( A little background... )
One word of warning! Some of my reviews contain spoilers. I used cut tags, but if you're clicking the links in the summary table, the cuts will be ignored!
An explanation of table columns in the summaries: ( Read more... )
I think that's everything! I'm keeping this mostly for my own review, but comments are welcome!
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I included a question mark above because I'm not convinced that these are intended to be read in any specific order. I numbered them in publication order, but they seem to have been published according to the reverse of the internal chronology.
The first installment, Red Team Blues, depicted a modern-day man at the end(?) of his career in computers, and this book is his origin story, from childhood to MIT to the early-ish days of the Silicon Valley phenomenon (mid-1980's). Unfortunately for the book, as soon as he arrives in San Francisco, the protagonist becomes the least interesting character in the story, and even the author begins to ignore him for entire chapters at a time.
The first installment, Red Team Blues, depicted a modern-day man at the end(?) of his career in computers, and this book is his origin story, from childhood to MIT to the early-ish days of the Silicon Valley phenomenon (mid-1980's). Unfortunately for the book, as soon as he arrives in San Francisco, the protagonist becomes the least interesting character in the story, and even the author begins to ignore him for entire chapters at a time.
#18: A.J. Jacobs, The Puzzler [JRI]
May. 5th, 2025 08:53 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
An author with a word game habit decides to write a book about all types of puzzles, from crosswords to puzzle boxes to jigsaws to Sudoku to ciphers to escape rooms. What he lacks in skill, he makes up for in enthusiasm. He visits Will Shortz and attends a National Puzzler's League convention. He manages to talk his family into representing the United States at the first ever World Jigsaw Puzzle Championship in Spain. He receives permission from the CIA to see Kryptos up close. He joins Setec Astronomy for the 2020 MIT Mystery Hunt (the same one I attended). Each chapter dips briefly into the evolution of each type of puzzle discussed and gives both historical and current examples. It's an entertaining overview, and it ends with its own series of puzzles representing each chapter.
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The other day my mother was telling me a story about one of her older cousins, who recently moved into assisted living. This cousin managed to knock over a lamp in her room, tried and failed to call the staff for help, and eventually ended up calling 911. To help her with a lamp.
And my mom is laughing hysterically, and eventually realizes that I'm not laughing, because all I can do is just say "oh no" over and over.
Reading this book is kind of like that. Some people may find it hilarious. All I could do was cringe.
And my mom is laughing hysterically, and eventually realizes that I'm not laughing, because all I can do is just say "oh no" over and over.
Reading this book is kind of like that. Some people may find it hilarious. All I could do was cringe.
#16: Bill Gates, Source Code
Apr. 28th, 2025 11:24 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This is a very well-written, unflinching memoir of the author's early years, starting from birth and ending as the nascent Microsoft company moves its headquarters from Albuquerque to Seattle.
The first half of the book covers his upbringing, and two things are immediately clear. One is that he was on the autism spectrum, which he acknowledges in the book's epilogue ("If I were growing up today...") The other is that he was immensely privileged, both by the choices made and opportunities afforded by his parents, and also in having access as a young teenager to some of the earliest commercially available computers on which to learn how to program.
The second half of the book describes his early business ventures, which started in high school and continued during his time at Harvard. He reveals that he got in big trouble with school administrators for bringing non-students into the computer lab to work on a non-academic project. He also notes that he originally had every intention of returning to finish his senior year and graduate. I hope his mom wasn't too disappointed that he never did.
I was surprised that the book did not mention his recent decision to release the original Altair BASIC interpreter as open source.
The first half of the book covers his upbringing, and two things are immediately clear. One is that he was on the autism spectrum, which he acknowledges in the book's epilogue ("If I were growing up today...") The other is that he was immensely privileged, both by the choices made and opportunities afforded by his parents, and also in having access as a young teenager to some of the earliest commercially available computers on which to learn how to program.
The second half of the book describes his early business ventures, which started in high school and continued during his time at Harvard. He reveals that he got in big trouble with school administrators for bringing non-students into the computer lab to work on a non-academic project. He also notes that he originally had every intention of returning to finish his senior year and graduate. I hope his mom wasn't too disappointed that he never did.
I was surprised that the book did not mention his recent decision to release the original Altair BASIC interpreter as open source.
