in
the galaxy and probably the universe according to author Waltham. His short
book discussing the potential of life in the universe gives earthlings the
edge. Although the author offers examples of how life might originate based on
Earth's history (he rejects a creator and is enamored of spontaneous fortuitous
generation), whenever his discussion approaches statistical multiplicity of elements
for any life arising, he discounts the possibility except for our planet.
Discarding his scientific belief that we are more than likely alone in all of
creation, Lucky Planet is a good
explanation of how we did arise on and why conditions for our existence
cooperated to result in our singular place in the universe. That similar
conditions evolving to rationality might arise in the growing immensity of the
universe or potential multi-verses is rejected without reason other than that
Waltham prefers to think that we are the pinnacle of creation. The astonishing
implications of that thought he never deals with. (November 2016)
Night Without Stars
By Peter F. Hamilton
The non-stop problems
mirror the social construct of our planet and we see political upheaval tending
to tyranny. However, generations of Commonwealth citizens expelled from the
void and imprisoned Riael return to the galaxy
through the magical ability of clones and downloaded brain content that provide
a full range of necessity to defeat the evil Fallers. Only through the
assistance of another alien mechanical race that provides transport far beyond
the Commonwealth's ultimate travel speed is homecoming achieved. Hamilton is
not as mysterious in this plot line, though he does surprise. His evil is worse
than usual, harking back to the Night's
Dawn Trilogy. His good is inherently altruistic and the reader expects the
victory. Much hero success seems contrived as Hamilton is engaged in trying to
bring together several hundred years of history on one planet expelled from the
void and the tenuous connection with Commonwealth intelligence that was
expelled with the planet. Almost as an afterthought, perhaps the basis for a
following tale, the major characters are detailed in their now Commonwealth
existence. Night Without Stars offers
some tedium as Hamilton spends more words than necessary adding detail and
connections to show the gnat's eyelash. Still Night Without Stars is engaging Hamilton. (November 2016)
The Island of Knowledge
By Marcelo Gleiser
This book on
philosophical cosmology is a paradox attempting to blur the boundary between
science and philosophy. In Part One Gleiser reviews
the Greek philosophers who defined reality based on what "little"
they could see and understand of the physical world. He leaps to medieval
scientists and critiques their inadequate (compared to current information) discoveries
as "the best they could do." Philosophical thought had not changed,
but reality was more intensely examined in an attempt to find physical
connections to the universe. Part Two discusses the rise of quantum mechanics
and the development of instruments that measure what we cannot see. Hardly a
change from the original Greeks, but a reverse order: measurements of the intangible
explain reality. A side trip into multi-verses explains nothing except that we
cannot know whether reality is what we understand or not. In true scientific perspective
that nothing can be assumed, Gleiser concludes that
we must wait for better measuring devices to expand our apparent knowledge of
reality which will always be horridly incomplete and possibly mistaken. (October
2016)
Cyber Spies
By Gordon Corera
Everything you ever
wanted and didn't want to know is wrapped up in this volume of spying, breaking
codes, and hacking. Corera begins his history with
the first world war and moves forward in discussing how the military spies on
the enemy and intercepts code. Once computers and the internet permeated
society, governments expanded their espionage and defenses against hacking,
little of which seemed effective as being able to hack was more of a badge than
the information gathered. The reader is led through the intrigue of US vs USSR vs China as each works to
discover attacks and defend against foreign agents. Important breaches,
discovery, and defenses highlight the second half of the book. Concluding his
volume is NSA's involvement in gathering information, which is detailed as a
cooperative venture of US and Britain counter espionage. Ultimately the reader
gets the idea that nothing on-line is sacred or inaccessible. (September 2016)
Killing Titan
By Greg Bear
This second of a trilogy
(?) doesn't reach Titan (let alone begin to "kill" it) until the last
pages of the book. Instead we are dragged with the hero Skyrine
from his medical imprisonment on Earth back to Mars and given a brief recap of
the Earthling sociology on Mars before being bored with the long trip to Titan
and physical acclimatization for the unit's existence on Titan. We are
tantalized that an alien civilization is involved in the human battle with a
different species bent on possessing or destroying Mars. At last our hero's
introspection, which drives the whole book, offers a hint that the two warring
sides are performing for an older species' enjoyment. Bear does give the reader
physical details of Mars and the interminable voyage to a gelid moon, but as the
second installment in an action series this volume is a waste of time—hardly
representative of what Bear is capable of. (August 2016)
Genesis and the Big Bang
By Gerald L Schroeder
Spawned by the insistence
of a child's belief that the universe is only 5,700 years old, Schroeder
relates scientific statements that explain how the thirteen and a half billion
year existence from the big bang matches the Biblical creation narrative. Using
four ancient Hebrew commentators, he relates the meaning of the words (from
ancient Hebrew) in the first chapter of Genesis to the scientific sequence of
the big bang up to the presence of humans. Filled with both Biblical references
and scientific explanations Genesis and
the Big Bang is not a book to be feared. Schroeder takes care to lead the
reader with clear and understandable reasoning, even to stating that Biblical
"days" were mostly billions of our years long. (July 2016)
Better Than Human
By Alan Buchanan
Once DNA was sequenced
and tinkering with human characteristics became an option, the possibility of
improving human beings mentally and physically sprang up. Buchanan begins with an
intention of "fixing" mistakes and undoing natural lacks that make
lives difficult. Providing a limb where none developed or replacing one that
was lost are certainly noble aims and it's hard to imagine that such repairs
are wrong. However, he quickly moves to the monetary demands that separate
ordinary people from the wealthy and enters the ethical realm. Along his
discussion he considers whether humanity might create a new species separate
from the original we sprang from and whether we should all possess the same
outstanding characteristics. Buchanan begins each chapter with a tantalizing
explanation of a need for genetic engineering and ends with a cogent discussion
of its dangers. Throughout he contrasts the growing ability of scientists who
question the efficacy of the Creator's work, with how they might improve or
correct it. The intelligent reader will enjoy the fascination of what we might
do, and then realize we just don't have the foresight to miss all the pitfalls.
(July 2016)
Golden Lion
By Wilbur Smith and Giles
Kristian
A second generation
Courtney is embroiled in pirates, infidels, and his father's enemies as he
plans his wedding with a beautiful female Ethiopian war general. Golden
Lion is filled with the typical swashbuckling Smith is known for all of
which is parceled out through twists urging a new reader to see what happens.
The expected gory introduction Smith's following are accustomed to is excessive
and its recurrent grotesqueness lengthens what would be a short tale for Smith.
Despite the second author, the tale and words are Smith's recognized detailed
descriptions and actions letting the reader watch the story. However, the plot
seems more contrived than free flowing and the climax and conclusion do not
evolve; they are tacked on. If this is Smith's swan song, perhaps he should
have left his name off and schooled Kristian better. If
Smith's research was lacking (hard to imagine!), maybe Golden Lion should have been reworked before published. (July 2016)
Sleeping Giants
By Sylvain Neuvel
The discovery of a buried
part of a dismembered huge robot leads to the discovery and reassembly of the
whole body by a para-governmental search team
scouring Earth. The assembled robot, many times larger than Klatu,
is imagined to be either a weapon or a protector and houses two humans who can direct
the robot's activities. The intriguing concept of rational beings once existing
on the earth, or at least visiting to leave evidence of their existence, does
more to show the militaristic nature of earthlings than our curiosity in finding
a connection to alien species. The format of Sleeping Giants takes some getting used to as there is essentially
no description. Dialog between characters offered as interviews moves the
action forward and introduces growing tension between main characters and
authorities and puts Earth in political jeopardy. (July 2016)
By the People
By Charles Murray
Murray offers us a way
out of the morass of political and regulatory nightmares that the United States
has slipped into—a sort of way out—and he leads the reader through
the historical sequence of significant laws and regulations that have
encumbered and bloated the original simplicity of the Constitution. The author's
Madisonian underpinnings lead him to pine for the
smallest possible government and provides the basis for his legal and
governmental discussions of how the country went off track. Though his singular
solution to our decreasing freedoms—civil disobedience—is one that
he admits is far-fetched, he provides a rational, educational, and legalistic
solution that just might reduce government regulations. Unfortunately his
solution requires an educated and morally just electorate. As a country we are
far from the basic requirement. but it's an enjoyable romp through wonderland. (July
2016)
Poseidon's Wake
By Alastair Reynolds
The end to what can only
be described as a multi-generational/planetary sci/fi
soap opera has arrived. Whatever potential purpose there is to this huge work
doesn't appear until late in this third volume of the Akinya
saga. Its presence is neither clear nor sufficiently bolstered to give meaning
to the entire trilogy. However the undercurrent of what Reynolds appears to be
saying about machine thinking and existence is a thin dotted line drawn
throughout this three book set.
As with the first two
volumes, Poseidon's Wake is filled
with interminable detail, much unnecessary and boring, that seems added for the
sake of extending pages. Akinya lineage is further
described around "skipovers" that take the
reader across light years of travel and through centuries of lifetimes without
the main characters becoming aged and decrepit but encountering ordinary social
problems humans are mired in. Perhaps we will extend our livespan
into centuries, but little promise of useful activities seems possible. Beyond
the factual cost of the episodes in Poseidon's
Wake and its two precursors, we are offered a story of colonizing planets
(vital and necessary) of joining the uplift of the non-rational (Francis
Crick's dream of thinking being merely biological), and introducing human
machines (foreshadowed by a dream of downloading brain contents to digital
storage). Disregarding the last two as philosophically impossible, the reader
is left with a tale of colonizing planets light years distant from earth and
only as a sidebar can we catch what Reynolds is asking. Is there purpose to
life? The blunt answer offered from the impossibility of machines colonizing
and from the TERROR enjoined from a descent to Poseidon is refuted by the human
demand to choose an ideal regardless of outcome. The human answer seems
supported by the controlling beings of Poseidon and places humanity at the
pinnacle of creation with the responsibility to make the most of life. (June
2016)
Street Smart
By Samuel I Schwartz
Schwartz lets us glimpse basic
concepts and history of streets, highways, and Interstates and extends a plea
that society might be better if we walked and biked when not riding
transportation systems. We should be more healthy and social if we followed his
advice É if society evolved to that level: a boon in his thinking. Traffic conundra encompasses the world and few cities exemplify the
ideals of a former New York City traffic commissioner. Reading Street Smart is like eavesdropping on
party conversation with all the tangents that erupt when word association demands
abrupt detours. Schwartz's plea that we scale back our living to a century ago
is intriguing. Unfortunately his blueprint for the technological means ignores
the reality of low wages, crime, the seedier elements of life, and drivers
unwilling to share the road. Impossible is the movement of citizens—on
foot—wandering aimlessly or to shop, or children free to play on streets
or walk to parks, or anyone casually strolling in the midst of traffic without
the ugly rise of danger. Utopia is a long way off; but Swartz can imagine it. (May
2016)
On the Steel Breeze
By Alastair Reynolds
Following Blue Remembered Earth by considerable
time the saga of an ecologically motivated African Akinya
family extends itself into the principle developments of a colony fleet headed
for a planet named Crucible. Earth has divested itself of several million
humans undertaking the voyage to create a new earth, but find themselves
embroiled (when they're not in hibernation) in the political in-fighting and
social immorality that their home planet is fraught with. A small group, headed
by the Akinya matriarch, driven by intuition and
telepathic messaging, manages to secede from the armada that is controlled by a
political faction influenced by a narcissistic mentality that possesses near
divine powers. This second book of a saga focuses on exposing the skullduggery
that only one or two are aware of. If relentless
describes the chronology of On Steel
Breeze, ponderous details the events which the reader has no difficulty
imagining. Perhaps we have an allegory of the future of Earth: two omnipresent
mentalities provide both the wisdom and the underhandedness of history's great
leaders and evolve problematic events among the colonists who react as rebels
and luddites. (April 2016)
Babies by Design
By Ronald M. Green
How far can humans go to
create a child's physical and mental traits by scientific procedures? Green
provides an elementary consideration of what science (as of 2007) is able to
generate in procreation. The list of physical characteristics and genetic
jiggling is not yet absolute, but expanding as we zero in on determining
specific desires potential parents desire: athletic ability, size, color,
artistic bents, gender, intelligence. Hardly a chapter begins without benefit
of legitimate tinkering only to have the normal caveat of illegitimate reasons
for adjustments popping up. The questions of subsuming God's creative act is
never far from the text, but not until the concluding chapters does Green
proclaim the horrors contained in manipulating our genes. Before genetic
options become available to all, the wealthy will have separated themselves
from the hoi polloi and possibly
created a new species of humanity unwilling and unable to procreate with the
rest of us. Basic aberrations of genetic dissimilarity bode greater danger than
for humanity's procreation and point again to our inability to imagine all the
repercussions of our actions. (April 2016)
Aurora
By Kim Stanley Robinson
Unfulfilled plotlines
abound in Robinson's novel that supplies us with multiple reasons that
colonizing another star system is impossible. After colonists are split into
those staying in the Tau Ceti system on moon Iris (after
moon Aurora proves fatal) and those returning to Earth, the stayers vanish from
the story. Devi's evolutionary attempt to teach narrative to the ship's
computer is achieved by the sixth section as Ship drones on about the
difficulties of caring for the crew and the Biomes and the extraordinary light
year time lag that suggests Earth has little care for the travelers or their
return. Robinson's continued preaching about selfish humans is couched in
Ship's narrative about an early on-ship rebellion and the unexpected loss of a
companion colony ship. The tedium extends to a repetitious litany of overcoming
impossibilities in returning to Earth. By the middle of Aurora the reader recognizes an allegory of "Spaceship
Earth," as the twin-ringed colony ship exhibits all the best and worst our
planet and inhabitants possess. The end of the novel, appropriately titled What is this bombards us with the
ecologists' accusation that we are ruining the planet as the space travelers ruined
their ship. The concluding pages beat the same drum with a tableau unconnected
to the primary story. Aurora is hardly
vintage Robinson. (March 2016)
The Broken Eye
By Brent Weeks
Intertwined alliances and
enemies that filled the first two volumes plumb new depths with more twisted
history. Gavin/Dazen's drafting expertise, cunning,
power-seeking, and lying justify his final days. Major characters Andross Guile, the White, and Ironfist
play important roles in the development of intrigue that underlies the naming
of a new Prism and elevates the stature of Kip and Karras.
