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Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 7, 2024 8:07:35 GMT -5
I just learned that archive.org has The Complete Works of Robert E. Howard available. Despite not being that big a file (22 Megs and change), it is a massive book that contains the Howard texts and many old images from pulp magazines (covers and illustrations), as well as a few photos. Great resource if you want to search something like "how many times does Howard actually mention Shadizar in his stories?"
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Post by wildfire2099 on Aug 7, 2024 19:10:08 GMT -5
Ancillary Sword Ann Leckie
This is a bit of an odd book to review... while I liked it better than the 1st one, the problems with the first one were exacerbated here. The basic plot is simple... Breq goes to a particular planetary system and decided to set herself up a base of operations before the civil war reaches it.
Now, there are a few problems with that.. the biggest one being there's no way to know which side is which, or even if there are multiple sides. While I love the concept of a ruler using ancillaries to live forever, but spreading too thin and changing. That's now just background.. there is no update as to what's going on.
Back at the ranch, the book seems to try hard to develop some characters, which it does decently well, but that development is majorly hampered by the fact that there is no description of any of the different races, and that everyone is referred to as 'she', despite the fact that there are multiple relationships of various types that would be helpful to know what gender the characters are. Or how old they are. (only one character is given an age, and it doesn't really apply. they rest you have to infer by context... which is fairly muddled to start) Or what they look like. Or even if they are humanoid or not. I assume the author is trying to make some sort of point by not doing so, but whatever point that might be is lost on this reader, it's just annoying.
That said, Breq is really interesting main character, even if her motivations are unclear. The book at least is interesting enough that I want to know what happens, so even if I wasn't reading this so my book club book could be taken in context, I'd probably still finish it.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 9, 2024 14:02:03 GMT -5
The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt by T.J. Stiles
Those who know me know that I'm very much not a business guy. So following up a very long biography of John D. Rockefeller with a very long biography of Cornelius Vanderbilt probably seems odd. But whatcha gonna do. Really, they should have probably been read in the opposite order, as Rockefeller supplanted Vanderbilt as the richest American ever and the great business innovator of his era. Going in I knew the bare minimum about Cornelius Vanderbilt. Started in steamboats, moved in to railroads, was very very rich. And that's about it. Cornelius Vanderbilt really was that quintessential American self-made man, of the type that it's almost impossible to have in this day and age...in part because of the business innovations in which Vanderbilt was at the forefront. He quit school fairly early and started a ferry between Staten Island and Manhattan. He then worked for and partnered with steamboat entrepreneur Thomas Gibbons, ultimately helping him break the steamboat monopolies and becoming the leader in steamboat operations in the emerging financial center of the U.S., New York City. Vanderbilt and his steamships were instrumental in ensuring the passage of people to and gold and people from the goldfields of California. Competition in this led to routes through both Nicaragua and Panama and ended up in the start of the century's of U.S. meddling in the region. Ultimately Vanderbilt moved from steamships to railroads perfecting the art of consolidation of the disparate lines and, generally, using the emerging stock market in that consolidation and in fending off competition, ultimately becoming the richest man in American for most of the last half of the 19th Century and one of the two or three richest Americans ever. It's almost safe to say that Vanderbilt WAS the transportation revolution in the U.S. This is a meticulously researched book. Around one hundred pages of notes. And while it's clear that the author admires Vanderbilt the book doesn't descend in to hagiography. Vanderbilt's faults are on display, particularly his tendency to ignore and berate his children. But there's a lot to like about Vanderbilt. He was hard-working, direct and prescient about the trends of both transportation and business innovation. Railroads, with their incredibly expensive infrastructure and constant costs were a new breed of business that pushed the corporate form into places that could not have been easily foreseen even a few decades earlier. Vanderbilt was not only able to adapt, but to flourish and push the corporate form in to accommodating truly interstate commerce that could not adequately be addressed by a nation used to sole proprietorships and small partnerships. Changes that would be pushed even further by Rockefeller. It is, however, a very big book. And it can bog down at times. But overall it's well worth the effort.
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Post by Rob Allen on Aug 9, 2024 15:05:47 GMT -5
Would his name have been spelled "van der Bilt" in the original Dutch?
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 9, 2024 16:07:54 GMT -5
Would his name have been spelled "van der Bilt" in the original Dutch? Originally, yes. By the time he was born in 1794 it had been condensed.
