Friday, October 24, 2008

Supremacy

Bourne Supremacy is a wrap. As was the case with Identity the movie diverged from the book in major ways. What began to strike me, however, was the way that it stayed true to the theme of the book. Although Russia in the movie replaces China, the "big bad" in each case has the same MO and level of access. I still think that the movies went a wise route in cutting Jason Bourne off from the CIA and making his life one of running instead of teaching.

Partially this change was created by the age factor. In the books, Bourne starts in late middle age and runs quickly toward early old age. The switch to Matt Damon made the "old" Bourne a no-go and created a younger face for the franchise. It also helped to cut out the family man aspect of the books. This made the movies much more exciting to watch and faster paced.

The books in turn benefited from the older Bourne. Ludlum's Bourne wrote better about Bourne as he made him older and more of a family man. In Bourne Supremacy Ludlum's Bourne is altogether more readable than he was in Identity. I'll follow up on this theme in my review on Bourne Ultimatum, but briefly, as Bourne became more like Ludlum the writing of his character became more and more nuanced. As these details increased, Bourne as a character became more and more readable.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Identity

I finished up Bourne Identity two days ago. I found it a passable thriller, but not as good as Le Carre or sadly, the movie. In the long time that I've read books and seen spin off movies this has only happened once before. In that case it was The Hunt for Red October. A vastly more enjoyable movie than book. Something about the way that the submarines moved in the ocean was much clearer in the movie than it was on the printed page. Usually I prefer my own vision of what a novel's events are, and most of my favorite writers are damn good at helping me to create that vision. The submarines in Red October defied my ability to see them as well as the movie could present them to me.

In this case Identity the film was close to but not lifted straight from the source book. They moved the movie to a two sided affair instead of the three way game of intrigue in the book. This allowed the film to concentrate much more on the two things that made it stand out so well from the pack. First, it brought to the forefront the relationship between Bourne and Marie. This humanized Bourne and made him a character that was much easier to root for than the Bourne in the book.

The second focus was the real winner for the movie over the book. The flashbacks that Bourne underwent as he tried to regain his memory. In the book Ludlum rushes through these moments, concentrating on using them to push along the plot of the book. The movie humanizes these moments, they become personal experiences of Bourne that the viewer gets to share. These interactions drew me into the movie and made me relate with the characters. It also made the plot much more vivid. Bourne's unknowing was the key to the film, in the book it's discarded whenever it becomes inconvenient.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

There be Dragons

I finished up the first three books in Naomi Novik's Temeraire series last week. They were enjoyable if fluff filled books that reminded me of the Dauntless series that I wrote about earlier. This is a fantasy historical adventure in the same vein. There were good books but I can't say that I'd reread them. For a book I find that worrisome. I enjoy rereading my novels. If I didn't I'd run out of books far to quickly. But I just can't find a reason to reread them. They were fun and tasty, but like a sculpture made of sugar, they melted away once I was done with them.

I also got the new Bourne books for my birthday, given the difference between the books and the movies (and there are some BIG ones) I'm thinking I need to go back and read the novels. The movies have taken up to much of my consciousness of the series and they have very little in common with the books. And while I suspect that these will be made into movies, I think that they'll only be loosely related to the titles.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

More unfinished buisness

I finished reading Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. Again I found that he didn't complete the story that he was writing. Having completed the story that involved the cryptography, the human elements of the story, the characters that he'd developed to that point, and the entirety of the rest of the plot were left incomplete. Sometimes this type of ending can be an interesting way for a story to end, in Limbo (the movie) the story is left with the viewer to decide if the people who are stranded are going to be rescued or killed. This choice was the point of the movie, and was built up to. In Our Game, Le Carre has an ending without resolution of the story plot of his novel. He does, however, resolve the internal plot of the main character. We followed him as he came to grips with a situation that he began the novel flummoxed by, and at the end had come to understand and accept.

Cryptonomicon doesn't build to a point where the reader is left wondering about a few discrete outcomes, nor does it follow one character closely enough for us to find an ending of the book in their internal choices. The solution of the cryptography puzzle also wasn't followed closely enough to be the center of the novel. When the we learn the solution, we are more interested in how the character cleverly learned while thwarting pursuers than in the solution itself. We as readers are left begging for another chapter, not to wrap up a happy ending, but simply to give us a sense of closure about the novel.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Update

It's been a while, life keeps on happening. I got to my best friends wedding as best man, that went off well. I quit my old job, which is I think going to be a good thing in the long term. I also left Madison, WI at long last. I'm back in Milwaukee, looking for work and cleaning up loose ends of my life. It hasn't been the easiest time, but I'm getting better as it goes along. House Tyrell's words seem to work for me right now, "Growing Strong" is a fit way to look at this current epoch.