The Broken Eye ends with preparation
for another major battle (and no doubt many surrounding struggles) to determine
who will control the satrapies and bend their wills to Guile, (who has no real
blood heir) or some other family that has been patient for generations and
rises to best Andross. The Broken Eye reads better than the first two. Description is still
over-drawn but not without merit. Characters continue to proliferate and
support subterfuge arising from hidden alliances topping each other as
characters amorally play against multiple sides. The only understanding a
reader can gather from Weeks's fantasy is that nothing is as it seems. In perpetual
what-else-can-go-wrong, things built from manipulation of light wave lengths
and 15th century technology mixed with inventions hardly surprising to 21st
century keep the reader wondering what new magic can spring off the pages.
Though physically huge books are unwieldy, the reader must admire the fertile
imagination contained in a story that will easily top three thousand pages when
the final installment is published in November. (March 2016)
The Black Prism
By Brent Weeks
This first volume of Weeks
color fantasy I read three years after I plowed through his second volume. The
time gap made the story a pleasant prequel. Having to remember the characters
from the second volume was not too difficult, as he regularly makes historical
and personal relationships clear. Weeks's hundreds of roles are begun and
developed in a medieval timeframe with startling technological advances created
through the use of single colors separated from ordinary light as material
elements creating on the spot anything physical. Subversion, hatred, war,
jealousy, and grasping are hardly different than we can see today in society.
Killing, slavery, and rejection of personal value underscore a lack of
universal morality that doesn't seem to bother anyone except in moments of
weakness or when fate (Orhalom: God?) is used to
explain away awkward events. The main characters are introduced and we read
their presences and growth, knowing they will continue through long (600+
words) volumes. The intricate relationships between major, minor, and walk-on
characters seems impossibly workable, but Weeks has a talent for flowing his
tale through all and has managed to keep separate each with their own roles in
the intrigue that might easily be recognized as the skullduggery that can be found
in any modern-day government. Hardly different from any fantasy the color
series if filled with battles, spies, envy, jealousy, pride, and personal
aggrandizement. The only complaint I have is that the books are so filled with
detail and interrelationships that the action must be viewed from multiple
fronts. Frequently Weeks bounces between at least five different scenes, making
the pages seem like different stories intermixed in one volume. (February 2016)
Slow Bullets
By Alastair Reynolds
This novella fits into my
limited category of exceptional tales that demonstrate the nature of altruism,
civilization, and human need. Slow
Bullets joins Canticle For Leibowitz and The
Postman as tales that inspect the nature of being human and what that
entails. The reader is soon provided a mystery and its impossible explanation. Only
through cooperation can a transport ship keep all alive. Ultimately everyone is
faced with a decision that runs against human nature. Their actions together
with the outcome of the vengeful urge of the story-teller show the grandeur
that humans are capable of. (February 2016)
Ultima
By Stephen Baxter
This tale brings together
a future time with alternate histories linking a Roman and Incan ruled Earth. When
kernels (a discovered energy source) provides wormhole travel around the galaxy
and a mysterious race offers "hatch" technology to the holes, an
extended generational family (with their on-going feuds) dashes through the
galaxy in search of the purpose of their ability to travel through time and
space as observers of the multi-verse. Baxter never actually gives the reason
for their exploits, though his implied purpose is hardly meaningful since their
information is never universally proclaimed, unless we imagine those returning
should chance being ridiculed for announcing what they learned. Baxter's knowledge of Roman and Incan
life and society represents good research to represent what these ancient
societies might be like with space travel. (February 2016)
War Dogs
By Greg Bear
This war tale told in
retrospect is more about the Martian climate, early immigrants, and military
technology than it details actual battles between humans and invading aliens. A
small remainder of an insertion force is hard pressed by the enemy and everything
else to stay alive. Most do along with the narrator who obviously lives through
all the problems (tied to the austere Martian landscape), since he is telling
the story to a debriefing counselor looking for proof of high administration
malfeasance (emerging in the following story?). Not the best of Bear, War Dogs far surpasses the first of his
Halo series and Hull Zero Three. We
are also offered a fanciful glimpse of potential technology to keep us living
in alien landscapes. (January 2016)
Death Wave
By Ben Bova
Following on the heels of
New Earth Bova
returns us to Earth after a two hundred year gap to enlist support for costly
space missions to save emerging intelligent species from a deadly gamma burst
flooding the galaxy. Bova's usual political and
moneyed complaints of our societal greed foster the development of this novel.
The underlying difficulties of mounting mercy missions are increased by human
paranoia. Bova casts returners from New Earth as
moles who are chased, incarcerated, and targeted as harbingers of alien
takeover. The flow of Death Wave—after
a slow start—is frenetic and the reader wonders how the author will let
the heroes escape difficulties. Better than his more recent tales, Death Wave takes the reader through a
course of developing necessary altruism if technological humanity will survive
even a few more centuries (the gamma burst is two millennia away). Death Wave encourages page turning, with
occasional breath-catching, to reach a satisfying conclusion. (January 2016)
The Lost Starship
By Vaughn Heppner
We are given a vision of
the galaxy several centuries in the future. Little has changed from our earthly
civilization except the names. Principalities are now planets in far flung
planetary systems. In the galactic politics of several federations, not all
friendly, an evolutionary challenge is hurled at homo sapiens by a group of perfect humans intending to take charge
of the federation. Captain Maddox, the stereotypical miscreant genius, is given
the duty of finding a fabled nearly omnipotent ship of past millennia that
saved the galaxy from a super race. Maddox's small crew of misfits is naturally
successful at beating the "New" men and escaping his own military
unaware of his mission. Heppner provides more background and narrative than
dealing with the philosophical elements of the proffered tale. Without actually
defeating the "New" men, but having the ancient space ship with its
armaments (not all still working), the Galaxy may be able to defend itself
against this new challenge. The Lost Starship is frequently tedious as Heppner
belabors scenario details and often magically escapes serious problems. It's
hard not to compare The Lost Starship to Resnick's
Dead Enders escapades in purpose and development but perhaps unfair. A second
installment of the battle against the "New" men might be in order. (January
2016)
The Prison in Antares
By Mike Resnick
The second book of the
Dead Enders series is not as intriguing as the first, but Resnick
is engaging. Chief spy Pretorious is still the
federation's best weapon against the coalition. In this tale his small band of
abnormal misfits must infiltrate a deep underground prison to rescue a federation
scientist who has managed to defend against the coalition's greatest weapon. Of
course they are successful, but not after the team loses two original members
(whose deaths are so matter-of-fact that one wonders if they
will—somehow—return) who are replaced by two different
personalities with unique abilities. What else can be said about The Prison in Antares? Resnick is enjoyable and his character relationships and
interchanges are why we dash through his stories without concern for the twists
and "but wait" that confront us. (January 2016)
The Flight of the Silvers
By Daniel Price
Touted as the first of a
series, the reader is offered a glimpse of strange time travel, alternate
universes, and characters who possess superhuman powers necessary to act on
unspecified desires by more magical overlords who are orchestrating the events
between universes. The main cast of characters learn their extra-normal powers
through brief instruction at the beginning of the tale and then hone their
skills as they are chased by federal authorities across a United States that is
unfamiliar to them to New York for a purpose that is never explained. The Flight of the Silvers is a long and
tedious read. Foreshadowing is non-existent and the perpetual "caught
again" sequences always melt away as the reader soon learns that the
"Silvers" (a descriptive title that is finally explained at the end
of the book) will always escape through of the machinations of the overlords
who use the protagonists as puppets. (September 2015)
A Deadly Wandering
By Matt Richtel
Read this book and you'll never text while
driving; maybe not use a phone— even hands free—unless you're an
arrogant egotist. A Deadly Wandering
is a must read for every driver.
(July 2015)
The Abyss Beyond Dreams
By Peter F Hamilton
Hamilton has extended his
reach far beyond the Milky Way Galaxy in this offering of the Commonwealth's reach.
This first of two promised parts entertains the reader with a civilization
within the void that is menaced by clone zombies. The humans come from an
earlier passage of an exploratory vessel that was captured by the void and
developed from primitive life with what electronics were allowed by the void
into a feudal society now encouraged to develop into a democratic system and
encouraged by a Commonwealth clone who has managed to enter the void with help
by the ancient Raiel who have worked to protect the
galaxy from the void's expansion.
Hamilton's casts of
hundreds and detailed descriptions initially appear excessive but the mounting
avalanche of words quickly provides understanding of Hamilton's ability to make
his stories something the reader is completely involved in the action. (June
2015)
Station Eleven
By Emily St. John Mandel
This apocalyptic tale
posits a biological epidemic that wipes humanity from the planet. There is
never proof that only a few hundred people are still alive except for the lack
of information available from anywhere except the environs of Michigan and
Toronto. The reader is given a cast of characters, primarily a traveling band
of entertainers who provide a social and historical connection to times prior
to the devastating epidemic. Emily St. John Mandel, in a complex plot that flips
between pre- and post- scenarios of the deadly Georgia Flu, traces significant
lives of those related to one victim and whose luck or safeguards or immunity kept
them from being infected. Station Eleven
(a comic book within the tale and minor sidebar to the story) credibly details
the initial and complete destruction of modern civilization—survivors
thrust back to fifteenth century life—and the passion of the traveling
"Symphony" to maintain an aesthetic presence within the impossible
task of regaining obliterated civilization. Station
Eleven reads like a memoir and lacks a purposeful theme beyond a
long-rejected form known as "slice of life." However, nearly hidden are
two subtle questions. Is remembering the past important or even possible? Should
dead civilization be resurrected or scrapped for something new and different?
(May 2015)
The Meaning of Human Existence
By Edward O. Wilson
Wilson fails to deliver
anything close to what the title promises; nor does he offer a convincing
argument that he understands anything about human nature beyond basic biology
as he details us as highly evolved insects. Early in this long multi-part essay
(more about lower life forms than humans) he states and then restates that
humanities hold answers to human existence that science cannot provide. Yet he
never presents anything from the humanities that answers what science can't nor
does he suggest any philosophy that science can look toward for solutions to
human problems it can't measure and explain.
Wilson's atheism colors
most of his discussion, but it erupts when he disparages religion and free will
as being irrational and anti-science. With a hodge-podge of religious
inconsistencies frequently spouted by the ill-educated he demonstrates that he
has even less understanding of a religious mentality or purpose than he does of
the humanities or the essence of human society, which he appears to desire
growing into a mindless obedient insect culture.
