Monday, August 18, 2014

Musical Monday - The Motherfucking Pterodactyl by Sarah Donner


One of the lesser known facts about Gen Con is that they have a fantastic music program featuring a couple dozen excellent musical acts which this year included (among others) great acts like The Doubleclicks, Molly Lewis, Five Year Mission, The Shake-Ups, and Sarah Donner. And although four days seems like a long time when you are making plans, it goes by so very fast, and it is so very exhausting. So planning for some time sitting and listening to some of this great music is something I suggest building into your schedule, You'll get some rest while being entertained, and if you happen to fall asleep, they'll wake you up and kick you out of the room before the next act, so you won't sleep through something you wanted to get to later (which is always a risk if you crash on one of the couches in one of the Con hotels).

But back to Sarah Donner, who we went to see perform for the second time, and who was just as brilliant this time around as she had been the last. And not to be outdone by the Doubleclicks and all their songs about dinosaurs (well, two songs about dinosaurs and one song about a synapsid), Sarah wrote her own song about a dinosaur (technically about a pterosaur). Except it isn't just a pterodactyl. It is a motherfucking pterodactyl. And later it mates with a bear which gives birth to a bearodactyl. I don't know how, so don't ask me. All I know is that I played a pregenerated druid for a Pathfinder session at Gen Con who had a bear animal companion, and I really wished it could have been a bearodactyl.

Previous Musical Monday: The Motherfucking Pterodactyl by Sarah Donner
Subsequent Musical Monday: Seize the Day by Symphony of Science (with Robin Williams)

Sarah Donner      Musical Monday     Home

2014 Prometheus Award Nominees

Location: Loncon 3 in London, United Kingdom.

Comments: While the nominees for the Prometheus Award for Best Novel continue to be "Cory Doctorow and some books by people you're unlikely to have ever heard of or read unless you are in the insular libertarian club", the Hall of Fame category is once again where the head-scratching selection is located. By handing a Hall of Fame induction to Falling Free, the Libertarian Futurist Society raised a number of questions. It isn't that Falling Free isn't a good novel - it undeniably is - but it wasn't able to garner a nod for Best Novel when it was published back in the 1980s, which makes one wonder why it deserves to be in the Hall of Fame now. This isn't quite as odd as John C. Wright's novel The Golden Age getting a nomination for the Hall of Fame despite being completely passed over for even a Best Novel nomination when it was first published, but it does cause one to doubt the validity of whatever metrics the nominators and judges for the Prometheus Award are using.

Best Novel

Winner:
(tie) Homeland by Cory Doctorow
(tie) Nexus by Ramez Naam

Other Nominees:
Brilliance by Marcus Sakey
Crux by Ramez Naam
A Few Good Men by Sarah A. Hoyt

Hall of Fame

Winner:
Falling Free by Lois McMaster Bujold

Other Nominees:
As Easy as A.B.C. by Rudyard Kipling
Courtship Rite by Donald M. Kingsbury
'Repent, Harlequin!' said the Ticktockman by Harlan Ellison
Sam Hall by Poul Anderson

Special Award

Winner:
Leslie Fish for the combination of 2013 novella Tower of Horses with filk song The Horsetaker's Daughter

Other Nominees:
None

Lifetime Achievement

Winner:
Vernor Vinge

Other Nominees:
None

Go to previous year's nominees: 2013
Go to subsequent year's nominees: 2015

Book Award Reviews     Home

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Random Thoughts - My 2014 Gen Con Haul

The redhead and I attended Gen Con for the second year in a row. Between acquiring some stuff as swag for volunteering in various places, hunting down deals in the Exhibitor Hall, and showing our love for authors and musical artists by buying their books and CDs, we acquired a fairly consequential pile of goodies to take home with us. Fortunately, unlike some other attendees, we drove to the convention and therefore don't have to figure out how to squeeze our hoard into a suitcase to take it home. This year's haul consists of:

Books
Fire for Effect: Battlecorps Anthology 4 edited by Jason Schmetzer
God's War by Kameron Hurley
Infidel by Kameron Hurley
Khan of Mars by Stephen Blackmoore
The Machine by Ren Garcia
The Mirror Empire by Kameron Hurley
Missing Pieces: Volume 4 edited by Bil White, Lorraine Stalians, Sandy Garfield, C.S. Marks, C.E. Rocco, and Tracy Chodhury
Rapture by Kameron Hurley

CDs
The Rogue Sessions by Sarah Donner
That Is a Pegasus by Sarah Donner

In addition to seeing Sarah Donner in concert, we went to see The Doubleclicks, Five Year Mission, and the Shake-Ups, but we already have all of the CDs for those bands.

Board Games
Carcasonne: The Castle
Carcasonne: The Discovery
Channel A
T-Rex

Role-Playing Games
Astounding Adventures: Pulp Adventures for Basic Roleplaying
Castles and Crusades: Rune Lore
Champions: The LARP
The Dying Earth Revivification Folio
Eternal Contenders
Fate Worlds Volume Two: Worlds in Shadow
Firefly Role-Playing Game - Gaming in the 'Verse: Gen Con 2013 Preview
Hollow Earth Expedition
Irrepressible!
Lamentations of the Flame Princess: Forgive Us
Lamentations of the Flame Princess: Rules & Magic
Lamentations of the Flame Princess: Tales of the Scarecrow
Maelstrom Domesday
Mutants and Masterminds: Supernatural Handbook
The Sands of Time
The Singularity System
Tome of Horrors 4
Wild Talents: A Singularity System Module

Random Thoughts     Home

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Book Blogger Hop August 15th - August 21st: Sammy Hagar No Longer Can't Drive 55, But Now He Can't Drive 65

Book Blogger Hop

Jen at Crazy for Books restarted her weekly Book Blogger Hop to help book bloggers connect with one another, but then couldn't continue, so she handed the hosting responsibilities off to Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer. The only requirements to participate in the Hop are to write and link a post answering the weekly question and then visit other blogs that are also participating to see if you like their blog and would like to follow them.

