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Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 22, 2024 13:29:00 GMT -5
Blonde FaithWalter Mosley, 2007 It’s now 1967, and Easy is searching for two men: one is his friend, who has disappeared and been accused of murdering another man, although his wife (and Easy) are convinced he didn’t do it; the other is a mysterious ex-military elite commando named Christmas Black (a character introduced in the preceding book) who left his young adopted Vietnamese daughter at Easy’s house – with instructions to simply look after her until he reappears. Easy realizes that the guy is not only in trouble, but could very well bring trouble to his door (a good hunch), so he sets about looking for him, as well. His investigations lead him to lovely blonde bank loan officer named Faith Laneer, who has a deep history with Black that goes back to Vietnam – and some of that history is the reason why Black disappeared, and why Faith’s life is also in jeopardy. Meanwhile, Easy’s home/ private life is in considerable turmoil due to certain events in the preceding book. This one keeps you flipping pages to its rather troubling end...
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Jun 22, 2024 13:36:44 GMT -5
Blonde FaithWalter Mosley, 2007 It’s now 1967, and Easy is searching for two men: one is his friend, who has disappeared and been accused of murdering another man, although his wife (and Easy) are convinced he didn’t do it; the other is a mysterious ex-military elite commando named Christmas Black (a character introduced in the preceding book) who left his young adopted Vietnamese daughter at Easy’s house – with instructions to simply look after her until he reappears. Easy realizes that the guy is not only trouble, but could very well bring trouble to his door (a good hunch), so he sets about looking for him, as well. His investigations lead him to lovely blonde bank loan officer named Faith Laneer, who has a deep history with Black that goes back to Vietnam – and some of that history is the reason why Black disappeared, and why Faith’s life is also in jeopardy. Meanwhile, Easy’s home/ private life is in considerable turmoil due to certain events in the preceding book. This one keeps you flipping pages to its rather troubling end... I really do intend to read the Easy Rawlins series fairly soon, having re-read Devil in a Blue Dress semi-recently. Maybe when I finish Nate Heller, since they’re a bit similar. So many books. So little time.
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Post by berkley on Jun 22, 2024 14:44:11 GMT -5
Blonde FaithWalter Mosley, 2007 It’s now 1967, and Easy is searching for two men: one is his friend, who has disappeared and been accused of murdering another man, although his wife (and Easy) are convinced he didn’t do it; the other is a mysterious ex-military elite commando named Christmas Black (a character introduced in the preceding book) who left his young adopted Vietnamese daughter at Easy’s house – with instructions to simply look after her until he reappears. Easy realizes that the guy is not only trouble, but could very well bring trouble to his door (a good hunch), so he sets about looking for him, as well. His investigations lead him to lovely blonde bank loan officer named Faith Laneer, who has a deep history with Black that goes back to Vietnam – and some of that history is the reason why Black disappeared, and why Faith’s life is also in jeopardy. Meanwhile, Easy’s home/ private life is in considerable turmoil due to certain events in the preceding book. This one keeps you flipping pages to its rather troubling end... I really do intend to read the Easy Rawlins series fairly soon, having re-read Devil in a Blue Dress semi-recently. Maybe when I finish Nate Heller, since they’re a bit similar. So many books. So little time. That's the problem, isn't it. I read the first Easy Rawlins book way back around the time it first came out and liked it but never followed up. I still intend to go back to the series, though. I don't think I've heard about Nate Heller till now, I'll have to take a look at those too.
