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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 1, 2022 12:49:49 GMT -5
Lest Darkness Fall by L. Sprague de CampA re-read of a book that may be among those I've read the most frequently. I bought this one very early on from the Science Fiction Book Club and I've read it a number of times since, though probably not in the last twenty years. Other than his work with Conan, this is almost certainly de Camp's best known book and it's very definitely his most important book. Initially published in the December 1939 issue of Unknown, this is considered to be one of the first Alt-History books and is absolutely a cornerstone of the genre. Archeologist Martin Padway finds himself transported to Rome in the Sixth Century A.D. He sets out to make a life for himself in an ancient world and a chaotic time. Luckily for Padway, he is conversant in Latin and is able to communicate in the evolving Vulgar Latin dialect of the time. Along the way he brings some trappings of modernity, those that can be accomplished without a lot of machinery, to the Sixth Century. And he changes the world around him and the course of history. A little old-fashioned, this is still a cornerstone piece of science fiction that is eminently readable and that will always have a place in my personal pantheon of important SF.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 3, 2022 13:08:25 GMT -5
Six Easy PiecesWalter Mosley, 2003 The eighth Easy Rawlins book. This is a collection of short stories, each a involving a separate mini-mystery, but all interconnected and taking place over a period of a few months. During the course of these cases, the reader gets more glimpses into Easy’s life, his relationship with his two adopted children, Jesus and Feather, and his common-law wife Bonnie (who’s often out of town due to her job as a flight attendant), and just life in general in the Black neighborhoods of LA in the mid-1960s. One theme running through the entire book is that Easy really just wants to do his job as chief of maintenance at Sojourner Truth High School, but he keeps getting pulled back onto the street to do investigations – usually when someone, a friend or acquaintance, asks him to do so as a favor. “Smoke” centers around a case of arson committed on the school grounds. A gas can firebomb was placed and set to go off under the metal shop building, which was a separate shed on campus. No one was injured, even though it burned to the ground. One of the younger students tells Easy he saw a former student, a drop-out, and some white guy he didn’t recognize walking through campus with a gas can early in the morning. Easy hits the streets to find out who set the fire and, more importantly, why. “Crimson Stain” has a plot point that carries over from the preceding story, as Easy tries to track down a former prostitute who has some information he really needs. He visits her former brothel, where he learns that she’s gone straight (possibly for a man) and even found a ‘normal’ job at an aircraft factory. Once he tracks her down, he finds her dead with a stab wound in her chest – and there are several likely suspects. “Silver Lining” reintroduces two characters from the earlier books, Mofass, Easy’s aging former business associate, and his girlfriend Jewelle, who is having a tangle of family troubles. She believes her younger sister – who fled an abusive boyfriend in Texas – is being held against her will by her resentful older sister and ne’er do well brothers, who seem to be using her as leverage to get Jewelle to sign over ownership of the successful real estate business she runs with Mofass. She wants Easy to help get her younger sister out of their clutches, but when Easy does so, he finds that the situation is even more complicated than it seems. “Lavender” starts with Easy getting a call from EttaMae, the former wife of his friend Mouse, after not hearing from her for almost a year. She wants him to find a young man named Willis Longtree, who ran off with the flirty, trouble-making daughter of the wealthy white family she’s working for (Willis, needless to say, is Black), Her father already has a man on their trail who will most likely kill Willis. At the same time, Easy is dealing with a serious problem in his home life. “Gator Green” takes Easy to a large auto repair shop owned by a former Louisianan called ‘Gator’, where he takes a job (working the late shift so it doesn’t interfere with his day job) to find out anything he can about a robbery of the owner’s safe that is being blamed on a young man who formerly worked there named Henry. The latter’s in-law, Saul Lynx, a P.I., enlisted Easy’s help because he’s convinced the young man didn’t do it and wants to clear his name. “Gray-Eyed Death” involves, well, lots of spoilers for previous Easy books (one in particular) – which I have been strenuously trying to avoid in these brief