In book news I just finished Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson, it was a good read, and an enjoyable extrapolation from Snow Crash. I didn't really like the ending, as he clips it off once he gets bored with the part of the book that interests him, which leaves large chunks of plot sitting around uncompleted. I understand the reasoning, but I think that this shows a lack of editor's power, not a lack of ability as a writer. In his earlier works, the ending is given despite the "interesting" portion of the book having been completed earlier. As he gains a name for himself and gets more power within the process of his book writing, he has less reason to listen to an editor making suggestions.

I'll be back to talk about detective fiction later.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

The System is Down

I completed System of the World and have to say that it was hugely enjoyable. Sadly I was up late to finish it, and can't put coherent sentances together, so I'll get a longer post on it later.

Also, Dark Knight was a wonderfully grown up comic book movie. I'm glad to see that directors don't feel the need to make comic book movies into cartoons or overstylized sillyness.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Not So Good Prince

It was a long trip to Origins this weekend, made worse by the Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin DOT's. The prize for best blockage of traffic goes, however, to Indiana. We spent 2 hours going 6 miles on the way from Chicago to Indianapolis. This was parking lot, turn off your engine, have a picnic speeds of travel and reminded me of why not having a car isn't always a negative. It did however give me a chance to get some Fables out of the trunk where it had languished in my backpack.

I've been picking up the trades of Fables since I can no longer find a steady supply of comics in the downtown Madison area. I get to catch up on that exiled communities foibles and follies every six months or so. The latest edition sets up the end game for the series however, showing the preparations for conflict and the creation of a magical kingdom of peace and happiness that the Adversary can't conquer. It was smarmy.

The best of the series comes from forcing the placement of all these fables together and having them have to deal with outside grievances and amusing issues. The naming of the adversary, and the near immediate destruction of his power base was poorly executed in a series that relies much more on it's characters for readability than on its plot. And this was the issue. The Good Prince sets out to give a mystical transformation and a redemption story arc for the lowly frog prince, but all it does is alter him without showing the transformation as it happens. One second he's a confused janitor and the next he's off with Obi-wan on some damn fool idealistic crusade.

Done right it could have been done well. If we'd followed the prince as he had to make real choices or real sacrifices. Instead he's granted near invincible power, a lack of needs or conflicting desires and goes off to save the world. It's like using the bat signal to stop a shoplifting 13 year old. Yeah, batman can find out who it was, but do we really care about that pack of gum? No I didn't think we did. The interesting thing in the story arc is what was hinted at, and barely shown. How the fables in Fabletown reacted to the news. That would have been my preferred way to see this play out. The fable community watching through the magic mirror and having them deal with the issues being brought forward. Instead we focus on the dull predictable plot.

A simple example: the mirror shows what happened to everyone dropped down the wishing well. It's hellish. And we get a moment of the fables saying "that's awful, we can't do that again" but then it moves on. An interesting issue would have been seeing Fly drop down there, and then watching the news of the discovery ripple through Fabletown. How would the once again 3 bears react to their son being down there? More speculation about the no-show of Baba Yaga would have been interesting too. Those types of moments could have conveyed the events in Fly's story much more forcefully and without making the reader lose their interest in the eventual outcome.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Earthclan

I picked up the Book Club version of Earthclan in my foray into half price books. All told I think I now have 2-3 copies of these books floating around my parents and my house. I picked this one up specifically so I can hand it off to people without the trauma of having to chase down a stack of paperback books.

Brin is a wonderful author, but I think that Earthclan and it's prequel Sundiver are his best works of fiction. They aptly blend 'real' physics with futuristic space travel, and take a good look at what contact with aliens could be like. Products of the mid 1980's, they offer an interesting view of what life on Earth would be like as it evolves, and how life in the galaxy would view us. The best part is how the universe feels the same, even when alien science alters things, because Brin shows humanity's flaws and triumphs reflected in each of the races that he creates. And by the combination of all of these, he shows us ourselves.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Bonanza

I finished The Confusion last night. I can admit now to having had doubts about it when I began - mainly from worrying about the faults of it's precursor. I was pleased to see that the sophomore work dispatched with the frame story, and alternated between the two strands of the plot. This was aided by the reliance of both strands on events from the other, and the whole book felt like a single work. That feeling redeemed the series for me. I'm looking forward to grabbing the third installment shortly to find out the conclusion of the work.