But because there's so much I want to get to, I've had to impose a somewhat arbitrary framework on my reading and right now that means I'm restricting my genre stuff to the earlier decades of the 20th century. My next American detective story will probably be Ross MacDonald's The Galton Case - I've been going through his Lew Archer series the last few years. Really first rate stuff, and a good example of something that hit me only after giving it a second try - I read one entry in the series back in the late 70s or early 80s and it didn't click with me at all, but this time around I'm having a completely different experience (though I haven't yet come to the one I read before). I can see now why a lot of people hailed him as the successor to Hammett and Chandler, though his style isn't really much like either. But I think it came from the feeling that, like them, he was more a really good writer who happened to work in the hard-boiled genre rather than a hard-boiled writer who happened to be really good, if that makes any sense.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 22, 2024 15:00:25 GMT -5
(...) So many books. So little time. Ain't that the truth. Funny that you mentioned the Nate Heller books, as I'm seriously thinking about starting those (since I've read my way through all of Collins' Quarry and Nolan books). If I do that though, I will definitely go the e-book route. However, now that I'm well past half-way through the Easy Rawlins books, I kind of want to read some of Mosley's other series, esp. the Leonid McGill mysteries. So yeah, so many books...
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Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 24, 2024 16:14:38 GMT -5
And speaking of Collins... Fancy Anders Goes to War – Who Killed Rosie the Riveter?Max Allan Collins, illustrations by Fay Dalton (2021) In early 1942, a young woman working at an aircraft plant in LA making bombers for the war effort dies after an apparent fall from a scaffold. Even though the police rule it an accidental death, the plant’s CEO however, finds the whole thing suspicious – not least because the young woman, named Rose, was going to be the poster girl for a US government publicity effort called ‘Rosie the Riveter.’ So he arranges for Fancy Anders – the daughter of his good friend who runs a private detective agency – to go undercover as a worker in the plant. Fancy uncovers more than just a murder, as there are apparently also saboteurs operating in the plant. This is a very light, enjoyable and – at less than 120 pages – quick read. There are also illustrations for each chapter. (if you get the ebook/Kindle edition, these illustrations are in color) This book, by the way, was released by NeoText, a small UK-based publisher that has quite a catalogue of these small illustrated volumes, both fact and fiction. Its website is really worth checking out (https://neotextcorp.com/) – their catalogue includes other books by Collins (including a sequel to this one), and also, e.g., Adam Roberts and J.M. DeMatteis, and the many illustrators of individual volumes include Simon Bisely, Eduardo Risso, Francois Schuiten, Francesco Francavilla, Joe Staton and Howard Chaykin.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Jun 24, 2024 17:22:55 GMT -5
War on the Border: Villa, Pershing, the Texas Rangers, and an American Invasion by Jeff Guinn
"Panco Villa crossed the border in the year of ‘aught sixteen The people of Columbus still hear him riding through their dreams He killed seventeen civilians you could hear the women scream Blackjack Pershing on a dancing horse was waiting in the wings" - Tom Russell, Tonight We Ride On March 9, 1916, Pancho Villa crossed the U.S.-Mexico border and raided the border town of Columbus, New Mexico, looting the business sector and setting a number of buildings on fire. Ultimately, in response, the United States sent General John J. Pershing across the border with with 4,800 troops in what was then called the "Punitive Expedition, U.S. Army" to capture Pancho Villa and end the treat of the Villistas. The expedition lasted just over 10 months and did not succeed in capturing Villa. I knew that much going in, and not just from Tom Russell's song. But there was a lot of background, some of which I did not know. Journalist and popular history author Jeff Guinn gives us an overview of the Villa Expedition along with the background necessary to understand why it happened and why it turned out the way it did. That background involves a lot of the history of the diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Mexico, the Mexican Revolution, the history of raids over the border (from both sides) and the build-up to the entry of the U.S. in to World War I. It's a whole lot of stuff and, honestly, almost every chapter in the book could be its own monograph, along with biographies of Villa, Venustiano Carranza, and most of the major participants in the Mexican Revolution that raged from 1910-1920. If you're well versed in the Mexican Revolution, the unofficial Border War between the U.S. and Mexico that went on for most of that time (including the involvement of the Texas Rangers and the "Bandit Wars") then this is probably not the book for you. But if you're looking for a primer that can lead to more in depth looks...this is a pretty decent place to start. For those of us who were already familiar with the Zimmerman Telegram, there's a lot more context of the fairly long-term German efforts to stoke the border disputes between the U.S. and Mexico in hopes of igniting a war that would keep the U.S. out of the war in Europe. Well worth a read and definitely a nice place to start on a part of American history that is seldom looked at in depth.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Jun 24, 2024 21:22:54 GMT -5
