Reviews and Comments

Ian Brown

igb@books.hccp.org

Joined 2 years, 3 months ago

XML apologist. Erlang enthusiast. Currently JVMs & Performance stuff at Netflix. Previously JVMs & performative stuff at Twitter. He/him.

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reviewed The Postmaster by Rabindranath Tagore (Penguin twentieth-century classics)

Rabindranath Tagore: The Postmaster (Paperback, 2000, Penguin Books)

Grim, full of death and disappointment,

Tough to read many of these. Children, husbands, wives, mothers, fathers...so many meet a sad end. Also wild to see the accepted practices of the world at the turn of the century. Worth a read, but buckle up and brace yourself for a rough go.

Annalee Newitz: The Terraformers (Hardcover, 2023, Tor Books)

From science fiction visionary Annalee Newitz comes The Terraformers, a sweeping, uplifting, and illuminating exploration …

.@annaleen@wandering.shop's epic tale of #enshittification on a geologic time scale.

A really wonderful take on colonization and identity. Fast paced and full of some truly original takes on technology and the balances (and imbalances) of power resulting from the dynamics of capitalism in a seemingly post-scarcity era.

Who owns the land? What is intelligence and what rights (if any) does intelligence deserve? What if naked mole rats could talk and what if Miyazaki's catbus was part of an anarchist collective that lived under an active volcano?

These and many other questions are wrestled with in the this light and heavy sci-fi gem.

Hugh Howey, Hugh Howey (duplicate): Shift (Paperback, 2016, John Joseph Adams/Mariner Books)

Shift happens.

Content warning Mild ones, really, but maybe read the book first.

John Scalzi: The Kaiju Preservation Society (Paperback, 2023, Tor Books)

I needed that!

Holy smokes! This was such a fun read by @scalzi@mastodon.social. Funny as hell, and with barely any tears. Maybe even no tears if you are a desiccated and empty shell like so many of us these days. Anyway, this book is brain-floss perfection, full of laughs and wit. The auther, per the note at the end, wrote this in 2021 after COVID and January 6th and writer's block and at least one existential crisis. Coincidentally I read this book after a week of the family and I, hundreds of miles from home and alledgedly on vacation, dealing with our second trip through COVID. I'd also just ripped through the first two books of Hugh Howey's "Silo" series ("Wool" & "Shift") while in the grips of the virus. Those are pretty heavy reads, and a mild fever only added to the emotional weight. This book was the perfect antidote to …

Hugh Howey (duplicate): Wool (2020, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company)

They live beneath the earth in a prison of their own making. There is a …

Wool? More like w00t! amirite?

Man, what a trip.

No spoilers, but in the Sci-Fi spectrum of humanity coming together in the face of apocalypse or everyone fro themselves (with Rebecca Solnit's "A Paradise Built in Hell" on one end, and parts of Atwood's "Oryx and Crake" or the edges of John Wyndham's works) "Wool" is decidedly on the sharp stick-end end of that scale.

Anyway, wonderfully paced, and great world-building. Excited for the next books in the trilogy!

John Wyndham: Trouble with Lichen (2022, Random House Publishing Group)

A strong open, and a big idea, is undone by a weak ending.

A strong open, and a big idea, is undone by a weak ending.

As usual, Wyndham takes a simple premise and peels it apart to tease out contradictions and consquences invisible from the surface. Buried within the prose are occasional aphorisms that apply nicely to our current predicaments. But, by far, the most striking aspect of this book, published in 1960, is how it reflects (and supports) that era's nascent feminist wave. Worth a read, even though it waters out in the last act.