This week Elizabeth of Silver's Reviews asks (via Billy): What is your favorite electronic device to use to add posts and content to your blog? Example: Your phone, your computer, your iPad, or another device?

When I am writing a blog post, I always prefer to use my desktop computer. I know I'm a dinosaur, but I'm just not comfortable posting anything of any real substance using a phone or an iPad. I can, and sometimes do, use a laptop computer to write posts for this blog, but I only do this when I am traveling and can't get to my computer at home. But if given the choice, I will always pick my desktop computer as my first choice for writing posts.

Subsequent Book Blogger Hop: 66 Is a Sphenic Number

Book Blogger Hop     Home

Friday, August 15, 2014

Follow Friday - 171 Is a Triangular Number


It's Friday again, and this means it's time for Follow Friday. There has been a slight change to the format, as now there are two Follow Friday hosts blogs and two Follow Friday Features Bloggers each week. To join the fun and make now book blogger friends, just follow these simple rules:
  1. Follow both of the Follow My Book Blog Friday Hosts (Parajunkee and Alison Can Read) and any one else you want to follow on the list.
  2. Follow the two Featured Bloggers of the week - Watcha Reading and The Reading Habits of a Recovering Daydreamer.
  3. Put your Blog name and URL in the Linky thing.
  4. Grab the button up there and place it in a post, this post is for people to find a place to say hi in your comments.
  5. Follow, follow, follow as many as you can, as many as you want, or just follow a few. The whole point is to make new friends and find new blogs. Also, don't just follow, comment and say hi. Another blogger might not know you are a new follower if you don't say "Hi".
  6. If someone comments and says they are following you, be a dear and follow back. Spread the love . . . and the followers.
  7. If you want to show the link list, just follow the link below the entries and copy and paste it within your post!
  8. If you're new to the Follow Friday Hop, comment and let me know, so I can stop by and check out your blog!
And now for the Follow Friday Question: Suggest a question! We need questions of the week for future Follow Fridays. Any ideas?

I don't know if these have been used before (because there are a lot of questions that have been asked and I just don't have the time or patience to go back through them and check), but here are a few that I think would elicit some interesting responses:

1. What made you decide to start book blogging?

2. Do you review anything other than books? How do you decide what non-book things to review?

3. How do you decide which books to read and review? Do you have a system or do you just pick up whichever one looks good you you at the moment?

4. Do you write or contribute to any other blogs? What are they and what are they about?


Follow Friday     Home

Monday, August 11, 2014

Musical Monday - The Rebuttal of Schrödinger's Cat by Sarah Donner


This week the redhead and I are going to be at Gen Con. This should not be a surprise to anyone who reads this blog, but I'm going to write about it anyway, just like I did last year. Like last year, we are planning on throwing in some concert attendance among the days of gaming. In addition to going to see both The Doubleclicks and Five Year Mission perform again, we are going to go and see Sarah Donner and The Shake-Ups perform as well.

So here is Sarah Donner performing her cute and silly song The Rebuttal of Schrödinger's Cat in which she takes the role of the hypothetical possibly doomed cat placed inside of a box with a random timer and a capsule of cyanide. Then Donner unleashes the nerdy and witty snarkiness that characterizes so much of her music, and the result is a hilarious song that might teach you just a little bit about thought experiments involving quantum mechanics. Or at least learn about what it is like to watch Sarah Donner put on cat ears and be silly, snarky, and adorably peppy for a couple of minutes.

Previous Musical Monday: The Ballad of Eddie Prager by Paul & Storm
Subsequent Musical Monday: The Motherfucking Pterodactyl by Sarah Donner

Sarah Donner      Musical Monday     Home

Sunday, August 10, 2014

2014 Mythopoeic Award Nominees

Location: Mythcon 45 in Norton, Massachusetts.

Comments: In 2014, both of the fiction categories in the Mythopoeic Awards were won by works authored by women. While this is not that unusual for the Mythopoeic Awards, sadly, this is still something that is notable in the wider world. in better news, Holly Black is slated to be a guest of honor at CapClave this year. I mention this in conjunction with noting her win in the Best Children's Fantasy Literature Award category here so as to make everyone jealous of the fact that I am probably going to be able to meet her this autumn. I can tell you are all jealous.

Best Adult Fantasy Literature

Winner:
The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker

Other Nominees:
The Ghost Bride by Yangsze Choo
The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
Sleepless Knights by Mark H. Williams
Three Parts Dead by Max Gladstone

Best Children's Fantasy Literature

Winner:
Doll Bones by Holly Black

Other Nominees:
Conjured by Sarah Beth Durst
Ghoulish Song by William Alexander
Killer of Enemies by Joseph Bruchac
Shadows by Robin McKinley

Scholarship Award in Inklings Studies

Winner:
Tolkien and the Study of His Sources: Critical Essays edited by Jason Fisher

Other Nominees:
C.S. Lewis and the Middle Ages by Robert Boening
C.S. Lewis - A Life: Eccentric Genius, Reluctant Prophet by Alister McGrath
Exploring J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit by Corey Olsen
There and Back Again: J.R.R. Tolkien and the Origins of the Hobbit by Mark Atherton

Myth and Fantasy Studies

Winner:
Tree of Salvation: Yggdrasil and the Cross in the North by G. Ronald Murphy

Other Nominees:
As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality by Michael Saler
The Book of Legendary Lands by Umberto Eco, translated by Alastair McEwan
Critical Discourses of the Fantastic, 1712-1831 by David Sandner
Dancing the Tao: Le Guin and Moral Development by Sandra J. Lindow

Go to previous year's nominees: 2013
Go to subsequent year's nominees: 2015

Book Award Reviews     Home

Book Blogger Hop August 8th - August 14th: There Are Sixty-Four Demons Listed in the Dictionnaire Infernal

Book Blogger Hop

Jen at Crazy for Books restarted her weekly Book Blogger Hop to help book bloggers connect with one another, but then couldn't continue, so she handed the hosting responsibilities off to Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer. The only requirements to participate in the Hop are to write and link a post answering the weekly question and then visit other blogs that are also participating to see if you like their blog and would like to follow them.

