Fading Memories

About

Ramblings about books and other things that will soon fade from my memory.

Boudewijn Rempt

index | rss1.0

There's more...

Creative Commons License
The original artwork is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Roundabout through identi.ca

    follow me on Identi.ca

    Categories, too

    Find


    Archives

    Other things here at valdyas.org

    2006-12-20

    The First Betrayal

    Patricia Bray

    Buy this book

    I had to go to hospital for a small operation (that nonetheless entailed my first night in a hospital), so I had to have some light reading. This book looked like the most likely satisfying on the fantasy and science fiction shelves of the local bookshop. I had never heard of the author, which is a plus for me, and the world building seemed quite nice, even if a little derivative, with strong echoes of late Byzantium and a map that looked a bit like the Black Sea. And despite being the first of a series, it didn't seem the usual hackneyed first part of a polylogy, but a rounded story.

    Turns out that it was good choice: there are interesting people in the book, shades of moral good and bad, the world building is as interesting as it seemed at first blush, the intrigue is complex, but not too complex for my nose-stuffed-up-with-sponges-and-bandaged self. Only near the end it seemed as if Patricia Bray got into trouble: she has set up her various plotlines so that there simply isn't good or bad anymore and it becomes difficult to emphathize with any of the protagonists. But that's quite realistic, too, and the depictions of imperial politics, while not quite as convincing as, say, Psellus (who really was in the thick of it), are convincing.

    Another strong point: the main protagonist's condition remained a mystery to me for as long as it remained a mystery to himself, despite carefully crafted hints. To me that shows that this is a well-crafted story. I'm looking forward to the second story about Josan -- even though the preview at the back seems to hint that he won't survive the first twenty pages.


    2005-10-14

    American Gods

    Neil Gaiman

    Buy this book at Amazon

    Oh dear... Someone has been reading Frazer's Golden Bough again, And where Wrede and Stevermer's The Grand Tour is fun with dark edges, American Gods is weirdness with leaden edges.

    It's the kind of book you open, and then suddenly find that you've read sixty, maybe a hundred pages without the text leaving much of an impression. Fluent wordwooze, was my impression. And then it starts to get seriously weird and complicated.

    Not to mention philosophical, but you need to bring a lot more than rehashed nineteenth century scholarly superstitions to faze me (fortunately the book has a happy ending, even if the bit just before the ending is just as unsatisfying as the ending to Cryptonomicon.) But I'm not impressed by a comparison between a television and an altar. That's been done before, on Dutch television, too, or so I am told, not having one of the machines myself.

    But in the end, a well-constructed story with some very interesting people in it -- it's just that I wish that these books would have an ending that was as good as the middle.


    2004-10-26

    Going Postal

    By Terry Pratchett

    I still buy every new Terry Pratchett as soon as it is published. Only... With this one, I hadn't noticed until someone mentioned it on the rec.arts.sf.composition newsgroup. I must be losing my grip -- or Terry Pratchett is losing his grip on me. That's a possibility, too.

    Read more ...


    2004-09-29

    The Assassins of Tamurin

    S.D. Tower

    I really wanted to like this book, no, I wanted to love it. It's that _rara avis_ a single-volume fantasy book, set in a world of its own, not a bastardized Ye Olde or Ye Nowadaisy England. The world building is of a high order, better than mine. There are hints of China, but also of India, and many, many details that are quite unique, such as the names of plants and animals, many aspects of culture (such as the particular kind of ancestor worship) and religion.

    Read more ...


    2004-08-21

    Cryptonomicon, by Neal Stephenson

    I finally found an edition of Cryptonomicon that was actually luggable. I'll be waiting a few years for Quicksilver and other, more recent Stephenson books to come out in a similarly handy format. I really hate the big trade paperback format. But I'll probably buy more Stephenson books, something I wasn't so sure about after finishing Diamond Age. But when I found Cryptonomicon I knew I had to give it a chance, if only because of the unanimous recommendation of my colleagues at Tryllian.

    Read more ...


    2004-07-25

    Singularity Sky, by Charles Stross

    Having hung out on rec.arts.sf.composition for quite some time, Charlie Stross is not an unknown to me; besides, his blog is in my blogroll. So when Singularity Sky turned up in the local bookshop in Deventer, I didn't hesitate to buy my copy. It is, by the way, quite a measure of success to get your books into the four metres of English language science fiction and fantasy Praamstra stocks.

    Read more ...


    2004-04-26

    Juniper, Gentian and Rosemary

    Pamela Dean

    Pamela Dean used to frequent the rec.arts.sf.composition newsgroup with some regularity some time ago, and any number of times she has helped other people with issues with pacing in their work. Which she's very well equipped to do, since she's a master in that art herself.

    Read more ...


    2004-03-03

    The Interior Life

    Katherine Blake (Dorothy J. Heydt)

    The Interior Life is a rather strange book, in many respects. It tells the story of a supposedly ordinary American housewife, a none-too-bright stay-at-home mom who married her high-school sweetheart. She has three children, a front and a back lawn, and, when the story starts, a very dirty house.

    Read more ...


    2004-02-21

    Out of Time

    By Lynn Abbey

    To start with, Out of Time is part one, of three, but it doesn't say so anywhere that I could find. That's rather sneaky, because there are plenty people like me and Irina who never buy trilogies if they can help it. Trilogies nowadays are almost inevitably over-written, overly detailed, rather boring romps through enough plot for a novelette padded and stretched into three volumes.

    Read more ...


    2004-02-11

    Grunts

    Mary Gentle

    Time and again I try again to read something by Mary Gentle. Her Usenet persona is so engaging -- even though also a little bit tactless and clowning -- that I figure her books must be great. And others do think them great, definitely. So there must be good stuff in them.

    Read more ...