Wed, 03 Feb 2010
Chindi, by Jack McDevitt, copyright 2002 by Cryptic, Inc; ISBN 0-441-00938-7.
I enjoyed this. I'll have to look for his other books.
Thu, 31 Dec 2009
The January Dancer (sp?), by Michael Flynn.
I liked this, although I'd early put down another Flynn novel that I didn't like well enough to finish.
Iron Sunrise, by Charles Stross.
I liked this one too. I'm going back and reading some of Stross's work that I missed when it first came out.
Thu, 17 Dec 2009
In the Stormy Red Sky, by David Drake, copyright 2009; Baen Books/Baen Publishing Enterprise; May 2009; ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-9159-7.
This is the seventh in The RCN Series featuring Daniel Leary and Adele Mundy.
Fri, 11 Dec 2009
The Revolution Business, by Charles Stross, copyright 2009; Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, LLC; April 2009; ISBN-13: 987-0-7653-1672-1.
In the fifth in Stross's Merchant Princes series, things go from bad to worse.
Mon, 30 Nov 2009
- Where Serpents Sleep, a Sebastian St. Cyr mystery.
- What Angel's Fear, a Sebastian St. Cyr mystery.
- Relentless
- The Gripping Hand
- Bone Crossed
- Slaves of the Shinar
Sat, 08 Aug 2009
- Absolution Gap, by Alastair Reynolds, copyright 2003; Ace/The Berkeley Publishing Group/Penguin Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc./Penguin Books Ltd; first Ace mass paperback edition June 2005; 4th printing; ISBN 0-441-01291-4.
Mon, 06 Jul 2009
The Mote in God's Eye, by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, copyright 1974; A Timescape Book/Pocet Books/Simon & Shulster/Gulf & Western Corporation, October 1974; 15th printing; ISBN: 0-671-43403-9.
Have I read the sequel? I can't remember.
Fri, 03 Jul 2009
All Tomorrow's Parties, by William Gibson, copyright 1999; Berkley Books/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Putnam Inc.; Berkley mass-market edition January 2003; ISBN: 0-425-19044-7.
The end of Gibson's Bridge series. Good to see Chevette and Rydell again.
Mon, 29 Jun 2009
- Virtual Light, by William Gibson; copyright 1993; A Bantam Spectra Book/Bantam/Bantam Doubleday Dell PUblishing Group, Inc. Bantam Paperback edition, August 1994; ISBN 0-553-566-06-7.
Tue, 23 Jun 2009
Burning Chrome, by William Gibson, copyright 1986; preface copyright 1986 by Bruce Sterling; Ace Books/The Berkley Publishing House; October 1987; ISBN 0-441-08934-9.
The last of Gibson's Sprawl trilogy. Now if I could only find my copy of Neuromancer.
Mon, 22 Jun 2009
- Count Zero, by William Gibson; copyright 1986; Ace Science Fiction Books/The Berkley Publishing Group, April 1987; ISBN: 0-441-11773-2.
Sat, 13 Jun 2009
The Forest of Peldanin, by Barrington J. Bayley; copyright 1985; DAW Books, first printing, August 1985; DAW Collectors' Book No. 640; ISBN 0-88677-068-8.
I've owned this for years, but I think this may be the first time I've read it.
Wed, 10 Jun 2009
- The Court of the Air, by Stephen Hunt, copyright 2007; Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.; 1st U.S. Mass Market Edition, April 2009; ISBN-13: 978-0-7653-6022-0, ISBN-10: 0-7653-6022-5.
Mon, 08 Jun 2009
The Soul of the Robot, by Barrington J. Baley, copyright 1974; Condor, March 1978; published by arrangment with Doubleday & Company, Inc; ISBN 0-895160161-1.
I ran across this book as a child, in a local library. It was shelved in the children's section, which, considering some of the content, was probably a mistake. In any case, it was one of the formative science fiction novels of my childhood.
Recently I found out that there was a sequel to this, published many years afterward, and bought a copy.
Thu, 04 Jun 2009
Endless Blue, by Wen Spencer, copyright 2007; A Baen Books Original/Baen Publishing Enterprises; June 2009; ISBN: 978-1-4391-3271-5.