And speaking of Collins... Fancy Anders Goes to War – Who Killed Rosie the Riveter?Max Allan Collins, illustrations by Fay Dalton (2021) In early 1942, a young woman working at an aircraft plant in LA making bombers for the war effort dies after an apparent fall from a scaffold. Even though the police rule it an accidental death, the plant’s CEO however, finds the whole thing suspicious – not least because the young woman, named Rose, was going to be the poster girl for a US government publicity effort called ‘Rosie the Riveter.’ So he arranges for Fancy Anders – the daughter of his good friend who runs a private detective agency – to go undercover as a worker in the plant. Fancy uncovers more than just a murder, as there are apparently also saboteurs operating in the plant. This is a very light, enjoyable and – at less than 120 pages – quick read. There are also illustrations for each chapter. (if you get the ebook/Kindle edition, these illustrations are in color) This book, by the way, was released by NeoText, a small UK-based publisher that has quite a catalogue of these small illustrated volumes, both fact and fiction. Its website is really worth checking out (https://neotextcorp.com/) – their catalogue includes other books by Collins (including a sequel to this one), and also, e.g., Adam Roberts and J.M. DeMatteis, and the many illustrators of individual volumes include Simon Bisely, Eduardo Risso, Francois Schuiten, Francesco Francavilla, Joe Staton and Howard Chaykin. That looks super fun! I'll definitely have to look them up!
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Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 25, 2024 3:08:49 GMT -5
(...) "Panco Villa crossed the border in the year of ought sixteenThe people of Columbus still hear him riding through their dreams He killed seventeen civilians you could hear the women scream Blackjack Pershing on a dancing horse was waiting in the wings" - Tom Russell, Tonight We Ride (...) O.k., I know this a trivial point, but shouldn't that be 'aught'? Also, it doesn't really make sense, as there's no zero in the year.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Jun 25, 2024 4:51:23 GMT -5
(...) "Panco Villa crossed the border in the year of ought sixteenThe people of Columbus still hear him riding through their dreams He killed seventeen civilians you could hear the women scream Blackjack Pershing on a dancing horse was waiting in the wings" - Tom Russell, Tonight We Ride (...) O.k., I know this a trivial point, but shouldn't that be 'aught'? Also, it doesn't really make sense, as there's no zero in the year.
It should be. Blame cutting and pasting from a lyric site without enough thought for the misspelling. As to the usage, that is poetic license.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Jun 27, 2024 21:25:47 GMT -5
Goblin Emperor Katherine Addison
Its certainly not unique to have an outsider come into a royal court and try to take over, but this version of that story was really well done.
The main character was very unique in that not only was he a reluctant ruler, but not a particularly strong person. He instead managed to find a good guide and managed to muddle through.
Not a whole lot happens in the book (there is only action in the last 3rd of the book, and only then a bit).. but the characters and the very realistic world that is set up definitely keeps you turning the pages.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 29, 2024 12:29:02 GMT -5
Blue LightWalter Mosley, 1998 Took a brief break from Mosley’s Easy Rawlins books (last one I read is reviewed above) to read one of his SF works that’s been sitting on my shelf for a while. I would only tentatively describe this as SF, because outside of the SF-like premise, or event, that precipitates the whole story, much of it reads more like – at turns – urban fantasy, magical realism and even horror. The event in question is some mysterious rays of blue light from the cosmos, a form of intelligence or possibly a catalyst for intelligence or greater insight, rain down on parts of northern California, mainly in and around the San Francisco Bay area, in 1966. They have an immediate effect on a small number of people, as well as a few animals and even some trees, who completely absorb them, but they also draw in some who were only partly or indirectly ‘touched’ by them. And, in one case, they inhabit the body of a man who had just died from cancer and animate it – basically turning him into a zombie who is the antithesis of the others (that’s the horror aspect of the story. It’s narrated by a man called Chance, a biracial former grad student at UC Berkeley who had attempted suicide on the night of the event. He goes on to tell how he was drawn into the community of so-called ‘Blues’, initially led by a hippie huckster guru who now has something real to preach about. The story is way too involved and complex to summarize, but it goes from the streets of SF and Berkeley and run-ins with the law to the Sequoia forests of east central California and a few detours, including Folsom Prison, over the next roughly two decades. The themes of the 1960s hippie culture are also explored and, I think, critiqued, not just the drug use and the often sappy idealism/spiritualism, but also the sexual attitudes (which got a bit uncomfortable in a few places). I found it flawed but still engrossing, with a rather unusual ending that has you wondering just how reliable a narrator Chance is.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Jun 30, 2024 13:51:42 GMT -5
The Massacre of Mankind, by Stephen Baxter.