This week Elizabeth of Silver's Reviews asks (via Billy): Do you have a pet peeve about when someone posts a comment on your blog? Example: no link back to their blog.

As a general rule, I dislike anonymous comments. In my experience, most people who make anonymous comments on a blog like this one don't add anything of value to the conversation, and are often rude, uninformed, or simply upset that a book by one of their favorite authors didn't get the glowing review they thought it should get. And, of course, many anonymous comments are simply spam.

So I have simply disallowed anonymous comments on this blog. Problem solved.


Book Blogger Hop     Home

Friday, August 8, 2014

Follow Friday - Marcus Aurelius Wrote the First Book of Meditations in 170 A.D.


It's Friday again, and this means it's time for Follow Friday. There has been a slight change to the format, as now there are two Follow Friday hosts blogs and two Follow Friday Features Bloggers each week. To join the fun and make now book blogger friends, just follow these simple rules:
  1. Follow both of the Follow My Book Blog Friday Hosts (Parajunkee and Alison Can Read) and any one else you want to follow on the list.
  2. Follow the two Featured Bloggers of the week - Twistedity and Spare Time Book Blog.
  3. Put your Blog name and URL in the Linky thing.
  4. Grab the button up there and place it in a post, this post is for people to find a place to say hi in your comments.
  5. Follow, follow, follow as many as you can, as many as you want, or just follow a few. The whole point is to make new friends and find new blogs. Also, don't just follow, comment and say hi. Another blogger might not know you are a new follower if you don't say "Hi".
  6. If someone comments and says they are following you, be a dear and follow back. Spread the love . . . and the followers.
  7. If you want to show the link list, just follow the link below the entries and copy and paste it within your post!
  8. If you're new to the Follow Friday Hop, comment and let me know, so I can stop by and check out your blog!
And now for the Follow Friday Question: Social Share! What is your favorite social network and leave us a link so we can join you!

Of all the social networks, I use Twitter the most. I'm on Google+ but mostly because it is free with a gmail account. I also have Facebook, but given the way that Facebook throttles the content I see, I don't rely on it other than to keep track of my close friends and family. But I have found Twitter to be the most useful social network, and it is the one that I am most likely to pay attention to. You can find me on Twitter under the name Aaron Pound.

Subsequent Follow Friday: 171 Is a Triangular Number

Follow Friday     Home

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Review - Warbound by Larry Correia


Short review: Jake sets out with a small crew of Grimnoir Knights and pirates to take on the whole Imperium. Meanwhile, Faye figures out the secrets of magic. Then everyone starts shooting each other and Faye saves the world.

Haiku
A pretense of death
A pirate expedition
Lots of explosions

Full review: The mediocrity of The Grimnoir Chronicles plods forward to its explosion-filled but still fairly pedestrian conclusion in Warbound. All of the now familiar characters - Jake, Faye, Francis, Heinrich, Toru, and so on - all return to fill their now familiar roles in a thin plot that, as with the previous books, appears to exist solely to give the author an excuse to write fight scenes in which every gun that appears is specifically identified. After basically screwing around for most of Spellbound (read review), this motley collection of characters fund and embark upon an expedition intended to foil the approaching magic consuming Enemy that had been hinted at in previous volumes. This being a Larry Corriea book, it should come as no surprise that their planned method of accomplishing this aim is to attempt to kill the leader of the nefarious Imperium and then shoot, burn, freeze, and club the Imperium's soldiers until they come around to the Grimnoir's way of thinking. Given this, no one should be surprised that the book, and the series, culminates in about seventy pages of near continuous fight sequences.

The first question that must be asked, given that this novel was essentially the flagship work of Correia's somewhat controversial "sad puppy" Hugo nominating ballot, is this: Is Warbound worthy of a Hugo Award? My answer is clear: No. This novel is simply not good enough to win a Hugo. In fact, I don't think it is good enough to deserve to be on the Hugo ballot. This isn't a bad book. It is, when one scrapes away all of the politicking that surrounded it, a competently written, fairly cartoonish adventure tale with a small amount of juvenile-level politics mixed in. The book's plot isn't particularly compelling, the writing isn't more than merely workmanlike, and there aren't any of the kinds of big ideas that one would expect from a Hugo nominated novel. When one reads it alongside its competition for the honor, the book's relatively weak plot, feeble world-building, and poor character development are painfully apparent.

The story in Warbound picks up shortly after the events in Spellbound, and proceeds along three paths. In the first, and most truncated, Francis, Dan, and Jane hold down the home front for the Grimnoir assisted by freshly minted Bureau of Investigations agent Pemberly Hammer. Francis butts heads with President Franklin Roosevelt, who demands that Francis' company turn over all of the Dymaxion Nullifiers in their possession and the plans to make them to the government, a demand that Francis refuses. Roosevelt also pushes for laws requiring Actives (as those who have identifiable magical powers are called) to wear identifying armbands and promotes building special communities for Actives to live in. All of this offends Francis, who decries the "collectivists" in government who want to steal his hard earned (or more accurately, completely inherited) wealth. This perpetual rallying cry of adolescent libertarians everywhere seems to be Corriea's latest salvo in an attempt to draw a nomination for a Prometheus Award, an effort that has proven unsuccessful thus far. This thread doesn't really add much to the story other than to explain where several characters who had appeared in previous books are spending their time in this one, but it is shunted aside and ignored for the bulk of the book. This is something of a disappointment, because if handled reasonably well the political maneuverings seem like they could have been an interesting part of the story.

In the second story thread, Faye Vierra, who was revealed to be the "spellbound" in the previous book, and who everyone still thinks is dead, heads to France to witness Whisper's funeral and find the torch's former mentor the Grimoir elder Jacques Montand. She introduces herself to Montand in the manner that so many of the various characters in the series do: At the point of a gun. They eventually come to a truce and Montand sets about teaching Faye about the previous spellbound Anand Sivarim while alternatively urging Faye to kill herself and agonizing over whether to poison her. Eventually he takes her to Berlin so she can consult with a zombified seer about the shape of the future. After she collects a pile of the seer's artwork, she follows the cryptic clues therein to the Russian countryside where she confronts and kills Rasputin - who is a servant of the Enemy in addition to his unpleasant historical personality quirks. Rasputin turns out to be an Active, apparently with the power of a "Boomer" to make things blow up, but his powers seem to have been enhanced by his alliance with the Enemy such that he has the ability to disassemble matter at the molecular level.