#15: Arkady Martine, Rose/House
Apr. 25th, 2025 02:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The author of A Memory Called Empire takes on haunted house tropes with a murder mystery set in a near future where nanobots and artificial intelligences are, if not common, at least things that are understood to exist. Creepy as heck.
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The last of a loose trilogy of unrelated novels that all prominently feature an asshole billionaire receiving his comeuppance, but have little else in common. Unlike Starter Villain and The Kaiju Preservation Society, there is no single protagonist. Instead, we live through a period of confusion and panic as seen through the eyes of multiple (American) viewpoint characters.
Yes, the premise is absurd. But on some level, the premise is irrelevant. It's a story about society and human connection. It's ridiculous and hilarious and poignant and gut-wrenching and uplifting and disappointing and... well, it runs the gamut of life experience, I suppose.
I'm not sure there's a point to all this. Maybe the point is that there isn't a point, and maybe that's okay.
Content notes: physician-assisted suicide, impending apocalypse, mob violence, Christianity
Yes, the premise is absurd. But on some level, the premise is irrelevant. It's a story about society and human connection. It's ridiculous and hilarious and poignant and gut-wrenching and uplifting and disappointing and... well, it runs the gamut of life experience, I suppose.
I'm not sure there's a point to all this. Maybe the point is that there isn't a point, and maybe that's okay.
Content notes: physician-assisted suicide, impending apocalypse, mob violence, Christianity
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First in an upcoming series of cozy spacefaring mystery novellas, similar in theme to The Mimicking of Known Successes but much less academic in character. The setting is a spaceship on a centuries-long voyage, whose crew is repeatedly reincarnated thanks to the ability to store backups of their personalities and memories in Books, which are kept in a Library on the ship. One of the ship's detectives, Dorothy Gentleman, wakes up in another passenger's body when her Book is erased. There is a mystery to be solved, and she soon realizes that the person whose body she unexpectedly took over is the prime suspect. It's a great premise, and the reincarnation aspect is what gives it the "Memory Called Empire meets Miss Marple" blurb that caused me to pick it up.
#12: Andrea Eames, A Harvest of Hearts
Apr. 10th, 2025 01:37 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
For a book that was accurately recommended as "Howl's Moving Castle meets T. Kingfisher" I really expected to like this story more, but none of the characters particularly came to life for me.
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I found myself beginning to write a story last year, thinking it would take maybe a few weeks, and now a year later it's maybe halfway done? Since it's taken on a life of its own and is turning into more of a novella than a short story, I thought I'd read some books aimed at helping me be a better writer, or at least a more productive one, because I do want to finish the thing sooner rather than later.
One was No Plot? No Problem! by Chris Baty, the original founder of NaNoWriMo. (My sense of timing is, as usual, inexplicable: the nonprofit organization that formed around NaNoWriMo announced a few days ago that it is shutting down.) I've never been interested in trying to cram an entire novel's worth of writing into 30 days, but I'm sure there's something to be said for how that strategy forces you to seek out a productive flow state. I did glean a few tips on how to access creative juices on days when it feels like the well has run dry, but much of the advice concerns hitting specific word count targets, which I find off-putting.
The other book, The Happy Writer by Marissa Meyer (author of the Lunar Chronicles, which I had no idea was a NaNoWriMo product), had tips for a more sustainable pursuit of the craft. Like many of the books I've read so far this year, this project started out as a podcast, and both books include words of advice from other successful authors. Part I talks about how to seek ideas and spark creativity, so there's some thematic overlap there. Part II contains good strategies for overcoming distraction and procrastination in any endeavor, not just writing. Part III presented the ideas that really challenged me - references to narrative structure, and how to formulate an outline that helps to achieve that structure. I've always been what the author refers to here as a "Pantser" instead of a "Plotter" (and I do have to say, I much prefer my DM's terms of "Gardener" and "Architect") - someone who figures out what the story is by writing it and seeing what happens, knowing the destination but not the shape of the journey. So actually thinking about narrative structure explicitly instead of intuitively is something that I'm sure I will find helpful... in my second draft.
I didn't read Parts IV-VI because they targeted the business of being a professional writer, instead of someone doing a one-off project on a lark, but overall I would characterize the Meyer book as much informative and helpful than the Baty one, which largely consists of irreverent cheerleading.