This is the official sequel to H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds, in which the Martians are ack for Round 2 (a bit as in Marvel's Killraven series).
I enjoyed it quite a bit, although I believe it could easily have been a hundred pages shorter. It is divided in four parts, between which many years can elapse.
In part one, we reacquaint ourselves with characters from the original novel. They are now all named (and we learn that the narrator from WotW is not Wells himself, who is actually a competitor, but one Walter Jenkins). Miss Elphinstone, also from the original book, eventually married Jenkins's brother with whom she had shared a few chapters. She subsequently divorced him and is our main point-of-view character here, a daring war veteran, suffragette and journalist.
Fifteen years have passed, and as one would expect the Martian invasion changed the course of history; World War I did not involve England nor the US, and although France was beaten, the fighting continues in imperial Russia. Some martian technology has been retro-engineered, leading to things like the Titanic surviving its maiden voyage and its unlucky encounter with an iceberg. England has become something of an authoritarian state.
Jenkins himself is also divorced and lives as a quasi recluse with autistic tendencies, and although he has a huge impact on the plot, we don't see much of him this time around.
Once the cast of characters is established in large part, we witness the return of the Martians to England and the discomfiture of the authorities who, as is so often the case, have made preparations to win the previous war but didn't anticipate that the enemy might change its tactics. First, the Martians have apparently found a way (unexplained) to become immune to the bugs that killed them during the first invasion. Second, having anticipated that the British army and its astronomers would predict where they would land and doubtless send a huge welcoming committee, the Martians begin by sending not their manned cylinders but a large number of kinetic impactors that dispose of the enemy and clear the land for a proper arrival.
The rest of Part 1 is devoted to the rout of the British army and the conquest of the country, much as in WotW. (I could have done without all the scenes of people fleeing... been there, read that).
Part 2 begins two years later. The Martians are essentially unbeatable, but their goal is not extermination. They control a large zone in England where they start culling the population selectively; they seem to want to treat us as cattle. A plan is made to try and poison their blood supply (they feed on human blood) with a new pathogen, and it is Miss Elphinstone who is charged with delivering it by carrying it in her own bloodstream. Officially, however, her mission is to try to communicate with the Martians using symbols conceived by Jenkins. Much as in Arrival, symbols play a big role in the plot.
The novel also makes use of the fact that other planets in our solar system are peopled, and the story's premise is that the outermost planets saw intelligence develop first. Jupiter is therefore supposed to be far more advanced than Mars, which is far more advanced that Earth, which itself is more advanced than Venus. Martians, in need of greener pastures (so to speak) have already invaded Venus, but not the mightier Jupiter.
Part 2 is rich in adventure, but once again we could have cut several parts dealing with the culture of potatoes in an occupied territory and the like. Such descriptions may make the book more down-to-earth, but slow the pace down. And anyway, Miss Elphinstone soon realizes that the "new pathogen" plan is flawed, as it would just be one more episode in an ongoing war that we'd surely lose in the end. Besides, she thinks she has a better, cleverer way to end the war for good!
Part 3 describes the arrival of a new wave of Martian invaders, striking all over the world. Here again many pages could have been cut, because we get to see how several places are conquered even if nothing else is learned.