This quasi-physics explanation of Rasputin's power, along with other elements of the story, does raise some questions that are never really answered in the book. In many parts of the story, Correia appears to be trying to create a kind of warped physics explanation for how magic works. "Heavies" can manipulate gravity. "Massives" and "fades" can manipulate density. "Iceboxes" can reduce temperature. And so on. Correia even uses this sort of warped physics as a means by which Fuller and Vierra are able to throw out some arcanobabble to unmask the Enemy and save the day in the climatic battle at the end of the book. But the quasi-physics breaks down when one looks at it in anything more than a perfunctory manner. If a "fade" is able to reduce his density to pass through things, and raise his density to solidify again, why is he unable to raise his density like a "massive" as well? Given that a "heavy" can both raise and lower the intensity of gravity, why can an "icebox" reduce temperature but not raise it? How do the powers of a torch fit into this at all? Fire is just the rapid oxidation of combustible materials - a simple chemical chain reaction. If a torch can manipulate that, why can't they manipulate other chemical reactions? It seems that Correia wants to have his cake and eat it too: Positing at times a set of magical abilities that kind of fit together into a warped but somewhat recognizable version of physics, and at others a hodge-podge of random powers that seem to follow no underlying principles at all. This sort of lackadaisical approach to world-building is apparent throughout the series, and underscores the fact that everything about The Grimnoir Chronicles exists pretty much entirely to provide a perfunctory framework upon which the many pages of fight scenes can be hung.

This brings us to the third thread running through the book, which follows Jake Sullivan as he gathers some Grimnoir Knights, Pirate Bob's crew, some Stuyvesant employees, and a paroled sociopathic psychologist and heads out looking for trouble in the most advanced airship that Francis could provide. The crew that Jake has selected for this expedition is described as being almost exclusively male, with the only female member being Pirate Bob's long time crew member, the torch "Lady Origami". This exclusion of female members from the crew seems to be out of some sort of sentiment that manly men go to war and women are to be shielded from this sort of activity. But in a world in which magical abilities exist, this seems to be a kind of false chivalry as there is no question but that there are female characters in the Grimoir universe that have skills that make them more than a match for any man, and probably more valuable than many of the men that Sullivan takes along. The expedition brings a healer along, but he gets killed in the early going, leaving the force without medical assistance, which raises the question of why Jane was not brought along as a second healing option. When the mission needs to interrogate prisoners, or deal with underworld figures in Shanghai, or even those Grimnoir native to China, a number of trust issues crop up, a situation in which Pemberly Hammer would have been exceedingly valuable. In short, by chauvinistically excluding most women from his crew, Sullivan seems to have caused himself a fair amount of unnecessary trouble. If one were feeling charitable, one might think that this is an attempt to show the downside of sexism in this world, but given that Sullivan is repeatedly described as being always right, this seems unlikely. The real problem is that even though it seems fairly obvious that Sullivan is supposed to be completely correct in choosing an all-male crew, this sort of attitude doesn't make any sense in a magical world. After all, the existence of someone like Delilah in the first book, Whisper and Hammer in the second book, and Lady Origami in this book, as well as the presumably numerous other people like them would make it very difficult to argue that women are the "weaker" sex. Unless one were to posit that magical ability is unequally distributed by sex (and given the characters who populate these books, that seems to be a possibility, although that would pose an entirely different, albeit no less problematic, set of questions), then the persistence of an attitude such as that displayed by many of the male characters in the book seems to be an instance in which the author simply didn't bother to think through the implications of his setting.

In any event, Jake's expedition takes up the bulk of the book, with the other two previously mentioned story lines providing a sprinkling of variety at the edges. First, Jake heads for an Imperial installation in the Arctic Circle so that there can be a fight scene showing the Grimnoir slicing up their opponents before they recover a MacGuffin and Toru can sneak off to try to tell the Imperial pseudo-Chairman that the "Pathfinder" - the advance scout of the magic-consuming Enemy - is on its way, an effort that backfires. On the other hand, the pseudo-Chairman's response to Toru's efforts provides an assist Buckminster Fuller's arcanobabble-laden efforts to unravel the characteristics of the Enemy, making this something of an own goal on the pseudo-Chairman's part. After using the MacGuffin to determine that the Enemy is spread across the globe, and has infested the Imperium, Jake and his cohorts decide to do what they had planned to do from the start: Try to kill the pseudo-Chairman and get the Imperium to return to its original purpose as the "Dark Ocean" to destroy the Pathfinder and prevent the Enemy from coming to Earth and consuming the creature that bestows magic on humanity. Given that their sojourn in the Arctic didn't really change anything they planned to do, one wonders exactly why they went there other than to surprise and slaughter some Imperial soldiers. So after their Arctic encounter, the expedition heads to Shanghai where they sneak into the city, link up with the Shanghai Grimnoir Knights, make a deal with some underworld gangs, send Toru around town to kill a bunch of people in very public ways, get betrayed by one of their own, and have a huge fight with the Shadow Guard in which Lance Talon has a heroic death and Toru gets captured. And then the book moves on to the final set of fight sequences, which, of course, are the entire point of the series.

