|
Post by wildfire2099 on Sept 9, 2023 17:21:02 GMT -5
The Compleat Werewolf and other stories Anthony Boucher This has been sitting in the to-read pile for a long time...only only vague know the name, and that cover didn't do it any favors, but in my ongoing efforts to make said pile smaller sometimes I just pick at random. And I was very pleasantly surprised. Only one real stinker in the bunch, and the good ones are very good. All these stories were written while WWII was going, and it provides the backdrop. There's quite a range of stuff. The title story is actually hilarious, about a college professor that finds out he's a werewolf from a passing magician and tries to use that to impress his lady love. it features Fergus O'Breen as a sort of investigator, who apparently is Boucher's detective in a few straight detective stories. He makes a 2nd appearance in the Pink Catepillar, which is a bit less funny, and focuses on a theme a love, which is time travel is impossible and breaks things. That theme is also found in Snulbug (which I definitely had read before but didn't know the name of the author of) and Expedition. Snulbug is pretty classic, about a man that summons a demon to fetch him tomorrow's paper from the future to make his fortune, but it doesn't go as planned. My favorite was We print the Truth, where a small town newspaper man catches the attention of a fairie and anything he prints becomes truth, just a great story with lots to make you think about. Lastly, there are two robot stories (really one story in two parts) about a 'straight thinker' who is out to revolutionize the industry. It's unusual to see so many different stories handled all really well by one author... definitely worth the read.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Sept 10, 2023 8:55:27 GMT -5
Boucher was something of a Renaissance man. Probably better known amongst mystery fans than SF fans at this point (there’s a major mystery convention named Bouchercon). He was a founder of the Mystery Writers of America. His best work was probably his critical writing about SF and mysteries. He was also the founding editor of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (F&SF). He also wrote tons of radio plays in the 40s mostly for mystery programs, particularly Ellery Queen.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Sept 10, 2023 14:04:10 GMT -5
yeah, I saw when I looked him up that he was more a mystery guy than Sci Fi... which is crazy to me since the sci fi was really good! I always find it kinda amazing that there are just so many great authors out there!
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Sept 13, 2023 15:15:39 GMT -5
yeah, I saw when I looked him up that he was more a mystery guy than Sci Fi... which is crazy to me since the sci fi was really good! I always find it kinda amazing that there are just so many great authors out there! John D. MacDonald is a similar case; he's best known for writing pretty grounded thrillers and mysteries, and - especially - the Travis McGee men's adventure novels. However, in the 1940s and early 1950s, he was simultaneously a prolific SF writer, producing in that time two novels and dozens of short stories and novellas. (I wrote a little more about this topic at another site a few years ago.)
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Sept 13, 2023 15:16:52 GMT -5
StilettoHarold Robbins, 1960 To the world at large, Count Cesare Cardinelli is an internationally renowned cross-country racecar driver, the licensed US dealer of high-end sports cars made by several European automakers, and a jetsetting playboy. However, unbeknownst to all but a few, he’s also an incredibly efficient hitman for the Mafia, who slays his victims at extremely close range using a stiletto – and usually they don’t see him coming (or even have any idea of what just happened to them as they drop dead). The story here follows Cardinelli as he takes down several key witnesses in a big organized crime trial in New York, but then eventually learns that a few of the very top bosses also want him dead as well (for reasons that are initially obscure). Also, an FBI agent who had worked on the aforementioned organized crime case with the NYPD eventually begins to suspect Cardinelli of perpetrating the hits and the chase is on. This is a kind-of, sort-of mob/crime thriller, but Robbins spends more time explaining the background of Cardinelli (how the scion of a minor Sicilian noble family became an assassin for the mob), as well as the three women in the story who either were or become his lovers over the course of the story, and also delving into a little questionable pop psychology to explain their motivations. In conclusion, so far I’ve read two of his books and have yet to truly understand why this guy was one of the bestselling authors in the US and beyond for several decades.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Sept 13, 2023 15:22:42 GMT -5
StilettoHarold Robbins, 1960 To the world at large, Count Cesare Cardinelli is an internationally renowned cross-country racecar driver, the licensed US dealer of high-end sports cars made by several European automakers, and a jetsetting playboy. However, unbeknownst to all but a few, he’s also an incredibly efficient hitman for the Mafia, who slays his victims at extremely close range using a stiletto – and usually they don’t see him coming (or even have any idea of what just happened to them as they drop dead). The story here follows Cardinelli as he takes down several key witnesses in a big organized crime trial in New York, but then eventually learns that a few of the very top bosses also want him dead as well (for reasons that are initially obscure). Also, an FBI agent who had worked on the aforementioned organized crime case with the NYPD eventually begins to suspect Cardinelli of perpetrating the hits and the chase is on. This is a kind-of, sort-of mob/crime thriller, but Robbins spends more time explaining the background of Cardinelli (how the scion of a minor Sicilian noble family became an assassin for the mob), as well as the three women in the story who either were or become his lovers over the course of the story, and also delving into a little questionable pop psychology to explain their motivations. In conclusion, so far I’ve read two of his books and have yet to truly understand why this guy was one of the bestselling authors in the US and beyond for several decades. I blame it on The McDonalds Effect.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Sept 16, 2023 18:57:31 GMT -5
Battletech: Mercenary's Star William H. Keith Jr.
