Reviews and Comments

TheGr8Whoopdini Locked account

thegr8whoopdini@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years ago

This link opens in a pop-up window

Edgar Rice Burroughs: Tarzan of the Apes (EBook, 2021, Standard Ebooks) 3 stars

The baby of an English aristocratic family becomes orphaned in the equatorial African jungle, and …

The Standard Ebooks project (www.standardebooks.org) has inspired me to delve into the classics—both of literature in general, and of genre/pulp fiction specifically, so that my knowledge of the field and creative output (especially as a worldbuilder and Dungeon Master/aspiring RPG writer) might grow. I figured it would be easiest to start with something that is familiar, and what could be more familiar than the basis for one of my favorite Disney movies?

Ann Leckie: Ancillary Justice (2013) 4 stars

Ancillary Justice is a science fiction novel by the American writer Ann Leckie, published in …

Military Sci-Fi at Its Most Contemplative

5 stars

A fascinating exploration of colonialism, gender, and the question of human agency told through a remarkably human, arguably nonhuman protagonist. A must-read for anyone who enjoys outside-the-box thinking and sci-fi worldbuilding.

Don David Argo: Canaveral Light (Hardcover, 2001, The Florida Historical Society Press) 2 stars

A Feast for the Senses... Wasted by a Sickening Twist

2 stars

Content warning Rape, slavery

finished reading Neuromancer by William Gibson (Sprawl Trilogy, #1)

William Gibson: Neuromancer (Paperback, 2000, Ace Books) 4 stars

The Matrix is a world within the world, a global consensus- hallucination, the representation of …

In the wake of my being hurled into a cyberpunk hyperfixation by the recent Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, I resolved to start at the beginning. Apprehension born of discourse that the book had aged poorly and that "cyberpunk is dead" proved unfounded; to the contrary, I found Neuromancer, and the genre it helped birth, to be more relevant today than ever, living as we are in the shadow of surveillance capitalism, on the verge of global ecological collapse. Against that, we should all aspire to the high-tech, low-life spirit of rebellion established in this and related works.

A more detailed review of the book itself to follow later.