As for a plot synopsis, the book follows up on "Section Three" of Quicksilver as well as following the adventures of Jack in captivity. Beyond saying that, at this point I really must recommend actually reading the books. They are worthwhile and well written, and I'm restraining myself from having the last one overnighted to me. I'm not sure that I'll be able to.

In other news, Neil's got Coraline coming to the big screen. I'm not sold on Dakota Fanning as the voice of the protagonist, but we shall see.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Keeping things Practical

I find that I can not escape from Half Price Books without spending $50+. My latest trip did, however net me some new material. I've picked up The Confusion, which should please the hza, and a lending copy of The Uplift War and Startide Rising. But at the end of the day I wonder if I'm going to end up needing a new apartment just to store books in.

While taking some time off from The Confusion I reread Practical Demon Keeping mainly because I pulled it off the shelf while putting other books up. I have an advanced readers version from my family's days running a bookstore, and I've enjoyed his books ever since. This first one sets up the story of his fictional California town, Pine Cove, and tells the story of what happens when a demon is brought by for a visit. While this isn't as refined a work as Lamb, it delights in jokes about the quirky people who make up the town and the insanity of the perfectly ordinary. Also, this is Moore's only book that doesn't reuse a character from an earlier piece. Which is saying it's his first novel.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Query

I'm annoyed. Pissed off. I want to smash things. With this frame of mind what can I go and read? I really can't think of anything that's the literary version of playing Unreal Tournament against bots until my anger is soothed. As an avid reader, this realization is troubling. I'd like to think that there's something I can read that will both help me vent my anger and my calm me down. I picked to wrong week to give up [insert drug of your choice here].

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

American Gods

In keeping with my self imposed rule here, I'm not reviewing American Gods. Whats to say that isn't going to come out gushing in fan boy induced glee? I like Gaiman's work. I enjoy his ability to craft stories, and his willingness to insert pieces that are less than normal. At the end of the day I'm not sure that I'm able or willing to perceive the faults that may lie in his books, and so I can't do more than say:

I read American Gods again.

And I'm sorry Mr. Norrel, I'm getting to you as swiftly as my free time will allow. Please don't turn me into a newt. The history of English magic lends me confidence that I would get better, but I'm not sure about the time frame, or if I'd enjoy spending time with Gussie Fink-Nottle.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Always an even trade.

Due to various circumstances that were entirely within my control, I've not been reading much until just recently. However I did finally sit down and peruse Reaper's Gale. And much to my chagrin, I found it lacking the level of completeness that Erikson infused into his previous volumes.

Partially this is the nature of his books. He has two competing story lines, which didn't touch each other until this book. While those stories were tied together by the same adversary, previously books dealt with one set of (mortal) protagonists and a set of deities that remained the same. The first three books Gardens of the Moon, Deadhouse Gates, and Memories of Ice all dealt with the same group of protagonists. These books felt polished and had a level of refinement in story that was easy to read. When thread split off, or new characters were introduced, there was time and effort spent on incorporating them into the story as a whole.

The second three books, House of Chains, Midnight Tides, and The Bonehunters delved into the machinations of the Crippled God, who is the main antagonist for the series to date. These books moved the protagonists from the first books into more powerful and less involved roles. Their appearance presaged a major shift in the direction of the story, or the coming to head of some major plot point. The second three books also began to introduce more characters and civilizations that had not been touched upon directly. These groups were usually within their own story lines, and developed without interaction with the main protagonists. This allowed for the creation of a similarly rich back story for the new characters.

The came Reaper's Gale. Where most of the various plot lines converged into a mess. There was easily two books worth of material here, books that could have introduced many of the characters that we learned about for 10 pages and then never heard about again. There were loose ends of plot at both ends of the book, people in places without explanation, (and often these people were not know characters, but generic.) There were also groups of people who were added at the last seconds, like a teaser for what will occur next. And throughout the entire book to many people were simply added without the character creation that marked the first books.