It is not difficult to
imagine that Edward Wilson is a pitiable old man trying to recapture his past
learning and research since science and atheism seem not to have provided him either
comfort or answers to a meaningless human life. He concludes with a brief
chapter that opens with a statement that rational humans have the ability to
develop altruism without outside assistance. However, he bemoans that our race
has never and will never achieve such responsibility and freedom from only rationality,
science, or ourselves. Nor does he admit that religion, humanities, and dreaded
tribalism have granted humans what he can't accept. (April 2015)
New Frontiers: Collection of Tales
By Ben Bova
New Frontiers offers the reader a wide range of short stories from the master of
science fiction. Some flow from Bova's previously
created scenarios and characters. Others are new places and characters generated
from his fertile mind. All maintain his optimistic view of humans and our
ability to overcome unusual and ordinary problems. Longer than expected short
stories, the reader is quickly sucked into the tale and frequently conned away
from anticipating the conclusion. Not a book to be read at a single or few
sittings, the reader is always rewarded with fascinating views and satisfying
beliefs from author Ben Bova who has provided us with
interesting humanitarian considerations. (April 2015)
The Fortress in Orion
By Mike Resnick
The first of who knows
how many more in the series by the master of fun adventures. Colonel Nathan
Pretorius heads a group of the most unlikely spies/ agents to tackle impossible
missions for the Federation. Resnick reprises his
ability to solve any problem, including many that never arise, that turned his
five volume Starship series into such a light-hearted adventure that ultimately
replaced the entire warrior ruling body of the Federation with officers more
concerned with peaceful existence. This time Pretorius has gathered a crew of
improbable members: a mostly bionic male warrior, a female computer expert, a
female who can squeeze her body into any small space, another female who reads
intentions, an alien that looks like a dust mop who can project himself as any
living creature to others' senses, and another alien who is from the race the
Federation is fighting. It's no wonder that Pretorius will be successful, for
that is Resnick's forte. Regardless, the mounting
impossible circumstances that continually crop up are no match for Pretorious's preternatural ability to control situations
for his success. The only unfortunate element of The Fortress in Orion is that we must wait for another adventure of
the Dead Enders led by the galaxy's perfect commander. (March 2015)
1177 BC: The year civilization collapsed
By Eric H. Cline
Ancient history provides
a mystery. What caused the end of the Bronze Age? Cline proposes an explanation
in five acts. From detailed research he paints a portrait of the many centers
of civilization and governments that surround the eastern Mediterranean and
interacted with each other. Then he begins a narrative of each major kingdom's
death and probable cause. The "Sea People" are repeatedly suggested
as the primary cause of destruction covering the broad area, but never given
full credit. Not until the final act does he draw all causes of destruction
together: earthquakes, internal rebellion, wars, and Sea People. However, I
find his conclusion difficult to accept as he explains the end of the Bronze
Age by drawing on reasons civilizations from only a few hundred years ago
vanished. Three thousand years ago, a solitary force didn't have the range or
mobility to hasten the end of multiple kingdoms of the Bronze Age, nor is there
geologic evidence that the eastern Mediterranean was blanketed by earthquakes or
other natural disasters within a brief span of time. Perhaps internal rebellion
ended some kingdoms, but not widespread from Greece to Anatolia to Egypt.
However, as we peek into history from 1700 BC to 1177 BC, we see kings and
their relationships and monarchies. It is easy to understand that little has
changed when the wealthy and powerful are considered today. 1177 might be a
primer for our world society, but such simplistic theory neglects to
incorporate the technology we are surrounded by. (March 2015)
Lightning Wolves
By David Lee Summers
A steam punk sequel to Owl Dance, Summers loosely ties the
defeated Russian invasion of Colorado to a more enthusiastic attempt to annex
the Pacific West Coast. However, the Russian invasion is really a backdrop for
the development of technology spawned by the Owl fighters. The lightning of the
wolves (motorcycles) from the title is a primitive laser that incinerates its
targets. The story involves the professor who created the flying machines and
the brave warriors who saved Denver and then opens up events that cover the
territory from New Mexico to California. Mexican cattle owners, miners, the Clantons, U.S. Army including a general from the Denver
front make detours through Geronimo's Apache territory. The addition of bank
robberies, AWOL soldiers and bounty hunters make for a rollicking tale that
concludes (?) the steam punk wild west tale. The reader is never unsure of the
outcome of any interim problem or the ultimate conclusion: Russians will be
driven away. And as with Owl Dance,
Summers manages to include history, geography, science (anachronistic ala steam punk)
to keep plot twists from becoming too abstruse. Lightning Wolves is a quick read, a little slow moving when
travelogue replaces action, but still a fun tale. (February 2015)
Desert God
By Wilbur Smith
The master of historical tales
entertains us with another chapter in the life of Taita.
This adventure precedes Warlock, the
third volume of Smith's Egyptian saga. Geography, political intrigue,
friendship, and relationships abound as we view the politics of civilizations
long past. Taita's mystical (magical?) powers are
more present in Desert God than in
the other volumes and Smith continues to endow his eunuch hero and mastermind
with super-human ability, this time with more than a little arrogant pride. Desert God introduces the Hyksos as the
vile creatures they were and whom Taita will be most
concerned with in Warlock. However,
his care and concern for two young Egyptian princesses, intended as gifts to
the Minoan ruler's harem in exchange for his participation in Taita's complicated and unsuccessful plan to drive the
Hyksos from northern Egypt, figure prominently in his intrigue. In a circuitous
route from Thebes to Babylon to Sidon to Crete the well-known Taita gathers warriors and equipment. The dangers and scrapes
that his small army encounters provide the stage for his own brilliance and
forethought that is explained in his encounters with a lesser-known Egyptian
spirit. All the problems and dangers that beset Taita's
plan (combined with Cretan refusal to be an active ally) are never enough to
shake the reader's confidence in the ultimate outcome, as Smith disguises
solutions and makes the expected questionable. Desert God is a quick read and filled with classic Wilbur Smith.
(February 2015)
The Night's Dawn Trilogy: The
Reality Disfunction, The Neutronium
Alchemist, The Naked God
By Peter F Hamilton
That the trilogy is an
allegory of our planet is evident throughout the more than three thousand NOOK
pages that translate into six thousand four hundred screens and took me months
to wade through. As with other Hamilton opera
(opuses) little can be removed as the amassed elements defining planets and
their inhabitants—all of whom interact—are necessary in this
galactic tale of human aspiration. Hamilton's ability to keep the reader
abreast of the changes and interconnections of humanity's spread over several
hundred planets in the Milky Way demands his detailed explanations that
frequently prompt the reader to think "Get on with it." Although set
some six centuries into the future, characters and situations then are little
different from today's Earth, except for the ease of production, seemingly
unlimited energy, simplicity of galactic travel, and the obscene wealth of the
entitled class. Humans have separated themselves into normal and
biological/technological constructs and maintain a tenuous relationship with a
few alien species who refuse to be drawn into humanity's problems. Into this
presence of human belief that we "can do what we want," the dead,
tired of existing in the void of a parallel universe, discover how to return
and possess the living, piggy-backing living personalities with their own. Then
the possessors from history set about supplanting all humans intending
eventually to remove part of our universe into their former void. Not until the
final fifty pages of volume three can the reader relax when the dead are
properly disposed of. And also not before Joshua Calvert manages to confront
"the Naked God" and intuits a divine solution eliminating possession
that ravages normal society.
Filled with action,
emotion, disgust, hope, and unvarnished humanity, Night's Dawn trilogy lays bare our warts and ugliness, our beauty
and empathy, our successes and needs, and encourages action or rejection of the
implicit moral obligation Hamilton placed before us. (February 2015)
Transhuman
By Ben Bova
In
a romp about medical possibilities, Bova takes us on
a quick and questionable journey across the country. A seventy-five year old
researcher expects to cure his granddaughter of brain cancer using unproven DNA
treatments and against her parents' wishes only to discover that corporate and
FBI and government agents are searching for him. And he falls in love with an
accompanying, young medical doctor half his age. Not exactly up to Bova's usual tales, the reader is required to withhold a
sense of reality that what is necessary always takes place, including
grandfather's scaling razor-wired security fence around a military installation
to escape confinement. Should agents be as inept as described and our military
as unaware, our country is in trouble. However, the lightness of the story is
engaging, despite its blatant improbabilities required to reach a typical Bova ending, and the reader is exposed to potential genetic
engineering (August 2014)
A Sense of the Mysterious
By
Alan Lightman
Another
intriguing set of essays by Lightman leads the reader
from the nature of science to the morality of what science should do and how it
has been kidnapped. Most of the essays are personal encounters the author has
had with notable scientists and Nobel Prize winners during his own science
career that managed a detour into dreaded humanities. For a brief time Lightman shared his theoretical physics while teaching
creative writing. Seldom is the reader treated to the abstruse nature of
mathematical formulas or esoteric discoveries. What Lightman
does offer is snapshots of scientists as human beings and their almost
universal goal of aiding the human experience, a goal that current technology
seems to have rejected. A Sense of the
Mysterious concludes with Lightman's wishing it
were otherwise, but knowing there seems no way back. That even science worships
"the bottom line," that bettering human lives is an outmoded ideal, that
the modern world has co-opted technology for its own sake scientist Lightman decries and unfortunately judges that the
situation is natural evolution that can not and will not regress as it ought to.
(August 2014)
Rescue Mode
By
Ben Bova and Les Johnson
One
wonders if Rescue Mode was in work
before or after Mars, Inc. Both books
urge space exploration and Mars as the first destination. The addition of
Johnson of NASA is most evident through the first half of this novel that
quickly becomes a sequence of Murphy's Law catastrophes. Bova's
optimistic motif is invisible until the second half of the novel. The political
anti-exploration sect has the reader's attention until all seems to be lost.
Then Bova's style and development rescue the reader
and reasserts human heroic ability. Space exploration is rife with dangers, but
that the Arrow lacks an asteroid scanning
detector seems far from possibility. Just as far fetched is crew members fooling
the psychologists testing their ability to survive with each other for two
years. Rescue Mode closes down much
too fast given how it developed to reach its "all okay" finish.
However, the reader should neither be forced into more Murphy's Law nor a
sequel. Let the Christmas presents suffice. (July 2014)
The Star Conquerors
By
Ben Bova
This
early sci-fi tale demonstrates the natural human trait that we can accomplish
anything. Many science fiction themes are evidenced. Earthlings are late-comers
in the galaxy that possesses other human races older and younger than we. And
there are those who are beyond ancient. Bova's hero
is wiser than indicated by his youth and adept as a warrior and politician who
leads the fight for the prime human demand for freedom, despite the offer of
benevolent servitude. However, in this quick read, we are once again reminded
to be cautious of what we wish for and simultaneously encouraged to investigate
well beyond the obvious. Regardless, this first novel by Bova
establishes his long-maintained ability to create solid characters and develop
intriguing plot lines. The Star
Conquerors may not have the finesse of later work, but the underpinnings
are all there. (July 2014)
The Closer
By
Mariano Rivera and Wayne Coffey
If
all record-setting Hall of Famers are like Mariano Rivera, they are not only
accomplished athletes but paragons of human beings. What the reader sees in The Closer is a committed team player
who never forgets his humble beginnings or his religious beliefs. Rivera's
tenure with the Yankees parallels the team's ascendance in baseball after a
long absence from an accustomed reign. Whether that success evolves from
Mariano's outstanding ability or the convergence of several players is never discussed.
We read of the Yankee's success through the development of the greatest closer
in history as he recounts mainly post-season competition and in-season
turning-points. This autobiography is not 270 pages of boring ball/strike
counts for outs. Rivera pulls aside the curtain for glimpses at the invisible
part of baseball, behind the injuries, before the spotlight shines, plans and
intentions and motives that create athletic success: the recipe for team
greatness. For Rivera team success trumps all and God is in charge. Both ideas flow from his love of
baseball and his humility that his God-given talent is not a source of pride.
In an era of athletes skirting and defying rules and demanding special
privileges for their physical prowess, Mariano Rivera stands above all as a
role model who might turn athletes away from one-ups-man-ship and back to
sportsmanship. (June 2014)
The Future of the Mind
By
Michio Kaku
The
Future of the Mind is as far from
understanding "mind" as Francis Crick was in discovering a biological
basis for the "soul" in Astonishing
Hypothesis. Neither scientist offers any philosophical understanding that
mind or soul is not a measurable object in the realm of physics or biology. This
latest book by Kaku, as energetic and promising as
the title suggests, presents his usual physics for the intelligent but never approaches
what the title offers. Instead he revisits and announces the latest research
that describes the brain as a powerful programmable parallel-processing
computer. He also touches on the inane concept of immortality evolving from downloading
ourselves onto some hard drive. His major mistake, identifying "mind"
as the same as "brain," is compounded by suggesting that
consciousness is mind. Perhaps in the far future we may understand the brain,
be able to diagnose genetic alterations and repair it, map our neuronal
structures leading from our experiences to our thoughts, and create a digital
brain. These ideals Kaku offers as benefits to
humanity. He seems not to appreciate that such brain-reconstruction is
dangerous and demeaning. Individuality and personality will vanish. Do we really want to be like everyone else? Could,
or should, we all be geniuses? Can selfish human nature use such power for the
good of society? (June 2014)
Mars, Inc.
