Discussion:
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024
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Tony Nance
2024-05-01 20:39:48 UTC
Permalink
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024

Books are listed in reverse chronological order from how I read them,
using a very primitive rating system:
“+” are good, and more “+” are better
“-“ are not good, and more “-“ are worse

I’m happy to answer questions about anything on the list.

Highlight - Lyorn - Brust [Vlad Taltos #17]

Lowlight - Balanced on the Blade’s Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]

Here’s a quick summary of what’s more in-depth below:
( ++ - ) Polar City Blues - Kerr
( +++ ) Med Ship - Leinster [collection]
( ++ - ) Chimera’s Star - Stewart [Starship’s Mage #14]
( + - - ) Balanced on the Blade’s Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]
( +++ 1/2 ) Lyorn - Brust [Dragaera/Vlad Taltos #17]
( +++ - ) Earth Abides - George R Stewart
( ++ 1/2 ) Cast in Honor - Sagara [Elantra #11]
( ++ ) The Blue Sword - McKinley (re-read)
( ++ 1/2 ) The Hero and the Crown - McKinley


Now Reading:
Long work - Accepting the Lance - Lee & Miller [Liaden #22]
Collection - The Best of L Sprague De Camp

===========================================
April 2024
( ++ - ) Polar City Blues - Kerr
I think I liked this more than I should have, but it was still just
okay. Hagar is one of two human colony planets, and it is too hot for
human habitation except at the poles. Bobbie Lacey is an ex-space
military officer who was forced out for administrative reasons, even
though she did the right/best thing in a tough situation. She’s now
making her way in Polar City as an information broker, and she gets
pulled into helping a murder investigation. There are three major
races/species where humans rate a poor third; and Polar City is an …
extremely ethically challenged city (crime, bribes, crime, drugs, crime,
espionage, crime…) The investigation blows up into something much
bigger, and not just because the murderer has decided to kill everybody
who was a witness, or who talked to a witness, or who knows that witness
starts with a “w”, or …. Kerr squeezes a ton of ideas into this book:
there are psychics/empaths/telepaths, AI, baseball, etc. Some of these
ideas work, and some of them don’t. James has reviewed this book, with
far more depth and info and details, if you want to know more.

( +++ ) Med Ship - Leinster [collection]
This is the first of three Leinster collections put out by Baen, the
other two being Planets of Adventure, and A Logic Named Joe. I will be
reading the others, as this one was excellent, and I enjoy Leinster in
general. Calhoun and his animal(?) companion Murgatroyd take Med Service
missions in 8 different long-ish stories here (600+ pages). Very well
done. A few of the earliest stories are slightly weaker, but it’s a very
enjoyable collection. As these are episodic and independent stories, I
am not at all sure how the editors (Flint and Gordon) chose the order of
the stories. (It’s not chronological by publication.)

( ++ - ) Chimera’s Star - Stewart [Starship’s Mage #14]
This was fine, and in line with its predecessors, but I’m concerned the
series is about to jump the shark. This one featured the crazy-ass
over-the-top nemesis as the p.o.v. character way too much (well over
half the book); Roslyn is starting to show signs of becoming Wesley
Crusher; and we’re getting farther and farther away from Damien, and
Mars, and what I enjoyed about this series initially. I’ll read the next
one, but I’m concerned.

( + - - ) Balanced on the Blade’s Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]
Oh dear. This was so So SO not my thing. I strongly suspect it was
competently done, played fair with the conventions of the genre, etc,
but…oh my, not my thing. To me, this basically read like a bodice-ripper
romance with steampunk and fantasy trappings. I don’t think I could be
more ignorant of the modern state of the romance genre, because I avoid
it like it has pernicious cooties. (Yes, cooties I tell you - and
pernicious ones, at that.) This one features The Last Sorceress Alive
and a rogue-ish pilot, who of course experience insta-love/insta-lust
for each other while fighting a war at a mining prison. Sure. The
sorceress is the only character not made of flimsy cardboard, but again,
I suspect this is fair within a genre I’m supremely ignorant of. For a
long time, I had been pondering what to try by Buroker, and I picked up
two series starters. I will read the other one soon, but … now I’m nervous.

