Book Log – Molly Fyde and the Parsona Rescue (The Bern Saga Book 1)

Molly Fyde and the Parsona Rescue (The Bern Saga Book 1) by Hugh C. Howey

I don’t remember why I had this book on my wish list… could be I came across it as a recommended book for young girls, and I wanted to keep track of it for my daughter, Scout.

As many, many folks have lamented before me, there is a dearth of good literature, movies, video games, etc with girl role models. You can only read Pippi Longstocking so many times. There are a lot of attempts, but rarely does the quality of the writing pass muster.

So, here’s Molly Fyde, space pilot. She’s an orphan, training in the naval space academy. She’s been shifted onto the navigator track, largely because she’s a woman, though she’s really a good pilot. She’s pretty tough, but gooey eyed for one of her companions in the navy.

She’s got a lot to admire, with some flaws thrown in to give her some realism. The world and entanglements therein she encounters are clever, with some good action sequences.

All that said, it is a young adult novel. I think I’ll leave the rest of the series to the young adults. Scout can let me know how they turn out, once she learns to read.

Book Log – A Dance with Dragons

A Dance with Dragons (A Song of Ice and Fire, Book 5) by George R.R. Martin

A lot of the reviews of books 4 and 5 complain that these books are “uneventful” compared to the first three, and they often center around new areas of the world, far from the areas where most of the first three books take place.

I don’t know what these folks are talking about.

Four and five were just as good as the first three. And sure, Martin is piling on more characters and cities and complicated storylines. But really, that’s part of what’s so great about these books: the richness, depth and variety of storytelling going on. There are dozens of protagonists and antagonists, and often times both in the same character. You can never count on your favorite character to survive, because Martin kills off so many and introduces new ones all the time, and there are half a dozen different ways to die but not be dead (though many of them are not enviable).

Really good writing, breathtaking scope of world-building, super complicated political intrigue and cool action sequences… what’s not to like?

It’s going to be a long three years or so until Book 6 comes out.

Book Log – Lots of Books, or Blaming the Kindle

So, I’ve fallen way, way behind in my book logging.

I blame the Kindle.  It used to be I read a physical book, then I dropped it by my computer to remind myself to write a post about it.  But you can’t do that with a Kindle.  So I’m going to shorthand some commentary here…

1. Mercury Falls by Robert Kroese
Fine, amusing book about bureaucratic angels and armageddon.

2. Mercury Swings by Robert Kroese
Not a book, but a short story, I believe it was a bridge between Mercury Falls and Mercury Rises.  Its kind of run together in my head.

3. Mercury Rises by Robert Kroese
The continuation/completion of the Mercury series.  Mr. Kroese is a fine writer, not a great writer.  He’s a better writer than I am.  Worth a read.

4. A Clash of Kings: A Song of Ice and Fire: Book Two by George R.R. Martin
5. A Storm of Swords: A Song of Ice and Fire: Book Three by George R.R. Martin
6. A Feast for Crows: A Song of Ice and Fire: Book Four by George R.R. Martin
Okay, I didn’t think I would, but I got caught up in these. The characters are compelling, and the author is not afraid of killing off ones you like. He can afford to… he’s got like 1,000 of them to keep track of.

7. You Are Not So Smart by David McRaney
This deserved more discussion, but it’s been so long since I read it, I can’t remember what I wanted to say about it. Other than, it points out our mental foibles and cites some interesting studies into the human brain. Some stuff I’ve heard about, but lots of it new to me.

Book Log – God, No!

God, No! by Pen Jillette

Pen Jillette is an asshole.

And I mean that in the nicest way possible.  He is the kind of asshole that every society needs.  Irreverant, brusque, and very direct in what he says.  There’s a lot of opinion about atheism and religion, of course, but there’s more to it, and many amusing stories of being a Las Vegas performer slipped in.

He’s good to have because even if you disagree with him (and a few times I did), he definitely makes you consider why you disagree with him.  At times, I thought I disagreed, but after thinking it through, I had to admit that he really wasn’t wrong.

It’s a thought-provoking and amusing, if scattershot, book.  I recommend it.

If it has a flaw, it’s that he tends to repeat himself.  By which I mean, he’ll reiterate what he says a lot by repeating it.  If he says something again and again, I have to believe it is for emphasis.  He gets his point across, through repitition, and perhaps extends his word count.  But maybe repeating himself, which he does often by rephrasing the same concept, is an effective persuasion technique.  Because hearing it again and again, because he writes things over and over, maybe you’ll really have to consider what he’s saying before you can move on to the next thought.

Also, Pen apparently knows a lot of strippers.

Book Log – Rhubarb

Rhubarb by M.H. Van Keuren

By way of disclosure, I must clarify that I know the author. As William Hurt said in The Big Chill, “a long time ago, we knew each other for a short period of time.” Back then, he was a filmmaker, and he was funny. Today, he is a writer, and he’s still funny.

I’ve read a Van Keuren before, in unpublished, prototype1 form. It was good… really good. And so imagine my surprise when the book he actually publishes a couple years later is a completely different book.

The first book was easy to categorize… Hard Science Fiction. No doubt.

Rhubarb is… different. I expected, from the whimsical title if nothing else, something with a Douglas Adams feel. It’s funny, but it’s not eccentric. There’s more of a solid texture2 and real storytelling, perhaps somewhat similar to Adams’ later works. (As opposed to the early Hitchhikers which were pieced together from various version of radio scripts).

But this is not Douglas Adams. This has a flavor all its own. A regular guy, just getting by best he can in a traveling account manager job, starts to notice some odd things about the towns he travels through. Is his brain being influenced by the long hours on the road listening to radio call-in shows, or is he on the trail of a massive, x-files style cover-up?