One was No Plot? No Problem! by Chris Baty, the original founder of NaNoWriMo. (My sense of timing is, as usual, inexplicable: the nonprofit organization that formed around NaNoWriMo announced a few days ago that it is shutting down.) I've never been interested in trying to cram an entire novel's worth of writing into 30 days, but I'm sure there's something to be said for how that strategy forces you to seek out a productive flow state. I did glean a few tips on how to access creative juices on days when it feels like the well has run dry, but much of the advice concerns hitting specific word count targets, which I find off-putting.
The other book, The Happy Writer by Marissa Meyer (author of the Lunar Chronicles, which I had no idea was a NaNoWriMo product), had tips for a more sustainable pursuit of the craft. Like many of the books I've read so far this year, this project started out as a podcast, and both books include words of advice from other successful authors. Part I talks about how to seek ideas and spark creativity, so there's some thematic overlap there. Part II contains good strategies for overcoming distraction and procrastination in any endeavor, not just writing. Part III presented the ideas that really challenged me - references to narrative structure, and how to formulate an outline that helps to achieve that structure. I've always been what the author refers to here as a "Pantser" instead of a "Plotter" (and I do have to say, I much prefer my DM's terms of "Gardener" and "Architect") - someone who figures out what the story is by writing it and seeing what happens, knowing the destination but not the shape of the journey. So actually thinking about narrative structure explicitly instead of intuitively is something that I'm sure I will find helpful... in my second draft.
I didn't read Parts IV-VI because they targeted the business of being a professional writer, instead of someone doing a one-off project on a lark, but overall I would characterize the Meyer book as much informative and helpful than the Baty one, which largely consists of irreverent cheerleading.
#9: John Scalzi, Starter Villain
Apr. 1st, 2025 07:51 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This is escapist contemporary action/adventure fantasy in the same vein as the book that preceded it, The Kaiju Preservation Society, but this one was less quippy and a shade or two darker, so I didn't enjoy it quite as much. I guess I'd still take it over most James Bond films, though.
Content notes: dead mother backstory, ridiculous funeral shenanigans, sudden violence.
Content notes: dead mother backstory, ridiculous funeral shenanigans, sudden violence.
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This final book of the trilogy neatly wraps up all of the plot threads introduced earlier in the series while also being completely unpredictable from one page to the next. It even circles back, at last, to the court of The Goblin Emperor himself. I'll preserve my character name cheat sheet (up to four dozen lines by now) in the hopes that we haven't seen the last of Celehar and his friends.
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I liked this one more than the other Clark stories I've tried, probably because it's working hard to be funny on top of everything else. Still pretty horrific, though.
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Found-family high-stakes space adventures! I really hope the author writes more of these. The protagonists reminded me a lot of my D&D characters, if only they existed in a sci-fi setting.
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If Space Opera was The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, then this is Life, the Universe and Everything - erratic, baffling, and easily mistaken for a repurposed Doctor Who script. The spaceship even looks like a casual dining establishment.
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Anaïs Nin wrote that we don’t see things as they are; we see them as we are.
The conceit of this book is that it reviews the spectrum of human experience, from cave paintings to the internet, but it's really a way for an anxious, thoughtful, middle-aged man to reflect on what he loves (and occasionally loathes) about life. It was largely written after the COVID outbreak and before the vaccine was available, which lends an extra poignancy to many of the entries.
Because the concept of The Anthropocene Reviewed started out as a podcast, I can particularly recommend the audiobook format: it includes a couple of chapters not available in the printed version, including one about the Kaua'i O-O, a now-extinct bird whose haunting and lonely cry was licensed for the recording. However, the paperback and ebook releases also include bonus chapters written after the audiobook and hardcover editions were published.
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This is the story of Nadya, who lived for years in an underwater world before being "rescued" and brought to Eleanor West's school. We already saw in the third book, Beneath The Sugar Sky, how she left our world behind for good, but this shows us the life that she returned to, and why she was sure enough to have gone there in the first place. I didn't much care for her the first time we met, but I learned to love her here.
