Super Sad True Love Story reminded me in bits and pieces of several other near future satire/dystopias (all of which I thought were more successful), among them Wallace’s infinite Jest and Hal Hartley’s film The Girl from Monday, but most of all David Marusek’s Counting Heads. Marusek’s book is much more science fiction-y and action-oriented, [...]
Entries Tagged as 's-author'
Gary Shteyngart – Super Sad True Love Story
19 Oct 2010 · No Comments
Tags: s-author · s-title · satire · science fiction
E. E. “Doc” Smith: Triplanetary; First Lensman
20 May 2010 · 1 Comment
Strange but true: I never read any E. E. “Doc” Smith before. (It was Michael Kaminski’s assertion in The Secret History of Star Wars that Smith’s Lensmen were a key influence on Lucas’s Jedi Knights that convinced me to take the plunge; mostly I hadn’t read the Lensmen books because I thought I knew exactly [...]
Tags: f-title · s-author · science fiction · t-title
George Saunders: The Braindead Megaphone
12 May 2010 · No Comments
The least of the essays* in The Braindead Megaphone are “merely” entertaining and informative, even enlightening. But the best, with “The United States of Huck” at the top of the pile, are flat-out magnificent: beautifully clear-headed thinking, elegantly expressed, and driven by a passionate need to make the world a better, more humane, place. (The [...]
Tags: b-title · nonfiction · s-author
Charles Stross: Wireless
20 Dec 2009 · No Comments
I finally figured out that I like Charles Stross better when he’s being funny than when he’s being preachy. His short fiction collection Wireless offers both. My favorite entries were “Rogue Farm” and “Trunk and Disorderly.” The former is a sly future backwoods noir that almost lives up to its killer opening:
It was a bright, [...]
Tags: fantasy · s-author · science fiction · w-title
Tom Standage: The Neptune File
03 Jul 2009 · No Comments
In The Neptune File, Standage expertly balances personal drama and the intellectual excitement of a radical new idea. The new idea rests on the notion that the eccentricities of Uranus’s orbit can only be explained by the gravitational pull of another planet. What makes it so radical is that mathemeticians work out where the new [...]
Tags: history · n-title · s-author · science
Robert Sheckley: The Alternative Detective
24 Jun 2009 · No Comments
I saw it opined in several places that the third of Sheckley’s mysteries featuring Hob Draconian was so good it would make me want to go back and read the first two — and since I’m a “save the best for last” kinda person, I opted to read them in chronological order. I found The [...]
Tags: a-title · mystery · s-author
Sean Stewart: The Night Watch
20 Jun 2009 · No Comments
I’ve never read anything quite like The Night Watch. It shares a background with Stewart’s earlier novel Resurrection Man, but it’s not a direct sequel; it takes place roughly a century later.
Stewart’s novel is set after the cataclysmic return of magic to the world — the Dream — ended civilization as we know it. [...]
Tags: fantasy · n-title · s-author · science fiction
Sean Stewart: Resurrection Man
02 Jun 2009 · No Comments
I loved Stewart’s Perfect Circle so much that I bought several more of his novels, and then didn’t read any of them for a while for fear they wouldn’t live up to the expectations Perfect Circle had set.
I’m glad I waited to read Resurrection Man, partly because it isn’t quite as good (it’s one of [...]
Tags: fantasy · r-title · s-author
Wen Spencer: Tinker
11 Feb 2009 · No Comments
I’m a big fan of artistic constraints as tools to help channel creativity, so much so that I often look at other people’s work and wonder what constraints they might have applied in its creation. In the case of Tinker, I can’t help but wonder if Spencer deliberately set out to write a fantasy employing [...]
Tags: fantasy · s-author · t-title
Wen Spencer: A Brother’s Price
25 Jan 2009 · No Comments
A Brother’s Price is a fantasy novel with a nifty feminist twist: it’s set in a world where male children are much rarer than female children. Spencer posits that this leads to a matriarchal society in which men are valuable chattel — or, in other words, occupy a similar role to women in the vaguely [...]