Around about page 480, the final conflict starts, and between that point and about page 550, the characters are all pretty much continuously fighting with very brief asides to resolve a handful of plot points. Toru fights in a staged contest with the pseudo-Chairman. Pirate Bob takes his airship to the upper stratosphere so that Buckminster Fuller can use his freshly created arcanobabble-driven device. Faye shows up just in time to join in the fracas and promptly destroys the Imperial flagship on her own - carrying a sizable bag of firearms that she cycles through mostly, it seems, so that Corriea can specifically identify each and every one of them. Eventually an armored Jake Sullivan and an armored Toru team up to fight enormous numbers of Iron Guard and Shadow Guard, who seem to fall in front of them like so many sheaves of wheat, which seems like something of a precipitous fall for the previously vaunted elite warriors of the Imperium. In Hard Magic (read review) the reader was told that the Grimnoir only take on members of the Iron Guard when the odds are at least five to one, and Sullivan's mostly single-handed defeat of one is considered to be a spectacularly amazing feat. Now, Toru and Sullivan armor up and take on a hundred of them plus a sizable number of Shadow Guard and hundreds of regular troops, all at the same time. Granted, Sullivan is supposed to be magically enhanced by the magical tattoo used by the OCI in Spellbound, but when he is cutting down Iron Guard by the dozens, the book moves from over the top to ridiculously silly.

And the somewhat odd thing about this bloodbath is that it was not only probably not necessary, when one begins to poke at the ultimate resolution of the plot, it was actually counterproductive. It turns out that the Enemy needs a sufficiently large concentration of dead Actives to be corralled by a sufficiently large number of Pathfinder minions to receive the signal to move in to feed on the Power. This, at first glance seems like a result to be avoided, and Sullivan's strategy of attacking the pseudo-Chariman in Shanghai and Faye's efforts to hop about the world preventing massacres of Actives are aimed at preventing this outcome. Of course, Faye misses one concentration and the Enemy launches itself towards Earth (through space it turns out, which kind of makes the Enemy seem like a cosmic Galactus and less like the trans-dimensional entity it and the Power were described as in earlier parts of the series). Faye intercepts the creature and, using the insight she gained from looking at an origami creation, sets a trap for it that results in the Enemy being permanently vanquished. But if the Grimnoir had been successful at foiling the Pathfinder, Faye could have never defeated the Enemy because it never would have begun its final approach. Which means that most of the actions taken by the Grimnoir in this book were at best pointless, and at worst, a hindrance that only made it harder to actually defeat the Enemy. In the end, of course, Sullivan is made an elder of the Grimnoir because "they should have been listening to him in the first place" despite his advice actually having not been particularly useful when one stops and thinks about it.

The novel has some other issues - for example, despite the fact that magical powers would presumably be a worldwide phenomenon and the Power has no reason to discriminate on the basis of geography, there isn't a single character in the book from either Africa or South America. Unless one of the English characters like Ian is supposed to hail from Australia, there isn't any "Active" from there in the book either. In fact, neither Africa or South America rates any kind of mention at all in the book. With the exception of a couple of Pacific Islands, the Southern Hemisphere as well not exist in the Grimnoir universe, and this is, yet again, an indication of how little thought was put into the world-building aspects of this story. While there are dozens of male characters running about the story, there are only four female characters in Warbound, and two of them, Jane and Lady Origami (or more accurately, Akune), exist mostly to be a wife or lover of a male character. And so on. In the end, the ultimate question is this: After upwards of 1,700 pages, are the Grimnoir Chronicles worth reading? I guess that depends on whether you are interested in reading an over the top comic book transformed into a novel filled with lots of two-dimensional characters, a facile plot, a lot of guns, and heaping helpings of fighting. If your answer is yes, then these are the books for you. If you care about things like world-building, well-developed characters, and a plot thicker than paper, then you should probably give them a pass.

Previous book in the series: Spellbound

2014 Hugo Award Nominees

Larry Correia     Book Reviews A-Z     Home

Monday, August 4, 2014

Musical Monday - The Ballad of Eddie Prager by Paul & Storm


So, as a guy, I find myself visiting men's restrooms on a reasonably regular basis. And one in particular makes full use of the urinal cake. (It might be where I work, but if you quote me on that I will deny everything). And I absolutely cannot use the facilities without thinking of this song, terrible penny-whistle solo and all. I don't drink Schlitz, rye, or Jaeger at work (although some of my coworkers might be more enjoyable to be around if I did), so I'm not even close to replicating the scenario described here, but sometimes, out of the corner of my eye, I see glimpses of little eyes looking up at me from the brave little cake as it carries out its suicide mission.

I will also point out that in the video, Paul & Storm are in fine form with their repeated use of the "______ is the name of my ________ cover band" routine. As a side note, they sell shirts with blank spots that you can fill in with the name of your own fictitious cover band. I own one.

Previous Musical Monday: Now I Am an Arsonist by Jon Coulton and Molly Lewis
Subsequent Musical Monday: The Rebuttal of Schrödinger's Cat by Sarah Donner

Paul & Storm      Musical Monday     Home

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Book Blogger Hop August 1st - August 7th: Rule 63 States That for Every Fictional Character, There Is an Opposite Gender Counterpart

Book Blogger Hop

Jen at Crazy for Books restarted her weekly Book Blogger Hop to help book bloggers connect with one another, but then couldn't continue, so she handed the hosting responsibilities off to Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer. The only requirements to participate in the Hop are to write and link a post answering the weekly question and then visit other blogs that are also participating to see if you like their blog and would like to follow them.

This week Elizabeth of Silver's Reviews asks (via Billy): How many bookcases do you have, and how do you organize the shelves?

I currently have ten tall bookcases, two tall double wide folding book cases, four shorter bookcases. and one piece of furniture that would be best described as a "half a bookcase, half something else".

The two double-wide bookcases house some of my mass market paperbacks, arranged in alphabetical order by author and then by title within each author. These books are double-stacked on the shelves.

Two of the tall bookcases house hardbacks and trade paperbacks, also arranged alphabetically by author and by title within each author.

One of the tall bookcases is split. Part of it holds overflow hardbacks and trade paperbacks that won't fit on the previous two tall bookcases organized alphabetically by author. The other part holds my review copies, more or less in the order that I intend to read them.

One tall bookcase holds my Time-Life books and some reference works. The Time-Life books are organized in series order. The reference books are roughly organized by topic.

One tall bookcase holds my law books and some miscellaneous textbooks. These are organized by subject matter.

One tall bookcase holds my history and economics books as well as a number of my wife's textbooks. These are mostly organized by subject matter, with the history and economics books organized alphabetically by author within their subject matter.