The book was good. It advanced the plot quite a bit. But it didn't feel like it was as well written as it could have been. And with so many other books in the series to compare it to, that's a fatal flaw.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Delicious reading material

I fear that I'll be waiting on Strange/Norrel for a bit longer, according to the good people at amazon.com I've got to read Reaper's Gale this weekend. The only question is if I'll have to purchase it in order to peruse it or if I'll be voraciously reading a friends copy prior to buying the paperback version in a few months. Regardless of outcome, it will be read this weekend.

My only problem will be talking about the book. I was considering this when I was thinking about something to read prior to picking Mutineer's Moon back up. I was thinking about rereading Neverwhere, but I couldn't figure out how to talk about a Neil Gaiman work without turning into a gushing fan-boy. I'm hoping that Reaper's Gale gives me some insight into that. I'm not at the same fan-boyish levels with Mr. Erikson, but I have to acknowledge that I'm going into this book with a prejudice, and I hope I'll be able to see problems if they exist.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Mooning over things

I was shooting to do Strange/Norrel next, but I ended up rereading (or starting to reread) a trilogy by David Weber. The wonderful thing is how quickly the read is. Enjoyment that doesn't really feel like an interruption of a longer and more ponderous work in progress. As far as the genre goes, Weber has a very nice take on a less than brand new plot. The alien menace and the extra-terrestrials who are here to help save us is a staple of the genre, but it's a staple because it makes it easy for the writer to create characters.

Mainly this comes from the lack of a time lag for the reader to overcome. "A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away..." sound cool, but getting into touch with the motivation of the characters can be dicey. All to often we never get well rounded characters because Adam Awesome is a dashing space adventurer! So there goes Adam off to save the princess. The human Id is easy enough to tap into - we all like fun and excitement, so there goes the space man finding space excitement. It's an infantile but easy method of putting together a story, and while it can be a fun distraction, it's rarely a worthwhile one.

A character worth caring about has to interact with the Ego and Superego. There have to be relationships that are dynamic and complex - and this is where a SF writer suddenly has a much harder time. What drives a sentient plant or an intelligent dolphin? How does and AI interact with and view the world? If they're all just humans with different body types then the setting loses the feel of the future.

An alien's visit nowish Earth avoids that issue by creating a modern human who can view the encounter and with whom the reader can easily bond with and support as the protagonist. Weber creates this world with an amusing twist. In Mutineer's Moon the Earth is hanging on the edge of a massive empire that is ravaged every few epochs by marauders bent on wiping out all competing life. There is a mutiny aboard one of this empire's ship, and the final stages of it play out on just post modern earth.

And the moon is a giant spaceship.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Props to the HZA

I finished Quicksilver last night, in one huge chunk. My general impressions of the book are positive, with a few rough edges that I hope are links into the second book in the series. I'll have to be getting to that one soon so I don't miss out on them.

I liked the voices used by the characters, they were almost always in period instead of creating modern characters and shoehorning them into an idealized past (Newton's Cannon we're looking at you.) The topic itself makes these characters accessible - they are all involved in the birth of modern science, so their worldview is modern enough for a reader to meet them half way. There were a few breaks in this; the mention of"gondola rage" towards the end of the book, and certain other moments. While jarring, they stood out for their rarity and can be set aside with only a mention.

The pacing of the book overcame my reservations regarding the frame story. As I mentioned back in January, I had trouble becoming involved with the characters and plot of the book until I was several hundred pages into the novel. While I appreciate that an author has to be given leeway to set up a story, I feel justified in critiquing the methods that were used. The story breaks down into four different parts - Sections one, two and three plus a frame story told out of synchronization with the rest of the book. I'll lay them out below:

The Frame Story - As the first portion of the book into which we delved, this should have been used to tie the story together. Instead it was used as a tool only for section one. This was jarring, and while I suspect that it will be resolved some time in book three, the author leaves it hanging to far out without support. A frame is a useful device to engross the reader into the story quickly. It establishes protagonists the reader knows they can follow throughout the rest of the story and usually gives the reader clues about what will become important to watch for. The frame story did this, somewhat, by introducing one of the protagonists, and setting up a conflict between Newton and Leibniz. But instead of wrapping that up and getting into the story proper, it hung around and made the first section seem dull in comparison to the swashbuckling underway.