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This was a very interesting book that I nonetheless felt would have been more effective as a podcast. Its main focus is the DART spacecraft, a test mission which changed the trajectory of an asteroid in late 2022. But it also engages in several sidetracks and diversions along the way, including complete spoilers for the 2021 movie "Don’t Look Up”, which I hadn't yet seen. And the author interviews a wide range of scientists and engineers, whose voices could have easily lent themselves to an episodic audio presentation. Still, it is almost certainly the definitive source for understanding the current state of the art with regards to the prospect of saving our planet from an asteroid impact, as opposed to the ridiculous antics featured in popular movies.
(2024) read: 56 / goal: 52 / JRI: 16/12
Dec. 30th, 2024 11:45 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Total number of (new to me) books read is slightly up from last year, which is surprising considering how many Valdemar books I reread this year. (Storygraph thinks that I read 83 books this year, including rereads and minor works.)
I'm also pleased to see my Just Read It count is way up, meaning that I've made good progress on my eternal backlog. Just don't ask how many of them I repurchased in order to get them on my Kindle... and that's going to be a continuing trend as long as most of my own books are in storage.
I'm also pleased to see my Just Read It count is way up, meaning that I've made good progress on my eternal backlog. Just don't ask how many of them I repurchased in order to get them on my Kindle... and that's going to be a continuing trend as long as most of my own books are in storage.
# | JRI | Author | Title | ✭ | Series |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Naomi Kritzer | Liberty's Daughter | 4 | ||
2 | X | Steven Levy | Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution | 3 | |
3 | Christopher Rowe | The Navigating Fox | 4 | ||
4 | Claire L. Evans | Broad Band: The Untold Story of the Women Who Made the Internet | 4 | ||
5 | Emily Tesh | Some Desperate Glory | 3 | ||
6 | Katie Hafner & Matthew Lyon | Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet | 4 | ||
7 | Mercedes Lackey | Beyond | 4 | Founding of Valdemar #1 | |
8 | Mercedes Lackey | Into the West | 3 | Founding of Valdemar #2 | |
9 | Mercedes Lackey | Valdemar | 4 | Founding of Valdemar #3 | |
10 | Seanan McGuire | Mislaid in Parts Half-Known | 4 | Wayward Children #9 | |
11 | Tracy Kidder | The Soul of a New Machine | 3 | ||
12 | John Scalzi | The Kaiju Preservation Society | 4 | ||
13 | X | Mercedes Lackey | Brightly Burning | 3 | |
14 | X | Mercedes Lackey | Take a Thief | 4 | |
15 | Haruki Murakami | Absolutely on Music: Conversations with Seiji Ozawa | 3 | ||
16 | Melissa Scott | Burning Bright | 4 | ||
17 | X | Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman | Dragons of Autumn Twilight | 3 | Dragonlance Chronicles #1 |
18 | Nicole Kornher-Stace | Firebreak | 4 | ||
19 | Cory Doctorow | Red Team Blues | 4 | Martin Hench #1 | |
20 | X | R.A. Salvatore | The Woods Out Back | 3 | Spearwielder's Tale #1 |
21 | X | R.A. Salvatore | The Dragon's Dagger | 3 | Spearwielder's Tale #2 |
22 | X | R.A. Salvatore | The Haggis Hunters | 3 | Spearwielder's Tale #3 |
23 | Ann Leckie | Lake of Souls: The Collected Short Fiction | 4 | ||
24 | X | Rhea Seddon | Go for Orbit: One of America's First Women Astronauts Finds Her Space | 4 | |
25 | X | Hayao Miyazaki | Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Vol. 1 | 3 | |
26 | X | Hayao Miyazaki | Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Vol. 2 | 3 | |
27 | X | Hayao Miyazaki | Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Vol. 3 | 3 | |
28 | X | Hayao Miyazaki | Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Vol. 4 | 3 | |
29 | Grace Curtis | Floating Hotel | 3 | ||
30 | Nghi Vo | The Brides of High Hill | 3 | Singing Hills Cycle #5 | |
31 | Clara Törnvall | The Autists: Women on the Spectrum | 4 | ||
32 | Mike Massimino | Moonshot: A NASA Astronaut's Guide to Achieving the Impossible | 5 | ||
33 | Judith Kolberg & Kathleen G. Nadeau | ADD-Friendly Ways to Organize Your Life | 4 | ||
