera and Japanese samurai film he meets up with old compatriots only to discover that a different version of himself has betrayed them all, in different ways - and may be involved with the event that killed the transcendents. Williams has also thrown away the convenience of FTL, leaving us with a universe where events take millenia to unfold, and characters can dial their subjective clock rates up and down. Overclocking, modding - this is a crisply gothic world where the LAN party culture would be at home...

    Both novels are excellent reads, that take the wide screen baroque of space opera and give us something that is unique and different, worlds that explore what it means to be human while looking through the eyes of our unfamiliar children.
    sbisson: (Default)
    2007-01-24 05:36 pm
    Entry tags:

    Road Books Read Reviewed

    A good trip for reading, which was surprising considering all the driving I did (around about 1500 miles), and all the meetings we had at both CES and in Silicon Valley...

    Transcendent. Stephen Baxter
    The final volume of the Destiny's Children sequence wraps up the story in a loop of time. Baxter links the bottlenecked near-future of a warming-threatened world with the far-distant tomorrow of the Commonwealth, a human-dominated galaxy where the Xeelee wars are long over, and a nascent transcendent overmind struggles to break through its own bottleneck. But is sorrow and redemption enough to build a new future? Baxter mixes the stories of two societies pondering their roads to their separate futures, and finds a road for today and tomorrow to finally collaborate. A fine end to a space opera that mixes philosophy and world-shattering revelations.

    Carnival. Elizabeth Bear
    One correspondence I've yet to see mentioned in reviews of Carnival is Ursula Le Guin. There are echoes of The Left Hand Of Darkness all through this story, a dark tale that explores gender issues and revolutionary politics through a diplomatic visit to a matriarchal world. A fragmented diaspora (the result of a machine-driven winnowing of humanity) has left a depopulated, expansionist Earth struggling to control its many colony worlds. Diplomatic methods conceal subversion and military actions, and two such diplomats arrive on New Amazonia to return stolen art. Separated many years ago, the two men were lovers, and their reunion reveals their true allegiances - and at the same time brings political differences on New Amazonia to a head. Bear juggles plots and counterplots in a Machiavellian skein of shifting alliances, tossing in a long awaited first contact to sweeten the brew. An excellent read, with compelling characters and a story that grabs the reader on page one and doesn't let go...

    The Resurrected Man. Sean Williams
    It's not every SF mystery that starts with a quote from Daniel Dennet's introduction to The Mind's I, a collection of the best readings on AI and intelligence. However, Dennet's musings on the philosophical ramifications of a duplicating teleportation device provide the backbone of Williams' story. What does it mean when the killer may be a duplicate of the detective, and when his dismembered and tortured victims are still very much alive? The search for the Twinmaker killer takes us from orbital towers to a future Australia, exploring the society that results from cheap and easy teleportation, and showing what such a tool could mean to a serial killer freed to indulge his fantasies. A fascinating, compelling read, this is a book that breaks new ground and sets the scene for the rest of the author's career.

    The Emerald Sea. John Ringo
    Oh dear. I should have stopped reading this at the point at which the dragon-carrier crew managed to reinvent fifty years of carrier operations lessons in one afternoon. Post the fall of a post-scarcity civilisation a rag tag bag of re-enactors battles a bad guy armed with people-changing machines fallen straight out of a Jack L. Chalker novel. The result? A mediocre piece of military SF that fails to engage or entertain. The idea was good - a dragon carrier defending merpeople from the bad guy's demon rays (and a kraken) - but even the set-pieces - dragons fighting orca, the merpeople's sea cave nursery - seemed to be there as plot coupons rather than as part of the story. A pity, as Ringo's earlier Posleen war stories had shown some promise.

    The Frost-Haired Vixen. John Zakour
    The latest Zach Johnson PI pastiche is enjoyable fluff, just like the rest of the series. Zakour's humour is an easy ride, and Zach's trials and tribulations push our hero to a solution. This time, Zach is sent to the North Pole to solve the murder of two elves (yes Virginia, in New Frisco there is a Santana Clausa...). Mutant geeks, super-powers, killer robots and obsequious elves litter the plot, while Zakour scatters enough clues to help the reader work out whodunnit just as Zach finds himself at the wrong end of a laser... An enjoyable light read.