One tall bookcase holds role-playing game books. These are organized by publisher and then in an arcane order that would probably only make sense to someone familiar with role-playing games.

One tall bookcase holds my graphic novels, some more role-playing game books, and some miscellaneous books including my collection of Babylon 5 script books. The graphic novels are organized alphabetically by title. The Babylon 5 script books are organized by series order. The role-playing game books are organized in the same arcane order as in the previous shelf.

One tall bookcase holds DVDs and board games. The "half a bookcase" also holds DVDs, as does one of the small bookcases. The DVDs are organized alphabetically by title.

One tall bookcase holds binders mostly holding material that I have written. These are organized in a manner that I think only I would understand.

One small bookcase holds a chunk of my collection of science fiction magazines such as Asimov's Analog, Amazing Stories, and so on. These are currently mostly unorganized except in a rough grouping by magazine.

One small bookcase holds my language dictionaries, some cookbooks, and a number of spiral notebooks. The language dictionaries are in alphabetical order. The other material is in no particular order.

The final small bookcase holds young adult and children's books. These are organized alphabetically by author and then by title within each author. The exceptions to this organization are the "choose-your-own-adventure" books, which are organized in series order.


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Friday, August 1, 2014

Follow Friday - Giliese 169 Is a Star in the Constellation of Taurus


It's Friday again, and this means it's time for Follow Friday. There has been a slight change to the format, as now there are two Follow Friday hosts blogs and two Follow Friday Features Bloggers each week. To join the fun and make now book blogger friends, just follow these simple rules:
  1. Follow both of the Follow My Book Blog Friday Hosts (Parajunkee and Alison Can Read) and any one else you want to follow on the list.
  2. Follow the two Featured Bloggers of the week - Sara in Bookland and I Am Simply a Book Drunkard.
  3. Put your Blog name and URL in the Linky thing.
  4. Grab the button up there and place it in a post, this post is for people to find a place to say hi in your comments.
  5. Follow, follow, follow as many as you can, as many as you want, or just follow a few. The whole point is to make new friends and find new blogs. Also, don't just follow, comment and say hi. Another blogger might not know you are a new follower if you don't say "Hi".
  6. If someone comments and says they are following you, be a dear and follow back. Spread the love . . . and the followers.
  7. If you want to show the link list, just follow the link below the entries and copy and paste it within your post!
  8. If you're new to the Follow Friday Hop, comment and let me know, so I can stop by and check out your blog!
And now for the Follow Friday Question: What is the biggest city you live near (or interesting landmark)? Show us a postcard picture.

The closest major city is Washington D.C. Based upon the pictures on this postcard, I think the D.C. slogan for attracting tourists should be "Come visit us! We have white buildings! And most of them have columns!"


Previous Follow Friday: There Are 168 Hours in a Week

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Thursday, July 31, 2014

2014 Hugo Voting - Best Novelette

I am a supporting member of Loncon 3, which is the location of this year's World Science Fiction Convention. Because of this, I was eligible to vote in this year's Hugo Awards. The Best Novelette category had the widest disparity between the best nominee and the weakest nominee, with three very good nominees clustered together at the top of the quality scale, a mediocre entry well behind them, and a really awful entry bringing up the rear. My ballot in this category was as follows:

1. I debated with myself for a long time before picking The Waiting Stars by Aliette de Bodard as my top choice (actual finish, 3rd), because while it is an excellent story, so are the next two nominees on this list. In the end, however, de Bodard's tale of misguided benevolent imperialism, and the reaction to it, won out over the competition. The story is actually two stories, woven together that eventually dovetail together at the very end. In one, two Dai Vet named Lhan Nen and Cuc seek to recover the mind ship that held their great-aunt's mind, braving the automated defenses of the Galactic Federation's trophy graveyard that all of the destroyed mind ships were cast into after the Dai Vet lost a war to the Galactics. In the other, a young girl named Catherine grows up in an Institution run by the Galactics along with dozens of other Dai Vet children, apparently displaced by the war between their cultures. The story makes clear that the Galactics think they are doing what is best for Catherine and her classmates, but at the same time, the story makes clear that the Galactics are destroying their charges despite their best intentions. As the story comes to a close, it becomes clear that the Galactics not only hid Catherine's past from her by erasing her prior memories, they deprived her of a family, and her place in her own society, and wrapped it in a collection of lies to convince the children, and apparently themselves, that what they were doing was justified. Even to the end, Catherine's boyfriend Jason desperately tried to justify the erasure of her memory by saying it was necessary to save her life, to save her body. And de Bodard pulls no punches here: Despite the fact that Jason clearly loves Catherine and thinks that what was done was the best of a collection of bad options, the magnitude of the monstrosity that Jason is excusing is brutally apparent. And the brilliance of the story is that this sneaks up on the reader - I couldn't even see how the two story lines related to one another for much of the novelette until they forcefully crashed into one another, and then their connection seemed like it should have been obvious all along. The actions of the adults running the Institute seem suspect from the start, but when the duplicity and immorality of their program is finally revealed, it is something of a shock. This is an unsettling story, but it is unsettling in the best possible way.

2. The Lady Astronaut of Mars by Mary Robinette Kowal (actual finish 1st) is a devastating and yet uplifting story that focuses on aging, loss, and hope. Elma York is the titular lady astronaut, long past her glory days who now lives on Mars with her dying, beloved husband Nathaniel. Elma still keeps her name on the astronaut roster despite her advanced age, and thus she needs regular physicals, which puts her in contact with a doctor named Dorothy who Elma had briefly met in Kansas when Dorothy was a young girl living on a farm with her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em. Dorothy seems to have been inspired to travel to Mars by her meeting with Elma, and the paper eagle Elma gave her. But when the story takes place, both Elma's youthful triumphs and Dorothy's childhood misfortunes are far in the past. Just when Elma has resigned herself to never traveling in space again and it seems as though she will be left with nothing but her memories, she is approached with an opportunity that poses and agonizing choice: Travel in space again on a dangerous but critical mission, or stay with Nathaniel as he slowly withers away. Elma ends up making the choice that everyone, including the reader, knew she would make- pointing herself towards the future rather than the past, heading for new adventures rather than drowning in old memories. At times the interweaving of references to the Wizard of Oz is a bit too precious, but even so The Lady Astronaut of Mars is a sublime story that reminds us that even if we get old, we don't have to give up the things that fuel our dreams.

