User Profile

Glen Engel-Cox

gengelcox@bookwyrm.social

Joined 5 months, 3 weeks ago

Glen has lived in Texas, California, Malaysia, Ohio, Saudi Arabia, and Washington (both state and District of Columbia), working as a radio DJ, bank clerk, database manager, library assistant, technical writer, computer programmer, adjunct English teacher, and communication consultant. Glen’s short fiction has appeared in LatineLit, Utopia, Nature, Triangulation, Factor Four, SFS Stories, and others.

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Wonderful worldbuilding

5 stars

We talk a lot in SF about worldbuilding, the creation of a unique setting for a book that is different from the world we live in. Of course, there’s always some connection to our world, for it would be impossible to understand a world that was completely new, but good worldbuilding is about changing enough for us to find a new way to examine our own thoughts and beliefs. This story by McIntyre does that splendidly and does it by showing you the world, never telling you. When writing teachers advise students to “show, don’t tell,” they should use this story as an example. Snake, the protagonist, is a healer, but of a different group than the family and sick child, and that means they struggle to understand even though they’ve asked for her help. Highly recommended.

Experimental

4 stars

Another story with a fairly experimental structure, in this case the wiki/reddit-way of commenting on a text where others can add comments and upvote or downvote previous comments. For the most part, this works for the story, reminiscent of the kind of sleuthing in longer works like A.S. Byatt’s Possession or even Richard Powers’ The Gold Bug Variations. I kept expecting that one of the commenters—BarrowBoy—to be revealed as something else, but was disappointing. The ending is heavily implied—if you follow the idea of the story, you are led to a recognition that the documentarian is being led astray by the village historian there at the end. Fun, if made somewhat more difficult than need be by the experimental format.

Just perfect

5 stars

This is my kind of story. I love the voice, I love the premise, I love the tough choices and the characterizations, and I love the resolution and the happy ending. This is a story worthy of an award. New reaper gets assigned to a two-and-a-half-year-old and has a bit of a problem doing his duty, and shennigans happen. Loved it.

Catherynne M. Valente: L’Esprit de L’Escalier (EBook, 2021, Tor Books) 4 stars

In this provocative and rich retelling of the Greek myth, Orpheus, the musician son of …

Challenging

4 stars

This is a strange, strange story. It revisions the Orpheus/Eurydice myth in ways I never imagined, placing it in modern times and yet still anchored in the ancient tale. I don’t like to use the term tour de force very often, but, really, I don’t think there’s any way this story isn’t one. It’s utterly unique and I wish I liked it more, but there’s a distance here I had trouble overcoming—perhaps it’s because I’m not as familiar with the myths as the author, at least not enough to get all the cleverness that I know is in this story. For someone without even a clue about the myth, this story must be unfathomable.

Kim Stanley Robinson: Antarctica (1999, Bantam Books) 4 stars

Long-winded, full of details and stuff

4 stars

This is the longest book I’ve read in some time, but then I read it while engaging in one of the longest trips I’ve ever taken, a visit to the Antarctic peninsula by a 130-person capacity cruise ship called the Sylvia Earle. While Jill read the primary documents about the continent—accounts of the Scott and Shackleton expeditions—I let Stan Robinson summarize those for me in his near future SF about people who want to work and live in one of the most inhospitable environments on Earth. Perfect fodder for a writer whose previous books were about terraforming Mars. Robinson’s book came from his own visit to Antarctica as a fellow for the NSF U.S. Antarctic Program’s Artists and Writers’ Program in 1995. The first third of the book, after a small action hook, is a slow burn through the details of what it is like to be in Antarctic as …

a little bit of rock 'n' roll

4 stars

My kind of story, about outsiders bonding over music, set in the time of my childhood, soaked in the stuff that science fiction promises of how things could be better if only. While I wasn’t bothered by its focus on gender, I did feel like Miller did a bit of time travel there by importing the language and issues of 2020 into the mid 1980s. Or perhaps this is an alternative Earth, where those issues emerged earlier? However, I’m surprised Miller was able to publish this, given the use of lyrics to both Iggy Pop and David Bowie songs.

Leviathan Wakes 4 stars

Intriguing

4 stars

In an effort to catch up on some of the most popular SFF published in the last couple of decades, I finally turned to this, the first in The Expanse series, now made into a TV series on Netflix. And it’s easy to see what has made it so popular and cinematic: the action here is exciting, the characters fairly complex, and the political machinations between Earth, Mars, and the Belt intriguing and interesting. The latter is probably the best selling point of the book, at least for me. Corey (a pseudonym for Daniel Abraham and Ty Frank, but I’ll refer to the collaboration with their chosen sobriquet because it truly is the work of both) has imagined a future in which humanity has escaped the gravity well that is our home planet, but not made much progress in escaping our solar system. This “on the cusp” of something bigger …