( +++ 1/2 )Lyorn - Brust [Dragaera/Vlad Taltos #17]
This was super enjoyable. It picks up directly after Hawk, and while
Vlad has indeed gotten the Right Hand of the Jhereg off his back, the
Left Hand is pursuing his demise with great vigor - or at least a
specific faction within the Left Hand is. Since the Left Hand is
particularly lethal with magic, Vlad hides out in a theater, because
theaters tend to have very strong magical protections. (Who knew? Not
Vlad - one of his friends clues him in.) As he hides, he also gets
caught up in the musical being produced there, including the people and
the culture, and the problems they hope he can solve while he’s solving
his own. While Vlad survives (of course), there are clearly bigger
things ahead. Many places say there are exactly two books left in this
series, currently named Chreotha (I believe this is the
last/only House that is not a book title yet) and The Final Contract.

( +++ - ) Earth Abides - George R Stewart
An interesting, thoughtful, and occasionally over-ponderous examination
of a pandemic wiping out well over 99% of the 1949 U.S. population.
Stewart clearly thought about the short- and long-term consequences of a
vast, abrupt depopulation event. Ish is the protagonist, and we pretty
much linearly follow his life through many generations and old age. Kind
of drags in a few places, but overall it is pretty darn good.

( ++ 1/2 ) Cast in Honor - Sagara [Elantra #11]
Whodathunkit? Kaylin and Co deal with another existential threat to
Elantra. This one tangles up the mirror network, elemental water, time
displacement, and a 10 yr old orphan. Sagara does this well, and if you
liked the first 10, you’ll like this one. I am mildly concerned that
these will get a bit same-y, but so far they haven’t. You know that
scene in the Avengers where Hulk & Thor are standing next to each other
after beating up some bad guys, and Hulk punches Thor out of nowhere,
just because? I want that to happen to Mandoran. Every time he appears
in a scene. And — not that this has been hidden or anything — we’re
getting glimpses that Nightshade is probably a bigger jerk than we
already think he is.

( ++ ) The Blue Sword - McKinley (re-read)
As I was reading The Hero and the Crown (next entry below), I realized I
remembered very little of The Blue Sword; so I figured it was safe for a
re-read. And the more I read The Blue Sword, the more I realized I had
forgotten every single thing about it. At no point did any of this feel
familiar, but my notes say I read it just under ten years ago. Anyhow,
this one focuses on recently orphaned Outlander “Harry” Crewe (we learn
later that her given name is Angharad) who is sent to the remote desert
land of Damar to be with her brother. Shortly after arriving, she gets
kidnapped by the Hillfolk of Damar, only to find she takes to the hills
like a true native, and she may be one of the very few to be strong in
Hill magic. Harry is a fine character, and the Hillfolk are a very
interesting people.

( ++ 1/2 ) The Hero and the Crown - McKinley
Good! This is a prequel to The Blue Sword, and it tells the tale of how
Aerin received the Blue Sword (Gonturan) and saved her beloved country
Damar from certain doom. I’m typically a “read in publication order”
person, but I do recommend reading this one before you read The Blue
Sword. Aerin is an interesting character (in good ways), and my only
disappointment here was because I am occasionally a petty reader who
wanted to see two characters get their comeuppance - and McKinley had
more class than to do that here.

Now Reading:
Long work - Accepting the Lance - Lee & Miller [Liaden #22]
Collection - The Best of L Sprague De Camp