Section One - Section one would have been better if it had lacked the frame story to interrupt it and give the reader something to compare it to within the book itself. A slow beginning to a 3 book series of novels is not a crime... yet; and much can be forgiven for an author setting up the mood of the books and bringing together the characters. The frame story interjects and shows a level of fast paced adventure that the first section of the book lacks, and this both interrupts the readers immersion into the story, and worse, makes reimmersion difficult. I found myself getting into the story, hitting a pirate bit, and then being unable to read more. This series of events usually led me to wander off to play Civ 4 for the purpose of building privateers.

Section Two - In comparison the the first portion, this read like an action/adventure/romance, and passed by quite swiftly. The characters were well drawn up, and their inability to reach a happy conclusion for their time together was a realistic portrayal of everything that led them to that point. If this section had a flaw it was the loose association that it had with Section one, and the lack of association that it had with the original frame. It felt that I was reading a separate novel with a few minor characters who transferred between the two. That said it was an enjoyable novel and one that led me happily into section three.

Section Three - This tied together the threads of the first two sections, and the characters really came into their own. Much of the characterizations were vibrant and the plot was interesting but not obtrusive. The letter writing and cryptography conceit was interesting, but not as engrossing as a reader as I suspect it was for the author. The plot was never made to feel as though it hinged on this, and so it was a method for conveying actions that sufficed as well as the more straightforward plotting of the second section. My only major complaint was the bait and switch about the events in northern France and the father of Eliza's child. It was sudden, annoying, and without any setup in the previous text. Neal is to good a writer to introduce a character so suddenly and importantly. It has a whiff of deus ex machina about it and I found it to be sloppy.

To leave this on a positive note, however, I find that I can't even look and other books dealing with the period now that have lesser pedigrees. They seem cloying and annoyingly saccharine. I'm probably going to pick up The Difference Engine, I suspect David Brin has retained his readability.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

They Might Be Giants... or

They might be dicks. Busy weekend as is the norm around here, but I wanted to make a comment about the TMBG concert on Friday. At a 14+ concert, how exactly do you judge who's 14+? I went with a friend of mine who brought her just turned 14 nephew. TMBG is a good first concert. And for reasons untold it's a 14+ show, so the stars aligned on that one. Until we were summarily thrown out because he's a small 14. And the hulk of a carnie in charge of the official "Guess your age" program didn't think he could be 14. And who brings a birth certificate to a TMBG concert? I mean Rob Zombie or Rammstein, sure I see needing proof. But They Might Be "Birdhouse in your Soul" Giants?

What's left to say except "but I'm not actually your friend..."

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Something worth reading

Right here.

I ran into a bet linked through Penny-Arcade about the nature of art and videogames. It ended up the next day at the New Yorker reading about the decline of reading. I have to say that it was an interesting journey and certainly one that I found to be highly interesting. The basis for all this was a wager on how videogames will evolve within our culture. The threads that were followed were diverse, and created a discussion about the nature of art, entertainment and how we judge culture.

In the end, video games, TV and Movies are a different type of media than books, and they cause different types of stimulation. Reading a book allows you to populate the world and characters with your own vision of them. The act of being entertained is more participatory and imaginative. On some level video games represent a reflection of this ability, while the plot involved may be straight forward, the best games allow you to interact with it, color it and make your own choices based on it. It's not the same as reading, as the world is shaped and colored by other peoples imagination, but it's less passive than TV or a movie, where everything is following someone else's idea of what is interesting.

Personally I prefer books, I like having the time to pursue tangents and minor characters in my own imagination before continuing with the authors story. It's why I dislike movies based on books, since they tend to calcify my image of the characters and the setting. Also, they tend to be rubbish, but that's not the key point. It's interesting to note that the best horror films tend to work on the same premise - that what you can imagine is more frightening than what the film can show you. Alien used this to its great advantage and once the alien was revealed the franchise became action movies instead of horror. In the end a book requires a level of interaction and a skill set the dwarfs that of video games, it's simply a skill set that is much easier to acquire (literacy) and a type of interaction that we encourage more (imagination.)

Friday, February 15, 2008

Take your B12, skip your B13

I'm a Luc Basson fan and have been for some time. As a writer and director he's made some fabulous movies, including The Fifth Element, The Transporter, La Femme Nikita, and one of my personal favorites Wasabi. So I've been psyched for some time to see District B13. Regrettably I then rented and viewed the film, and suffered for it. B13 ultimately a look at French culture and a political commentary about how France is losing contact with the forces that made her a great democracy. This theme - the center of old France rebelling against immigrants and hoodlums has become a major theme in French entertainment.

