Hideaway — Alastair Reynolds

Hideaway -- Alastair ReynoldsThe first book in the Merlin Series tetralogy.

There’s just a handful of humans left with a galaxy full of nasty cyborgs hunting them down to extinction, so it’s time to find a place to “hideaway”.   But one person, Merlin, doesn’t want to “hideaway”, instead he wants to go and find a weapon to fight back with.

All the usual best from Alastair.   It’s great to have a break from the shorts as i’m working through his whole back catalogue and get into something a bit bigger: this is looking to be a really good series.

Next up is Minla’s Flowers.

You’ll find Hideaway in the collection, Zima Blue and Other Stories, or in Interzone.

Bye for now.

Alastair’s Page

#scifi #alastairreynolds

In Dreams — Anthology

In Dreams -- Anthology

Planet Rock (Don’t Stop) — Charles Shaar Murray
Fat Tuesday — Ian McDonald
The Discovery of Running Bare — Jonathan Carroll
Night Shift Sister — Nicholas Royle
Worthless — Greg Egan
Nyro Fiddles — F. Paul Wilson
Thrumm — Steve Rasnic Tem
Digital to AnalogueAlastair Reynolds
Sticks — Lewis Shiner
The Elvis National Theatre of Okinawa — Jonathan Lethem and Lukas Jaeger
Candy Comes Back — Colin Greenland
Honey, I’m Home! — Lisa Tuttle
The Reflection Once Removed — Scott Bradfield
Life in the Groove — Ian Watson
Black Day at Bad Rock — Christopher Fowler
Riders on the Storm — Mark Timlin
The Shiny Surface — Don Webb
Weep for the Moon — Stephen Baxter
The Man Who Shot Anarchy Gordon — Ray Davis
Don’t Leave Me — Barrington J. Bayley
Falling StonesPeter F. Hamilton
Changes — Andrew Weiner
Wunderkindergarten — Marc Laidlaw
Bold as LoveGwyneth Jones
Blues for a Dying Breed — Cliff Burns
Last Rising Sun — Graham Joyce
Reed John-Paul Forever — Steve Antczak
Snodgrass — Ian R. MacLeod

#scifi #gregegan #alastairreynolds #ianwatson #stephenbaxter #peterfhamilton #gwynethjoneswriter

The Shepherd’s Tale — Joss Whedon and Zack Whedon

The Shepherd's Tale -- Joss Whedon and Zack WhedonThis is a comic that is purely aimed at those of us who loved Firefly and Serenity and always wanted to know what Shepherd Book’s back story was.   It used to be available on Kindle, which i managed to get, but for some reason only the expensive hard back is now available.

While this comic goes through Book’s earlier life, it does so in such a way that is just totally messy and disjointed.   I can’t understand how anyone could sit down and think that this was a good way to tell Book’s story.   It starts at the end, where Book gets killed on Haven, and then keeps jumping back in time a few years at a time, but each jump is so harsh and disjointed it just leaves you having to go back over things several times to try and make some sense out of it.

To be fair, i would normally put a book this bad on “The Bookshelf of Infamy”, but as a total Firefly and Serenity fan looking at the only thing that tells of Shepherd Book’s past, albeit in a really badly presented way, i’m willing to spare it that utter shame and give it a hairline pass with 2 stars — but that’s an only just scraped into the bottom of 2 stars.

The annoying thing is that the Whedon’s obviously know how popular Shepherd Book was and how much everyone wanted to know more about his past.   Shepherd Book fully deserved a full length novel.   Even if the Whedon’s couldn’t be bothered to write it themselves, they could at least have just dumped all their notes onto a really good writer and let them have at it.

Shepherd’s back story deserved much better than this.

Joss’ Page Zack’s Page

#scifi #zackwhedon #josswhedon