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Post by Rob Allen on Aug 9, 2024 18:29:59 GMT -5
Would his name have been spelled "van der Bilt" in the original Dutch? Originally, yes. By the time he was born in 1794 it had been condensed. I prefer the original. I also prefer "Marquis de la Fayette" to the more common spelling.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 12, 2024 8:56:02 GMT -5
XenogenesisMiriam Allen deFord, 1969 (one of my favorite covers ever, by Richard Powers) A collection of sixteen short stories, published between 1950 and 1968 (although one was apparently originally written in 1946). Some of the many themes explored in them include gender roles and sexism, overpopulation, and clashes of cultures (i.e., humans meeting aliens). The latter stories have a somewhat satirical nature, in that they almost always deal with sex in some way that makes you chuckle – like “Featherbed on Chlyntha,” one of the best in the book, narrated by an Earthman abducted and held captive by a highly technologically advanced alien race looking for reproductively compatible species to shore up their dwindling population. The ending is pretty dark, though. And dark humor runs through many of the stories, in fact, although sometimes it’s so dark that you can barely detect it, as in one story, “The Smiling Future,” in which super-intelligent and telekinetic dolphins (mutated by radioactive waste dumped into the oceans by humans) announce that they are taking over the planet. DeFord, by the way, was an interesting figure; she was a prolific writer of both SF and mystery/crime short stories, but she also wrote quite a bit of non-fiction. She was an early feminist writer and activist, and also an outspoken antifascist and anti-authoritarian, and these qualities are naturally reflected in the stories, so that – unusually for mid-20th century SF stories – there are very three-dimensional female characters, as well as, say, scientists or intellectuals who are not only white dudes of north European stock. So all in all, I’d definitely recommend picking this one up, esp. if, like me, you can find a copy with that beautiful cover.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 13, 2024 10:55:11 GMT -5
Chicago Confidential by Max Allan Collins
Heller is back and not just back...but back to his roots. After a brief sojourn in L.A. in the first few chapters and a tryst with a very young Vera Jayne Palmer (Jayne Mansfield) Heller is back in Chicago. And he's dealing with The Chicago Outfit and his long-term ties to the mob in Chicago. Senator Estes Kefauver is investigating organized crime and Heller would much prefer not to be called as a witness and have to potentially plead the Fifth. This, of course leads to very organic appearances by Frank Sinatra, Joe McCarthy, Sam Giancana and the Fischetti Brothers (cousins of Al Capone). This really is Heller going back to his roots as the first three books of the series are known as The Nitti Trilogy because of Heller's relationship with Outfit boss Frank Nitti. Collins also works in the mostly forgotten murders of ex-Chicago cop William Drury and attorney Marvin Bas. The Heller series is generally very good and this was no exception. I really appreciated the return to basics as a bit of a palate cleanser. This one kept the pages turning.
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Post by Chintzy Beatnik on Aug 13, 2024 19:41:01 GMT -5
The Heller series is generally very good and this was no exception. I really appreciated the return to basics as a bit of a palate cleanser. This one kept the pages turning. Did you see the Kickstarter that Robert Meyer Burnett and Max Allan Collins are doing to create a Heller audio drama here.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Aug 13, 2024 20:54:26 GMT -5
Ancillary Mercy Ann Leckie
There are a great many times when authors write a great book, but have no idea how to end it, or create an interesting universe but don't know what to do with it.
This series is the rare opposite... the setting is kind of boring, but boy does business pick up by the end. This final installment of the trilogy we get the big conflict we've been building up for in the first two books, and its quite good. I was completely surprised by the ending, which rarely happens these days, yet it made total sense in the framework of the story, which was great.
The fact that Breq alledgedly came up with it as a last second random thought is silly, but I'm just not going to worry about that, I'm sure she was just saying that to make her friends feel better she didn't discuss it with them ahead of time.
The finale had a far different tone than the first two.. it was much lighter and has some fun, sarcastic moments, where the first too books were almost overly serious.
I also love the portrayal and treatment of AI here.. very unique. I hesitate to say 'realistic' for such a thing, but the AIs in this book behave how I expect they should.
I'm a little sad we don't seem to find out what happens next, so that's clearly the sign of a good series. I'm not sure it needed to win every award ever, but I'm glad I finally got around to reading it.