I first really noticed this in the success of Notre Dame de Paris, the most recent musical version of the old Hugo book. The ultimate struggle in the musical was not over Esmeralda, but what to do with these gypsies who've helped build Notre Dame, but now want to live in France. Authority (Phoebus and Fleur) drive the out and kill them, showing the cracks of immigration in modern France.

B13 has the same topic, but is far more heavy handed. This could have been alright, a lot can be forgiven in a film that is basically an action flick. But B13 spends to long setting up it's (admittedly awesome) protagonists, and then spends the rest of the film grandstanding about political issues and equality. There was potential here for a film that makes a message about the direction that France is heading through an entertaining action film, but it was never realized.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

I have a knife. We all have knives. It's 1183 and we're all barbarians!

I finished up my reread of A Game of Thrones by George RR Martin. I found that going back to reread this series was harder than I had expected it to be. The first time I read the books they were great. A fantasy series by the man who wrote the Wild Cards series? A fantasy series with little to no magic, where the real villains and heroes are all human? And it's based on the War of the Roses? There was no downside to beginning to read these books.

The writing in them is very well done. The characters act like real people. They have flaws, and merits, and often they come from the same traits. Life isn't idyllic and kind, and people die with realistic regularity. The politics of the kingdom that Martin creates is convoluted and realistically portrayed, with favors and knowledge used to usurp the throne. The characters all change, and there are few if any mono-dimensional people in this world. At times that feels like it's almost getting out of hand, but Martin does maintain the primary plot and works to limit the desire to wander, following the next interesting lead.

I have a vision of the perfect Game of Thrones experience. I doubt that it's actually possible, but I'd love to be able to see the stories in the form of the giant web that they create. With each chapter a thread, and the stories twisting together and then moving apart. It's what happens in the books, but I'd like to see it graphically, and be able to jump from one section to another or follow a story from start to finish.

There still isn't a downside to reading these books. So go out and read them. I'll wait here until you do.

Did you? Good.

A few points on rereading the books: The mysteries in the books are much more notable and I noticed peoples flaws much more than I did the first time through. I also had more trouble following characters who I knew were doing to be dead soon. This is especially difficult when the first book can be aptly subtitled "The Tragedy of House Stark." Stark also being portrayed as the "good guys."

In John Snow news I'm more convinced than ever that he's the son of Lyanna Stark and Rhaegar Targaryen, and that Lyanna went away willingly with the crown prince. When King Robert is talking about avenging Lyanna's capture at the battle of the Trident, Eddard's first thought is of the secret that Lyanna made him promise to keep. Not of pleasure in revenge, or duty to family, but Lyanna's final secret. Combined with Starks answers about John - "he's of my blood" not "he's my son" and his anger at the besmirching of anyone else’s honor with rumors that they're John's mother... because he knows who John's parents are and can't tell anyone, but can't let a harmless lie circulate either.

Ok, now I really want the next few books to come out. Argh.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Adventures in media, pt. 2

I'm still working through the land of media that aren't books. This is a land that (due to not owning a television) is populated by three kinds of media. Movies, delivered through netflix and streamed through netflix. A service that I can say has never let me down over the years and I'm hugely satisfied with. TV showes from the same source, and TV from bittorrent.

It's that last source that's consumed much of yesterday. Giant robot space battles are hard to set aside, and Heroic Age delivers them with an almost unseemly haste. Compared to my other Anime downloads (Bleach and Naruto Shipodden) things happening all over the place. And those two titles are by no means slow, nor do they suffer from what annoyed me so much about the genre in college. This is something that I'd refer to as the DBZ effect: episode after episode of characters looking back and forth "powering up" and looking like they're having a difficult time with number two for episode after episode.

That stated I did work my way through the first third of Game of Thrones last night, so look for my forgone conclusion of a review in the next few days.

Friday, February 8, 2008

Little Reading Here

It's been a wee bit busy in Madison of late. The recent snow deluges have certainly granted me some free time, but that has largely been eaten up with other persuits. And the joy of my computer/DVD player and Netflix is finally letting me make some progress on my appreciation of non-wood pulp based media. But that's not really what this is about, so I really need to catch up on my books, or I'll have to start reviewing things that I've already read, without rereading them. And I'm fairly certain that counts as cheating.