3. Of all of the stories nominated in this category, The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling by Ted Chiang (actual finish 2nd) has the most interesting science fiction idea. Or rather, the most interesting long-running idea that we treat as being uniquely a feature of the modern world: How technology changes not only the way we view the world, but us as well. The story is set in a world in which the use of technology similar to the Google glass is nearly ubiquitous and people use it to record the everyday events of their own lives. A new product is being introduced, titled Remem which will allow the user to quickly and easily locate portions of their "lifelog" and replay them. This leads to fears that such technology will allow people to effectively outsource their memories, with presumably bad effects. The main character is a journalist researching for a story about this new technology, and his efforts are interwoven with the story of Jijingi, a Tiv tribesman whose village has welcomed its first European resident, and with the newcomer, the technology of writing. In the first story, our journalist approaches his project with a set of assumptions about what Remem does and what it can be useful for until he runs into something he didn't expect: A recording that directly contradicts what he had thought to be one of his most important memories. In Jijingi's story, Jijingi first resists and then becomes fascinated with writing, eventually trying to use written records to settle a dispute over which side of an argument his tribe should take. Jijingi's efforts are rebuffed, as he is told that the written records might be accurate, but they don't comport with the memory that the tribe considers to be right - an interesting distinction between veracity and correctness. On the other hand, our journalist, faced with the records dredged up by Remem, has to confront the fact that the image of himself that he has constructed doesn't match the reality of his past, and doesn't match the image others around him have. The story delves into the dueling subjects of records and memory and shows how they conflict, and more importantly, how each are necessary to human existence.

4. No Award (actual finish 5th): For reasons that will become apparent below, if none of the three stories listed above wins the Best Novelette award, then I don't think either of the two remaining nominees should.

5. There's nothing much wrong with The Exchange Officers by Brad R. Torgersen, (actual finish 4th) but there's nothing particularly memorable or original about it either. The story takes place in a future where NASA has been shut down and the United States' interests in space are protected by a joint program run by the U.S. Navy and Air Force. Warrant Officers Dan Jaraczuk and Mavy Stoddard, from the U.S. Army and Marine Corps respectively, are part of an exchange program placing officers from those services into the joint Navy and Air Force space program. The story bounces back and forth between showing Jaraczuk and Stoddard training to operate the robots that they will use to do orbital construction all the while marveling that these sorts of jobs were done by Ph.D.'s when NASA was putting Americans in space, and using those robots to fight off a Chinese attack on a partially completed American orbital installation. Eventually Jaraczuk figures that he and Stoddard cannot win the fight and puts the platform on a collision course with Earth so as to deny the Chinese their prize. The story is competent and reasonably good, but it doesn't have anything that makes it stand out from the dozens of other stories that feature in magazines like Asimov's Science Fiction or Analog Science Fiction and Fact every year. The story essentially amounts to standard issue military characters having standard issue conversations before dealing with a standard issue military situation in a standard issue manner. Torgersen executes the story well, but there really isn't anything here that is substantially different from what authors like Heinlein, Drake, and Pournelle were doing thirty or forty years ago, and they weren't getting nominated for awards for those stories. The upshot of this is that while The Exchange Officers is a decent enough story, it is not a Hugo-worthy one.

6. While The Exchange Officers is merely mediocre, Opera Vita Aeterna by Theodore Beale (writing as Vox Day) is truly awful (actual finish 6th, behind "No Award"). Beale manages to combine writing that lurches between clumsy and over the top purple prose and turgid tedium with characters that are little more than bland stereotypes who inhabit about as generic a fantasy world as one can imagine. Not only that, the story is almost nonexistent, serving as little more than an excuse for Beale to fumble about trying to make what I'm sure he considers to be philosophical points. The primary problem is that even (or perhaps especially) when he is putting the words in the mouths of characters who are supposed to be on both sides of a theological debate, Beale can't manage to make the result anything other than incoherent mush. The story, such as it is, involves an elf who shows up at a pseudo-Catholic monastery in a generic fantasy world looking for religious enlightenment. Despite everyone being certain the elf has no soul, he decides to stick around and learn the scriptures of the pseudo-Catholic church by making an illuminated copy of them. After laboring for decades, the elf goes on a short trip to buy some more writing supplies and wine only to discover that the monks have been slaughtered by goblins in his absence. Things then jump forward centuries where a new initiate marvels at the anonymously made illuminated copy and the story ends. It is clear that the author thinks he is making insightful points throughout, but these range from laughably silly to merely uninteresting, in no small part because the characters are so one-dimensional that there's simply no reason to care. To sum up, this story is badly written, has a soap-bubble flimsy plot, and features characters who aspire to be uni-dimensional. This story should have never come within light years of the Hugo Awards, and it rests quite securely at the bottom of my ballot.

2013 Hugo Award Winner for Best Novelette: The Girl-Thing Who Went Out for Sushi by Pat Cadigan
2015 Hugo Award Winner for Best Novelette: The Day the World Turned Upside Down by Thomas Olde Heuvelt (translated by Lia Belt) (reviewed in 2015 Hugo Voting - Best Novelette)

List of Hugo Award Winners for Best Novelette

2014 Hugo Award Nominees     Book Award Reviews     Home

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

2014 Hugo Voting - Best Short Story

I am a supporting member of Loncon 3, which is the location of this year's World Science Fiction Convention. Because of this, I was eligible to vote in this year's Hugo Awards. The nominees in the Best Short Story category were all good, and in my estimation, any one of them would be a worthy winner. That said, on my ballot, they appeared in this order:

1. If You Were a Dinosaur, My Love by Rachel Swirsky (actual finish 3rd) is a brilliantly silly story that is full of sorrow. The story opens in a rather humorous manner, as the narrator imagines what life would be like if their lover was a dinosaur - specifically a human sized Tyrannosaurus Rex with sharp, menacing teeth and pointy claws. The story continues in a somewhat silly vein with the narrator imagining the creation of a second human-sized Tyrannosaur to be her love's mate, which then slowly moves into the bittersweet sadness of seeing someone you love but cannot have for your own be happy. And then the story hits you with the twist, and you realize that this isn't a silly or funny story at all, but is rather the narrator's desperate attempt to deal with grief and loss. It is this juxtaposition of the surreal and whimsical of imagination with the brutal harshness of reality that provides this story with its devastating and heart wrenching emotional punch, and does it with a stark simplicity that places it at the top of my ballot.