Starts very much in medias res. Interesting. Mentions two other Baen books by Wen Spencer:
- Tinker
- Wolf Who Rules
Have to look them up.
Sun, 31 May 2009
- Redemption Ark, by Alastair Reynolds, copyright 2002; Ace Books/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc./The Penguin Group/Penguin Books Ltd; Ace mass market edition, June 2004, 7th printing; ISBN: 978-0-441-01173-5.
Thu, 28 May 2009
The Merchants' War, subtitle:Book Four of the Merchant Princes, copyright 2007 by Charles Stross; Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, LLC; 1st mass market edition October 2008; ISBN-10: 0-7653-5589-2, ISBN-13: 978-0-7653-5589-2.
Another enjoyable entry in Stross's alternate universes series.
The Steel Remains, copyright 2009 by Richard Morgan; Ballantine Books/Del Rey/Random House Publishing Group/Random House Inc; ISBN 978-0-345-49303-3.
An interesting non-{extruded fantasy product} fantasy.
The Draco Tavern, copyright 2006 by Larry Niven; Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, LLc; 1st edition January 2006; ISBN 0-765-30863.
Somehow I completely missed all of the series:Draco Tavern stories until reading this compilation. Niven is still one of my favorite science fiction authors, and I enjoyed these tremendously.
Deader Still, copyright 2009 by Anton Strout; Ace Books/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc/Penguin Books Ltd; Ace mass-market edition March 2009; ISBN 978-0-441-01691-4.
I found the main character of this supernatural adventure interesting, but also annoying at times.
Sun, 10 May 2009
The Ends of the Circle, by Paul O. Williams, copyright 1981; Del Rey/Ballantine Books, April 1981; ISBN 0-345-29551-X. Book Two of The Pelbar Cycle
This was the book in the series that I read first, many years ago. I'm in the process of rereading the series in order for the first time.
Wed, 06 May 2009
The Breaking of Northwall, by Paul O. Williams, copyright 1981; Del Rey/Ballantine Books, First Edition February 1981, Fifth Printing October 1984; ISBN 0-345-32434-X. Cover art by Darrel K. Sweet, Map by Chris Barbieri. Book One of The Pelbar Cycle.
Back in the eighties, when these were first published, I read the second book of The Pelbar Cycle before I read this, the first book, and I remember it was a little bit hearing legends in the second book, and then getting to meet some of the legends in the first book.
I like books these for the interesting post apocalypse societies.
Tue, 28 Apr 2009
Traveller, by Marc Miller & Game Designers' Workshop, copyright 1977, 1981 by Game Designer's Workshop. Books 1–3, The Basic Books, Classic Traveller Reprint Series, copyright 2001 by Far Future Enterprises; a joint publication of Far Future Enterprises and QuikLink Interactive, ISBN 1-55878-218-4. “The Olympia Incident” by Martin J. Dougherty.
This is a reprint of the 1981 second edition of Traveller, along with a little bit about the publishing history of Traveller, and a short story, “The Olympia Incident”, set in the Traveller universe.
When I was first getting into gaming, I remember going on a trip to Morgantown, WV with my brother and some of his friends from high school who were in the gaming group that I'd recently joined. We visited a couple of places that sold gaming materials, and one of the group, R.S. if I remember correctly, bought a copy of Traveller. I remember reading the books in his basement rec room and trying to make characters. Unfortunately, at that point the only RPGs that our group had seen were variants of D&D (T&T and DQ were still a couple years away), and I, at least, never really figured out Traveller and what you could do with it, and, again if I remember correctly, our group never did much with Traveller.