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Post by driver1980 on Aug 14, 2024 8:42:50 GMT -5
I’ve read The Happy Index, by James Timpson, CEO of Timpson: For those outside the UK who may not have heard of Timpson, it’s a retailer with branches across the UK, that cut keys, repair shoes, repair watches, along with other services such as dry cleaning, engraving, etc. It is part of the Timpson Group, which includes other brands such as Max Spielmann (who provide, among other things, photo printing). I must admit, after reading this book, where Timpson shares his business philosophies and advice, I found it a bit Orwellian (an overused phrase I know). For instance, Timpson has a Director of Happiness. Feel free to disagree, but that sounds like something you’d see in the Village in The Prisoner. And he refers to his receptionists as “Directors of Smiles”. Oh, and he banned the burger van that used to park near his HQ in Manchester, but there’s free fruit in the office. I wonder, is anyone allowed to bring their own burger in, or must everyone only eat fruit? There’s mention of questionnaires sent to managers, who are expected to answer how much they know about their employees, from names of partners to what sports team they support, etc. Where’s Number Six when you need him? Why should a manager necessarily need to know who you’re dating or what sports team you support? I found it a tad creepy and disconcerting. Let me state I see nothing wrong with a company doing its best to make employees happy, whether that be via perks such as a free gym or managers supporting staff who are bereaved. But once we get into the realm of a Director of Happiness, Directors of Smiles, a ban on burger vans, and questionnaires that managers must answer about employees’ personal lives, well I feel that’s akin to the aforementioned Village. You can’t force happiness, surely? It feels like Timpson wants automatons in his company and not individuals. Something like a ban on the burger van, which USED TO park near the office, makes me wonder if he’s trying to mold everyone into his image (I bet the burger van guy loves the loss of sales!). It also seems like Timpson wants a one-size-fits-all employee. Before being self-employed, I worked in offices. Getting the job done is the key thing, but people come in all shapes and sizes, from the stoic introvert who comes in, says little and gets on with his/her work to the outgoing guy who likes to chat a lot. Both are fine. Neither are wrong. But it does feel like Timpson wants everyone to wear smiles all of the time (I wonder if the Director of Happiness tries to force smiles). Sorry for the negativity, but it comes across as fake as politicians’ promises. I appreciate others might feel differently, and I once again stress it’s fine to have a nice environment where employees are supported, but I, personally, would not feel happy working in a company that has done all of the things I have referred to here. Not everyone can be happy 24/7, and I would hate to be the guy whose desk was near a Director of Happiness. And I would not feel comfortable necessarily telling a manager who I was dating, what holiday I went on, etc. When I did work in offices, I collaborated with others, but I kept work and personal stuff separate; if I dated someone, why did anyone in the office need to know? I used to believe in being friendly and collaborative, but with a professional mindset. (Also, not everyone is going to get on, you aren’t going to be everyone’s best friend) In among all the Orwellian stuff, there is some good business advice, I guess, about visiting your shops rather than making decisions solely in the boardroom, about not being too bogged down in sales data, about supporting shops and employees in a practical sense, etc. And there was a bit if insight into Timpsons. But I could not get past the stuff that would not have felt out of place in The Prisoner.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 15, 2024 14:00:46 GMT -5
Superman: Last Son of KryptonElliot S! Maggin, 1978 I first read this back in 1981, when I bought it together with Maggin’s other Supes novel, Miracle Monday (more on that in probably a few days). I recall back then being a bit annoyed that it was not a novelization of the first movie, and the only parts of the story I remembered were the sections focusing on Luthor (both as a teenager in Smallville, and as an adult), and also that Albert Einstein had advance notice of Kal-El’s arrival on Earth. Having re-read it as an adult, I really appreciate it much more. First, I’m glad it’s not a movie novelization, because it’s frankly a better story, and in fact one of the best Superman stories, I’d say. I really like how Maggin portrays both Superman and Luthor, really fleshing their personalities, motivations, etc., and I particularly appreciated the sort of understated way Superman always manages to best Luthor. One thing that I found a bit odd, and which also flew over my head when I first read it, was the bit about Xerox photocopiers, which reads like an extended advertisement or product placement (basically, they’re considered top-of-the-line devices not just on Earth but in the nearby galactic neighborhood, so that various non-Terran merchants steal them to sell on other planets).