2. The Water That Falls on You from Nowhere by John Chu (actual finish 1st) is a story that was only just barely edged out of first place by a hair's breadth. In it Chu imagines a world in which lying causes water to fall upon the speaker apparently in proportion to the magnitude of the lie. Someone who told a little white lie or stretched the truth a little might only make the air become somewhat noticeably humid, while someone who told a whopper would get drenched by bucketfuls of water. Conversely, telling the truth seems to dry out the surroundings. The main character living in this world is Matt, a gay Asian man with a serious fitness-trainer boyfriend named Gus. After trying to avoid letting Gus know of the intensity of his feelings for him, Matt is forced to come clean and Gus suggests marriage. This proves problematic as Matt has not told his rather traditional family that he is gay, but ends up deciding that his relationship with Gus is worth the pain of coming out to his parents. This difficult task is made more difficult by Matt's somewhat abusive sister Michele, who forbids him to come out to his parents and spends all of her time interposing herself between them and Matt. This stressful brother and sister dance continues until Michele overreaches and gets drenched, leading to his sister throwing him out of her house. While packing, Matt discovers that throughout the visit his parents have told Gus to call them using Chinese terms meaning "husband's father" and "husband's mother". Matt ends the story alone, but realizing that he is loved more than he realized. The story uses the inability of the characters to lie as a means at shearing away the lies, half-truths, and evasions think they need to use to hold a family together and rather optimistically suggests that unvarnished truth might work better, or at least make us happier. Wrapped inside the somewhat odd package of water drenching liars is the idea that people can be better than we think they are, and being forced to tell the truth can even surprise the speaker. As a side note, there are several untranslated Chinese characters interspersed throughout the story. At least I assume from context that they are Chinese characters, but as I don't speak Chinese, I can't be sure. In any event, the story gives no explicit guidance as to what they mean, but for the most part one can figure them out fairly easily from the context in which they are used.

3. Selkie Stories Are for Losers by Sofia Samatar (actual finish 2nd) comes in third in my balloting, not because it isn't an excellent story - in some years this would have been a strong contender for the award - but because the first two entries are just so very very good. The central character is an unnamed young woman (although the way the story is written, it could be a young man) whose mother vanished years before - putting on a coat found in the attic, getting into the car, and driving away, abandoning her husband and child for another life without them. Now, the narrator works with her best friend Mona (who she is secretly in love with) as a waitress at local restaurant and dreams of moving to Colorado, because it is a land-locked state. Laced throughout the story are the narrator's recollection of other stories that feature selkies, each one recounting how someone fell in love with one of the creatures, managed to steal its seal coat to trap it for a time and hold on to it until the selkie recovered its coat and returned to the sea. In all of the stories the selkie simply doesn't care how much those it left behind ached for it, the sea called, and it returned. The story balances the fairy tale visions of women with seal coats with the adolescent narrator's pain and anger at being abandoned, drawing the obvious parallel, and inverting the usual selkie story's empathy for the trapped fae creature and instead highlighting the loss and rage of those left behind.

4. I am placing The Ink Readers of Doi Saket by Thomas Olde Heuvelt (actual finish 4th) in the fourth slot on my ballot. This should not be taken as a denigration of the story, because it is quite good. In fact, in my opinion there is very little separating the first story in this category from the last. But someone has to be in fourth place, and this story gets the dubious distinction of being the worst story in an excellent field. The story is set in the small village of Doi Saket in Thailand on the banks of the Mae Ping River, the site of annual ritual in which people from upstream send their wishes floating down in paper boats called krathongs to be collected and, they hope, granted. The wishes, written on the krathongs are often smeared by their passage through the water, and monks would swim through the river divining from the inky streaks flowing through it what wishes were intended. The story has numerous character, but the central one is a young man named Tangmoo whose daily tasks include shoring up a listing tree that poses a danger to his parents' home. He becomes curious about where the wishes sent by air, in floating paper lanterns called khom loi, go when they head off to the west and follows them until he meets a Buddhist monk with whom he unknowingly trades some philosophical musings. Tangmoo then returns to his village and unwittingly finds out the greedy secret of the local priests - they steal the valuables sent with the krathongs - and they promptly drown him in the river. But his drowning sets off a chain of events that result in all of the previously named villagers getting their wishes granted after a fashion. The story is interesting, but it is so short and has so many characters that none of them other than Tangmoo are developed much beyond a single personality trait and their wish, which somewhat diminishes the impact of the final story developments. Even so, the way that the interrelationships between the various individuals weave together to fulfill their wishes is humorous, although in many cases darkly so.

2013 Hugo Award Winner for Best Short Story: Mono no Aware by Ken Liu
2015 Hugo Award Winner for Best Short Story: No Award
2016 Hugo Award Winner for Best Short Story: Cat Pictures Please by Naomi Kritzer (reviewed in Clarkesworld: Issue 100 (January 2015), 2016 Hugo Voting - Best Short Story, and 2016 WSFA Small Press Award Voting)

2013 Nebula Award Winner for Best Short Story: Immersion by Aliette de Bodard
2015 Nebula Award Winner for Best Short Story: Jackalope Wives by Ursula Vernon (reviewed in 2015 WSFA Small Press Award Voting)

List of Hugo Award Winners for Best Short Story
List of Nebula Award Winners for Best Short Story

2014 Nebula Award Nominees

2014 Hugo Award Nominees     Book Award Reviews     Home