Something must have struck a cord, however, because over the years I bought several editions of the game, from Megatraveller to Traveller: the New Era (also known as T:NE), to GURPS Traveller, to Marc Miller's Traveller (also known as T4), and even including 2300AD, which was originally published as Traveller: 2300, even though the mechanics and setting were in no way related to the Traveller mechanics or setting. Many of this I probably picked up during a long period where I wasn't doing any gaming, and just reading game books. (This would almost certainly have been before the explosion of RPG stores on the net.) I probably picked Megatraveller up after it was out of print; my copy seems to have the (infamous) errata fixed. I may have picked up T:NE when it first came out. I know I picked up almost all of the GURPS Traveller books as they came out. I'm sure I picked up 2300AD off the discount rack. I remember being saddened when GDW closed their doors, although that was in part due to really enjoying their Space: 1889 line and Frank Chadwick's Cadillacs & Dinosaurs RPG, based on Mark Schultz's comic books, which I had read and enjoyed. I never got a chance to play any of GDW's games while they were still in operation, but have always wanted to play a game with Space: 1889's background. I never figured out what to do with Traveller, though. I came closest with GURPS Traveller, having enjoyed playing GURPS before my gaming hiatus. I enjoyed reading all the GURPS Traveller books, but I had no gaming group at that time.
Anyway, years later, after I'd gotten back to gaming regularly, in 2007, I had been reading about a number of people who had been playing Classic Traveller, which is what folks called the original system, with or without the Traveller Universe. They praised the game for its simplicity and completeness and for its relatively small size. I had know about the Far Future Enterprises Classic Traveller reprint line, but couldn't afford them when they first came out. I did, however, find a an inexpensive reprint of just Books 1–3, published jointly by Far Future Enterprises and QuikLink Interactive (also know as QLI/RPGRealms), and I ordered it in October 2007. After some problems with QLI's order system, I finally received my copy in November, 2007. It was a reprint of the 1981 2nd edition of Traveller, which apparently cleaned up the rules a little bit. I read it quickly, and my reaction was: “Huh. Why didn't we play the heck out of this back in high school? I could see playing this today and having a blast!” I liked the basic simplicity of the system, having moved away from complex systems like GURPS to systems that were much simpler, like Savage Worlds.
Sometime later I got Mongoose Publishing's new edition of Traveller,and though it was a reasonable version. Certainly it was closest of any system to the original, definitely since Megatraveller, and possibly since the original itself. And the fact Mongoose released it with several licenses that allowed free use of the system, and some use of the background made it more attractive. It prompted me to go back and read most of my other versions of Traveller, including the FFE/QLI reprint of Books 1–3. After looking at them all, it was Classic Traveller I wanted to play. Since then I've gathered some of the original Traveller publications, and a couple volumes of the FFE reprint volumes. (I wish they were all still in print.)
I'm going to have to run a Classic Traveller game sometime soon.
Thu, 09 Apr 2009
The Gifts of the Gorboduc Vandal, by Paul O. Williams, copyright 1989; Del Rey/Ballantine Books, May 1989; ISBN 0-345-35597-0.
An interesting science fiction novel by the author of the post-apocalyptic Pelbar Cycle series of novels. Like the Pelbar novels, I enjoyed this more for the ideas than the style.
Apparently there is a sequel to this, The Man from Far Cloud, published in 2004. I really ought to see about finding a copy.
Mon, 06 Apr 2009
Accelerando, by Charles Stross, copyright 2005; Ace/The Berkley Publishing Groupo/Penguin Group (USA) Inc./Penguin Books Ltd., July 2006; ISBN 0-441-01415-1.
Crash! Bang! Ouch! The idea of sentient corporations and ponzi schemes taking over makes this a dystopia to me. Very interesting, however; and quite dense.
Mon, 23 Mar 2009
- Jennifer Morgue, by Charles Stross, copyright 2006; Golden Gryphon Press, 2006; ISBN 1-930846-45-2. The follow-up to his The Atrocity Archives.
Fri, 13 Mar 2009
Mon, 09 Mar 2009
The Black Tower, by Louis Bayard; William Morrow, 2008.
The Cardinal's Heir, by Jaki Demarest; Medallion Press, 2004.
Hellboy: Oddest Jobs, edited by Christopher Golden, illustrated by Mike Mignola.
I suppose it's odd that I've still not read more than one or two Hellboy comics. I really ought to get some of the compilations.
The Fox, by Sherwood Smith; DAW Books/Penguin Group; 2007. Sequel to Inda.