    Pushing Ice. Alastair Reynolds
    Pushing Ice is Reynolds take on Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama. One of Saturn's moons turns out to to be an alien spacecraft - and it's leaving the solar system at speed. Only one ship can explore the moon before it leaves the system, and it's an ice miner that really should be heading home. Things are complicated by corporate politics, a high-speed Chinese mission, the possibility that there's not enough fuel to get home, and the alien vessel/moon's mysterious propulsion scheme. Reynolds manages to deliver his own take on the space opera "big dumb object" trope, exploring the human response to the alien, and the effects of politics and survival on friendship and working relationships. It's a story that mixes the wide screen with the human scale - to great effect. Reynolds' best book to date.
    sbisson: (Default)
    2006-11-25 09:31 pm
    Entry tags:

    Oz in the post

    The postman woke me this morning with a delivery from Galaxy Bookshop. Yes, it was my much anticipated copy of Sean Williams' The Devoured Earth (along with The Resurrected Man). I can now happily finish The Hanging Mountains without having to travel to the southern hemisphere to track down the final volume of The Books Of The Cataclysm. Now all I need is a copy of Metal Fatigue...

    Meanwhile [livejournal.com profile] marypcb has introduced me to Kerry Greenwood's Corrina Chapman mysteries, which are proving most enjoyable. Corrina is a baker living in a Melbourne apartment block shaped (and named) after a Roman insula. A mixed bag of neighbours lead to interesting mysteries, and a lot of cooking. Side references to Buffy, Babylon 5, and Blakes 7 slash (along with touches of Dorothy L. Sayers) add to the enjoyment. Perhaps not as geeky as Donna Andrews' Meg Langslow books, but definitely a charming and an engaging read.

    Recommended so far: Heavenly Pleasures (sabotage at a chocolate shop and the collapse of the Megatherium trust) and Devil's Food (mad monks, a missing father, and an incompetent herbalist).

    I suspect I will be starting on Greenwood's other series, the Phryne Fisher books (mysteries set in a 1920's Melbourne) soon - as [livejournal.com profile] marypcb is reading chunks of them out to me with similar relish to her discovery of Jennifer Cruisie...
    sbisson: (Default)
    2006-08-22 01:06 pm

    Finding the missing link: Thinking about Walter Jon Williams' "The Rift"

    I've been reading a lot of Walter Jon Williams recently, going back to his early novels to trace my way through his writing from the lost colony epic (with a twist in the tale) of Ambassador of Progress to the dark space opera of Dread Empire's Fall.

    Most of Williams' writing is tightly focussed on one or two characters - Cowboy and Sarah in Hardwired, Ubu Roy and Beautiful Maria in Angel Station, Drake Majistraal in the Divertimenti. It's a pattern that continues on until we get to his later works, where the screen opens out, and more characters take the stage, owning more of the story. But there was a discontinuity in my reading, a rift between the structures of Metropolitan and The Praxis.

    The answer had been sat on my to-be-read bookcase for nearly seven years.

    It's in 1999's The Rift where we see Willliams' take his first steps onto a new path, using the classic wide angle of a disaster novel, with a rebounding, spiralling cast of victims and survivors. We get the usual Williams' duality in the main viewpoint voices, two characters trying to survive in a world that's suddenly become hostile, as a boy with a telescope joins forces with an unemployed engineer struggling to find his estranged family. Meanwhile the world falls apart, ripped into shreds by a massive earthquake under the Mississippi valley, the New Madrid fault shrugging itself after nearly two centuries of sleep.

    Other storylines ebb and flow in the aftershocks, a stock trader who loses everything, a klansman who rediscovers the concentration camp, an apocalyptic preacher suddenly delivered the answer to his prayers, and a military engineer trying to put it all back together again. Everything spirals round, an eddy in the wild river, while Williams moves to explore the real rift - man's inability to see the other as truly human.