The Gray Death Legion finds itself out of work and forced to take a training gig on a backwater planet that turns into a whole revolution.
Much like the 1st book, there was a bit too much repetitive technospeak and specs... almost like the author wanted the reader to be able to have the game in front of them while reading and roll out the battle. If one was actually doing that it would be great, but if you are reading for the story it definitely bogs down some. The characters are pretty interesting though, that defnitely helps carry it through.. alot of the action scenes are pretty similar and the good guys seems to have really strong plot armor. Fun to read for sure though!
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Sept 19, 2023 22:12:16 GMT -5
Slave Planet Laurence Janifer What a strange little book! This is the 3rd by the author I've read (they were all in the big box of classic sci fi I got a couple years back), and while I think I like him, I can see why he's not popular or particularly remembered... none of the 3 books have more than a handful of ratings. Like the others I've read, this one is very psychological, and definitely a bit satirical. While it's sci fi (the plot involves a distant planet with aliens that are kind of small dinosaurs they call 'Alberts' for some reason that I'm sure made sense to readers in 1963), you could easily substitute 'the Confederation' for England and the planet for any African country exploited by England and the story would not change. The thing is.... Janifer seems to be making an argument FOR Slavery, as a cost effective replacement for expensive machinery. I assumed this would be very clearly tongue in cheek in the end...but it really wasn't which is a more than a bit disturbing. But it may just be the method of presentation.. both the 'masters' and the exploited alien slaves come out far worse for the experience in the end... I'm going to choose that as the main point and that the book is as a cautionary tale of exploitation and capitalism. Gotta say, it definitely made me think, so it succeeded on that score.... great cover, too.
|
|
|
Post by Prince Hal on Sept 20, 2023 9:44:48 GMT -5
Slave Planet Laurence Janifer ( the plot involves a distant planet with aliens that are kind of small dinosaurs they call 'Alberts' for some reason that I'm sure made sense to readers in 1963) Maybe it was a cute reference to this guy? "Pogo" was everywhere in those days. Probably still ran in 400 newspapers in the early 60s.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Sept 21, 2023 6:48:50 GMT -5
That's probably it!
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Sept 21, 2023 10:48:17 GMT -5
The Alienist by Caleb Carr I first read this when it came out in paperback after it had been a big thing when published. I wasn't reading much in the way of historical fiction or historical mysteries at the time, but I remember being pretty enthralled with it. I hadn't read it since then, though I watched the first season of the television show which adapts it and have zero memory of that program. I was floundering for a historical novel to read and decided to slot this one in. The book is narrated by John Moore, a crime beat reporter for the New York Times in 1896. Teddy Roosevelt is the reform Police Commissioner of New York City. The city itself is teaming with immigrants as it is transforming from a shipping hub to a manufacturing and banking behemoth. The plan is in place for the consolidation of the outer boroughs in to the current NYC. Into this setting comes a serial killer who preys (predominantly) on very young male prostitutes who dress as ladies. Roosevelt gathers together Laslo Kreizler, an alienist (early psychologist), Moore, two young eager reform police detectives, and a female police secretary (the first in the city) to stop the killer, in the face of vehement and violent opposition from the entrenched New York police force and the upper strata of New York society. The plot itself is good and it's more of a procedural than a true mystery. We learn enough about the main protagonists to maintain interest in them. It's made clear that while this isn't an entirely new situation (there is mention of H. H. Holmes and Jesse Pomeroy appears as a character), but the recognition of the existence of serial killers is still quite new. I think where Carr really excels is in portraying the stratified society of the time and the entrenched backwardness of the New York police department (how little things have changed).