I could tell you the ending, and it wouldn’t really matter. Like Hitchhikers, the joy is more in the telling than the plot (though the plot is strong). Interesting, small-town characters mixed with good dialog, witty running gags, and a comfortable pacing all add up to a darn fine novel.

I could gush, and spout hyperbole, but you’d attribute it to me knowing the guy. So I’m just going to say that it’s a good read, just in time for summer. Here’s your opportunity to discover a new author, right at the start.

“Oh I read Rhubarb when it was in its first printing,” you’ll say, racking up the hipster cred.

“Dude,” I’ll respond, “I read Legitimacy before it was even done.”

And you will all bow to me.

Probably.

______________________________
1 I’m an engineer, not an author. I’m sure authors call it something writer-y.
2 I’ve never been to the Billings, Montana area before, but now I feel like I have.

Book Log – falling behind…

Falling behind isn’t the name of a book, it’s my state of being.

There are obvious upsides and downsides to a Kindle.

On the upsides, I’m getting a lot more reading done, and I love the e-Ink screen. The light on the case makes it easy to read while putting the kids to sleep without searching for my always missing flashlight or book cliplight. The Kindle’s always with me, at work, in the car, whereever. If I’ve got 5 minutes to kill, I’ve got a good way to kill it handy.

The downsides are primarily that I’m a little too Amazon-centric as it is, and it is Way Too Easy to buy a book. I’m going to reign that in. Really.

But also, I fall behind in this blog.

So I’m making some notes on recently read books I need to write about:

God, No! by Pen Jillette
Rhubarb by M.H. Van Keuren (I really want to talk abou this one)
You Are Not So Smart by David McRaney

All three of these deserve more than a paragraph of commentary, so… until there is time, there they’ll sit.

Book Log: A Game of Thrones: A Song of Ice and Fire: Book One

A Game of Thrones: A Song of Ice and Fire: Book One by R.R. Martin

I need to be more prompt on writing these. It’s been several weeks since I finished GoT and I’m trying to remember what I thought about it…

It’s good. It’s above average fantasy, not that I’m an expert on fantasy. What have I read? Some Piers Anthony a lifetime ago… the Myth Adventures series… Spellsinger series… Thieves World series… Discworld… these are all mostly Goofy Fantasy, if that’s a term.

So I’m not an aficionado. But GoT is good, it has some interesting characters. The dwarf, who is not a Dwarf, but actually a human of small stature, kind of made this worth it. He had a sense of humor, and didn’t take himself too seriously, which characters in fantasy novels tend to do. The tomboy princess was also fun.

I don’t know if I’ll keep going with the series. I’m not dying to find out what happens, but the journey is enjoyable enough I might check in on it now and then.

Book Log – Restaurant Success by the Numbers: A Money-Guy’s Guide to Opening the Next Hot Spot

Restaurant Success by the Numbers: A Money-Guy’s Guide to Opening the Next Hot Spot by Roger Fields

We recently invested in a start-up restaurant, so I wanted an overview of the business. There’s some good detail in here on budgeting and other numbers games, which was what I’m interested in.

I think if I were actually the one starting and running the restaurant, this book would be inadequate. But, as a beginner’s intro, it’s pretty solid.

Also, people who work in restaurants are paid terribly, if his sample budgets are to be believed. So, remember to tip your servers! I’ll be here all week!

Book Log – Catching Fire & Mockingjay

Catching Fire (The Second Book of the Hunger Games Trilogy) by Suzanne Collins
Mockingjay (The Final Book of the Hunger Games Trilogy) by Suzanne Collins

They’re good, these books.

I should have waited until April and May, when I could “borrow” them for free from the Amazon Lending Library. But sometimes you just need to know how the story turns out.

The story has great rhythm, never dilly-dallying with useless preamble. The plot flows smoothly from point to point, maintaining tension, plausibility and unpredictability.

Imagine my surprise when I found out this was a Young Adult series. I fell for this with Pratchett’s The Wee Free Men, reading along thinking myself an Old Adult.

It’s Harry Potter that’s done this… blurred the line between Old Adult and Young Adult. Now I’m reading Slam and Hat Full of Sky and not even realizing that my development has been arrested. Or something.

Or maybe it’s just time that Young Adults got something worth reading. Something Adult, but only just.

And now I’m just looking to fill that end-of-a-good-series inner void with something decent. I’m not up to switching gears suddenly back to Dickens. Will the Game of Thrones series suffice? For some reason I’m associating the two.

We’ll see.

Book Log – The Hunger Games

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

So, I discovered the Lending Library of Amazon. There’s over 100,000 titles you can just read for free with a Kindle and a Prime membership. You can borrow one at a time, once a month.

I haven’t figured out how to return it though. I expect that will be made clear at some point. Maybe it just disappears off the Kindle.

But I hadn’t found a book to read, until I was thumbing my wish list and noticed The Hunger Games. I’m usually skeptical of bestsellers, because of what I’m calling the “Clive Cussler Syndrome”, which is when authors put out a lot of really crappy books that just get magnetized to the NYT Bestseller list for an unknown reason.

I’m willing to accept that the crappiness may just be my perception. But only just.

At any rate, I figured I should check it out before the movie comes out. There were enough raves of The Hunger Games from people I actually know that I took a chance. A small chance, since… it’s free.

It’s a good book. Well crafted, not sentimental, not overly dramatic… just right. It draws you in and there’s no real good point to take a break and stop reading.

I just watched the trailer for the movie. I don’t know how it’ll fly… there’s a lot of inner thought going on that may just not translate to the screen.

We’ll see.