Sat, 28 Feb 2009
Revelation Space ,by Alastair Reynolds, copyright © 2000 by Orion Publishing Group; Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc./Penguin Books Ltd.; June 2002; 15th printing; ISBN 978-0-441-00942-8.
I haven't read as much science fiction as I once did, but I've been reading more of it again in the last year or so. I got Reynolds' Pushing Ice from the library, and enjoyed it, so I bought Revelation Space, and was hooked.
Tue, 10 Feb 2009
- The Lost Fleet: Courageous, by Jack Campbell, copyright 2008 by John G. Henry; Ace/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc/Penguin Books Ltd; January 2008; ISBN 978-0-441-10567-2.
- The Lost Fleet: Valiant, by Jack Campbell, copyright 2008 by John G. Henry; Ace/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc/Penguin Books Ltd; July 2008; ISBN 978-0-441-01619-8.
Mon, 09 Feb 2009
- The Lost Fleet: Dauntless, by Jack Campbell, copyright 2006 by John. G. Henry writing as Jack Campbell; Ace/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc/Penguin Books Ltd; July 2006; ISBN 0-441-01418-6.
- The Lost Fleet: Fearless, by Jack Campbell, copyright 2007 by John. G. Henry; Ace/The Berkley Publishing Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc/Penguin Books Ltd; February 2007; ISBN 978-0-441-01476-7.
Tue, 13 Jan 2009
- Pushing Ice, by Alastair Reynolds, copyright 2005; Ace/The Berkley
Publishing Group/The Penguin Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc., June 2006, ISBN 0-441-01401-1.
Sun, 11 Jan 2009
Saturn's Children, A Space Opera by Charles Stross, copyright 2008; Ace Books/The Berkley Publishing Group/The Penguin Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc., July 2008; ISBN 978-0-441-01594-8. Bridgeport Public Library.
Despite the cover (which I suppose was appropriate to the content of the book, but still was rather off-putting) I enjoyed this.
Sat, 10 Jan 2009
Bad Monkeys, by Matt Ruff, copyright 2007; HarperPerennial/HarperCollins Publisher; first Harper Perennial edition published 2008; ISBN 978-0-06-124041-6. Bridgeport Public Library.
This book listed three others by Matt Ruff: Set This House in Order, Fool on the Hill, Sewer, Gas & Electric; I think I should check them out.
Wed, 07 Jan 2009
The Dark Heart of Time, by Philip José Farmer, copyright © 1999 by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc.; Del Rey/The Ballantine Publishing Group/Random House, Inc.; 1st edition, 1st printing, June 1999; ISBN 0-345-42463-8.
It's been a while since I've read any of Burrough's Tarzan books, so I can't compare styles, but certainly in inventiveness and subject matter Farmer did a good job with this story. I've always been fond of Farmer's various different takes on Tarzan, whether an authorized pastiche like this one, a deconstruction, an alternate mythology, or a backstory element [1].
I really should complete my collection of Tarzan novels, though.
| [1] | See Hadon of Ancient Opar and its sequel, Flight to Opar. |
Wed, 24 Dec 2008
Watchmen, by written by Alan Moore, illustrated and lettered by Dave Gibbons, coloured by John Higgins; copyright © 1986, 1987 DC Comics, Inc.; Book Club edition; no ISBN listed. Originally published in twelve issues in magazine form in 1986 & 1987.
Knowing that there was a Watchman movie in the works, I decided to re-read the comic. I enjoyed it again.
Wed, 19 Nov 2008
Psycho Shop, by Alfred Bester and Roger Zelazny, copyright 1998 by the Alfred Bester Estate and the Amber Corporation; Introduction copyright 1998 by Greg Bear; Vintage Original/Byron Preiss Visual Publications, Inc./Random House; July, 1998; first edtion; paperback; ISBN 0-679-76782-7.
An interesting posthumous collaboration between the deceased Alfred Bester and Roger Zelazny, now also, alas, deceased. I wish both of them had lived longer and written more.
Sat, 08 Nov 2008
Non-Stop, by Brian W. Aldiss, Copyright 1958, 1959, 1987 by Brian W. Aldiss; Carroll & Graf, 1989; bookclub edition.