Secretary was a good movie, I'm glad I rerented it to watch it all the way through. I'm not sure if I like the office or the love story more. The office was an interesting story about the personality of the lawyer, while the love story was much more about the main character. Either way, the actin was great, the family was wonderfully disfunctional, and her competing suitors parents made me cringe delightfully.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Plan B is just Plan A with more explosives

I'm taking my time with Quicksilver, and so far I'm happy that I am. I fear I have developed an in book crush on Eliza. I suspect that I was meant to.

The real reason for the delay is work on a setting for my Game of Thrones RPG. It's always fun to populate a little corner of someone elses world, but I'm also trying very hard to stay in the background of the plotline of the author. I'm likely going to reread the GoT series aka Song of Ice and Fire by Martin, so you'll be seeing the books reviewed here in the next month.

Personally I'm looking forward to the foriegn service exams in March. Who doesn't like pondering what they'll be doing with their life?

Monday, January 28, 2008

NUKE THEM FROM ORBIT

I finally got through Minimum Means of Reprisal and I have to say, it was intriguing. As a primer for Chinese nuclear posture it's quite well written. I suspect that it is reasonably accessible even if you didn't get a degree in International Relations. The basic Chinese tenet appears to be that any nuclear reprisal, from one bomb to 100 million is sufficient for rational deterrence, so there isn't any need to have a massive nuclear industrial complex.

In addition, the removal of bombs from military authority, warhead and launch vehicles are separate, makes nukes a political and not a military weapon. I've argued before that nukes aren't a weapon system per se - they aren't dominant enough to make having them the only rational choice for a nation (mainly because of the side effect of their use.) These same side effects also limit their battlefield utility and the array of locations where they could be used to advantage. The colorful quote from Aliens up in the title bar "take off, nuke them from orbit. It's the only way to be sure" gives a good anecdote for this lack of utility. They're useful for making large explosions, from orbit where the explosion can't harm the attacker, and in a situation where the ground that they're being used on isn't valuable enough that reoccupying it is important.

Anyway, I'm off to ponder this while at work, and I have to recommend the book if you've any interest in Chinese deterrence policy.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

331 PAGES OF QUICKSILVER

The frame story in Quicksilver is not nearly robust enough to support all the flashbacks heaped upon it. We begin with one character, who is interesting but who departs the story rather quickly. We then begin to follow Mr. Waterhouse. His frame story is interesting, but his flashbacks are pure exposition, many without wider meaning to the story. It is not until page 331 we finally begin to see the protagonist act as anything other than a cipher and the reasons for his trip in the frame story support the flashbacks.

Neal, come on. I know that you can write a fast paced novel. Snow Crash and Zodiac proved that you can write well and create interesting characters in the midst of an interesting plot. I recognize that this is going to be a long process. You've got three books, each broken into sections, but even Tolkien, king of huge three part books, made sure that plot and characters advanced together.

This problem is made worse by my suddenly renewed interest in the novel that occurred as soon as the protagonist began to act. I worry that Neal's editor no longer has enough power to make him write a good clean book. Ideally though I'll finish before I feel compelled to write another update on it.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

FAR TO FAR

I'm in the midst of Quicksilver and I have to say I'm still waiting for something to happen. I'm enjoying the characters and events as they pass by, but the key focus of the first portion: "who invented calculus" was lost. This is why Mr. Waterhouse leaves Boston, this is the driving source of conflict, but there is little tension, and instead we wander through England emersed in daydream. I'm finding that the lack of a cohesive focus on the plot is making it difficult to plow through. I enjoy the bits that I read, dipping in and out of the book, but it lost the hook that it had in my and I'm worried that I'll stop caring about the characters by the time the plot advances again.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Doom doomity doom doom doom

I'm in a bit of a moral quandary. I greatly dislike Eli Manning, but can't support the Patriots either. Leaving me at a loss last night once I got home from watching the Packer game. Still being in the denial phase, I went ahead and sought out the pulpiest book I could find. I'm pleased to report that I succeeded.

Death or Glory is set in the Warhammer 40k universe, is told in an autobiographical fashion, and has amusing footnotes from the editor of the biography. It's utter pulp fiction, but I love that it's well done pulp. Cain is a reluctant hero, longing for comfort and safety. The type of man who would have been at home running an upscale bordello, but for his placement it the universe. Watching him try to justify doing the right thing as being selfish amuses. And reading the book is a quick way to remove yourself from a reality in which your team managed to lose in overtime at home for the championship. Damn... so much for denial.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

SHHHH!!!

