xnet?

Little Brother

Cory Doctorow

Little BrotherBasically this novel is one long, very angry rant about the erosion of civil liberties in the Western world. Which doesn’t sound like fun, but he manages to make it into a very entertaining coming of age adventure/spy romp.

Rating: A

spicy wings?

Someone Comes To Town Someone Leaves Town

Cory Doctorow

Someone Comes To Town Someone Leaves TownI found a copy of the ebook of this on an old thumb drive.
A very strange and oddly moving book this.
The story opens with a man refurbishing an old house in Toronto. Somehow it leads to a falling out with one of his neighbours, a plan to create an open access wifi mesh network and the stirring up of old secrets.
The book felt, real, somehow. For it’s weirdness and the strangeness of it’s characters.
I would recommend this book in it’s free ebook state without hesitation as it’s definitely worth the read.

Rating: B+

pouch?

Friday

Robert A. Heinlein

FridayOh dear, Oh dear. Going by the reviews blurbed on the cover of the book, this was considered at one point to be Heinlein’s last great book.
For the record this book is a big old pile of manure that I couldn’t wait to be done with.
Friday is a ‘combat courier’, the kind you turn to when your delivery must absolutely get through. She’s also an artificial artefact, a genetically manipulated superhuman in a world where prejudice is rife and her kind have no rights.
The book follows her on a couple of missions and through an incident called ‘Red Thursday’. It also follows her obsessive need for family and love through several groups of people.
Friday is a typical late Heinlein character – practically flawless and her main flaw is in her total humility.
Unfortunately she’s just not a very sympathetic character and Heinlein’s quirks have gotten real old by this point in his career.
If I hadn’t already read ‘I Will Fear No Evil’ and ‘To Sail Beyond The Sunset’ I would have classed this as his worst book.
It’s such a pity that so many of the genuinely great science fiction authors started produced self-indulgent crap the second they’re successful enough to overrule their editor.
The only reason to read this is for Heinlein completism or for an idea of the influences behind Charles Stross’ upcoming Saturn’s Children..

Rating: C+

flip?

Bellwether

Connie Willis

BellwetherThis is only the second Connie Willis book I’ve read. Like that book this is an excellent read.
Sandra Foster is a sociological researcher at a privately funded institution looking into fads and how they start, who is bought into contact with a researcher into Chaos Theory called Bennett O’Reilly after a parcel is delivered wrongly to her lab.
Not a book of great events or battles, this instead is all about the characters and the way they interact, the way they see the world and the consequences of those actions.
This book is rather lovely, with a lot of wit and good insight to the human condition and particularly good at skewering the ridiculousness of bureaucracy.
I particularly loved the breakdowns of various fads histories delivered at the start of every chapter.
I would recommend this book to pretty much anybody. I won’t guarantee that you’ll like it, but those that do will fall totally in love with it..

Rating: A

restless?

Search The Sky

Frederik Pohl & C.M. Kornbluth

Search The SkyPohl and Kornbluth wrote some magnificent science fiction together. Indeed I regard The Space Merchants as one of my favourite science fiction books. However this particular title, even after a 1985 update, is rather dated.
The plot is straightforward enough, a young man on a colony world becomes disenchanted with the ‘decay’ he can see around him everywhere. As a result he is entrusted with access to a secret faster than light ship to find out “What has gone wrong with mankind and why?”.
This journey takes in several worlds, where he gets into trouble and rescues others in trouble.
The crux of the story is based upon some shonky equation that blames lack of genetic diversity for the woes of the worlds.
Plus points are the excellent way they keep the plot moving forward and the relative brevity of the book compared to modern titles because this book would have seriously sucked at greater length.
The negatives are cardboard characters, trite world building and a sense that this would have been better off stuck back in the 50’s.
I would only recommend this particular title to those interested in the work of Pohl & Kornbluth or in the mood for some quick old school sci-fi.

Rating: B