This was actually homework for a Metamorphosis Alpha game I intend to play with the kids, but quite enjoyable. I thought I might have read it before, but I certainly didn't remember any of it. (Did I read it as a kid myself? Quite possible.)
Now I need to find more generation ship novels and movies. Any suggestions?
Thu, 28 Aug 2008
I saw Iron Man a while back, before I saw Batman: the Dark Knight. I actually read Iron Man decades ago as a preteen and teen, but can't claim any more than a casual acquaintance. In any case, I ended up liking the movie. It didn't make some of the mistakes I thought it might. I'm looking forwarad to the sequel.
I don't see many movies in the theatres any more. I ought to keep better track of which ones I've seen.
Sat, 05 Jul 2008
I recently decided that I need to read Heinlein's juvenile novels. I'd read some of them in my youth (thanks to the Weston and Clarksburg public libraries), but not all, and I wondered how they would stand up in the 21st century to my middle-aged eyes, and how interesting they might be to younger eyes as well. (I'll have to wait a bit to see the later, though.)
Luckily, inexpensive compilations published by the Science Fiction Bookclub are easily available from online sellers, and I got four volumes that include all the juveniles, as well as Starship Troopers. Four Frontiers is the first of them.
Four Frontiers, by Robert A. Heinlein; First Science Fiction Book Club printing: June 2005. Published by arrangement with “The Robert A. & Virginia Heinlein Prize Trust” and “The Robert A. & Virginia Heinlein Library Foundation”, and Tor Books, and The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc. ISBN 0-7394-5345-9.
Rocket Ship Galileo, copyright 1947 by Robert A. Heinlein, copyright renewed 1974 by Robert A. Heinlein, Copyright 1988 by the Robert A. & Virginia Heinlein Library Foundation.
I had never read this one. As you might expect, the earliest is the roughest, and probably the least interesting to current crop of juveniles. It's still a fun adventure story, though current social mores would have made it impossible.
Space Cadet, copyright 1948 by Robert A. Heinlein, copyright renewed 1975 by Robert A. Heinlein, Copyright 1988 by the Robert A. & Virginia Heinlein Library Foundation.
I can't remember reading this one, but may have. It's interesting how much of this is about learning to deal with others, which moves from dealing with other cadets to, eventually, dealing with aliens. Knowledge, brains, and morals win out over brains, money, and greed.
Red Planet, copyright 1949 by Robert A. Heinlein, copyright renewed 1976 by Robert A. Heinlein, Copyright 2003 by the Robert A. & Virginia Heinlein Library Foundation.
I'm almost positive that I'd read this one, but if so I'd forgotten how subversive it was. And I love the skating, for some reason. (I don't skate myself.)
Farmer in the Sky, copyright 1950 by Robert A. Heinlein, copyright renewed 1977 by Robert A. Heinlein, Copyright 2003 by the Robert A. & Virginia Heinlein Library Foundation.
This situation on earth in this one, sadly, looks more and more likely.
There's a fair amount of discussion of the actual technology of space travel and related planetary science in these first four books, and that's probably what has aged the worst. The adventures are still fun, and I think an open-minded juvenile could still enjoy them.
Note
This is a timewarp post.
Fri, 27 Jun 2008
Schismatrix Plus, Bruce Sterling
I figured out part way through this that I actually read this before. (Or rather, the Schismatrix part of it, since it's a collection of a novel and some related short stories.) Looking back at my log, I'd actually read it recently, just 3½ years ago. Worth rereading, though. I found them thought provoking.
Note
This is a timewarp post.
Powers of Two, copyright 2004 by Tim Powers, NESFA Press, 2004; ISBN: 1-886778-51-5.
The Skies Discrowned, copyright 1976 by Tim Powers, published by Laser Books; republished in slightly different form as Forsake the Sky by Tor Books, 1986.
- Epitaph in Rust, copyright 1976 by Tim Powers, published by
Laser Books; republished in corrected form as An Epitaph in Rust by NESFA Press, 1989.
These early novels by Tim Powers show little of the reality twisting genius of his later novels, but were still enjoyable.
Note
This is a timewarp post.