Reviews and Comments

phooky

phooky@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 11 months ago

I'm just starting to read again, children permitting

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reviewed The fabulous riverboat by Philip José Farmer (A Berkley Medallion book)

Philip José Farmer: The fabulous riverboat (1973, Berkley) 4 stars

The Fabulous Riverboat is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip José Farmer, the …

Decidedly unfabulous

1 star

Content warning spoilers and unwelcome frankness

Raymond Roussel: Locus Solus (Paperback, 1988, Riverrun Press) 5 stars

Based, like the earlier Impressions of Africa, on uniquely eccentric principles of composition, this book …

Welp. That was significantly more bonkers than I was expecting, and my Bonkers Expectations were high. Do you like nested stories? Are you a fan of proto-science and mystical hoohaw? How do you feel about alternative dentistry? If you can answer any of these questions, respond in the form of an essay, seal it with beeswax in a brine-filled pickle jar, and launch it into the freaking sun, and then maybe pick up a copy of Locus Solus. Just buckle up for a bunch of random reductive and racist "exoticism" along the way, because this was written by a European guy in the first half of the twentieth century, and fucking of course. Recommended with a huge, sweaty asterisk, of the Vonnegut persuasion.

Mike Duncan: Hero of Two Worlds (Hardcover, 2021, PublicAffairs) 5 stars

An object lesson in trying to be a fixed point in a fluid environment. Mike Duncan does a wonderful job of researching and presenting his story, but the "podcast voice" writing style is a bit jarring.

Best WTF: Jefferson offered to make Lafayette governor of the Louisiana territory. As my spouse put it, "strong token French friend vibes".

Lewis Carroll, Helen Oxenbury: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland 4 stars

Welcome back to a Wonderland that is as astonishingly new as it is joyously familiar. …

Usually a fan of Oxenbury, but perhaps Tenniel has eaten my brain

3 stars

Look, illustrating Alice is hard. You're laboring in the shadow of Tenniel, and the comparison is going to be made. You can lean into the Tenniel iconography and add your own spin to it, as Disney did, or you can fight it tooth and nail. That's what Oxenbury's doing here, but she's working so hard to be Not Tenniel that she's forgetting to have any fun with it. Thus we have a Cheshire Cat that somehow "grins" without showing any teeth, playing-card people who just look like they're wearing playing cards, and weirdly sterile environments that seem terrified to include any imagery that isn't explicitly detailed in the text. Characters often float along with minimal background. Their expressions seem muted. If anything, it feels like Oxenbury is trying to bring a sort of naturalism to her illustrations here, which is, frankly, kind of a bonkers way of going about illustrating …

H. Beam Piper: Four-Day Planet (Paperback, 2007, Wildside Press) 3 stars

Fenris isn't a hell planet, but it's nobody's bargain. With 2,000-hour days and an 8,000-hour …

Whalers on the Moon

2 stars

Trouble's brewing at the whaler's co-op-- in space! Simple solid old school sci-fi, from before sci-fi got trippy and cool. People fight with fists and guns, light or put out fires, and argue about price fixing in a frontier town. In spaaaaaace. It's fun, I guess.

H. Beam Piper: Four-Day Planet (Paperback, 2007, Wildside Press) 3 stars

Fenris isn't a hell planet, but it's nobody's bargain. With 2,000-hour days and an 8,000-hour …

I know that this book is essentially "Whalers on the Moon" made flesh, so it gets away with it most of the time, but I'm nearly done with this book and there are no female characters. Not "no female characters with plot beats" or even "no female characters with speaking lines". They're just... not there. There is one woman named in the book. Her name is Martha. She is married to a whaling captain, and her entire appearance consists of her husband basically saying "Martha, call us a cab." There is no prior or subsequent reference to her being in the room. That is impressive dedication to dudestown.

reviewed Discrete mathematics by Lovász, László (Undergraduate texts in mathematics)

Laszlo Lovasz, Jozsef Pelikan, Katalin L. Vesztergombi, Lovász, László: Discrete mathematics (2003, Springer) 3 stars

Not very deep, a fun if meandering overview

3 stars

The topics are clearly explained at a leisurely pace, and I enjoyed the frequent, well thought out exercises. This is the rare mathematics textbook that includes answers to all the exercises, instead of, say, leaving you scratching your head for a month before you figure out you're chasing a careless typo.

One quibble: so many combinatorics problems are posed along the lines of "match up every girl with every boy" etc. and it's like, it's the 21st century, can we just, y'know, not?

George MacDonald: Lilith (1895, Chatto & Windus) 3 stars

Lilith is a fantasy novel by Scottish writer George MacDonald, first published in 1895. It …

Interesting, if not good

3 stars

It's a weird one. It's nominally a Christian fantasy novel, but it's more Gnostic than anything else. It's the kind of novel in which the narrator is invited to literally lay down and die about twenty pages in. It can't quite make up its mind whether its worldbuilding is allegorical or literal. Much of the writing is labored and confused. There is purple, adoring, faintly sexual prose about horses and leopards. Strange beasts erupt from the sand-- are they direct representations of sin, or just weird-ass alien monsters? In the end, it puts forth a very specific theology, one which on one hand offers salvation to everyone, but predicates everything on submission. Not sure how I feel about this one, but it was an interesting read and worth a mull or two.