reviews. Suffice it to say, Easy is hit (virtually blind-sided) by several blasts from his past, including two characters last seen in the novella Gone Fishin’: Mama Jo, a spooky herbalist (Easy considers her a witch) of indeterminate age who lived in the middle of a south Texas swamp, and her misfit son Domaque (he’s incredibly intelligent, but child-like in many ways, and also rather homely and hunchbacked). Easy learns that they had both moved to Santa Barbara six years earlier, and now Domaque is hiding out from the cops because he’s been framed for an armored car robbery. So, as per usual, Easy starts conducting an investigation and devising a plan to get him out of trouble. “Amber Gate” sees Easy taking on a case for a pair of shoes: a cobbler he knows named Theodore Steinman wants him to clear the name of a wealthy landlord who is suspected by the police of killing a young Black woman, and Easy agrees to look into it if Theodore makes him a pair of shoes. In this story in particular, Easy also does some soul searching about the way he lives his life, what he wants to do with it, and what kind of role model he is for his children.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Dec 4, 2022 22:57:28 GMT -5
Best SF: 1967 edited by Harry Harrison and Brian Aldiss
I've been in a bit of a reading slump (for prose, anyway) so I decided to go back to some sci fi short stories. Lots of good names in this one.. I had heard of but not read what could be called the headliner of the book 'Hawksbill Station' by Robert Silverberg. I was not disappointed, it was very good (though like maybe other really good short stories, no need for it to be expanded into a novel, no interest in reading that).
My favorite I think, though was 'Answering Service' by Fritz Leiber. I work in a call center, so it was such an amazing portrayal, I was laughing the whole time (until the end of course). One thing this collection doesn't have is alot of happy endings, but very few stinkers, and the few I didn't love were quick and painless. Excellent collection.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 6, 2022 11:46:11 GMT -5
King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa by Adam Hochschild
There has rightfully been a lot written about the various genocides of the 20th Century. But the genocides in Africa during the colonial period have long been largely forgotten. If we want to understand Africa today and the problems still facing that continent we have to understand the past and particularly the colonial period and the "Scramble for Africa." An estimated 10 to 15 million people were systematically killed in the Congo while it was ruled by Belgian King Leopold II from forced labor, massacres, famine, slavery and other effects of his repressive rule. It was from this regime that American minister George Washington Williams first coined the term "Crimes Against Humanity." It always seemed odd that tiny Belgium, a very young state still in the 1880s, ended up with a huge colonial territory in Central Africa. It really was through the force of Leopold's ambition and greed, because the Belgian parliament and people, at least early on, had little to no interest in colonialism. The Congo Free State was a personal fiefdom and billions of dollars in ivory and then rubber profits funneled largely into the personal pockets of Leopold. At the same time the native population of that area were forced to labor at risk of beatings, having their hands cut off and death. Villages were razed. Women were raped and sold in to sex slavery. It's very clear that the name Leopold II deserves to be mentioned along with Mao, Stalin and Hitler. Along the way there are heroes. George Washington Williams, a black American minister, lawyer and journalist who was one of the first to ring the bell on the atrocities in the Congo Free State. E. D. Morel, a British journalist who started the Congo Reform Association, the first mass human rights organization. British Consul Roger Casement who investigated abuses there and acted as a whistleblower. Hochschild gives us the history of Leopold's regime, the backlash and a look at how long it took even after the region was taken over by the Belgian government for any change to actually happen. He also gives us a short look at the extremely troubled history of the Congo since that time, much of it still exacerbated by western meddling (the assassination of Patrice Lumumba with U.S. and British involvement), the continued propping up of the despotic regime of Mobutu Sese Seko. And he questions how many millions of others died at the hands of other colonizers, the British, the French and the Germans who weren't subject to the scrutiny that Leopold received. An excellent look at a long forgotten tragedy.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 6, 2022 13:50:26 GMT -5
Yeah, Leopold really ranks quite highly in the "history's greatest monsters" category.
