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Soh Kam Yung Locked account

sohkamyung@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 11 months ago

Exploring one universe at a time. Interested in #Nature, #Photography, #NaturePhotography, #Science, #ScienceFiction, #Physics, #Engineering.

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Clarkesworld Magazine, Issue 220 (2025, Wyrm Publishing) 4 stars

Clarkesworld is a Hugo and World Fantasy Award-winning science fiction and fantasy magazine. Each month …

A good issue of Clarkesworld

4 stars

A good issue of Clarkesworld, with some interesting long stories. One that I liked are by Gunnar De Winter, H.H. Pak and Tia Tashiro.

  • "When There Are Two of You: A Documentary" by Zun Yu Tan: in a world with sentient AI that can be installed into a person, questions would be asked about who would really be in charge of the person.

  • "Child of the Mountain" by Gunnar De Winter: at a time when the world is in a climate crisis, a monk at a monastery whose members can be 'regrown' when they die has a flash of insight on how to solve the problem. But to do so will require sacrifices to be made.

  • "Never Eaten Vegetables" by H.H. Pak: a spaceship transporting hibernating embryos suddenly faces a crisis when some embryos unexpectedly begin to grow before the ship reaches its destination. The desperate decisions it makes would …

Bright Hearts (2024, Tor Books) 3 stars

A florist becomes obsessed with the strange, haunting red flowers she buys from an equally …

Bright flowers with a terrible past

3 stars

A florist buys stunning red flowers from an old lady that proves to be a hit with her buyers. Eager to get more, and also curious about the flowers, she persuades the old lady to show her where she gets the flowers. She would discover that there is a tragedy associated with the flowers; a tragedy that would persuade her to also resolve her own personal tragedy.

Gastro Obscura (2021, Workman Publishing Company, Incorporated) 4 stars

A Feast of Wonder!

Created by the ever-curious minds behind Atlas Obscura, this breathtaking guide …

A tour of interesting food from around the world

4 stars

A book filled with lots of lovely food featured from all over the world. Some history on how the food is created, either by local people or by people have historically migrated to the area from the past, is given, along with some recommended places to try the food. The way some of the food is prepared may be considered disgusting to an outsider, so trying it may be challenging.

There are also interesting stories of people trying to revive recipes of food as prepared by their ancestors, while others are of migrants adapting the recipes they have known for generations in their new country. In any case, the food presented in the book may tempt the reader to give them a try, rather than sticking to the usual food eaten by tourists.

The Things (2010, Clarkesworld Magazine) 3 stars

"The Thing" told from the viewpoint of the Thing.

3 stars

An interesting re-telling of the film, "The Thing" by John Carpenter, from the view point of the Thing. To the Thing, the idea that people like us have a fixed form and are unable to change shape, merge or separate, is repelling, leading to an ending that is the same as the film's but with a conclusion that is appropriate for the Thing.

The Friendly Orange Glow (2018, Vintage) 4 stars

At a time when Steve Jobs was only a teenager and Mark Zuckerberg wasn't even …

A fantastic telling of a computer system that gave rise to current computer culture.

4 stars

The fascinating story of PLATO, a computer system initially developed as a means to explore computer education techniques, but ended up creating the 'cyberculture' around gaming (both single and multi-user), social media (in the form of shared notes and messages), resource searching, etc., well before BBSes (on-line bulletin board systems), AOL, the World Wide Web, Google, or Facebook even existed. While PLATO no longer exists, its legacy would affect today's internet culture.

The book starts with the creation of electronic computers and researchers like B.F. Skinner, who start to develop theories about how education might be made better via computers. The University of Illinois would be one of the groups who would try to develop a computerised education system. Conflicts between engineers (designing the system) and educationist (with their own theories of education) would cause the project to be delayed. Then Donald Bitzer hears about the project, decides to lead …

Sins of the Children (2024, Asterisk Magazine) 3 stars

A moral story about modifying the ecology of a planet without full understanding.

3 stars

An interesting story of a planetary expedition that discovers a planet with an impoverished ecology, but with plants that can concentrate the minerals required by the expedition. While harvesting the plants, the expedition comes under attack from unexpected biological forms. The expedition exterminates the attackers, but now discover, too late, how the ecology of the planet works and what they have done.

In the Moon’s House (2024, Tor.com) 3 stars

A new Lady Astronaut story! Dawn struggles to fit in with the rest of her …

On resolving feelings of being excluded from a group.

3 stars

A story set in the author's "Lady Astronaut" series, this one looks at a female astronaut in a backup crew for a moon mission, who finds herself being excluded from events from both her fellow male astronauts and from another female astronaut. One day, she decides to follow them and discover they were all secretly going to a particular pub, increasing her feelings of being excluded. Then events occur, and she decides to gatecrash the pub, only to discover that what goes on inside is not what it seems, and they all discover secrets about each other that will only bond the crew closer together.

Ace Up Her Sleeve (2024, Tor.com) 3 stars

Set in the same thrilling world as Genoveva Dimova's The Witch's Compendium of Monsters series, …

Is cheating at a game of cards against the Tsar of Monsters worth the gamble?

3 stars

An interesting little tale of a witch who is trying to hide from the Tsar of Monsters in a city. But when she is eventually discovered, she has no choice but to play a game of cards. However, this time, with some luck, she may be able to cheat to win and get away with it. But the deception may have a costly consequence in the future.

Clarkesworld Magazine, Issue 217 (EBook, 2024) 3 stars

Clarkesworld is a Hugo and World Fantasy Award-winning science fiction and fantasy magazine. Each month …

An average issue of Clarkesworld

3 stars

An average issue with interesting stories by Nigel Brown, Fiona Moore and Arula Ratnakar.

  • "A Space O/pera" by Abby Nicole Yee: the Philippines sends up a dog into space. But a problem occurs, and the dog is left for dead in space. But her owner does not give up, and plans to rescue the dog.

  • "The Buried People" by Nigel Brown: an expedition goes to the frozen north to dig up people who have the ability to hibernate and freeze during winter. The reason for this, and how these people may have got this ability, are hinted at in this story about a climate catastrophe that happened in the past.

  • "The Children of Flame" by Fiona Moore: a community that sprung up after a civilization collapse now face a new challenge: a feudal group that wants to take over. It would need the community to realise that they need each …

Spill (2024, Tor.com) 3 stars

In a new Little Brother novella, there is no security in obscurity. But there can …

A story about hacking and a protests that gets bigger as it progresses

3 stars

The story starts with a hacker discovering his server has been hacked. From there, it grows as a protest against a pipeline going through Native American land gets violently broken up, as the protestors are investigated from sabotaging the pipeline. The hacker discovers who the real saboteurs are, and the trail leads back through his hacked server.

I’ll Miss Myself (2024, Tor.com) 3 stars

A man using a social media app that reaches across dimensions to talk to himself …

Doom-scrolling through messages from your alternate selves is as depressing as it sounds

3 stars

In this story, the protagonist 'doom-scrolls' through the postings on a social-media app. Only, instead of seeing posts by other people, he is seeing posts by himself in other universes. And the posts are uniformly depressing, with complaints by his alternate selves about their lives in the doldrums. But then, he occasionally sees direct messages from his other selves, asking him how he is. And when he decides to respond to one message, he discovers what may be the truth behind the app that is keeping him addicted to the social network, and what he may have to do to break out of the cycle of depressing posts.