By
Ben Bova
Aspiration,
power, mega-wealth, greed, and government dash through this encapsulated tale
about readying us for another planet. Art Thrasher is a visionary who discovers
that his moneyed backers and NASA are looking to squeeze him out of a lucrative
and patriotic success. Mars, Inc. is
not BovaÕs usual tight plot in this loosely veiled
mystery. The action is swift and the reader is never lost, though Bova keeps us guessing about the culprits. Mars, Inc. gives us a cast of characters
different from his developed solar system tour population many of whom are
little more than scenery and he ultimately manages to dismiss them, despite
their presence to move the story along. His short chapters are briefer than usual
and one might imagine this tale is a TV script of chronological scenes stitched
together. Regardless Bova manages to keep ThrasherÕs
ultimate fate in question until the last pages. Hardly a thought-provoking
lesson, Mars Inc. is an enjoyable
read. (June 2014)
The Unincorporated Future
By
Dani & Eytan Kollin
The
interminable space soap opera does end, but with unexpected implications. Most
of this fourth book is warfare: battles, intrigue, and sedition. Avatars undertake
important roles, as they shadow and match the human sides of the intense and
continuing degenerative war. Much of what the reader recognizes is each sideÕs
diminishing returns in the billions of deaths, which seem to make no impact on
either the Alliance or the Federation, and the posturing that forces both into
greater idiocy for the imagined success of obliterating the other side. The KollinsÕ stage is the solar system and they involve the entire
stellar playground. For every victory, corresponding defeat urges a counter-offensive,
until sanity and reason finally take charge—would that our world take a
lesson. The Alliance and the Federation engineer a cease-fire, long after the
reader has tired of the continual Òbut wait.Ó (In all honesty, little could
have been left out.) And then the saga ends. The plug is pulled; a switch, flipped. The tedious settings
and events that spring from the brothersÕ palette conclude with narration, not description:
not without the reader issuing a sigh of relief that itÕs over. However, the
reader is caught by a gotcha. ÒExodus,Ó
the final chapter, startles us with an astonishing concept that is extended in
the short ÒEpilogueÓ that should not be passed over. (June 2014)
The Accidental Universe
By
Alan Lightman —&—
Why Science Does Not Disprove God
By
Amir D. Aczel
A
double dose of thoughtful science is provided by several brief whimsical views
of the universe by Lightman and the mathematical
underpinnings for Aczel's contention that science and
religion are not antithetical.
Alan
Lightman's Accidental
Universe leads us to more facets of the grand construct that provides us
with a minuscule section for our lives. Whether we are the only rational beings
in the universe has little bearing on how and why we ought to consider our
blessings rather than that we may be chancy results of the big bang's
evolution. Lightman's impetus that we revel at what
we have is more satisfying than the atheist's desponding that there's nothing
more than our ineffectual selves.
Amir
Aczel's stated intention is to explain why Dawkins
and the New Atheists have got it all wrong, when they attempt to use science to
prove that God does not exist. Aczel is not
championing God, though he leans towards Anselm's natural proofs for His
existence and makes clear the difference between a personal God and a Prime
Mover. His continued emphasis, through the use of mathematics, is that the New
Atheists have mistaken their objections to a deity as scientific conclusions
when they are unrelated to any scientific study. One imagines Dawkins's and
atheists' replies as unscientific as their assertions. (May 2014)
Reign of Error
By
Diane Ravitch
This comprehensive tome follows The Death and Life of the Great American
School System. Unfortunately, that proffered ÒlifeÓ may be in ICU and uncared
for by the business moguls who imagine students are nothing more than
assembly-line elements of a manufactured product that will generate money for
the wealthy. In Reign of Error Ravitch stresses again and again that for America to remain
the democracy it was founded as, education must be returned to educators (who
need to become real teachers through
a liberal arts curriculum and not only aware of a small sliver of some subject).
The conservative reformers, who only think of the bottom line, must be exiled
from any connection to scholastic ideals except financial: offered without strings
to its use. RavitchÕs parallel theme is that equal
education for all (an absolute necessity for democracy) can only be provided our
children, if poverty is eliminated. Repeatedly she shows the physical damage in
children that poverty effects and its residual in disadvantaged ability that compounds
unequal learning. Reign of Error
demonstrates that the reformersÕ pet solutions—charters that quickly
become for-profits that strip state monies (taxes) from public schools—are
worse than the public system they decry. Under the surface of the rebuttal to
the reformersÕ beloved and erroneous data is the implication that those opposed
to public education are the forefront implementing an aristocracy (trumping our
democracy) where they will be in charge to commandeer millions as their slaves.
Fifty years ago, the United States was projected to follow the demise of the
Roman Empire as we appeared to follow in the steps of RomeÕs depravity fifteen
centuries before. Now, our democracy may be closer to disappearing, but from
enlightened ignorance that yields our rights to the wealthy who seem convinced
that education is subservient to the desires of the selfish rich. (May 2014)
New Earth
By
Ben Bova
A
follow-up to Farside,
this tale of BovaÕs first human exploration outside
the solar system is a veiled addition to the ecology offerings of other major
sci-fi authors. This work departs from BovaÕs normal
plots. However, his characters and their interaction are up to his usual
clarity. While the crew engages in
their scientific exploration of the planet, the reader is kept aware of the
mystery of an alien species inhabiting an improbable planet orbiting Sirius and
its companion. Only in the last few pages is the novel-length conundrum solved
with a whimper rather than a bang. The conclusion to New Earth leaves much to an inquiring reader and that uncertainty
might well found a following tale to answer implied questions of accepting the
encounter as the aliens have orchestrated it: whether the small colony of
explorers has been brain-washed. Two major concerns over the planet and its
inhabitants that the human skeptics have are never answered. Further, the alien
claim of repeatedly visiting Earth (even before humans resided there)—eight
and a half light years away—suggests an alien heritage or ancestry that ought
to have neglected Earth and its human population or explain more fully their
omniscience to be interested in humanity. If Bova has
exhausted his solar system tales, he has begun what might be a most interesting
sequence as his humans begin the necessary step into the truly unknown. (April
2014)
Absolution Gap
By
Alastair Reynolds
The
conclusion to the trilogy still leaves possibilities for ancient machines to exterminate
galactic faring species. Nearly all the characters from the prior two books are
eliminated as they manage to sacrifice themselves against the machines. The
escapees from Redemption Ark have a
tenuous connection to the main tale of Absolution
Gap which details a religious development. The religious leader has aims
that he keeps secret but bode disaster with his attack on the single remaining
light ship that returned to Chasm City and back to save any remnants of
humanity left by the machines. The religious cults continuously watch a planet
that occasionally vanishes momentarily and is assumed to be tied to the
godhead. The planetary mystery leads to the potential of a parallel universe
that might mingle with our universe and whose inhabitants might have the power
to eliminate the technology-exterminating machines. Reynolds manages to weave
his characters from multiple settings and books in smooth combinations. However
to brings his characters together in this most epic of the trilogy the reader
is forced to wade through considerable back-grounding that is tedious but
necessary.
Redemption Ark
By
Alastair Reynolds
Part
two of the ÒRevelation Trilogy,Ó Redemption
Ark continues as human-machines battle advanced humans for the control of
weapons that may protect humanity, or only themselves, against a growing fear
that they may be exterminated by very old galactic machine technology that
targets emerged intelligences. Most of the same cast from Revelation Space is back with necessary additions, who change
allegiances easily and add to both the mystery and the insufferable bouncing
from setting to setting. Little of the narrative flows smoothly except for the unsuccessful
plans that are regularly resolved by a newly introduced character or inevitable
scientific magic that demonstrates society is immune to death and disease and fatally
wary of nearly everyone else who possesses machinery and implants different
from their own. The technological enemy is finally explained to the reader who must
wonder why the bigoted Conjoiners and Ultras canÕt agree to a solution to the common
problem despite their antipathy toward each other since the extinction of
humanity looms before them. In an expected battle against the destroying
technology, the fought-over weapons are shown to be useless and most of targeted
humanity, in its exotic manifestations, apparently escapes extermination
leading to the final chapter of ReynoldÕs interminable
saga. (January 2014)
Revelation Space
By
Alastair Reynolds
The
first of a trilogy, Revelation Space
provides the reader with characters, a galactic area somewhere within the reach
of Earthlings (six centuries from now), and the mystery of an extinct race.
Reynolds posits human-machine integration, digital downloads of human
personality and characteristics and brain contents. Long-living, necessary for
the time scale of the tale, is never explained but charactersÕ ages approach
centuries and they interact with machines that self-replicate. Though
characters and settings are clear, alliances are never as they appear: whom to
trust is directed by personal agendas. Though much of this book is backgrounding, the characters are brought together on a
powerful military spaceship that soon demonstrates it forces the characters
into its purposes. The initial mystery that is woven into the narrative as the
reason all are united is ultimately but incompletely explained. Loose ends that
bedevil the reader would seem to be explained in the next part of this lengthy
saga. (January 2014)
Santiago:
By
Mike Resnick
Sub-titled
ÒA Myth of the FutureÓ this older book (1985) is another list of legendary heroes.
Resnick unconcerned over his characters flitting
throughout the galaxy as if they were traipsing across countries on Earth, for
his tales are neither technological nor scientific constructs but interactions of
his characters with success granted to the morally better. This tale of
bounty-hunters seeking the galaxyÕs most notorious and mysterious criminal
(according to the government) frequently drags as ResnickÕs
sequence of hunters and their exploits tends to the tedious. However, the
intricate story-line never detours from Sebastian ÒSongbirdÓ CainÕs purpose of
reaching the slippery criminal. Nor does Resnick vary
from his ÒsurpriseÓ ending, though the careful reader should recognize the twist
before it becomes evident. As
always Resnick is fun, more from his creativity of
character encounters, and enjoyable without the suspense of serious drama. Santiago is a fun read. (December 2013)
Great North Road
By
Peter F Hamilton
This
saga by Peter Hamilton is encyclopedic in nature and length. Though covering a
timeline of only six months, Hamilton paints a thinly veiled critique of baser
human characteristics: greed, jealousy, oppression, intolerance. Providing specific
details would spoil the intrigue. HamiltonÕs trademarks—huge casts of
characters, diverse settings, brief detailed descriptions that allow the reader
to watch the book unfold, and hi-tech surveillance and weaponry—are
neither lacking nor cumbersome. We are led about two worlds, Earth and St.
Libra, a body orbiting Sirius. The orbs are connected by a gateway providing
instantaneous travel between them. The Earth-side of the gate erected in London
is bedeviled by the seemingly unsolvable murder of a wealthy North, a clone of
a trio of clones who own EarthÕs dominant financial corporation. The St. Libra-side
leads to a terrestrial planet supporting only flora and provides the Norths with bioil for energy.
However, St. LibraÕs climate mounts an effort to drive humans from its surface.
Weaving the murder mystery, believed evolved from a North rivalry of the
original three clones, and St. LibraÕs war, waged against EarthÕs military
force investigating an alien existence there, provides the reader with
HamiltonÕs intricate and well-narrated relationship of main characters. Great North Road is a maddening sequence
of things always going wrong—on both planets—until Hamilton finally
ends the frustration, first on Earth then on St. Libra. Nine hundred
forty-eight pages is daunting, but normal for HamiltonÕs stories. Nothing can
be removed without destroying the fabric of the tale, except the last few pages
that seem tacked on as an afterthought or as a hint to a potential sequel.