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Roquefort Raider
CCF Mod Squad
Modus omnibus in rebus
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 11, 2022 18:23:10 GMT -5
The cobra dance from Robert E. Howard's Shadows in Zamboula was lifted from Talbot Mundy's King of the Khyber Rifles!
But then the scene got the desired result: get the cover spot for its publications in Weird Tales. It wouldn't be the only time Howard would do that!
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Post by Deleted on Dec 12, 2022 0:56:58 GMT -5
Finished another of the early Trek fiction books, this one an anthology-Star Trek the New Voyages- The stories themselves were a mixed bag. I think they all "got" the characters, but the plots and writing varied wildly in quality, and several of the plots were highly derivative of actual episodes. It is still an interesting snapshot of the burgeoning field of Star Trek fiction as it transitioned from fan fiction to professional fiction, and the introductions to stories by cast members gave an interesting glimpse into how they felt about Trek on that early to mid 70s period when the show had been gone except in syndication for a while but hopes were rising for a motion picture. -M
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Post by dbutler69 on Dec 12, 2022 19:36:23 GMT -5
Finished another of the early Trek fiction books, this one an anthology-Star Trek the New Voyages- The stories themselves were a mixed bag. I think they all "got" the characters, but the plots and writing varied wildly in quality, and several of the plots were highly derivative of actual episodes. It is still an interesting snapshot of the burgeoning field of Star Trek fiction as it transitioned from fan fiction to professional fiction, and the introductions to stories by cast members gave an interesting glimpse into how they felt about Trek on that early to mid 70s period when the show had been gone except in syndication for a while but hopes were rising for a motion picture. -M I have several Star Trek novels from the 70's - a novelization of The Trouble with Tribbles plus a few 70's novels with new adventures with the original cast. I plan to read them in early 2023. First I want to finish the Han Solo Adventures trilogy by Brian Daley (I love those novels) plus I plan to get a Superman novel - Superman, Last Son of Krypton by Elliot Maggin, before I jump into those Star Trek novels. I'm looking forward to them, though I probably shouldn't get my hopes up too much.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 14, 2022 18:21:26 GMT -5
The Lady From Zagreb by Philip Kerr After a bit of a break I'm back with the tenth Bernie Gunther book. Set (with the exception of a short prelude and epilogue) in 1943, this one finds Bernie on a personal task for Propaganda Reichsminister Joseph Goebbels that sends him to the killing fields of war era Croatia and to the neutral country of Switzerland. The titular Lady is Dalia Dresner, an actress signed with UFA who Goebbels hopes will be his next conquest. Dresner (who is a composite character drawing from such real actresses as Pola Negri and Hedy Lamarr) is a Germanized name, as the lady was born in Yugoslavia and lived in Switzerland prior to her acting career. Gunther is sent to Croatia to find Dresner's father who was last known to be a Catholic monk. He does find him, along with a war in the former Yugoslavia where everyone is trying to kill everyone else and death camps that are every bit as brutal as those of the Germans, though not nearly as efficient. The adventure later takes him in to Switzerland and a run-in with Allen Dulles. The Bernie Gunther books are always more than readable, but this is one of the best, almost up there with the initial trilogy. Kerr's research is excellent and I'm always happiest when the books deal with areas that with which I'm not super familiar. I knew a decent bit about the political infighting in the former Yugoslavia during WWII from undergrad classes, but not as much about the on-the-ground dirtiness and far too little about the genocides perpetrated there. I was almost wholly unknowledgeable about what was going down in Switzerland during the war and the presence of foreign intelligence agents from all sides. A very good entry in a high quality series.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 15, 2022 5:11:24 GMT -5
(...) Kerr's research is excellent and I'm always happiest when the books deal with areas that with which I'm not super familiar. I knew a decent bit about the political infighting in the former Yugoslavia during WWII from undergrad classes, but not as much about the on-the-ground dirtiness and far too little about the genocides perpetrated there. I was almost wholly unknowledgeable about what was going down in Switzerland during the war and the presence of foreign intelligence agents from all sides. A very good entry in a high quality series. Of course, there's also the other side of that - being a little too familiar with the subject matter and then getting bothered by some factual error or detail. That's happened to me several times when reading espionage/thriller novels set in Bosnia, Croatia or elsewhere in the former Yugoslavia during WW2. Still, can't beat the title of this one - if I ever come across it I'll probably end up reading it.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 15, 2022 14:56:39 GMT -5
Maybe it’s just the books I’m reading, but I feel some authors are going over the top with endnotes.
