Reviews and Comments

Eric

erichendel@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 8 months ago

Book blogger and reviewer. I mainly read and write about science fiction and fantasy. (he/him)

Mastodon: mastodon.social/@eric_hendel Website: erichendel.blogspot.com/

This link opens in a pop-up window

finished reading Death of the Author by Nnedi Okorafor

Nnedi Okorafor: Death of the Author (Hardcover, 2025, HarperCollins Publishers)

The future of storytelling is here.

Disabled, disinclined to marry, and more interested in writing …

I did not expect that ending... A part of me wants to go into more detail here about what (I think) Okorafor is doing with this novel, but I also know that I can't really talk about how this story concludes its narrative without spoiling the effect for others.

All I'll say here is that I love this book, and I think other people should read it.

(And of course that they should avoid spoilers.)

reviewed All Systems Red by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)

Martha Wells: All Systems Red (EBook, 2017, Tordotcom)

"As a heartless killing machine, I was a complete failure."

In a corporate-dominated spacefaring future, …

A Surprisingly Innocent Story About Trauma

All Systems Red is a wonderfully funny story, but also a deceptively heavy one.

It's true that the protagonist of this book (a socially awkward security android who calls themself "Murderbot") is introduced as this loveably quirky individual who is perpetually wishing everyone would just leave them alone so they can watch TV. However the humor of this setup is only half of what truly makes this story great. Murderbot is an amusing and innocent first-person narrator, but they're also a character who is gradually indicated by Wells to be struggling with some degree of PTSD as a result of an experience whose nature is left deliberately unclear.

The skill which Wells showcases here isn't just her innocent sense of comedy, but in her ability to take what is really a very heavy subject (how people respond to traumatic memories), and use humor to approach these themes with a respect …

reviewed The Book of Ti'ana by Rand Miller (The Myst Reader, #2)

Rand Miller, David Wingrove, Rand Miller: The Book of Ti'ana (Paperback, 1996, Hyperion)

Fascinating (if not always for the reasons the authors intended)

I wish The Book of Ti'ana was more popular, in part because this is a fascinating novel, but also because it's a story whose flaws are worth thinking about.

Functioning as a prequel to The Book of Atrus, Ti'ana details the events leading to the destruction of the utopian city of D'ni (the ruined setting of the earlier novel). The main storyline follows a woman from Earth, Anna, who after befriending a D'ni official named Aitrus, begins studying the D'ni "Art" of using an ancient written language to open portals between parallel universes. Yet as Anna masters the Art's unlimited power, her presence in this city also triggers a bigoted movement calling for her exile. Worse, at the head of this movement is no one less than one of Aitrus's closest friends--a prominent D'ni politician named Veovis who begins dedicating his life to upholding an authoritarian view of D'ni tradition. …

reviewed Jumpnauts by Hao Jingfang

Hao Jingfang, Ken Liu: Jumpnauts (Paperback, 2024, Simon and Schuster)

From the Hugo Award­–winning author of Folding Beijing comes a gripping science fiction thriller in …

The real aliens actually were the friends they made along the way

Jumpnauts demonstrates the value of sticking with a book even when the beginning chapters seem disappointing.

This story primarily follows three characters (an aloof archeologist named Yun Fan, a self-absorbed tech billionaire named Jiang Liu, and an elite soldier named Qi Fei) all of whom find themselves trapped in an international conspiracy when they discover an alien spaceship en-route to Earth. What follows is a sort of near-future "spy-fi" thriller in which everyone races to find information about this vessel, while also fleeing two warring nations who plan to use this ship's technology against their enemies.

It's a creative premise, but unfortunately Jumpnauts's first half is defined by one-note characters whose motives often feel underdeveloped. Jiang Liu and Qi Fei in particular feel less like fully realized people, and instead toxically masculine gender stereotypes who engage in increasingly cartoonish ego battles as they compete for Yun Fan's nonexistent affection. Yet …

reviewed The Lathe Of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin

Ursula K. Le Guin: The Lathe Of Heaven (Paperback, 2008, Scribner)

“The Lathe of Heaven” ; 1971 ( Ursula Le Guin received the 1973 Locus Award …

Personally my favorite Le Guin novel

This is probably my favorite of all of Le Guin's novels. It's not just that The Lathe of Heaven works as a really fun and tightly written sci-fi concept, but also that Le Guin weaves together a ton of parallel narratives into what outwardly seems to be a very simple story idea.

In part, The Lathe of Heaven is a surrealist work about a person whose dreams suddenly start becoming real, and who has to contend with all the problems that arise as a result of this fact. However in another respect this book is also a very honest and compassionate depiction of a character suffering from severe anxiety and mental illness, while on top of both of those stories is also a very political dystopian science fiction novel about the end of the world.

Yet what makes this book work is that Le Guin writes all of these conflicting …