Tony
Ted Nolan <tednolan>
2024-05-02 03:02:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tony Nance
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024
( +++ ) Med Ship - Leinster [collection]
This is the first of three Leinster collections put out by Baen, the
other two being Planets of Adventure, and A Logic Named Joe. I will be
reading the others, as this one was excellent, and I enjoy Leinster in
general. Calhoun and his animal(?) companion Murgatroyd take Med Service
missions in 8 different long-ish stories here (600+ pages). Very well
done. A few of the earliest stories are slightly weaker, but it's a very
enjoyable collection. As these are episodic and independent stories, I
am not at all sure how the editors (Flint and Gordon) chose the order of
the stories. (It's not chronological by publication.)
I have very fond memories of the Med stories. As far as I know, Leinster
did not have an explicit Future History, but the Med stories are definitely
in a loose setting I call the "Landing Grid Universe". This includes
at least "The Duplicators", "Sand Doom", & "The Pirates of Ersatz".
I'm sure there are others I can't grep for.
Post by Tony Nance
( + - - ) Balanced on the Blade's Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]
Oh dear. This was so So SO not my thing. I strongly suspect it was
competently done, played fair with the conventions of the genre, etc,
but -- oh my, not my thing. To me, this basically read like a bodice-ripper
romance with steampunk and fantasy trappings. I don't think I could be
more ignorant of the modern state of the romance genre, because I avoid
it like it has pernicious cooties. (Yes, cooties I tell you - and
pernicious ones, at that.) This one features The Last Sorceress Alive
and a rogue-ish pilot, who of course experience insta-love/insta-lust
for each other while fighting a war at a mining prison. Sure. The
sorceress is the only character not made of flimsy cardboard, but again,
I suspect this is fair within a genre I'm supremely ignorant of. For a
long time, I had been pondering what to try by Buroker, and I picked up
two series starters. I will read the other one soon, but -- now I'm nervous.
Sorry that didn't work out for you. Buroker does write Romance as
Ruby Lionsdrake (pause to admire that!), and generally there will
be a girl-meets-boy (often an aloof boy) element. I would say the
pilot's characterization does get better as the series progresses.
That said, it's less of an element in The Emperor's Edge.
--
columbiaclosings.com
What's not in Columbia anymore..
Tony Nance
2024-05-02 20:03:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Post by Tony Nance
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024
( +++ ) Med Ship - Leinster [collection]
This is the first of three Leinster collections put out by Baen, the
other two being Planets of Adventure, and A Logic Named Joe. I will be
reading the others, as this one was excellent, and I enjoy Leinster in
general. Calhoun and his animal(?) companion Murgatroyd take Med Service
missions in 8 different long-ish stories here (600+ pages). Very well
done. A few of the earliest stories are slightly weaker, but it's a very
enjoyable collection. As these are episodic and independent stories, I
am not at all sure how the editors (Flint and Gordon) chose the order of
the stories. (It's not chronological by publication.)
I have very fond memories of the Med stories. As far as I know, Leinster
did not have an explicit Future History, but the Med stories are definitely
in a loose setting I call the "Landing Grid Universe". This includes
at least "The Duplicators", "Sand Doom", & "The Pirates of Ersatz".
I'm sure there are others I can't grep for.
Oh cool - I did not realize those stories used Landing Grids as well. I
have "The Pirates of Ersatz" under its other title "The Pirates of Zan",
but I haven't read it yet.
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Post by Tony Nance
( + - - ) Balanced on the Blade's Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]
Oh dear. This was so So SO not my thing. I strongly suspect it was
competently done, played fair with the conventions of the genre, etc,
but -- oh my, not my thing. To me, this basically read like a bodice-ripper
romance with steampunk and fantasy trappings. I don't think I could be
more ignorant of the modern state of the romance genre, because I avoid
it like it has pernicious cooties. (Yes, cooties I tell you - and
pernicious ones, at that.) This one features The Last Sorceress Alive
and a rogue-ish pilot, who of course experience insta-love/insta-lust
for each other while fighting a war at a mining prison. Sure. The
sorceress is the only character not made of flimsy cardboard, but again,
I suspect this is fair within a genre I'm supremely ignorant of. For a
long time, I had been pondering what to try by Buroker, and I picked up
two series starters. I will read the other one soon, but -- now I'm nervous.
Sorry that didn't work out for you.
Me too, but no problems here. It was a short read, and harmless.
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Buroker does write Romance as Ruby Lionsdrake (pause to admire that!),
Yes - that's awesome. (And much better than Subordinary Elk.)


and generally there will
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
be a girl-meets-boy (often an aloof boy) element. I would say the
pilot's characterization does get better as the series progresses.
That said, it's less of an element in The Emperor's Edge.
Good to know, because that is indeed the other one I picked up!
- Tony
Ahasuerus
2024-05-06 17:33:33 UTC
Permalink
On 5/2/2024 4:03 PM, Tony Nance wrote:

[snip-snip]
I have "The Pirates of Ersatz" under its other title "The Pirates of Zan",
but I haven't read it yet.
It's ... mildly amusing but rather lightweight.
Ted Nolan <tednolan>
2024-05-06 17:49:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ahasuerus
[snip-snip]
I have "The Pirates of Ersatz" under its other title "The Pirates of Zan",
but I haven't read it yet.
It's ... mildly amusing but rather lightweight.
To back up a little bit, I mentioned that title upthread after doing
a grep for "landing grid" in tall the Leinster stories in my Calibre
library. Does ISFDB have a policy for what tags to add to a story
when it's entered? Things like "landing grid" or "tormal" might
be useful.
--
columbiaclosings.com
What's not in Columbia anymore..
Ahasuerus
2024-05-06 18:33:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Post by Ahasuerus
[snip-snip]
I have "The Pirates of Ersatz" under its other title "The Pirates of Zan",
but I haven't read it yet.
It's ... mildly amusing but rather lightweight.
To back up a little bit, I mentioned that title upthread after doing
a grep for "landing grid" in tall the Leinster stories in my Calibre
library. Does ISFDB have a policy for what tags to add to a story
when it's entered? Things like "landing grid" or "tormal" might
be useful.
https://isfdb.org/wiki/index.php/Help:Screen:TagEditor describes our
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Unlike most data submissions within ISFDB, there is no moderator
approval needed in order to add a tag -- new tags take effect
immediately. Once added to the Title, a tag will be displayed on
that Title's Bibliography page. Please do NOT add tags that spoil
the plot.
Most tags are descriptive, e.g. "space opera", "time travel",
"alien invasion", etc. You can also assign tags to create personal
lists like "read list", "verification list", etc, but moderators
may change the status of such tags to "private". Private tags can
only be seen by the tagger.
Moderators have the ability to delete tags that do not comply with
this policy.
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
the Med stories are definitely in a loose setting I call the
"Landing Grid Universe". This includes at least "The
Duplicators", "Sand Doom", & "The Pirates of Ersatz". I'm sure
there are others I can't grep for.
is different. If "Landing Grid Universe" is truly a shared universe,
then the best thing to do would be to put individual titles and
sub-series into it. However, SFE
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
The similarities in background from one late novel to another
were sufficiently numerous for these books to make up one loose
series – but through sameness, not through any articulated
central conceit.
It may be best to sort this out with the author of the SFE article
(John Clute) before reorganizing Leinster's ISFDB bibliography.
We have seen authors insert throwaway references to other series
as "Easter eggs", but it doesn't necessarily mean that they comprise
a super-series.

I am going to add a quote from the SFE article to Leinster's ISFDB
bibliography for now. Thanks!
Ted Nolan <tednolan>
2024-05-06 18:45:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ahasuerus
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Post by Ahasuerus
[snip-snip]
I have "The Pirates of Ersatz" under its other title "The Pirates of Zan",
but I haven't read it yet.
It's ... mildly amusing but rather lightweight.
To back up a little bit, I mentioned that title upthread after doing
a grep for "landing grid" in tall the Leinster stories in my Calibre
library. Does ISFDB have a policy for what tags to add to a story
when it's entered? Things like "landing grid" or "tormal" might
be useful.
https://isfdb.org/wiki/index.php/Help:Screen:TagEditor describes our
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Unlike most data submissions within ISFDB, there is no moderator
approval needed in order to add a tag -- new tags take effect
immediately. Once added to the Title, a tag will be displayed on
that Title's Bibliography page. Please do NOT add tags that spoil
the plot.
Most tags are descriptive, e.g. "space opera", "time travel",
"alien invasion", etc. You can also assign tags to create personal
lists like "read list", "verification list", etc, but moderators
may change the status of such tags to "private". Private tags can
only be seen by the tagger.
Moderators have the ability to delete tags that do not comply with
this policy.
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
the Med stories are definitely in a loose setting I call the
"Landing Grid Universe". This includes at least "The
Duplicators", "Sand Doom", & "The Pirates of Ersatz". I'm sure
there are others I can't grep for.
is different. If "Landing Grid Universe" is truly a shared universe,
then the best thing to do would be to put individual titles and
sub-series into it. However, SFE
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
The similarities in background from one late novel to another
were sufficiently numerous for these books to make up one loose
series – but through sameness, not through any articulated
central conceit.
It may be best to sort this out with the author of the SFE article
(John Clute) before reorganizing Leinster's ISFDB bibliography.
We have seen authors insert throwaway references to other series
as "Easter eggs", but it doesn't necessarily mean that they comprise
a super-series.
I am going to add a quote from the SFE article to Leinster's ISFDB
bibliography for now. Thanks!
Thank you as well for the info!
--
columbiaclosings.com
What's not in Columbia anymore..
Tony Nance
2024-05-07 20:57:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ahasuerus
[snip-snip]
I have "The Pirates of Ersatz" under its other title "The Pirates of
Zan", but I haven't read it yet.
It's ... mildly amusing but rather lightweight.
Good to know - thanks. I think I picked it up 15 years ago with the
thought to review it here as part of Will F Jenkins day[1], but I never
got around to it.