(October 2013)
Farside
By
Ben Bova
Though
the characters seem at first underdeveloped, Farside is a good Bova novel that offers his usual mystery of greed losing to
good honest effort and ends with good feelings, though the epilogue is an
add-on, unless it kicks us into his next book, New Earth. One more stop on his grand tour of the solar system,
this tale is placed on the back of the moon and introduces the potential for a
whole new ÒgalacticÓ tour. The astronomy business of the Moscow Crater provides
the basis for BovaÕs usual skullduggery and also
gives the reader a new Earth-like planet that is the subject for his next
novel. Farside
reintroduces several characters that we are familiar with from his prior tour
novels and introduces others who may well continue his grand epic narrative of
space exploration. In a quiet off-handed manner, Bova
introduces a potential storyline that may loosen the religious shackling of
EarthÕs scientific community. (September 2013)
The Unincorporated Woman
By
Dani & Eytan Kollin
And
the war continues. Were right and just as strong as evil, the tale should be
done. But not so. The war drags on; the corporate forces are not drawn as
capable as the unincorporated Alliance, yet they continue to fall into success
because they naturally donÕt play fair. The avatars come alive as allies for
both sides and the reader is offered the possibility of a traitor at the
highest level of the Alliance. Few main characters are done away with and the
reader is required, almost, to create his own playbill to keep aware of the
former and myriad new players. After three volumes the reader rightfully
questions whether the several plotlines will ever coalesce to a fitting conclusion:
The war continues into the fourth book; Justin Cord is probably dead, but maybe
not; Neela may throw off the psyche audit Hector
forced on her; the second resurrected individual from JustinÕs original time
appears sufficiently power hungry to copy HectorÕs ascension but in the
Alliance; avatars may be the new ruling caste that will dominate humans who
could become their pets.
The
need to keep Mars, Earth, Ceres, Jupiter, several armies and their commanders,
and all the internal and external relationships make for difficult reading. And
thereÕs at least one more volume. The concept of everyone incorporated at birth
and being able to sell stock on himself that he might eventually buy back was
an intriguing concept in The
Unincorporated Man. However, that unique consideration has degenerated into
a very long and tedious battle on the field and in society between the haves
and those who wish not to be had and clamor for freedom as Justin Cord had.
(September 2013)
Inferno
By
Dan Brown
Similar
format, multi-setting, and not as fast paced as Angels and Demons or DaVinci Code, this
recent offering from Brown is more travelogue than mystery. The astute reader
can anticipate until the highly questionable climax. Though the scavenger hunt
continually provides clues, one of the initial ones is a glaring counting
error. Brown leads us through Florence, Venice, and Istanbul in search of the
solution to a puzzle that has universal human implications. Through continual
side trips that waste time and main characters that appear to change sides with
some frequency, the reader ultimately discovers that two accompanying Langdon
have the identical memory of an interlude with the nefarious villain on the
same night in Chicago without seeming to recognize each other. Unless Brown
callously kills off Robert Langdon in some future novel, the reader is always sure
that Langdon will survive the most harrowing of situations as he solves the
riddle of symbols. In Inferno, with
some frequency, explaining clues or escaping seems more deus ex machina than produced from the
evolving logical hints. Much Italian history is added to the mix and the reader
is regaled with details of renaissance art and Dante, as he/she follows the
maze of clues to an unsatisfying conclusion. The most compelling reason to read
Inferno is to see how Brown gets
where he is going. (August 2013)
Connectome
By
Sebastian Seung
This
might be sub-titled Everything you ever
wanted to know about the brain. Seung offers to
the non-scientist a vision of the brain, its structure and its complexity. He
provides the reader with nearly a new tale every chapter to help understand the
nature of the information he is offering about how the brain is put together.
Once the incredible formation of the brainÕs parts is concluded we are taken
through another journey about how we might maintain our personality to
immortality. Given the current possible options, Seung
discounts immortality without positing some extremely technologically able
civilization.
SeungÕs style is easily followed, though he does run
off on tangents that are longer than I think they need to be. He does, however,
commit a major blunder when he lists Rosalind Franklin in the same sentence of
Watson and Crick as co-discoverers of the DNA helix. Concluding Connectome, Seung offers PascalÕs Wager to introduce and debunk the two
current immortality theories: cryonics and digital download. His own subtitle
that implies a discovery of how we are all different goes rather to the
difficulty of understanding the brainÕs connections. We are not informed about
how any experience is recorded in multiple parts of the brain and that
recording is not possibly matched by any other human. We are presented with
much research that attempts to understand how the brain might be wired and how
it might be repaired. The conclusion of Connectome might well be the statement that we must believe
how the brain works—making the study religion—because what must be
studied is so impossibly tiny. Further, the brain of a living person canÕt be
dug around in and the brain of a dead person is no longer functioning. (July
2013)
Blue Remembered Earth
By
Alastair Reynolds
Set
not too far in the future, Reynolds posits clones, mental constructs, life on
the moon and Mars, and technological economy beyond the solar system. In a
change from his space adventures, this novel involves political and familial intrigue
involving characters that are loosely connected and physically far, far apart.
The singular mystery or riddle, gaining information about GeoffreyÕs and
SundayÕs grandmother, is held off until the conclusion of the tale. Written in
the style of old-fashioned cliff-hanging serials, the main characters never
manage to enjoy the solution to one difficulty before they are confronted by
another, often from an earlier villain, and all manage to recur in odd
combinations with each other. Departing from his normal tightly constructed
plots, Blue Remembered Earth leaves
loose too many thoughts, not least of which is the disposition of GeoffreyÕs
attempted physical assault on his cousin. The story does contain a gem of
science fiction. However, it is presented to the reader in such a desultory way
that it hardly achieves the grand purpose because it is insufficiently foreshadowed.
(June 2013)
Solaris
By
Stanislaw Lem
Solaris is old science fiction by a recognized giant of
sci-fi. The tale has the elements of a short story: few characters, hardly a
scene change, and character driven. The tale is between a novella and a novel
and is evenly divided between long narrative sequences separated by dialog. From
fifty years ago, Solaris is more
philosophy than story and placed on a water planet that is ÒwatchedÓ by three
humans from an outpost that sits gravitationally above the planetary ocean.
Strange goings-on are sufficiently explained, but never does the reader receive
a definitive explanation of the mysteries that surround the main character,
Kris Kelvin. Instead the reader is allowed to develop theories that provide
discovery that nearly matches LemÕs purpose. Not
written in the style of todayÕs action-packed stories, Solaris speaks to the thoughtful who care to be offered ideas that
they can wrestle with. (April 2013)
Genes, Cells and Brains
By
Hilary Rose and Steven Rose
This
book offers guarded hope for science defeating diseases that most hideously
infect us. It also identifies a glaring human failing that may keep science
from that grandiose accomplishment. Clones and DNA sequencing and stem cells
could be the magic bullets and have been so heralded for the last two decades.
However, the Roses rightly explain that the work is still in itÕs infancy, so
much so that most research is hampered and dropped because not enough money is
being made and because shortcuts and ethics violations limit and erode the trust
of the research. The Icelandic beginning of genetic data bases collapsed for
personal and business reasons, not least of which was the fear of discovery of
familial diseases that would have kept families from insurance and proper care.
Before humanity can advance far along the road to eliminating debilitating
diseases and successfully repairing human bodies, we must become altruistic and
without fear of suffering from the greed of those who believe they are above
morals and ethics and humanity itself. Genes,
Cells and Brains is not an easy read. Long sentences and scientific
references to summaries of studies abound. The authorsÕ stand is not apparent;
they present with disinterest the beginnings of a new biology that offers
promise for the human race and deride the inherent problems that keep good
science from happening.
In Legend Born
By
Laura Resnick
I
have long been interested in reading a fantasy by Mike ResnickÕs
daughter. Laura is more long winded than her famous father, no less intriguing.
With two fantasies read, I conclude that fantasy is more society building than
problem solving. That is not to imply that there are no problems in fantasy, or
that magic and the supernatural are ever present, but the main thrust is the
medieval development of human rights and the struggle to reach and maintain them.
In Legend Born is the first of a
trilogy that narrates the beginning of the SileriansÕ
attempt to regain control of their land and throw off the millennial rule of
despotic Valdanis. ResnickÕs
characters are finely defined with all the human characteristics we are
familiar with. Heroes are flawed; ordinary citizens are fearful but can rise to
the moment; evil is selfish without redeeming qualities. Magic and the paranormal
do not drive the story and appear when necessary to direct the outcome if
humans are doing their part. Success in confrontations and battles is the
result of effort and failure is equally the result of misguided effort. This
first volume almost reaches the culmination of the revolution and though one
might assume the eventual conclusion to the story, it is not sure. The characters
in In Legend Born are insufficient to
carry freedom to its conclusion and ever-present evil must be dealt with; that
success is not yet evident. During two more volumes necessary to free Silerians from dictatorship, human idealism and grasping
greed will run through the narration together with characters with necessary
qualities to succeed, no doubt all reflecting what we see around us. (March
2013)
The Republican Brain
By
Chris Mooney
Mooney
attempts to delineate the essential and basic difference between Republicans
and Democrats, conservatives and liberals, and to explain the inherent antipathy
between the two. Most of this work from a conservative turned liberal is an
explication of multiple statistical studies than confirm (if statistics
actually prove anything) the consensus difference between the two political
parties that shape the direction of the country. His conclusions, first stated
and then supported by results of polls, repeatedly offer that liberals are open
to new ideas that will move humanity forward, look for change and are willing
to accept scientific ideas after reasonable debate; conservatives reject
anything new, seek information that supports their beliefs however contrary to
science and reality, and demand everything be as it always was. The singular
error in this book is that psychology can be quantified. Beyond that misguided
attempt, Mooney offers a vain hope and suggests a method to narrow and fill the
current deep chasm between Republicans and Democrats. In short form The Republican Brain is proof that the
adage ÒMy mind is made up; donÕt confuse me with factsÓ is the conservative
bulwark and continually bolstered by misinformation and falsehood. Getting conservatives
to join the twenty-first century is no more possible than successfully encouraging
their joining any previous century was. (February 2013)
The Hydrogen Sonata
By
Iain M. Banks
Long,
complex, and all but concluding with ÒÉ and?Ó this tale of Banks forces the
reader to have a play list to keep the characters separated. Avatars seemingly
a current plot element to make up for magic, The Hydrogen Sonata is more fantasy than sci-fi. Beneath the given
scenario of the GziltÕs civilizationÉa handful will
rejectÉplanning to sublime as a race (dying to reach Ònirvana) is a jab at
religion that is an atheistÕs dream. Cossant, the
novelÕs main character and heroine has been tasked with discovering the truth
to the Book of All Truths. Her venture is made nearly impossible by several
civilizations who are aligned or hostile to each other and who either donÕt
want the information discovered or fear the announcement of the bookÕs origin. Battles
abound, warp speed is common, AI possesses nearly omnipotence and omniscience
and one wonders why humans even remain necessary in the universe. However, the
entire robot universe seems the benevolent caretakers of us puny biologicals who continue unaware of the real power embedded
in the ancient civilizations. (February 2013)
the unincorporated war
By
dani & eytan kollin
Once
Justin Cord managed to create economic chaos and then flee to the spacers, the
solar system was thrown into civil war: the Alliance (freedom seeking humans
who rejected the concept of being incorporated at birth) against the
establishment. Sides formed and solidified; Hector achieves the presidency of
the corporate federation and Cord leads the Alliance. The reader is provide
with more names and situations, mostly inter-relationships that seem interminable
and interposed between the major battles in the asteroid ring with few forays
to Mars and the inner system. CordÕs demand to maintain morality in war is the
cause of his undoing while Sambianco is open for
anything and proves his devious nature has rubbed off on other major
characters.
This
second of a trilogy is tedious, though it represents situations the world has
been experiencing, militarily and economically. Instead of the war ending in
this part, the reader is forced to enter the third volume, the unincorporated woman.
Avatars,
originally the sub-plot of the first volume, become a driving force and take on
human characteristics but enhanced with the speed and logic of advanced
computers. It becomes clear that they are the guardians of humans (frequently
described in anthropomorphic terms) and it is hard to keep them separate from
mystical beings as their actions are magical, humanistic, and nearly omnipotent
(from their thought, reason, and creativity) not from physical prowess.