34 | X | Mercedes Lackey | Owlflight | 4 | Darian's Tale #1 |
35 | X | Mercedes Lackey | Owlsight | 4 | Darian's Tale #2 |
36 | X | Mercedes Lackey | Owlknight | 4 | Darian's Tale #3 |
37 | Mercedes Lackey | Gryphon in Light | 3 | Kelvren's Saga #1 | |
38 | Tracy Otsuka | ADHD for Smart Ass Women | 4 | ||
39 | Kristin Cashore | There Is A Door In This Darkness | 4 | ||
40 | T. Kingfisher | A Sorceress Comes to Call | 4 | ||
41 | Jonathan Strahan (ed.) | New Adventures in Space Opera | 3 | ||
42 | X | Douglas Adams with Mark Carwardine | Last Chance to See | 4 | |
43 | Adrian Tchaikovsky | Service Model | 2 | ||
44 | Phil Collins | Not Dead Yet | 3 | ||
45 | Kevin Jon Davies | 42: The Wildly Improbable Ideas of Douglas Adams | 3 | ||
46 | Geena Davis | Dying of Politeness | 3 | ||
47 | Kate Beaton | Hark! A Vagrant | 3 | ||
48 | Kate Beaton | Step Aside, Pops | 3 | ||
49 | Michael Witwer | Empire of Imagination: Gary Gygax and the Birth of Dungeons & Dragons | 3 | ||
50 | Daniel de Visé | The Blues Brothers: An Epic Friendship, the Rise of Improv, and the Making of an American Film Classic | 4 | ||
51 | Hayao Miyazaki | Shuna's Journey | 3 | ||
52 | Suzi Ronson | Me and Mr Jones: My Life with David Bowie and the Spiders from Mars | 3 | ||
53 | Ratey & Hallowell | Driven to Distraction: Recognizing and Coping with Attention Deficit Disorder | 3 | ||
54 | Lisa Mosconi | The Menopause Brain: The New Science Empowering Women to Navigate Midlife with Knowledge and Confidence | 3 | ||
55 | Marty Sklar | One Little Spark: Mickey's Ten Commandments and The Road to Imagineering | 3 | ||
56 | Peter S. Beagle | I'm Afraid You've Got Dragons | 3 |
#43: Adrian Tchaikovsky, Service Model
Dec. 12th, 2024 06:05 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
There are some interesting ideas here but taken altogether as a story, this did not work for me at all - in fact I almost ragequit multiple times.
That said, I did enjoy another story of his, Elder Race, and plan to read his Children of Time series at some point.
That said, I did enjoy another story of his, Elder Race, and plan to read his Children of Time series at some point.
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I finished reading this last month but waited to review it until I had also finished watching the 6 episode miniseries of the same name, filmed 20 years later with Stephen Fry taking the "bemused Brit" role.
The TV series does more to showcase the various critically endangered species and the people who are trying to save them, so it is superior in that sense. But the book contains some of Adams' best comedy writing, made all the funnier by being nonfiction.
I attended a lecture Douglas Adams gave at MIT less than a year before he died. I rushed there straight from work, I didn't bring any of his books with me to get signed, and I just wasn't in the right headspace to appreciate it at the time... but I remember that he came with the promise that he could talk about anything he liked, and he talked about this book. He really cared about conservation.
Unfortunately, of the 6 species profiled in the book, one had already been declared extinct by the time the Fry series was filmed, and I believe at least one more is all but gone now.
(And yes, I saved this entry for #42 on purpose.)
The TV series does more to showcase the various critically endangered species and the people who are trying to save them, so it is superior in that sense. But the book contains some of Adams' best comedy writing, made all the funnier by being nonfiction.
I attended a lecture Douglas Adams gave at MIT less than a year before he died. I rushed there straight from work, I didn't bring any of his books with me to get signed, and I just wasn't in the right headspace to appreciate it at the time... but I remember that he came with the promise that he could talk about anything he liked, and he talked about this book. He really cared about conservation.
Unfortunately, of the 6 species profiled in the book, one had already been declared extinct by the time the Fry series was filmed, and I believe at least one more is all but gone now.
(And yes, I saved this entry for #42 on purpose.)