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Book Blog

July 6, 2025

Monk and Robot (Review)

kay, so this is a two-fer, two novelettes in one. With this, you get… A psalm for the Wild-Built A prayer for the Crown-Shy  These are just two stories that combine into a unified whole, so it’s better to get this collection. So anyway, Dex is a young man in a world that, after ecological instability and the robot rebellion (when Robots walked off their factory jobs and wandered into the wilderness), now lives in a utopia. But guess what – you can live in Utopia and still not be happy. So he quits his first job (kinda a part-time […]
June 29, 2025

The Roaring Trumpet (Review)

friend of mine, while talking about books at the train club (hobbies within hobbies) to me how she’d liked the Mathematics of Magic series from back in her youth (her youth being a lot more recent than mine). Well, I did a little searching and found a copy of it up in a used bookstore in Jacksonville. Overjoyed, she ordered it, but when she read it, she was underjoyed. Turns out it wasn’t as good as she’d remembered. Yet, strangely, she decided that since she didn’t like it, she’d give it to me for a go. Kinda an anti-recommendation, sort of. […]
June 8, 2025

To The Last Man (Review)

n interesting premise here. Jeff Shaara, a historian, writes a fictional account with real people, trying his best to tell the events of a war (this time, World War One) from the surmised point of view from some of the people who lived (and died) in it. For this novel, the author chose four people to represent various viewpoints – Rosco Temple (an American doughboy), John J. Pershing (his general), Manfred Von Richthofen (the “Red Baron”) and Raoul Lufbery (one of the early fliers in the Lafayette Escadrille, a French squadron of Americans). Other historic figures are also encountered, and […]
June 1, 2025

The Unfeeling Sky (Review)

was something like ten years old, visiting the Wright Patterson AFB museum. In the gift shop were a number of aviation novels (remember those quaint old days when people actually read?). Plucked this one off the shelf and loved it. So Frank Thompson is an infantry officer in World War One. While in the shitty, muddy trenches, he watches his childhood friend get shot down into no mans’ land, and the hun that does it comes back around and kills him. Thompson watches the German buzz away, noting his distinctive aircraft paint scheme. And then he joins the Royal Flying […]
May 25, 2025

Dungeons and Drama (Review)

kay, Hell is freezing over. Pigs are flying. Dogs and cats are living together. I read a romcom. I’m in a Sunday evening class and when our old bookstore closed, I thought we were done. But then the class reformed in the same space, new owners. But this bookstore, The New Romantic, is a Romance bookstore. Not really my thing. But I was there early one night, poking around the store just before they closed, and I found Dungeons and Drama, a YA romance about a high school drama student, Riley, who is forced to work in her father’s game store as […]
May 18, 2025

Footfall (Review)

ead this very thick scifi back went it came out in ’85 when I was through with one degree and working on another. This was back, kids, when the scifi section in the many neighborhood bookstores were on thick sets of shelves and not a bunch of weak image-based bullshit. Think about it – StarWars was still just a movie (not a religion) and many young people still read. Okay, gripe done. So in Footfall, and intelligent race of (wait for it) elephants coasts into our solar system with the intent of taking over Earth. The first thing they do is […]
May 11, 2025

She who became the Sun (Review)

o the only way I can describe this novel – it’s Mulan without the music, the side-kick dragon, all the feel-good nonsense of commercial franchising. Hey, I have a thing for historical fictions about actual princesses. What can I say? So, an unnamed girl exists in a central Chinese farmland during a horrific famine in 1345. Her brother, Zhu Chongba, is prophetized for greatness. And she, a grubby little famished thing, faces “nothing”. But when bandits ruin their shattered lives, her brother lays down and literally dies. And the grubby little girl, she takes his place. His fate shall be […]
May 4, 2025

Silo (Review)

he guy who unloaded the three “Silo Series” books on me also gave me a thin little thing, sixty pages long. In Silo, we get three little short stories. The first one is about a man who was considering going to Atlanta (right before the fall of everything) and decides not to take that lifeboat, but instead ops for his own path. In the second, a woman he’d had an affair with has holed up in Colorado with a bunch of anti-siloists, who hate the entire nanobot releasing group of the Atlanta silos and vows revenge, only to realize that […]
April 27, 2025

Dust (Review)

he third big book of the massive Silo series. So in this, we finally combine the present (Wool) and the past (Shift) with a novel that ties Juliette in Silo 17 and 18 with Donny in Silo 1. And while it all comes down to the final struggle, interesting changes happen to our world, interesting people live and die, and interesting discoveries are made. Of course, to end happily, survivors find their way into a Garden of Eden (and me, being cynical, I wonder how soon it is before greedy thugs and bullies form their own collectives, and weird-ass religions practice […]
April 20, 2025

Shift (Review)

kay, I’m letting you know that, growing up, I really liked the movie My side of the Mountain. But more on that later. Shift is the second book of the Silo Series, set in a world where some sort of ecological/man-made disaster has swept the planet. Now people live in underground silos, 150 (or so) stories deep. Their entire existence is one of continuous uprisings (one every generation) with (usually) the revolt failing or total crazy chaos (in which either everyone dies or the silo is destroyed remotely. Remotely? But that implies a controlling silo. Doesn’t it? It does. So this […]