    There's a sense of experimentation here, as Williams steps outside his usual genre, and his usual structures, and tries to do something different. Perhaps it's even freedom - an opening out from tight structures and reader expectations. Whatever it is, it's a brave effort, and a powerful novel that sets the scene for a new direction in Williams' career. Ignore the trappings of the airport disaster novel and see it for what it is: a writer experimenting and delighting in the results of his experiments.

    Perhaps the world of SF should be grateful that it wasn't a huge hit, as the lessons learnt went to help with the construction of one of the more considered of the recent re-workings of space opera.

    Recommended, for more than just the Walter Jon Williams completists out there.
    sbisson: (Default)
    2006-06-14 03:04 pm
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    Ill in bed reading

    One thing about spending a couple of days ill in bed, you get plenty of time to read stuff, in this case another six books (with a couple more well under way)...

    As usual, this is an export from Readerware, with my usual star rating - from * (thrown at the wall), to ***** (why haven't you read this one yet?).

    Recent virally induced readings )
    sbisson: (Default)
    2006-06-11 08:23 pm
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    A life, measured in pages turned...

    Books read so far this year (not counting books borrowed from [livejournal.com profile] marypcb and [livejournal.com profile] saffronrose or technical books read for work), using an export of everything entered from 01 January 2006 from my Readerware database (it's older than my Librarything, but kept up to date in parallel).

    I've used my usual star rating - from * (thrown at the wall), to ***** (why haven't you read this one yet?).

    Table behind the cut, but I'm ahead of the 50 book challenge... )
    sbisson: (Default)
    2006-01-12 02:32 pm

    Reading Through The Years

    Taken from various folk (including [livejournal.com profile] gummitch and [livejournal.com profile] peake), and cut due to length: a list of award winning SF and fantasy, with the volumes I've read in bold.

    The Reading List )

    Several of the unreads are on my to-be-read bookcase...

    Interesting to note that things thin out a bit when we get to the end of the list. Also to note that the books get bigger...

    (It took me a while to remember that "...and call me Conrad" was an alternate title for "This Immortal")
    sbisson: (Default)
    2006-01-08 06:46 pm
    Entry tags:

    Books So Far in 2006

    Read:

    Vernor Vinge Rainbows End.
    This is the novel length follow up to the Hugo-winning "Fast Times At Fairmont High", which expands on the short Vinge had published in IEEE Spectrum a couple of years ago. I suspect that this is set to be among the best SF novels of 2006. Vinge uses his home city of San Diego as the background for a meditation on continuing education, life-long learning, and identity. A fascinating book that touches on recurring themes in many of Vinge's work. If you know about my research projects of old (which have remained continuing interests), then you'll not be surprised that I loved a book that expanded on so many of them. There's a lot in it about ubiquitous networks, reputation management, context, digital collaboration, co-presence, affinity hierarchies, and the meaning of identity in a highly networked world - one major character's identity is being spoofed three ways. And it's all wrapped up a cracking SF story.

    Charles Stross The Family Trade and The Hidden Family.
    Charlie takes on the alternate worlds/alternate history pack with a story that throws a business journalist into a world of feuding families, mercantile economics, and intellectual property trade. Two books that are best thought of as one in two parts. Miriam is a sparky heroine, with a unique take on the opportunities and perils of suddenly finding herself part of a family of world-walking merchant adventurers. An interesting spin on an old theme. The rest of the series will be worth watching.

    Jennifer Cruisie Charlie All Night.
    An early Cruisie book, this is one of her Riverside books (but set in another town). A radio producer finds herself with an annoying new presenter to train, while her ex-lover tries to make it on his own. The story takes in small town corruption, blackmail and a touch of medical marijuana. A fun, quick read, like all of Cruisie's books.

    Reading:
    C. J. Cherryh Cloud's Rider.
    Neal Stephenson The System Of The World.