Return to Pleasure Island — Cory Doctorow

Return to Pleasure Island -- Cory DoctorowAvailable in the collection, A Place So Foreign and Eight More.

This story is a bit hit and miss for me.   A lot more miss than hit.   A bit of background and context might have made things a lot better.

After i finished reading it, i discovered that, apparently, it’s a Pinocchio spin off.   Which is a bit late to find out.   And maybe that’s the background and context that is utterly absent from this story.   If a writer is going to use another book as background and context to a story then it might be a really, really good idea to at least mention in a fore-word to the story.

I’ve never read Pinocchio, so maybe i’ll go and read it sometime and then give this

Cory’s Page

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Craphound — Cory Doctorow

Craphound -- Cory DoctorowAvailable in the collection, A Place So Foreign and Eight More.

Cory’s first story from way back in 1998.   Definitely a story for those of us who love thrift shops, junk shops, auctions, yard sales, charity shops, etc..   The extees remind me of the groks who come to Devon on holiday and deplete all our wonderful charity shops, only difference between extees and groks is that extees actually bring something decent to the table whereas groks only bring their rubbish, noise and pollution.   Groks don’t follow the craphound code.

Cory’s Page

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The Fixation — Alastair Reynolds

The Six Directions of Space -- Alastair ReynoldsYou’ll find this in Deep Navigation.

Yet another one of Alastair’s parallel universe, ridicilous nonsense stories.   Utter rubbish, to put it mildly.

I live in hope that he will soon get over this bizarre phase in his bibliography.   Next up in the timeline is The Sledge-Maker’s Daughter, and i think i’ll throw my Kindle across the room if there’s even a hint on one single parallel universe, let alone an infinite number of them.

Alastair’s Page

#scifi #alastairreynolds

The Six Directions of Space — Alastair Reynolds

The Six Directions of Space -- Alastair ReynoldsOriginally published in Galactic Empires

More of that parallel universe nonsense that Alastair is obviously having a thing for during this period of his writing: 2006/2007.   Fingers crossed it should be over soon and we can get back to some proper good sci-fi.

The next story from Alastair’s timeline will be The Fixation.

Alastair’s Page

#scifi #alastairreynolds

Gourmet Rhapsody — Muriel Barbery

Gourmet Rhapsody -- Muriel BarberyAlthough translated one year after The Elegance of the Hedgehog, this is actually Muriel’s first book and was published in French 6 years before.   And that’s why i read it first.

I’m in two frames of mind about this book, my first one is that it’s an incredibly well written descriptive narrative that i thoroughly enjoyed, especially being a life long foody myself, to the point i found myself happily picking it up at every spare minute to read some more.   However, my other frame of mind comes from my utter contempt for people who look at food as a medium for art when the best part of i billion people don’t get enough calories every day while many many more get absolutely no choice what to eat and very rarely have access to a full range of essential nutrients.   At the same time, over 1 billion other people in the privileged developed world gorge themselves on highly processed foods to an obesity epidemic (creating an obscene amount of waste while doing so).   A system of food preparation, presentation, advertising and marketing that caters for nothing but a ridiculous conception of what good food is.   This system being pushed wholesale through advertising and television cookery programs: Master Chef being a prime example.

Good food is as it comes from the ground with the most minimal processing, just enough processing to maximise the digestion of the nutrients, and each meal should aim to be completely nutritionally balanced.   Instead we have these so called master chefs, critics and their sycophants parading food on television that bears no resemblance to reality, is nutritionally corrupt in the extreme and does nothing but titillate people’s mouths and give them a spike of neurotransmitters that they fallaciously perceive as delicious while fuelling a pandemic of obesity and chronic diseases, causing years of suffering before sending them all to an early grave.

So yeah, i loved the writing and enjoyed reading it, but i really hated the main protagonist’s attitude to food, life and everything: the only thing he didn’t treat with utter contempt was his own gluttony and i was quite pleased when he died without the choux pastry he wanted so much.

Anyways, i’m certainly looking forward to reading The Elegance of the Hedgehog.

Muriel’s Page

#murielbarbery

Tiger, Burning — Alastair Reynolds

Tiger, Burning -- Alastair ReynoldsYou’ll find this in Deep Navigation.

It seems that someone’s been leaking top secret information from a top secret facility in a different reality and a detective is sent to investigate.   The only problem being that the only way to get there is to have his consciousness uploaded and sent by signal and then put into a new body at the other end: exactly like in Altered Carbon.   But for some reason the detective finds himself re-sleeved into a bit cat’s body: hence the title Tiger, Burning.

Really good, Alastair at his best, as usual.

Next up in Alastair’s timeline will be Signal to Noise, from 2006.

Alastair’s Page

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The Autobiography of Jean-Luc Picard — David A. Goodman

The Autobiography of Jean-Luc Picard -- David A. GoodmanVery much similar to The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway that i read two books ago.

Thoroughly enjoyable look back at Jean-Luc’s early life before the Enterprise, and also some good snippets from the series and afterwards also.

Another must for Trekkies everywhere.

David’s Page

#autobiography #scifi #startrek #davidagoodman

Will I Live to See My Utopia? — P. Djèlí Clark

Will I Live to See My Utopia? -- P. Djèlí ClarkInspired by the TV show Watchmen.   You can read it over at Uncanny.

An interesting and thought provoking essay by one of my favourite writers.   Djèlí is a historian by day and he provides lots of links for you to learn things with.

And for those of you who haven’t watched Watchmen yet, then seriously get the fuck out from under that rock you’ve been living under and turn the computer on and find it.   Seriously good TV.

P. Djèlí Clark’s Page

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