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Sept 24, 2023 13:15:27 GMT -5
Diary of a Madman and Other StoriesNikolai Gogol (Eng. translation by Ronald Wilks, 1972) I came across this recently in a box when looking for another book, and couldn’t even remember buying it (it must have been dirt-cheap somewhere and purchased with some other books). Anway, flipping through it I realized that besides the title story I hadn’t read any of the others previously. This is a solid little collection, as it has some of Gogol’s better-known short stories: the already noted titular one plus “The Nose,” “The Overcoat” (sometimes also translated as ‘cloak’ and ‘mantle’), “How Ivan Ivanovich Quarelled with Ivan Nikiforovich” and “Ivan Fyodorovich Shponka and His Aunt.” I think my least favorite is “Diary of a Madman,” because honestly I find the way it chronicles a man’s descent into madness a bit depressing, despite some really well-written sections that are intended to be humorous. The rest, though, are all really enjoyable – that can be read as commentaries on the absurdity and pettiness of the Russian state bureaucracy in St. Petersburg or the foolishness of the lesser landed gentry in Ukraine, but also just as amusing, and occasionally surreal, examinations of general human foibles.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,143
|
Post by Confessor on Sept 25, 2023 9:37:50 GMT -5
A Night to Remember by Walter Lord. Originally published in 1955, Walter Lord's A Night to Remember details the sinking of the Titanic following its collision with an iceberg on April 15th, 1912, resulting in the loss of over 1,500 lives. A huge critical and popular success upon initial publication, the book was later adapted into a popular and still very well regarded film in 1958. Lord undertook a lot of research in preparation for the book, as well as conducting hours of interviews with many of the survivors to obtain first-hand accounts. It's a testament to the author's diligent methodology and rejection of anything that smacked of hearsay or exaggeration that, even though the discovery of the ship's wreck in 1985 shed much new light on the events of the sinking, almost everything Lord wrote in this book still holds up today as accurate. Unlike other books I've read on the subject, the author isn't interested in setting up the story up in advance, with a history of the White Star line or the Titanic's construction etc; instead, he focuses exclusively on the events of the night of the sinking. Sure, he does provide some background details as he goes along, but the main purpose of this book is to give an almost minute-by-minute account of the night of the disaster. The book is also concerned with the mores and etiquette of the era. An era when gentlemen offered chivalrous 'protection' to women who were travelling alone; when men put women and children into the lifeboats first and subsequently went to their deaths stiff-lipped and in full evening dress; when First Class passengers assumed that their lives were of more importance than the many Third Class passengers who died trapped below decks. It really is a fascinating study of people from a bygone era in a horrific crisis. On a related subject, something I hadn't quite appreciated before reading this book was that the wealthy aristocracy on board the Titanic really were the A-list celebrities of their day. In 1912, there weren't really any movie stars or celebrity musicians or famous sports personalities, so it was the aristocracy whose lives and adventures filled up the newspaper gossip columns and allowed the public to live vicariously through their glamourous lifestyles. This, I think, goes a long way towards explaining why the sinking was so shocking to the world at large and why it became such a newspaper sensation at the time. An area where the book really scores over other Titanic books that I've read is in its coverage of the freezing night that the survivors spent shivering in their lifeboats, waiting for the arrival of the Carpathia, the ship that rescued them. There's a tremendous amount of detail about this part of the story that usually just gets ignored in other books. Overall, A Night to Remember is an utterly riveting and very readable account of the great ship's sinking – I whipped through it in just 2 nights! Lord has a dispassionate, journalistic style that works well in this context, as he coverers the varying viewpoints of the large shipboard cast, with its entrenched upstairs/downstairs class divide. Highly recommended if you're interested in the Titanic's sinking.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Sept 25, 2023 11:42:40 GMT -5
Good Behavior by Donald Westlake
Dortmunder is back and this time the theft caper is secondary to an act of mercy. John Dortmunder narrowly escapes the police during a burglary gone wrong. But his escape leaves him with a badly banged up ankle and in the hands of an order of nuns who have taken a vow of silence. Hoping to avoid being turned in to the police Dortmunder agrees to use his skills to rescue a young member of the order who has been kidnapped by her millionaire industrialist father and is locked away in the penthouse of a skyscraper with state of the art security and a private army on the premises. Dortmunder could certainly go back on his promise, but there's some honor in this thief, so he works out a way to get Kelp, Stan March, Tiny Blucher and a new lock man to help...and still get paid. This was an up and down ride. I was definitely there in the first half, but then the book slowed down and took some turns I didn't love. But Westlake nailed the landing and overall I would say it's one of the better Dortmunder books. It's nice to see some good come out of John's shenanigans. And it's always good to see someone stick it to the rich folk. And who knows...maybe St. Dismas was looking after our sad-sack protagonist. Because he came out of this one a-ok.
|
|
|
Post by Jesse on Sept 25, 2023 22:03:41 GMT -5
This lady reviewed my wife's book! 🤩
|
|