June 13, 2008
However... more...
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June 12, 2008
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June 11, 2008
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June 08, 2008
Who the heck is he, you ask? For shame!
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June 05, 2008
'Certainty I danced. Why would I not dance, pray?'
'Certainty you are to dance most uncommon graceful, I am sure. I only wondered. But did you indeed go about dancing?'
'I did. You have not travelled in Catalonia, sir, I believe?'
'Not I.' more...
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June 01, 2008
I had read this volume once previously, but picked it up again as I'm trying (desperately!) to catch up on the various series that I keep accumulating. Alas, with somebody like John Ringo (as with several other authors from Baen Books) this is proving difficult...since many churn these puppies out faster than I can consume them. Someday, someday... more...
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Inspired by this podcast mentioned by the folks at SF Signal, I hauled this book down for another read. I had read it once before, enjoyed the two introductions (one by Asimov, one by Ellison) immensely, but had kind of been left cold by the rest...I found the form (a screenplay) hard to handle.
This time around, I must have been in the right mindset. Because I found this to be the greatest science fiction movie never made. more...
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The Martian General's Daughter, Theodore Judson
All Tomorrow's Parties, William Gibson
Oath of Fealty, Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle
In progress:
Pattern Recognition, William Gibson
Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Douglas R. Hofstadter.
Consciousness Explained, Daniel C. Dennett.
On deck:
Extraordinary Relationships, Roberta Gilbert.
Suite Francaise, Irene Nemerovsky.
Soul Made Flesh: The Discovery of the Brain--and How it Changed the World, Carl Zimmer.
Spook Country, William Gibson.
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Short story count for the year? 255 short stories (goal for the end of the month was to get to 152).
While the numbers look good, I still feel like I'm reading a lot less these days. Maybe it is time to unsubscribe from a few internet timesinks!
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May 28, 2008
Somewhat jokingly I suggested that, in the spirit of their programs to give free books to members of the military and free books to disabled readers, they ought to give free books to the crew of the ISS.
Gee...maybe I should have suggested they give me a book contract. Because it appears they listened to me!
(I can't complain. They get free books, and I got a free Baen Books apron and a bunch of bookmarks and a sheet of autographed bookplates!)
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May 27, 2008
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Just about the same time that I learned the sad news that Robert Asprin had passed away, I was finishing up this book. Meisha Merlin had put out two omnibus editions (this one is made up of Another Fine Myth, Myth Conceptions, Myth Directions, Hit or Myth, Myth-ing Persons and Little Myth Marker); shortly afterwards, Meisha Merlin went under. What is it with small publishers and this series? It's a curse, I tell you...
The first volume is the tale of Skeeve, an apprentice magician and Aahz, a demon. Skeeve's teacher summons Aahz to impress Skeeve, but not only ends up dead but has a hand in Aahz losing his powers. Toss in a baby dragon, a demon hunter, a beautiful assassin, various sidekicks, a war unicorn, dimensional travel...and another magician who is trying to take things over. Lots of puns, lots of verbal jokes in names, each chapter is headed by a quote allegedly made by folks ranging from Hamlet to Bruce Lee to Laurel and Hardy and others.
Due to various unfortunate events (failing publishers, books going out of print, troubles with the IRS), this series never gained the widespread reputation that it should have. Sure we have Rowling. We have Pratchett. But the name of Asprin should have been as widely known. The books are a hoot 'n' a holler. They're fun. They're a riot. Seek them out.
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Smoke and Mirrors; Neil Gaiman (Harper Perennial; 2001; ISBN 0-06-093470-0; cover by J.K. Potter).
The review can now be found here.
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May 23, 2008
See thousands of Scalzi fans rending their copies of You're Not Fooling Anybody When You Take Your Laptop to a Coffee Shop into so much pulp! See the stock price of $tarbucks climb as those thousands of fans embrace coffee again!
The paradigm, she has shifted.
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Robert Asprin (1946-200
On May 22, 2008, Bob passed away quietly in his home in New Orleans, LA. He had been in good spirits and working on several new projects, and was set to be the Guest of Honor at a major science fiction convention that very weekend. He is survived by his mother, his sister, his daughter and his son, and his cat, Princess, not to mention countless friends and fans and numerous legendary fictional characters. He will be greatly missed.
Asprin should have been the "American Pratchett". He wrote great humorous science fiction and fantasy. His career was impacted by the Internal Revenue Service, which took his income from solo works for a long period. With the Thieves' World series, he helped to start the shared-world anthologies that so many publishers fell in love with. The MythAdventure series and the Phule series were both great examples of humorous genre fiction.
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May 05, 2008
And...toasted cheese in literature.
'Killick! Killick, there! Bear a hand.'
Killick's voice could be heard coming nearer: 'No peace, no bleeding peace in this barky,' and as the door opened, 'Sir?'
'Toasted cheese for the Doctor, half a dozen mutton-chops for me, and a couple of bottles of the Hermitage. D'ye hear me there? Now, Stephen, give me an A.'
They tuned their strings, that pleasant tentative wailing, and as they tuned he said, 'What do you say to our old Corelli in C major?'
'With all my heart,' said Stephen, poising his bow. He paused, and fixed Jack's eye with his own: they both nodded: he brought the bow down and the cello broke into its deep noble song, followed instantly by the piercing violin, dead true to the note. The music filled the great cabin, the one speaking to the other, both twining into one, the fiddle soaring alone: they were in the very heart of the intricate sound, the close lovely reasoning, and the ship and her burdens faded far, far from their minds.
(Patrick O'Brian, Desolation Island)
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May 03, 2008
Me, I tend to turn back to music and certain authors. Clifford D. Simak and Spider Robinson, among others, have helped me through previous periods of stress. And this seems to be shaping up to be a spring of stress, and no doubt will also be a summer of stress.
So, it is back to the bar. Back to Callahan's Place and Lady Sally's Place and Mary's Place and The Place. more...
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May 01, 2008
Virtual Light, William Gibson.
In progress:
Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Douglas R. Hofstadter. I'm really savoring this one this time around. It's taking me longer to read, but I am breaking it into more digestible chunks.
Consciousness Explained, Daniel C. Dennett.
On deck:
The Martian General's Daughter, Theodore Judson
Extraordinary Relationships, Roberta Gilbert.
Suite Francaise, Irene Nemerovsky. My wife loaned this one out, so I'll need to wait to start it later.
Soul Made Flesh: The Discovery of the Brain--and How it Changed the World, Carl Zimmer.
Spook Country, William Gibson.
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Eighteen books YTD! 187 short works!
Which is to say...there's good news and there's bad news. For short works, if the goal is one short a day, I needed to be at 121 stories by the end of April. So, I've exceeded that goal. For long form, 18 books is better than one book a month for a year, so I'm way ahead of 99.99% of the people I know (many barely manage a book a year, for all love). more...
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