Tony
[1] June 27, 2009, in Virginia, but of course we got wind of it here in
rasfw
Lynn McGuire
2024-05-02 21:53:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tony Nance
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024
Books are listed in reverse chronological order from how I read them,
“+” are good, and more “+” are better
“-“ are not good, and more “-“ are worse
I’m happy to answer questions about anything on the list.
...
Post by Tony Nance
( +++ - ) Earth Abides - George R Stewart
An interesting, thoughtful, and occasionally over-ponderous examination
of a pandemic wiping out well over 99% of the 1949 U.S. population.
Stewart clearly thought about the short- and long-term consequences of a
vast, abrupt depopulation event. Ish is the protagonist, and we pretty
much linearly follow his life through many generations and old age. Kind
of drags in a few places, but overall it is pretty darn good.
...

Earth Abides is definitely still very good, especially for a 1949 work.

It is tough to kill off 99% of the world's population and make it
believable.

Lynn
Tony Nance
2024-05-02 23:50:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Lynn McGuire
Post by Tony Nance
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024
Books are listed in reverse chronological order from how I read them,
“+” are good, and more “+” are better
“-“ are not good, and more “-“ are worse
I’m happy to answer questions about anything on the list.
...
Post by Tony Nance
( +++ - ) Earth Abides - George R Stewart
An interesting, thoughtful, and occasionally over-ponderous
examination of a pandemic wiping out well over 99% of the 1949 U.S.
population. Stewart clearly thought about the short- and long-term
consequences of a vast, abrupt depopulation event. Ish is the
protagonist, and we pretty much linearly follow his life through many
generations and old age. Kind of drags in a few places, but overall it
is pretty darn good.
...
Earth Abides is definitely still very good, especially for a 1949 work.
It is tough to kill off 99% of the world's population and make it
believable.
Most definitely - it struck me several times how broadly and thoroughly
he thought about things.

Tony
Default User
2024-05-22 06:14:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tony Nance
Highlights and Lowlights - April 2024
Books are listed in reverse chronological order from how I read them,
“+” are good, and more “+” are better
“-“ are not good, and more “-“ are worse
I’m happy to answer questions about anything on the list.
Highlight - Lyorn - Brust [Vlad Taltos #17]
Lowlight - Balanced on the Blade’s Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]
( ++ - ) Polar City Blues - Kerr
( +++ ) Med Ship - Leinster [collection]
( ++ - ) Chimera’s Star - Stewart [Starship’s Mage #14]
( + - - ) Balanced on the Blade’s Edge - Buroker [Dragon Blood #1]
( +++ 1/2 ) Lyorn - Brust [Dragaera/Vlad Taltos #17]
( +++ - ) Earth Abides - George R Stewart
( ++ 1/2 ) Cast in Honor - Sagara [Elantra #11]
( ++ ) The Blue Sword - McKinley (re-read)
( ++ 1/2 ) The Hero and the Crown - McKinley
I read Polar City Blues many years ago, and liked it well enough. None
of the others, although I have read some Buroker works.


Brian

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