(January 2013)
The Blinding Knife
By
Brent Weeks
For
my first foray into fantasy I picked up The
Blinding Knife at a signing and at my brotherÕs encouragement. Action and
intrigue abound and it is possible to understand the narrative of the first
volume without reading it. I havenÕt decided whether I will back-track or not:
600 pages of tight detail does not read quickly. WeeksÕs unique characteristic
of characters who mold specific light frequencies to create physical armaments
and weapons takes some getting used to, though his repeated reminders of the
qualities of light keep the reader informed. The continuing epic details the
political struggles of a medieval civilization that possesses a strange layer
of technology wrapped around warring factions, pirates, brigands, slaves,
royalty, and magic. His color motif is well-established. Color dominates
society and is equally the basis for the friction between rival powers as well
as engendering the strife that appears within families. Building throughout the
volume to a decisive battle between the primary leaders, Weeks employs a cliff-hanger
that leaves the fate of many characters in question É until the next book, no
doubt. Characterization, details of people and places, and interpersonal
relationships in The Blinding Knife
can be seen around us every day. Once the reader accepts light as a physical
building block, Weeks provides us with another vision of our society. (January
2013)
Existence
By
David Brin
Multiple
characters (many of whom never cross paths), worldwide settings, and varied points
of view make reading Existence a
horrendous ordeal. This recent novel containing few compelling narrative
sequences (the best being the final pages) interspersed through all the telling
is more an explication of BrinÕs pessimism than an
introduction to galactic aliens. He joins the many who use global warming to
chide the glutinous population unwilling to care for the planet and mixes that
imagery with the greedy obscenely rich who care naught that most of the world
struggles for food and a safe place to sleep. Though the novel deals mostly
with the very well-to-do who revel in ups-man-ship, the reader is shown in
character after character that brotherhood is non-existent and Earthlings are
still seeking advantage by cheating others. Into our environment aliens appear
and seem no different from the humans they are expected to advise and direct to
better living. BrinÕs pseudo-apologetic Afterword
does nothing to improve the lingering taste of Existence which seems more a research vehicle about the unlikely possibility
of aliens and humans meeting. (October 2012)
2312
By
Kim Stanley Robinson
This offering by Robinson
is topped in words only by his Mars trilogy and possibly the California and
ecology threesomes. Mars may well be his best writing, though Blue Mars,
limping badly, did open his move toward ecology which was the sometimes veiled
intent of 2312. Reading this book was
real work and not particularly enjoyable. The inclusion of numerous ÒextractsÓ
and Òlists,Ó scarcely connected to the politics of plot line, seemed more
personal musings and loose commentary on society than related to the story. The
reader must first toss out any attempt to find verisimilitude in this ponderous
work. That earthlings have spread to inhabit the solar system in merely 300
years and doing so by terra-forming along the way (without any apparent alien
benevolence) is beyond belief. RobinsonÕs characters flit about our system in
hardly less time than the sunÕs rays flow, as if they were jetting around the
planet. He does describe well something I long ago considered necessary to
extend our lives beyond planet Earth: dismantling the other bodies on our outward
journey. Most of 2312 is descriptive
of the lives of ÒspacersÓ who used to be Earthers. The loose plot is apparent
only for description of our possession of the system and an indictment of how
we have poorly cared for our world. (September 2012)
Vortex
By Robert Charles Wilson
POSSIBLE SPOILERS The
trilogy ends and with it the Earth, but not quite. VortexÕs galactic chronology is a strange mixture of events before
and after Axis and contains an
intriguing time-sequence that explains the character biographies in Vortex. Sandra/Bose and Orrin/Ariel,
Turk (from before and after Axis)/Allison
and Dvali/Oscar are well-defined and each pair is
related to the other as their stories unfold within the worlds arched together
by the Hypotheticals who are still not described except for their power at
sheltering nine planets within their established time frame while galactic
evolution speeds ahead faster than light. This concluding volume seems weaker
in many ways as Wilson tries to explain Spin
and fails miserably. The Hypotheticals (mechanical and non-rational, as opposed
to irrational) continue to be a deus ex machina, though we are told that they are the galaxy
evolving from its initial existence. The atheistic notion that the universe is
a random creation not a theistic event is evident, but never precisely stated.
The semblance of a mystery story that explains Turk FindleyÕs
self-incrimination—one element of Axis—and
is tied to a time-travel redo seems insufficient as a reason for one more
volume, particularly one that ends, as all three volumes do, shouting that the Earth
is destroying itself. (August 2012)
Micro
By (Michael Crichton?
Really?) & Richard Preston
SPOILERS After the last of
CrichtonÕs endeavors—two posthumously published works, we hope there are
no more—we have clear proof of his expertise. Preston is no peer and one
wonders how much of Micro was the
great writerÕs final copy. The basic plot line seems to be CrichtonÕs: cutting
edge technology gone bad. Little else fits his pattern. Never before have
CrichtonÕs heroes been predictably killed off and, though the evil perpetrator
finally dies, his demise hardly seems fitting. The cliff-hanger sequences and
escapes (so now what?) seem more matter-of-fact. Little has the intricacy we came
to expect from Crichton. The early disappearance of the concluding hero, represented
in so little copy, smacks of State of
Fear. And there is a loose end, two actually—the Davros
liaison and KarenÕs glint of metal, that is not the normal Crichton conclusion.
Too much of Micro is filled with gore
and the violence of nature herself. The bibliography is an addition and one
that also follows of State of Fear,
but it does not appear to be much more than a list generated from a Google
search to provide the details as the students slog through the insect world. Micro is a quick read, but one that is
more insect- and biology-filled than technologically involved as those snippets
are sparse and tossed out to explain how and why the characters are involved as
they are. (July 2012)
Axis
By Robert Charles Wilson
The second in his trilogy
of Earth linked with another planet and sheltered (together with Mars) from the
normal aging of the universe, Wilson details the lives of two humans on the
alien world as they search for a Martian female. Further descriptions of the
ÒFourthÓ state of life introduced by Martian biology are the central focus
linked to an experiment to contact the Hypotheticals that have altered galactic
existence for Earth, Mars, and the connected planet. Axis takes place many years after the end of Spin and simple references to the major figures in Spin are the only connections to the
first of the trilogy. The scene-setting of the first part is long gone and Axis is filled with the intrigue of the
governmentÕs intention to eliminate Fourths and corral Turk and Lise (in a tenuous affair) who are seeking answers about LiseÕs fatherÕs disappearance. (July 2012)
Against the Fall of Night
By Arthur C. Clarke
An old book, but the
basis for ClarkeÕs The City and the Stars
that I think is the best he ever wrote and the support for science fictionÕs
philosophic grounding. Civilization is its only worst enemy. Clarke offers
reasons for hope like few others have been able to offer. Of all literature,
only sci-fi is generally rosy and offers the best of humanity. I canÕt remember
ever reading Against the Fall of Night.
More than anything we are offered the prophecy that humanity will survive for
greatness within the galaxy. ItÕs hard to be critical of vintage Clarke and I
will not try. This short book praises humanity and the singular spirit of
seeking knowledge and understanding that so far we have not found anywhere
else. If there are other rational species (how could there not be?), we will
eventually meet them and our own abilities will grow in collaboration. Clarke
never says, ÒHow great things can be,Ó but those sentiments are never far from
AlvinÕs thoughts or ClarkeÕs commentary or my anticipation. (June 2012)
Those in Peril
By Wilbur Smith
WOW!
IÕve been reading Smith
since River God, the first of a four
part ancient Egypt story, was published in 1994. Those in Peril surpasses everything from the Egyptian saga and the
Courtney saga that extends to establishing the CourtneyÕs in Africa. Smith is
expert in sailing the ocean, in maritime history, in intrigue and spies and war
and the espionage of stealing corporate secrets. Mostly he captures the reader
with exciting stories that demand attention and satisfy the need for justice. Those in Peril demonstrate his intricate
plots, complete characterization, flowing prose that is lyric and poetic, and
description that projects his tale to the readerÕs inner vision. Though this
latest tale has sexual encounters balanced against the violence and viciousness
of terrorism, the explicitness is not gratuitous. Anyone familiar with Wilbur
SmithÕs works will be exhilarated with this work. Those who discover him with
this exciting tale, may find his other works tame. (June 2012)
Masters of the Planet
By Ian Tattersall
A champion of the
distinct difference between humans and other animals, especially primates,
Tattersall takes the reader on an excursion through the prior millions of years
linking the discoveries of proto-anthropoids and their relationships,
skeletally and therefore biologically. Master
of the Planet is a primer for paleontology and our emerging presence in it.
Tattersall does not propose an immanent ancestor, nor does he argue for a
definite evolutionary sequence of ancestors. He does propose several homo
sapiens ancestors that may have arisen and died out over the hundreds of
thousands of years of each appearance. Not until he reaches the Neanderthals
and the Cro-Magnons does he suggest any direct ancestry and almost in passing
suggests that these two might have interbred, but keeps from saying that might
have been the missing link.
TattersallÕs normal flowing prose that excites the reader is constrained
in this book, which is far more academic than his other works. However, his
fourteenth chapter states that when the ability to think—indicated by our
ancestorsÕ ability to use symbols—is not possible to determine from the
bone record. He does not offer any reason except that biological elements do
not imply any thought process. I wish he had omitted his ÒcodaÓ after chapter
14. His intention to join the many who wish to excoriate humans for their poor stewardship
of the planet, in spite of their intelligence, more than muddied the rest of
the outstanding work of presenting Homo
Sapiens parentage.
Cryptum
By Greg Bear
The first of a trilogy,
and based on a video game, Cryptum is hardly equal to the standard Bear work. The scenes
and concepts takes too long to develop. Not being a devotee of gaming, I found
the plotline droll and inconsistent, more magical than reasonably developed.
Many scenes were reminiscent of stereotypical gaming concepts and most had
little connection with reality in any sense. Perhaps this is an attempt to get
gamers to look at more established leisure activities like reading good
literature, which Cryptum is not. The scam may work or is just
pandering to baser levels of human activity. Unfortunately I have the second
volume and loathe to let it stay unread, even with a quick page through, but
not too soon. Maybe the story will develop interest. Or maybe it will merely
turn on the chance that the gamer manages a miscue that turns into triumph.
Hungry as the Sea
By Wilbur Smith
This story comes early in
SmithÕs career, but it contains all the characteristics he weaves so well. Sea,
ecology, love, vengeance, greed, and finance embroil the hero who beats all challenges
while almost always doing the right thing. SmithÕs descriptions provide more
than enough detail to smell the crashing waves and the sweet perfume of his
women. Hungry as the Sea is a primer
for surviving ocean disasters and catastrophes. The book opens with a
successful salvage of a passenger ship grounded in stormy Antarctic winter
weather and concludes with the salvage of an oiler during a Caribbean
hurricane. SmithÕs plotline, a sequence of cliff-hangers, is never farfetched,
but the reader frequently agrees, Òwhy not?Ó as problems continue to surface. Although
the ocean and its vagaries are center stage in connection with those who ply
their lives on her, we are allowed glimpses into the world of high finance and
the lives of the very wealthy, all from the point of view of one who lacks
greed and is more concerned with how things ought to be. (March 2012)
Power Play
By Ben Bova
Straying from his
futuristic characters and scenarios throughout the solar system, Bova has zeroed in on politics in Power Play and all the infuriating subterfuge connected there.
Would that his plot line could actually develop, really, as he spins his tale.
Intrigue without the horrendous exploits we find in movies moves the reader
through a year and a half of a political campaign. Improbable solutions do not
detract from his charactersÕ circumstances and the one glaring omission, an
attempt to destroy the MHD facility in Lignite never enters the picture. Yet
that lack points to one more frightening implication: the criminal element that
underscores all the novelÕs action is unconcerned about the issues ordinary
voting citizens concern themselves with. A more terrifying consideration is how
plausible Power Play is.
Perhaps, Bova can move into the realm Crichton left: taking a
potential scientific thought and extrapolating it. This tale is as gripping and
his conclusions are equally thoughtful as they have ever been. Power Play is
one of BovaÕs best. (February 2012)
Betrayer
By C. J. Cherryh
Part of a long and
expanding(?) series, Betrayer falls
into science fiction by the slimmest of definitions: mention of a space station
half a dozen times. Half the book is needed to define, and characterize the
interacting tribal leaders, their bodyguards, and the human negotiator. The
reader is implanted in a Japanese feudal system complete with characteristic
multiple honorifics for nearly everyone and battling egocentric warlords. Once
negotiations are complete with the normal disbelief of all involved, attacks
from all excluded parties, including a rebel splinter group of a recognized
continental ÒmilitaryÓ force, place the tenuous negotiated agreements in
greater jeopardy. Perhaps this was an aberration from a recognized prolific
author. I donÕt intend to find out. (February 2012)
Owl Dance
By David Lee Summers
Steampunk is not my preference, but this anachronistic tale
is a fun read and it is not without important lessons. Ramon Morales and Fatemeh Karimi are unusual heroes
who get caught up in everyday questionable behavior fostered by those in charge
of SocorroÕs population and elsewhere some hundred and twenty-five years ago.
