User Profile

Kelson Reads

KelsonReads@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 11 months ago

Techie, software developer, hobbyist photographer, sci-fi/fantasy and comics fan in the Los Angeles area. He/him.

Mostly reading science fiction these days, mixing in some fantasy and some non-fiction (mostly tech and science), occasionally other stuff. As far as books go, anyway. (I read more random articles than I probably should.)

Reviews are cross-posted on my website and I have a blog dedicated to Les Misérables.

Fediverse Main: @kelson@notes.kvibber.com (GoToSocial) Websites: KVibber.com and Hyperborea.org

This link opens in a pop-up window

Kelson Reads's books

Currently Reading

Jules Verne, Frederick Paul Walter, Milo Winter: Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (EBook, Project Gutenberg)

A nineteenth-century science fiction tale of an electric submarine, its eccentric captain, and undersea world, …

A gripping episodic adventure through a strange, hidden world of marvels.

...even though marine science and geology have passed it by.

Captain Nemo is compelling and mysterious as ever, if the passengers are rather broadly drawn (at least all three of them are distinct) and the crew is more or less faceless. (Aside from Nemo, the crew doesn’t speak to the passengers, so they’re never able to pick up the Nautilus’ private language.)

And Verne has really thought things through. Like, how did Nemo get something of this scale built without someone noticing? He farmed out different parts and systems to different factories scattered across the world. Ocean-based textiles, undersea mines, an isolated source of fuel that no surface-based ship will find.

Even the parts where he made up oceanography out of whole cloth, like the deeper outflow throgh Gibraltar (which as it turns out does exist, but not for the reasons Nemo suggests, which have since been …

Charles Dickens: A Christmas Carol (EBook, Standard Ebooks)

An allegorical novella descibing the rehabilitation of bitter, miserly businessman Ebenezer Scrooge. The reader is …

Dickens' original still holds up

The emphasis on kindness and charity and human connection makes it timeless, beyond the specifics of poverty in England during the early Industrial Revolution or 19th-century Christmas traditions.

Dickens as narrator is more cheerful in "A Christmas Carol" than he is in heavier works like Great Expectations (though even that has its moments of levity), even when describing Scrooge's cruelty, the Cratchets' poverty, or the black market pawn shop where items stolen from his corpse are sold off. The Cratchets making the most of what little they have is of course part of the point, but there's a sort of perverse he-had-it-coming-to-him glee in the latter scene.

The trickiest part is making Scrooge's conversion believable, and while I think some screen versions fall into because-the-theme-demanded-it territory, the original makes it work. The spirits cover all the bases of persuasion, sometimes hinting, other times bluntly throwing Scrooge's own words …

Charles Dickens: A Christmas Carol (EBook, Standard Ebooks)

An allegorical novella descibing the rehabilitation of bitter, miserly businessman Ebenezer Scrooge. The reader is …

It's been ages since I last read the actual story. Figured I'd take a break from Toilers of the Sea for something lighter.

reviewed Galactic Derelict by Andre Norton (Ross Murdock Time War #2)

Andre Norton: Galactic Derelict (Paperback, 1978, Ace Books)

Time-travel for archaeologists was a well-guarded secret; but when the remains of an interstellar spaceship …

A decent space adventure story...

...from the anything-goes era of science fiction. About a third of it is a quasi-military time travel mission to retrieve an alien spaceship that crashed in the distant past, before it decays to ruins. Mammoths, sabre-toothed tigers, volcanoes, etc. That part goes by too quickly, because Norton is using it to pivot from time travel to space travel. The rest is an outer space adventure as the team is dragged around the galaxy by the ship's autopilot...in the present day...after the civilization that built it has been dead for millennia.

There's a lot of improvising and jerry-rigging, with a crew stuck in a spaceship without sufficient provisions, not sure how long they'll be up there. At times I was reminded of Apollo 13, which of course hadn't happened yet when Norton was writing this in the late 1950s!

Like book three, it handles Native Americans better than I …

reviewed Wizard of Earthsea by Fred Fordham (The Books of Earthsea, #1)

Fred Fordham, Ursula K. Le Guin: Wizard of Earthsea (GraphicNovel, HarperCollins Publishers)

Ursula K. Le Guin’s timeless and revered A Wizard of Earthsea is reimagined in a …

Gorgeous Adaptation

Fred Fordham's watercolor-style art is absolutely gorgeous. The adaptation plays to the medium's strengths, allowing the visuals to tell the story when possible, keeping Ursula K. Le Guin's prose when needed. Wide seascapes, rocky coasts, forested landscapes, people (not whitewashed! and dragons...

Cross-posted from my website