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 18, 2024 14:23:22 GMT -5
Superman: Miracle MondayElliot S! Maggin, 1981 Like Last Son of Krypton, the first and last time I read this was in 1981, when – as I noted in my above review for that book – I was rather put off by the fact that they were not novelizations of the movies. I remembered even less of the story in this one than in the preceding novel – really, the only thing that stuck in my mind is that it introduced the character Kristen Wells, a historian from future Earth who travels back in time to find out why the third Monday in May is celebrated as ‘Miracle Monday.’ It all has to do with the fact that Superman basically takes on the devil himself, whose demonic agent, calling himself C.W. Saturn, slips into our dimension when Luthor opens a portal into the nether realms as a means to escape from prison. Saturn possesses Wells, and begins creating catastrophic, life-threatening calamities throughout the world in order to demoralize Superman. I’m glad I re-read this, as it’s another outstanding Superman story. And I got a chuckle out of this line, part of a description of Perry White that did not stand the test of time: “Barrel-chested and robust, White looked like the sort of man Bruce Jenner would be when he grew up.”
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 19, 2024 12:13:01 GMT -5
As a sort of post-script to reading Elliot S! Maggin’s first two Superman novels (see right above), I also read two short stories he wrote in the 1990s. The first is “Luthor’s Gift,” which first appeared in 1991. It’s narrated by Superman at some point in the distant future, in which he contemplates and reminisces about his relationships with Lex Luthor and Lois Lane. It has some nicely written, indeed moving, passages, but overall I don’t like it very much for a few reasons: 1. he re-wrote Luthor’s villain origin story, I guess to fit in better with post-Crisis continuity, but I think the first version he did in Last Son of Krypton is better; 2. the centerpiece of the story is the love triangle between Superman, Lois and Luthor, something I never, ever liked very much – it was probably among my least favorite post-Crisis changes in the Superman mythos; and 3. the idea that Clark Kent is just a guise and not the real man – something that Maggin also elaborated at length in Miracle Monday – which I never cottoned to, either (by contrast with the preceding point, making Clark just as ‘real’ as Superman was one of my favorite post-Crisis developments, along with Ma and Pa Kent staying alive). The other story I read is “Starwinds Howl” from 1998, which I very thoroughly enjoyed. It basically tells the origin of Krypto, and it is absolutely delightful. Maggin dedicates all of his talent to providing depth and plausible explanations for what are otherwise silly Silver Age concepts, so we get to see Krypto’s puppyhood as a lab animal who is taken by Jor-El solely for the purpose of use in a test flight for his rocket but then ends up bonding with baby Kal-El, and then the backstory of how he finally made his way to Earth and was reunited with his beloved man-baby (albeit now an adolescent). This story will particularly tug at your heartstrings if you have, or have ever had, a dog of your own. By the way, both of these stories are available for free online at the website Superman Through the Ages – just click the ‘novels’ link on that landing page; here’s a direct link to the bibliography page for Maggin’s prose at the site. Last Son of Krypton and Miracle Monday are also available there.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 19, 2024 15:34:09 GMT -5
I've just finished The Attack, by Yasmina Khadra.
It's a short, sobering novel exploring some realities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Dr. Jaafari is an Arab Israeli, well-respected, happily married, devoted to his patients. His world is turned upside down when a Tel-Aviv fast-food joint full of kids is bombed, and when his own wife is revealed to be the kamikaze who committed the heinous act.
Jaafari has a hard time accepting reality, as his wife had no reason to perform such an act; she never manifested any political opinion, had shown only signs of happiness for 15 years and was not even religious. Faced with the evidence, Jaafari tries to understand what could have pushed the love of his life down a path he had never suspected existed.
His obsessive and self-destructive quest for understanding will bring him face-to-face with the ugliness of military occupation, religious fanaticism, the thirst for martyrdom and the nature of familial bonds. Unfortunately for him, caught up in his demons, he will not pay enough attention to the power of simple friendship.
The book is very solid in its refusal to take sides in the conflict; both are presented with their respective faults. I'll admit that I'm biased toward one side, but I never felt that the writer was being unfair. Actually, one thing he does repeatedly is to present some character in a very unfavourable light (whether a bullying police officer or a fanatical jihadist) and then show how their actions can be, if not justified, at least understandable.
Not a novel to cheer someone up, but one I found difficult to put down. I will definitely look up the writer's book on Algeria.
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