Their innate sense of fairness and justice keeps them in conflict with the
powers-that-be. Their adventures, beginning and based mostly in New Mexico,
soon reach notable destinations: Grand Canyon, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and
Denver. A secondary plot carries the reader to Russia and back. Summers manages
to weave southwest history with the presence of an alien existence wishing to
learn about humanity. Instead of hands-off observation the alien,
intending to save humanity, soon
unleashes the baser motivations powerful humans must guard against. Presented
as a sequence of cliff-hanger episodes that our pair of heroes must survive
(and of course do), Owl Dance manages
more insight to human nature than we can witness in the daily news or gain from
a psychology class. (January 2012)
Prophet
By Mike Resnick
And the Penelope Bailey
saga ends. But not before Resnick has managed to
provide a continuing evolution of characters that will become the basis for his
later work The Outpost, which is a
Òtall taleÓ expose of how heroes saved the galaxy from a takeover by an
invading force from another galaxy. ResnickÕs
old-time Saturday serial sense continues as PenelopeÕs existence is hardly more
than a nebulous fearful presence haunting and determining the action of his
heroes. More than just the shootÕem up, sequences
that have flowed through the trilogy, a treatise on a human with omniscience or
precognition, as Resnick describes PenelopeÕs
ability, provides a clear demonstration of the irony and difficulty of
possessing such a talent. The conclusion ties the story up with a nice bow
after the only ending possible has taken place. Resnick
never fails to provide the reader with a thought-provoking kernel. PenelopeÕs
revelations should not be totally astonishing, but they are properly critical
of many of our cultureÕs aspirations.
Certainly each volume in
the trilogy might be read independently of the others and the whole tale might
be a single volume—very large. However, beginning with Soothsayer is the only way to read about
Penelope Bailey. No book is particularly long and, as Resnick
normally writes Òpage-turners,Ó the reader is compelled to see what happens
next. The trilogy is dashed through. How could one not enjoy? (January 2012)
Oracle
By Mike Resnick
Volume two of ResnickÕs Penelope Bailey series has little to do with the
title character. Rather it heightens PenelopeÕs mystery and causes galactic
wonder and fear. Set sixteen years after Soothsayer,
this part of the tale concerns two bounty hunters and their tribulations to get
to the alien planet, not of the Democracy, where Penelope is living. In the
background the Democracy is fearful that the prescient young lady may still
attempt to take over the galaxy, and it wants her out of the picture. Yet
killing her, let alone getting to her, seems insurmountable. Only at the end of
Oracle is the reader provided with
one more twist: Penelope may be imprisoned and unable to leave. Reminiscent of Mad MagazineÕs ÒSpy vs
Spy vs SpyÓ the reader is carried along with the
exploits of the most famous bounty hunter and another who is most able but
inept. Oracle ends with Resnick giving a glimpse of why the DemocracyÕs fears are
serious, not only for its own control but for the sake of the galaxy. (January
2012)
Soothsayer
By Mike Resnick
Penelope is a young child
and she knows what can happen—all of the possibilities in the near
future—and she manages to work toward those that are advantageous for
herself. And the whole galaxy is after her because with her in their control,
they will corner incredible power and wealth. Except one man who sees farther
and knows she will be a menace when she eventually grows up. He wants her dead.
In his normal fast-paced style Resnick weaves the
first novel of a three part tale. Chases, captures, and escapes follow one
after another until the surprising end, that is a little un-Resnick.
Mostly the reader is taken on a tour of the questionable trait and its impact
of seeing the future. (January 2012)
Spin
By Robert Charles Wilson
ItÕs hard to imagine this
first volume of a trilogy as a Hugo Award winner, unless the award speaks to
the temporal (and unexplained) physics of the Spin. The main characters are
well-drawn. However, we are presented with a sketchy Òend of the worldÓ scenario
seen only through their eyes and it looks little different than the catastrophe
represented by When Worlds Collide.
If one looks beyond the unexplained (and we are offered all sorts of reasons
for the lack of explanation) the Òwhat ifÓ seems a rehash of the regular
doomsday scenarios the media foist on us and we are at long last provided with
the first conclusion (two more volumes each have a conclusion, one presumes),
an almost deus ex machina
that allows the main characters escape. The format of the novel provides the
reader short and discrete and current narrative information that the escape is
probable interposed with long chronologies of the history of EarthÕs problems
and the characters involvement with each other. The tale might end with this
part, but a follow story is obvious. (January 2012)
Fuzzy Nation
By John Scalzi
Exploration, worldly
wealth, emerging sentience, and intense corporate greed: Zara XXIII has it all
in this rollicking adventure of life on a distant planet. Jack Halloway is the unlikely hero, a disbarred lawyer from
North Carolina, who discovers way beyond a fortune of sunstones and immediately
discovers trouble from all directions. Naturally it all works out, the good
win, the evil lose and whatÕs right happens—unfortunately only on the
pages of an enjoyable read. Would that things worked so well in the real world.
Scalzi moves his story forward with the technique of
the old Saturday serial. Things fall apart, get remedied and are destroyed even
worse. The conclusion is never in doubt, just how itÕs going to happen. Good
dialog and short on description that would take from the action, Fuzzy Nation is a good read that leaves
the reader shouting for joy.
The Unincorporated Man
By Dani
& Eytan Kollin
Far in the future,
centuries after a world economic collapse and a nuclear spat that defied the
TAPS report, earthlings are all satisfied and reasonably well off. The solar
system has been explored, inhabited in many places, including the Ort Cloud,
Mars and Venus terra-formed, and the asteroids and moons of Jupiter and Saturn are
inhabitable destinations. Into this seeming utopia, a cryogenic capsule from
five hundred years early is found and the occupant, a high-powered business man
is reanimated to the fear of all the ruling corporations on Earth. Jason Cord
refuses to be incorporated as all humans are at birth, thereby becoming an
outcast in the business-style world of humanity. Written several years ago, but
after the turn of the century, The
Unincorporated Man offers a lesson and a prediction about our financial
dealings. The current economic woes the planet faces can be found hinted at
throughout this novel. Justin Cord, destined to be a folk hero, presages the
end of a ÒcomfortableÓ world order that has existed for centuries. A bit slow
at times, this tale weaves itself around the good, the misinformed (mostly
illiterate and unthinking), and the tyrants (corporate executives) who refuse
to yield their selfish control for the best of all. The book is long, but the
necessary financial narrative ties exciting intrigue and action with a love
story. A sequel follows, The
Unincorporated War.
Second Contact
By Mike Resnick
This shorter, more
entertaining older work by Resnick is in his full
dialog and rapid moving story format. This mystery has but two main characters
who are involved in discovering why the government wants them dead because one,
a lawyer, is willing to built a case to defend a space ship captainÕs
confession that he killed two of his crew who he thought were aliens. This high
pressure four-day adventure includes a female computer wizard who introduces
the lawyer, who has many of the characteristics of Wilson Cole of the Starship
saga, to the intricacies of espionage and underhanded dealings necessary to
stay alive while they touch the lives of more and more officials up the chain
of command. This page-turner is a quick read and demonstrates the enjoyable
facility Resnick has with moving a story with dialog
only.
Paradise
By Mike Resnick
Star TrekÕs Prime Directive has been bandied about for more than four decades;
however, seldom are we offered an example of why the directive is so important.
Humans in their quest for discover and expansion have no empathy or
understanding for the needs of ÒlesserÓ societies or alien civilizations. We
can recognize the failing from the colonialism humans undertook on Planet Earth
and generally messed up the enterprise because of selfishness, greed, and lack
of concern for cultural differences. Humans seem arrogant enough to believe
their ways are best and everyone else should adopt them. ResnickÕs
Paradise pictures how human exploration
and expansion on an alien planet provides nothing but destruction for the
inhabitants of Peponi. Nor is his narrative far from
what first world nations have always does to third and fourth world countries
on our planet. Not much different thematically from another novel, Kirinyaga, written a decade later Presnick
seems to have set the parameters of conquest/exploration clearly enough that
the later book should be digested with the idea that even when the best of
cultural intentions are engaged, culture and heritage take a beating. It is
clear that humans are imbued with the belief that our ways are best and we work
hard to educate all to understand them, as complex and conflicting as they are.
However, the one characteristic that humans seem to have in great abundance,
empathy—engaged only later in relationships—should be brought
forward at the beginning of our explorations.
Metaconcert
By Julian May
This second part of MayÕs
Intervention story concludes the Machiavellian workings of OÕConnor and RogiÕs nephew Victor. More, the novel depicts the normal
human fears of the unknown or different (mental operants
established in the first book) in conjunction with the ordinary political
problems that this planet must suffer. Reading a story that purports a future
that is in fact the past of my reading is an interesting view that repeatedly
says that Òthere is nothing new under the sun.Ó RogiÕs
ghost is finally revealed in startling fashion. We learn that Rogi never at danger. The foreshadowing that a quick
reading will pass over lets the reader sigh, ÒOf course.Ó Though MayÕs style drags because she
tries to stuff so much at one time and juggles many sub plots, we are offered
one more hope that humankind might still have some value and the possibility
that we can overcome our character flaws is possible.
Fallen Dragon
By Peter F. Hamilton
An older work from before
I discovered Hamilton, Fallen Dragon is no less exciting in his
presentation of human desire and fulfillment of aspirations. The story from a
different universe than I have encountered more recently from Hamilton, we are
presented with the image of multi-national powerful business that works for its
own perpetual grasping, regardless of what it espouses, at all costs. Into this
mix Lawrence Newton works to discover how he can spend his time space-faring
which is nearly a lost need. Along the journey to his aspirations Lawrence
joins the company that seems to control civilization among the stars in much
the manner of medieval kings: colonies are required to provide a percentage of
their product to the company. In HamiltonÕs normally complex plots, we are
carried along with the hero and his history as he is involved in love affairs,
dashed dreams, war-like skirmishes, and the discovery of his most basic belief:
the human need to explore and expand horizons. In this smaller story (only one
volume, instead of the multiple book sagas) Hamilton is not shy with his
characters or details. Written in 2002, there are hints that a following tale
might spring from Fallen Dragon, but that is not a certainty.
The Surveillance
By Julian May
The first volume in two
parts of a larger work entitled Intervention, the reader is provided with a
history of metapsychology and introduced to the alien consortium looking to
uplift earthlings who have something to provide the galaxy with. The characters
are well developed and the chronology is intermittent from the early 40Õs to
the early 90Õs. This first volume, divided into two parts offers hints of what
is to come in volume two, but is more concerned with establishing the emergence
of humans who have extra normal mental powers, not excluding ESP or
telekinesis. The presence of these ÒsuperiorÓ humans who have banded together
to bring peace to the planet through their special powers, are made known to
the world and immediately seen as a greater problem than the nuclear threat
from the two super powers.
The Immortality Factor
By Ben Bova
This effort of BovaÕs is a reprint of an older non-spacey novel that was an
originally edited novel entitled Brothers.
This version contains a previously removed chapter. (Several chapters could
have been removed without hindering the story; which chapter was removed is not
evident.) The bookÕs format makes it difficult to become embroiled in the story
of potential organ regeneration in vivo.
The kernel of the story is a hearing to determine the continuance of research
for this possibility. However, the story is frequently broken as Bova has long passages—of many pages—that
provides his charactersÕ backgrounds and thoughts and interactions, all
triggered by the brief paragraphs of a five day hearing. This method is far
from BovaÕs normal technique and not easily followed
for one expecting his usual story telling. The conclusion of the tale is
typical Bova as all strings are tied together in a
pleasing conclusion. BovaÕs purpose seems an
offensive against the non-scientific elements of society and government and how
they are pitted against researchers who are working to make our lives better.
This much longer than most Bova is more instructive
than entertaining and the reader should be prepared.
With A Happy Eye But É
By George F Will
I took nearly a decade to
read this collection of op-ed pieces written from Õ97 to Õ02. I had read an
early collection by George Will, a moderate conservative who writes for the
Washington Post and other publications. His earlier book was more interesting. Will is not rabid and
that helps. More than anything, his style, vocabulary, and periodic sentences
are a delight in an era that has put a premium on short simple statement. The
book is exceptionally politically directed and he spends much time on the first
amendment challenges and election laws that seem to limit whether all
candidates can be heard or should be heard or whether the loudest, richest
voice should or should not rule. Much of his writing is tied to his time in
Washington, D. C., and to the important people he has been in contact with. In
a small way he has managed to let the reader in on some insider understanding
of what happens in our Capitol.
Hull Zero Three
By Greg Bear
Years ago I managed about
40 pages of Slant by Bear before I
put the book up. I have not opened its pages since. Maybe I will now; it canÕt
be worse than Hull Zero Three which I should have with Hull Zero Three away after 20 pages. An
agent or publisher would have done that with an unfledged writer had they
forced themselves that far. I hope that the creative well hasnÕt run dry, because
from Dinosaur Summer BearÕs writing has
been superb, although I questioned killing off his heroes in Mariposa after just two adventures. And The City at the End of Time is more
fantasy than science fiction but Bear deserves plaudits for attempting something
so ambitious and difficult. His latest effort, however, magical fantasy of a
regenerative colony ship, lacks tangible substance and a viable conclusion.
