Thursday, September 27, 2007

RSS

Well, my previous attempts to get RSS aggregation across the multiple networks I live on was a failure, but a combination of changed proxy settings and a new version of SharpReader seems to have things working.

It works far too well. Getting automatic updates from people such as Neil Gaiman, Daniel Keys Moran, William Gibson, RealLivePreacher, Stephen Fry, David Brin, Warren Ellis, Scott Adams and others is just wonderful...

Much quicker than old-style web surfing as well...

Monday, September 24, 2007

Robert Jordan Dead

Damm, I always thought he would make it.

I met him in 1993(?) in Perth during the National SF Con, and when I talked to him he told me that the first part of the Wheel of time story that had come to him was the finale. He explained that he had a very clear idea of what would happen at the end, and that this vision had never wavered.

The finish to this story will be the one part he will not get to write.

I am sure Memory of Light will be written eventually, indeed I know that he basically was writing it days before he died. It will not be the same, of that I am also certain...

Rest in Peace...

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (7.5/10)

J.K. Rowling
Fantasy


I found the final Harry P novel a difficult one to read. The story seemed to have moved away from Hogwarts (and quiddich, etc.), and this left it without its core. In addition to this I felt that the time that Harry, Hermione and Ron spent in the wilderness was boring and caused the book to lose momentum. I recognize that this may have been an intentional device by the author to make the reader feel some of the suffering that Harry felt, but frankly I think there are better ways to work with your readers.

I also felt that once again J.K.R. was making it up as she went along and that story elements from past novels where being used in ways they had not been originally intended.

I was however pleased with the resolution of the Snape storyline, the plot has always benfited from Snape, with his ambivalent morality, and the final reveal was a good one. I do feel that more hints about this could have been left earlier in the books.

The finale was very good, and certainly worthy of the series, I was not surprised by the resurrection theme, as Harry was clearly going to die, and I felt that the author had no intentions of letting that bring down the whole series.

Would have liked a bit more dialogue between Harry and Ginny towards the end as well, that seemed to finish with words left unsaid…

Ultimately I believe that the great writers have a very good idea of where they are going when they begin their stories and I felt that JKR was staying only a book ahead of the readers in her plot planning. Tough? perhaps, but it was a constant concern with me from about book 3 of this series.

Readability (4/5) – Lost points for the boring bit in the middle, but the rest was easy to read.
Quality (3.5/5) – She made it up as she went along (with the probable exception of the Snape storyline).

Yes, yes...

Back again after another long layoff...

I am currently reading the Summer Queen by Joan D. Vinge. Damm! it is good!

This will drive me to find the dificult-to-find "World's End" I fear...

Perhaps Bookfinder will know.

Little Heroes (6.5/10)

Norman Spinrad
Science Fiction

The future of sex and drugs and rock & roll is the topic of discussion here. Despite a typically gritty and powerful effort from Mr. Spinrad it became somewhat repetitive toward the middle of the book and the final scene was dissapoiting. It is also somewhat dated by references to modems, rather than an internet, but the quality of the writing allowed that point to slide by in my opinion.

The book seemed to be somewhat limited in scope as well, with the whole world of the characters somewhat obsessed with sex and drugs and rock & roll.

Readability (4/5)
Quality (2.5/5)