Greene Slæd reviewed $ git sync murder by Michael Warren Lucas (git commit murder, #2)
Version control and self-care
5 stars
This is one sequel I've been actively waiting for, and it has many of same elements which made the first book (/git commit murder/) in the (hopefully continuing!) series appealing. There's a decent mystery plot (and who doesn't like a mystery?), but moreover the protagonist, Dale Whitehead, is an extremely interesting, sympathetic, and (and, perhaps sadly, at times) relatable character.
There are parts of the books which perhaps will most appeal to a fairly niche audience: that is, people with some knowledge of the underpinnings of UNIX (also, people who understand computer networking; also, people who know about how members of tech communities interact). If you do know a bit about any of those things, those parts of the book are especial treats. But one needn't be a UNIX guru to read and enjoy the book, any more than one need be a wizard (or a hobbit) to read and …
This is one sequel I've been actively waiting for, and it has many of same elements which made the first book (/git commit murder/) in the (hopefully continuing!) series appealing. There's a decent mystery plot (and who doesn't like a mystery?), but moreover the protagonist, Dale Whitehead, is an extremely interesting, sympathetic, and (and, perhaps sadly, at times) relatable character.
There are parts of the books which perhaps will most appeal to a fairly niche audience: that is, people with some knowledge of the underpinnings of UNIX (also, people who understand computer networking; also, people who know about how members of tech communities interact). If you do know a bit about any of those things, those parts of the book are especial treats. But one needn't be a UNIX guru to read and enjoy the book, any more than one need be a wizard (or a hobbit) to read and enjoy the Lord of the Rings. The author has done careful work to make sure the contexts make any tech discussion comprehensible enough even without specialised knowledge.
The mystery here (as in the preceding book) is interesting, but, again, I think the most appealing aspect is the protagonist. While it's a rather different story and setting, getting inside Dale's head gives me similar feeling to the one I get from the inner monologues of the protagonist in Martha Wells' "Murderbot" series (so I'd recommend this series to fans of that one, and vice-versa).
That is, a character who is extremely capable, but also severely hampered by their own mental processes and the anxieties spun out by them. This is an extremely relatable situation, and so following along with Dale (or Murderbot) is somehow reassuring and affirming in a way that I think is actually quite hard to capture. But Lucas does it here, and he does very well.