Friday, August 31, 2012
For the Win (Cory Doctorow)
I didn't hate this book, but I gave up halfway through. It is about the gold farmers in online games - people, generally poor people in developing countries, who work long hours inside the games gathering treasure or leveling-up characters so that their bosses can sell them to rich, lazy players who don't want to work for their status. In the entire book (so far anyway) there is nobody we meet who is actually playing any of these games for fun. They are all either downtrodden, oppressed workers or cruel, tyrannical bosses. I know the book was written for a young-adult market, but even so this level of oversimplification was too much for me. That's not even to mention the frequent lengthy passages lecturing on economics, in the world and in the games. It is all one big sermon on the importance of unions, which is appropriate for Labor Day Weekend, I guess, but I've had enough now.
Labels:
computers,
economics,
not for me,
science fiction,
Young adult
Thursday, August 30, 2012
The Forever War (Joe Haldeman)
This is a classic, from 1974, but it is still compelling. The central character is one of the first drafted into interstellar war in the early 2005, and with all the relativistic time-dilation effects, he makes it to the end of the war in 3143. Along the way technology and human nature both change, but he remains much the same, giving the reader a consistent viewpoint with which to view time going by. It is a combination of war story, with high-casualty battles and high-tech weaponry (with few false steps to remind us that it was written before ubiquitous computers and the Internet), and social commentary. I enjoyed it a lot.
Labels:
action,
science fiction,
space flight,
technology
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Snuff (Terry Pratchett)
Sam is dragged away on a vacation in the country by his determined wife, away from his beloved city streets, and anticipates two weeks of mind-numbing boredom until his sensitive cop's nose detects a whiff of crime. Before he has unraveled the whole sordid ball of string, he has been proved a hero yet again, on land and sea, solved crimes of murder and smuggling, and helped to recognize an entire new race of sapient creatures. Just his kind of vacation!
In the hilarious, fantastical world that is Discworld, the subset of Sam Vines books put less emphasis on madcap hijinks and more on an examination of what it means to be a good cop in a chaotic world. Not to imply that there isn't plenty of hilarity to go around! Still, much of the story is about how to make things right within the law. I enjoyed it quite a lot.
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Vanishing Act (Thomas Perry)
It's interesting to read a novel where some scenes take place here in Rochester, on streets I often drive! The story centers on a woman, native to the Seneca tribe, who works as a guide - helping people disappear. Her clients include woman escaping abusive spouses and small-time criminals who run afoul of big-time ones. In this story, she helps an ex-policeman who is being framed for embezzlement, but as events unfold we find that not everything is what it seems. She is smart and committed and resourceful and skilled, and I enjoyed the book very much.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Changeless (Gail Carriger)
This second story (a novel of vampires, werewolves, and dirigibles) is as interesting and charming as the first (Soulless). Alexia is just a strong-willed, unpredictable, and quirky as ever, as she works to discover what is behind a mysterious force that strips the supernatural of their powers and makes them simply human again. Alexia, of course, does this herself, but does it one-on-one with direct touch. Whatever is going on now covers all the supernatural creatures in a large region. In the process of solving this mystery, Alexia learns more about her husband's past, and at the end her life is overturned. Now I have to read the next book in the series!
Labels:
England,
fantasy,
magic,
vampires,
werewolves
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Practical Magic (Alice Hoffman)
Women in the Owens family have been accused of being witches forever. Two sisters who grew up in the home of their witchy aunts both move out, but they can't leave behind their ties to the magic of their birthrights. They both have trouble dealing with love and relationships, though their lives couldn't be more different. Gillian takes off as a teen, marrying multiple times but never getting tied down, while sensible widowed Sally is raising her two daughters as responsibly as she can, feeding them nutritious vegetarian meals and making sure they are never late to school. They are brought together again by tragedy, and have to find ways to reconcile their hopes, dreams, fears, and traumas. I loved the sensitive, beautiful story telling and the flashes of magic that seem to hide just out of most people's vision.
Artemis Fowl (Eoin Colfer)
This audio book kept me company on a long car trip, and I loved every minute! Artemis Fowl is a 12-year-old genius, the only child in a very wealthy family operating on the fringes of the law (and often over the edge). After his father disappears, his mother becomes unhinged, and the family fortune is diminished, Artemis and his loyal bodyguard Butler embark on a complex plot to restore that fortune: kidnapping a fairy to extort gold as her ransom. This fairy is a trained operative in the fairy military, and the entire force of fairy might is focused on getting her back and defeating Artemis. The story is delightfully inventive, with unexpected but entirely logical twists and turns, and led to a surprisingly satisfying conclusion. I will definitely read more.
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