Endnotes can be useful, but some endnotes are not sentences, but paragraphs and pages. I wonder, why didn’t they just try and incorporate the end notes into their chapters?
I don’t mind a brief endnote, e.g. something which is one sentence, such as, “The USWA was founded in 1989, folding in 1997.” But if an endnote goes on and on and on, I reach the stage where I am taken out of the flow of a chapter.
I read a science book recently. While each chapter was interesting, when I read the endnotes, well the endnotes for one chapter alone lasted about 3 pages. I just don’t want flow interrupted. I feel that when a writer doesn’t use endnotes (or use them much), then he/she has written something well.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 15, 2022 15:03:49 GMT -5
(...) Kerr's research is excellent and I'm always happiest when the books deal with areas that with which I'm not super familiar. I knew a decent bit about the political infighting in the former Yugoslavia during WWII from undergrad classes, but not as much about the on-the-ground dirtiness and far too little about the genocides perpetrated there. I was almost wholly unknowledgeable about what was going down in Switzerland during the war and the presence of foreign intelligence agents from all sides. A very good entry in a high quality series. Of course, there's also the other side of that - being a little too familiar with the subject matter and then getting bothered by some factual error or detail. That's happened to me several times when reading espionage/thriller novels set in Bosnia, Croatia or elsewhere in the former Yugoslavia during WW2. Still, can't beat the title of this one - if I ever come across it I'll probably end up reading it.
I thought about you when I was reading those sections. I'd honestly love to get your take on the book.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 19, 2022 2:39:50 GMT -5
Finally tracked down the first book in the The Phantom novel series- The Story of the Phantom-at a con earlier this year, and got around to reading it this past week. Credited to Lee Falk, it is likely ghost -written by Ron Goulart, who wrote the majority of these phantom novels. As this one is the "origin story of the 21st Phantom" it is a bit uneven, as it tells of Kit's life as a boy up through the death of his father and his assumption of the mantle of Phantom. Interspersed were tales of previous Phantoms, and these adventure tales were the best parts, the stuff of Kit growing up was mostly drudgery, both his time in the Deep Woods and his time in Missouri. If not for the tales of past Phantoms, it would have been as dull as dishwater. I've read a few of the later books in the series, and they are , for the most part, crackin' adventure yarns, but if I had started with this first volume, as most fo the reading public had to when they debuted, I am not sure I would have been inspired to keep reading. It just further reinforces my idea that with rare exceptions, the origin story is usually the least interesting story to be told with a heroic adventure character. -M
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Post by berkley on Dec 19, 2022 22:51:48 GMT -5
Maybe it’s just the books I’m reading, but I feel some authors are going over the top with endnotes. Endnotes can be useful, but some endnotes are not sentences, but paragraphs and pages. I wonder, why didn’t they just try and incorporate the end notes into their chapters? I don’t mind a brief endnote, e.g. something which is one sentence, such as, “The USWA was founded in 1989, folding in 1997.” But if an endnote goes on and on and on, I reach the stage where I am taken out of the flow of a chapter. I read a science book recently. While each chapter was interesting, when I read the endnotes, well the endnotes for one chapter alone lasted about 3 pages. I just don’t want flow interrupted. I feel that when a writer doesn’t use endnotes (or use them much), then he/she has written something well.
I need a footnote to this post to tell me what the USWA is.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Dec 20, 2022 8:04:36 GMT -5
Maybe it’s just the books I’m reading, but I feel some authors are going over the top with endnotes. I need a footnote to this post to tell me what the USWA is. 1 USWA was a wrestling federation that spun out of the Memphis Territory,with Jerry Lawler as it's main star
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