Luckily, Miss Elphinstone's plan works. I won't spoil it, but it is at the same time original, quite unbelievable and an acknowledged Deus ex Machina. I wouldn't say I found it frustrating, though; the seeds had been planted early in the novel. The Martians stop their invasion and seemingly vanish.
Part 4 is the shortest, and that is unfortunate as it is the most original section of the novel. We once again jump many years into the future, and see how Earth changed after the second invasion. We also learn that most Martians are still here, and that although they have renounced the armed struggle, they could still be a big problem for other reasons. Some (like Churchill) want to exterminate them, but others (like Jenkins) want to negotiate a mutually acceptable modus vivendi. The conclusion is pleasantly unconventional.
Many historical characters make appearances, and the mix of nostlagia/alternate history/military thriller makes for a nice read. I liked it.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Jun 30, 2024 18:48:24 GMT -5
Stuck on my back for the weekend because the slipped disks are acting up again, I finished Yasmine Mohammed's Unveiled: How Western Liberals Empower Radical Islam this afternoon.
The title is a little deceptive, because 90% of the book is actually a memoir of Ms. Mohammed's struggle with an oppressive religion, a hateful mother, a rapist stepfather, an arranged marriage to a member of Al-Qaida, and the utter betrayal of Canadian institutions (which, as a Canadian, I can vouch are much better at making pretty speeches and condemning peccadilloes than providing help to those who actually need it).
Yasmine's story is dreadful. Truly dreadful, in the way the life of ordinary people can be when they are children facing monstrous adults. I'm glad she finally escaped and took control of her life.
I really enjoyed how the writer blasts people like Ben Affleck who, under the guise of benevolent tolerance, conveniently forget the fate of millions of women who are treated like second-class citizens, are mutilated as children and are forced into abusive marriages all over the world. Were the accusations coming from a white middle-aged man, accusations of a colonialist mindset would be de rigueur... but here the criticism comes from an actual Egyptian woman who provides a first-hand account of what things actually were for the girl she was. She makes an excellent point about well-meaning factions who condemn sexism in the west and simultaneously excuse it elsewhere, as did a Canadian judge to whom beating a child was "culturally acceptable" in certain families.
The book is more heartfelt than systematic, more gut-wrenching than philosophically inclined... but it is a moving testimony. I would be quite ashamed of my country if I hadn't already been aware of its milquetoast policies whenever accusations of (fill in the blank)-ism may be involved . I was nevertheless shocked to learn that "stealth" polygamy is tolerated in Canada, if it involves certain religious groups. Not Mormons, of course.
Probably a book preaching to the choir, but as a staunch devotee of the utter and absolute separation between church and state, I liked its message. And just as a human being, felt utter compassion for its author.
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Post by MRPs_Missives on Jun 30, 2024 23:20:32 GMT -5
Latest read: Barbarians edited by Robert Adams, Martin Greenberger & Charles Waugh w/stories by Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber, Fred Saberhagen, Andre Norton, Lin Carter, Karl Edward Wagner, Poul Anderson, Katherine Kurtz others. Some were a bit uneven, but most were at least enjoyable. All were new to me except REH's Conan tale Beyond the Black River. -M
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Post by berkley on Jul 1, 2024 0:51:58 GMT -5
Latest read: Barbarians edited by Robert Adams, Martin Greenberger & Charles Waugh w/stories by Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber, Fred Saberhagen, Andre Norton, Lin Carter, Karl Edward Wagner, Poul Anderson, Katherine Kurtz others. Some were a bit uneven, but most were at least enjoyable. All were new to me except REH's Conan tale Beyond the Black River. -M I can see myself trying this once I get caught up to more recent modern fantasy. I recognise most of the names, though I haven't yet read anything from Saberhagen, Wagner, or Kurtz. The first two have been on my list for many years, Kurtz I only became aware of recently. Have you read the Derenyi series? That's the one of hers I've seen recommended, can't recall if it was here or somewhere else.
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