Reviews and Comments

Phil in SF

kingrat@sfba.club

Joined 1 year, 7 months ago

aka @kingrat@sfba.social. I'm following a lot of bookwyrm accounts, since that seems to be the only way to get reviews from larger servers to this small server. Also, I will like & boost a lot of reviews that come across my feed. I will follow most bookwyrm accounts back if they review & comment. Social reading should be social.

2024 In The Books

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Knife (AudiobookFormat, 2024, Books on Tape) 4 stars

From Booker Prize winner Salman Rushdie, a searing, deeply personal account of enduring—and surviving—an attempt …

A bit of engaging therapy writing

4 stars

On August 12, 2022, a young radicalized Muslim man stabbed famed author Salman Rushdie some 15 times.

Rushdie explicitly disowns the idea of writing as therapy, but also says that he didn't feel like he could move on to write other work without first writing this book, a memoir of his experience. Much of it is a recounting of his journey to recover from his injuries at the hands of an amateur would-be assassin.

However, it very much veers into therapy during an extended chapter where Rushdie imagines conversations with his attacker in a jailhouse interrogation room over four days. That chapter is the most awkward of the book; it invents the workings of his assailant's mind from common tropes about radicalized Islamists, and then knocks those positions down handily.

The rest is engaging. Rushdie writes with humor and reveals enough of his emotions and frustrations that the experience is …

Royal Assassin (EBook, 2002, Del Rey) 4 stars

Young Fitz, the illegitimate son of the noble Prince Chivalry, is ignored by all royalty …

Builds slowly to a huge punch

4 stars

Content warning Spoils book 1 in the series

Hollow Beasts (Hardcover, 2023, Thomas & Mercer) 3 stars

After a long stint in academia, Jodi Luna leaves Boston for the wilds of New …

Mustache twirling heavies and paper-thin heroes

3 stars

Picked this up because it was on the Washington Posts' best crime fiction of 2023 list. I definitely don't agree.

After the death of her husband, poet Jodi Luna moves back to New Mexico to become a game warden. Almost immediately she's pulled into a case where inexperienced white supremacists abduct Mexican girls and hold them captive in their desert plateau camp. They are, of course, super dumb, and Jodi is super competent. I like me some competence porn, but this doesn't feel like competence porn. Jodi does stuff like, dropping off a suspect in the hands of a lazy sheriff and go home and sleep when there's two body parts discovered. The heavies twirl their mustaches, and the good game warden just goes home because there's no story otherwise.

This could have been such a great story, but this feels like it was written in one NANOWRIMO and edited …

Cracked (AudiobookFormat, 2023, Patagonia) 3 stars

The ugly truth about dams is about to be revealed.

During the first two decades …

A polemic for the already convinced

3 stars

The author proffers that dams are the cause of earthquakes, nuclear proliferation & radiation poisoning, and the devastation of wildlife and culture. He's not wrong exactly, but he presents everything from the worst possible case position while also arguing that dam benefits are meager at best. In other words, if you are already convinced, this book will solidify your position. And if you are worried about dams but not already convinced, you'll have a lot of "but what about ...?" type questions that you want answered. As I did.

The book is clearly written for the already convinced, because it includes a chapter on how to remove a dam. The chapter includes lengthy steps all the way from first organizing to actual dam removal. As an overview of just how much work goes into dam removal, it's a great chapter. As an actual how-to, people will need a lot more …

finished reading Dinosaurs by Duane T. Gish

Dinosaurs (Hardcover, 1977, Master Books) No rating

And with this book, I think I've added every book I know I've ever finished to SFBA.club, with the exception of Bibles & cookbooks.

When I tell people I attended a fundamentalist Christian school, I was not kidding. "Dinosaurs: Those Terrible Lizards" was assigned reading in elementary school. We were taught that dinosaurs and humans lived together. We were taught that fossils were tricks of the devil to test our faith. They had us read this book to cement the anti-science teaching.

I can't tell you now exactly when I broke away from that. After 8th grade, I transferred to a Jesuit high school. While Christian, the Jesuits are far more science based than the fundamentalists. By my last year of high school, I was clearly not with the original program.

Duane Gish is a creationist who is famous for his nutso views and the Gish Gallop method of debating. …

Station Eternity (EBook, 2022, Ace) 3 stars

Amateur detective Mallory Viridian’s talent for solving murders ruined her life on Earth and drove …

The premise is that Mallory Viridian solves murders, but mostly because wherever she goes people keep getting murdered. The receptionist while she's at her therapist. A parishioner while she's giving confession. etc.

This makes me think immediately of how cozy mysteries have outsized numbers of murders for small towns. or how major crime figures always seem to conduct major murderous operations that just happen around Jack Reacher.

is Lafferty satirizing those stories? imma bout to find out.

The Traitor (EBook, 2023, Bantam) 3 stars

British spy Emma Makepeace goes undercover on a Russian oligarch’s superyacht, where she’s one wrong …

The 1st Emma Makepeace book was better

3 stars

The first Emma Makepeace book was a race to safety across a night time London landscape. This one is a more standard over-the-top spy thriller. Emma is sent undercover to serve drinks on the yacht of a Russian oligarch suspected of selling weapons. She's to find out who the oligarchs partners are and what they are up to.

A mostly fun book, but I did grow a little tired of Emma Makepeace ignoring the Agency's many directives to get out or not engage, lest she put herself in too much danger. "But I'm the only one who can find out!" so she sneaks in the hotel where the oligarch is going to meet. Or she goes to an oligaarch party after some of them might recognize her. You can plot an agent going against the book once or twice, but after that it starts to feel like lazy writing.