I read A Lifetime of Secrets yesterday. Read may be a strong word though. It's a collections of anonymous secrets that people send to the editor. I have to admit that the collection as a whole is quite moving, and I left it feeling the need to be snarky and elitist. So it was done well enough to leave me feeling vulnerable. I certainly recommend paging through the book, I don't know that I would want to own it. Seeing a secret like those in the book was cathartic, but I don't know that it would stand up to repeatition.

Also, looking back I can only assume that the mailbox that the editor has these post cards sent to is some kind of nexus a la the merry go round in American Gods. Damn it, now I want to go reread American Gods, which means I have to recall who I lent it to.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

HOW RUDE

Very Nice Ways to Say Very Bad Things: An Unusual Book of Euphemisms by Linda Berdoll was an interesting read. Berdoll's other writing is continuing doing sequels to Jane Austen classics, and while I haven't read them I'm given to understand that they are well written and in genre.

Very Nice Ways is a bird of a different feather. It is a primer for mockery and put downs, and supposed to allow us to tell people to their face what we really think of them. While cute, it doesn't do as good a job of this as we could hope. Berdoll gets caught up in the wordplay of writing the book, and the focus (or what I wish the focus was) suffers for it.

Finally, some of the chapters end up coming across as lists of euphemisms and synonyms for various bodily functions and substances, but such a list isn't as helpful as it could have been. A more perfected tome would have laid out some structural guides for insults, and perhaps set about to elucidate the situations under which various bodily functions are best put to use. Instead we have a book that can comfortably sit next to The Devil's Dictionary and be referred to perhaps as Satan's Synonyms or Beelzebub's Thesaurus.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

(More) BOOKS

I finished up J Gregory Keyes Age of Unreason series. Empire of Unreason and Shadows of God didn't fix the problems that I'd had with the first two books in the series. There wasn't enough character development, and the books felt to hectic. I think a lot more could have been done if instead of stuffing in plot points and including as many "real" historical figures as possible Keyes had expanded the series and fleshed out his main characters a bit more.

A case in point: Franklin and his wife's marriage issues. They crop up suddenly in the third book, remain a major problem throughout the fourth book, and are magically solved in 2 pages near the end. It made the people feel far less real than the setting, which is a major problem for a book of this type. If you make an alternate future/past book you need to limit changes as much as possible. The draw in these books comes from the "those people are real... that city exists..." and that draw is killed if the people don't seem real, but are instead one dimensional dolls made to advance the plot.

As an aside, I've been lending out my copies of A Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin. It's quite a good series. I should probably reread and write up the books. In the meantime, I'm pondering who Jon Snow's parents are. Current best guess: Lyanna Stark and Rhaegar Targaryen.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

TELEVISION

I was reading wikipedia at work today and learned that Top Gear is supposed to be the most downloaded television show on the internet. I absolutely adore this show, and am saddened that I can't get ahold of it without resorting to illegalities. I suppose my real question is why the hell they don't just make DVD's for each series (season) like they do for every other show in the world.

Honestly, bbc.co.uk/topgear and ask them why not. And play the stupidly hard quiz. That's hilarious hard fun.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

BOOKS

I've decided to keep up a series on what I've finished reading. I'd keep track of what I am reading, but that doesn't lend itself to comments or chronology. So briefly to get this started....

Newton's Cannon and Calculus of Angels by J Gregory Keyes.

I was lent these by a friend of mine, and they're an interesting take on the usual steampunk genre. David Brin's The Difference Engine is a better and more interesting take on Victorian era advanced technology, and Card's Alvin Maker series is better written. But having read both of those, Keyes' creates an interesting universe based on deism and then releases his characters into it.

The characters themselves are, I believe, the crux of my problem. A swashbuckling Ben Franklin just sits oddly with me. We'll see if that feeling improves as the series continues. There are further books in the series and I look forward to reading them, but I can't say that I'd reread the first two.

Dauntless Fearless Courageous by Jack Campbell

Swashbuckling space combat? Check. Lost hero returning to save the day? Check. Space battles that involve Einstein? Check.

It's that last one that keeps me reading the series. The first book, Dauntless was novel and interesting. The second built well on the first, but had some new elements. The third book started rehashing old material in a manner that I found distracting. I hear that the fourth book is supposed to be the climax, which bodes well, and I'm always willing to accept a bland filler book if it was building to something.