Three hundred pages of detail do not a good story make: hot and cold, bubbles
that contain forests and environments that morph themselves, monkeys, strange
creatures that may be human and who are constantly escaping incarnate evil, and
an artificial intelligence that seems more fallible deity that continually
takes advantage of its creations. There are some who recommend this effort; I
am not one. I have read too many excellent tales from Greg Bear to be conned
into accepting this sophomoric drivel.
Leviathans of Jupiter
By Ben Bova
BovaÕs latest entry into his tour of the solar system
is, like Jupiter, much larger than his normal offerings. One character from the Rock Rats saga
continues in this tale and Bova introduces a few
others that may populate further stories. Intrigue and political skullduggery
underwrite a simple attempt (but technologically difficult) for proving
intelligent creatures inhabit Jupiter. Normally Bova
provides a clear tale with few ÒgotchaÓ events and so it is with this one.
Determining the intelligence will, of course, take place and the evil will be
countered, maybe completely. However, some of the solutions in this tale
include nanotechnology, but the rules that Earth refuses return to any one who
has encounter nanites seems to have been forgotten.
The chief IAA council member is unaware of that prohibition which is also lost
on the heroine who has been promised a scholarship to the Sorbonne. It is
unimaginable that Bova has forgotten. Perhaps the
next story may annul the nanite prohibition as well
as remove the fundamentalist hold on planet Earth.
PandoraÕs Seed
By Spencer Wells
Spencer Wells takes an
unpopular road: humans need to do with less for their sake and the planetÕs.
His journey skims the development of humans from hunter-gatherers to
technologists and provides us with a thin comparison that shows todayÕs culture
as frightfully on the edge of impossibility, to continue, to back up, to
improve, perhaps even to exist. Wells wanders through not an original thought
that our deadly diseases are as much a result of our longevity as mutant
causes. He suggests that our demand for technology (genetics) to solve problems
may have unforeseen consequences that are more drastic that the problems it was
employed to solve. Wells decries a loss of morality and wonders if a universal
ethic is even possible. In the only definitive belief he holds, he stands firm
that global warming is human caused and clearly the result of our greed to have
an easy life without concern for the consequences. His message, hinted and stated
is that we need to back away from our demands, our rushing, our striving, and
learn to relax and be satisfied with less. ItÕs not a new lesson and he doesnÕt
offer much hope of its learning.
Talus
By Erol
Ozan
Imagine a scavenger hunt
looking for clues that humans are not the only rational beings on Earth. Add
the paranoid fear that very few greedy speculators are in charge of the world.
Mix with the unknown and you donÕt have Dan Brown or National Treasure. This is not the first attempt at providing
mythological creatures like Yetis and Bigfoots with a place in society, but it
offers at least another explanation; unfortunately itÕs unrealized. Rylan and Ursula are faint images of Langdon and Sophe (from the DaVinci Code) but
the similarities are unmistakable. The book is self-published and consequently
contains the typos one might expect without a professional editor. However, the
most glaring holes are the jerky transitions, lack of reality in detail and
plot, and deus ex machinaÕs
to escape impossible situations. It appears that when the author realizes he
has no where to go or the word count will be short, he dumps long pages of
background and ÒtranslationsÓ that add little to the moment. These tangents
might have been eliminated if details, descriptions, and flowing segues were
better developed. The underlying concept has merit. It might have been more
successful after another dozen rewrites.
Figuring It Out
By Nuno
Crato
If you watched NUMBERS on
TV, you remember that every episode Charlie pulled out some mathematical theory
or equation to help solve the problem and catch the perpetrator. This small
book by Nuno Crato is the
lay personÕs version of math related to every day subjects. Crato
manages to explain each puzzle, dilemma, encounter, question or intrigue in
less than three pages. Seldom does he lose himself in abstract math so the
reader is hardly ever out of his element. Occasionally he explains why our
intuitions are correct or provides proof that we are simply off base. This
interesting little book might be a good bathroom book, but it provides an
avenue to realizing that math doesnÕt have to be esoteric.
The Buntline Special
By Mike Resnick
The extended title is ÒA
Weird West TaleÓ and Resnick does not disappoint. The Buntline Special once again demonstrates
ResnickÕs ability to create characters who delight.
He is humorous, a joy to read. This tale of the west is a wacky narrative of
the events around the gunfight at OK coral and spiced with vampires,
electricity, and prosthetics. The basic elements of this famous gun fight
remain, but the whimsy Resnick adds provides intrigue
that makes this small slice of history more exciting that normal historical
presentations. A short book, word-wise, one might read The Buntline Special in a single sitting. If not, it will call the
reader back.
Heroes of History
By Will Durant
Certainly a longer
companion to the Lessons of History, Heroes is more concerned with pointing
out the succession of major historical figures who have promoted the elements
of civilization through their own presence, imagination, and leadership. If the
groundwork to our civilization was fully laid by the end of this book, one
might imagine that every element of society had been presented by the end of
Francis BaconÕs life. Durant has given the reader a primer for what is
necessary for humanity if it wishes to understand how life is sorted out in
societies and countries. His heroes are the names most are familiar with if not
conversant with after a complete education. All are not the best and most
favorable of historical characters, but they are the ones who for well or ill
molded the people around and after them. The reader who expects superman and
crime fighters will be disappointed early on and throughout. Durant allows the evil
to be as much a force for developing civilization as the benevolent ruler or
the great philosopher or the strong military leader. Rather Heroes of History presents a complete
picture of civilization with all its qualities admirable and detestable. With
DurantÕs tutelage, readers are left to make the future what they imagine to be
the best.
Ark
By Stephen Baxter
We must leave the planet,
if we are to continue to exist, to search, to answer questions, to maintain our
humanity. Baxter envisions that colony ship in reaction to the earth inundating
all land with miles deep-water, more water than in fact is found in the
planetÕs oceans. However his tale is more than just traversing space to find a
new earth, Earth II, while the nearly drowned remnant of humans scrounge for
mere existence on what has become a water world. In Ark he attacks and exhibits the facets necessary to undertake such
a human quest: who should go, how should they be prepared, how do they live,
how do humans on earth deal with inexorable submersion? Ark is a study in human psychology, interaction, indomitable
spirit, and ultimate submission to uncontrollable forces.
Although his tale reaches
the planned conclusion, he drops enough hints that the story might be a twist
on an old Twilight Zone episode of
the earthÕs destruction. His characterizations are complete and run the gamut
of people we know around us. However he is magical with respect to the needs
and provisions of everyday items we take for granted: food, clothing,
technology, and the basic elements for maintaining that existence. Since most
of the book is about events in faster than light travel (covering some fourteen
years at warp 3) the earthen remnant has hardly aged much beyond the same time.
Of course Star Trek labored under the
same difficulty.
What Baxter has given us is
a primer for leaving this planet and setting out into the galaxy. He reminds
us, again and again, that there is much we have to do before we set off on such
an adventure. The first is to put our own houses in order. Humanity,
unfortunately, is not yet ready for the trek; we must mature and do so quickly,
especially if the earth should decide to make our lives impossible upon it.
Heirs of the New Earth
By David Lee Summers
In the concluding volume
of the trilogy, Earth, humanity, and the galaxy faces potential extinction. In
a remarkable confluence, the heroes of the first two volumes all manage to
cooperate in the defense of humanity and the Clusters are provided with a different
alternative than symbiosis with humans that they have undertaken. Summers dashes
through the galaxy gathering his characters, bringing them to one final
confrontation at Earth. This third part moves more quickly and definitely
toward conclusion that will obviously be in humanityÕs favor. His denouement
ties all into a nice bow but also keeps a few openings for something that might
follow. The Clusters are the first appearance of potential danger or
imperfection possible in transferring oneÕs knowledge and history and
personality to a computer. This consideration is not, however, a spot-lighted
extension of the far-out desire of those who look to download themselves onto a
hard drive. It does provide some wonder about such an operation.
Pirate Latitudes
By Michael Crichton
Discovered on his
computer after his death, this posthumous novel seems far from CrichtonÕs
normal tales. Historical fiction was never his method. Crichton always took
some scientific headline and expanded the logical extreme into his normally
long tales. This tale of the 1600Õs takes place in the Caribbean as a
rollicking jaunt along with privateers. The ending is hardly ever in doubt, but
Crichton does manage to throw a few unexpected twists. The resolution of the
difficulties along the way, though possible, seem most improbable at times. The
tale is entertaining. However given the length and the length (much shorter
than his novels for several decades) and the looseness of continuity, I wonder
if this is more a very early effort that had not seen publication. And with the
word that another novel that had not seen a publisher is waiting for one in the
next two years, one must wonder if it is an earlier work as well. Crichton was
certainly not without scientific landscapes to write about.
Children of the Old Stars
By David Lee Summers
Volume 2 of The Old Star
Saga provides the reader with a twist in sequence. Instead of the hero being
demoted, he ends up promoted after doing exactly what was done to be demoted at
the end of book one. The mystery of the Cluster is solved but with alarming
consequences amid a bit of romance, some subversion and not a little soul
searching to provide solid base to the characters who seem always to be at the
right place at the right time. However, the cliffhanger for this book is
something that provides much greater catastrophe than the mere war on Safiro. Summers has offered us a nice twist on where the
intelligence comes from and takes a stab at perhaps explaining, as David Brin never got around to doing, how humans rose to
rationality. This volume provides more action and perhaps presages a
philosophic twist for the final part to this saga.
The Pirates of Sufiro
By David Lee Summers
This is the first book of
a trilogy, founded by a privateer in the galactic federation who is entrapped
and eventually lands on a distant planet to begin a new civilization from the
ground up. The plot covers many decades as it follows the original settler and
his family and naturally glosses over the ordinary lives of the characters as
it presents the follies and foibles of humans as we have come to expect them.
The conclusion of the book is hardly in doubt, although there are a couple of
unexpected twists that allow good to triumph. The grand scheme of things is
more important in how civilization or society may develop and Summers manages
to introduce the Cluster, an apparent alien probe, that provides the impetus
for the tale to continue.
The Year of the Flood
By Margaret Atwood
Oryx and Crake extended
is this droll production by Atwood. In my experience, writers wipe out the
planet and the human species at the beginning of their careers, not Atwood.
Perhaps there is a bit of hope that our species will make the changes fitting
for supposed rational beings. The overwhelming ecological and technological
demands by our civilizations are evident, but not dwelled on. The Year of the
Flood is clearly an ecology treatise but without the hope that most of them
offer the reader. Humans are stupid is the underlying message. Perhaps we are;
fostering change can be enjoined by praise or damnation. Atwood offers very
little praise.
Evolutionary Void
By Peter F Hamilton
The awaited conclusion to
the Void trilogy continues the complexity of interacting characters that only
astonishes the reader. Hamilton manages to juggle so many elements with skill
and incredible anticipation as all have a part in the conclusion which
naturally falls in line with his continual belief that all must end well.
Description, detail, and psychology all fall in place as the prescribed, within
the chronology of the story, brief time is stretched out with innumerable
cliff-hanger potentials. Hamilton is a master at tying all up neatly and the
Void series, a simplistic "end of universe" (instead of planet or civilization)
idea, is turned, analyzed, dissected, and stretched out for viewing.
One book seller waited
for this part to be published before he intended to real all of them. If he
started quickly after availability, he's finished now. I can't imagine the story
without volume gaps.
Long for this world
By Jonathan Weiner
Let's live forever, or a
thousand years, which ever comes first. It's a mantra uttered by biologist
Aubrey de Grey in a cogent explanation why aging is more disease than condition
and that there are ways to counter the inherent demands that our bodies be
mortal. Much of the book is a narrative of de Grey's reasons that biology will
eventually provide us with immortality and that living forever is a desirable
condition. Not until the end of the book—the last three
chapters—does Weiner waver from the mantra. Objections to exceedingly
long life are introduced in the normal philosophical concerns over boredom and
health and quality of life; then he considers the evils that arise from
dictators and autocrats maintaining their empires and people refusing to have
children which is a selfish and questionable rational existence, not unlike
that of the "Q" presented in a "Voyager" episode of the multi-series
Star Trek run. Weiner does not
convince the reader to buy into immortality. Rather he offers both yea and nay their
fair viewing (de Grey has more space). The reader decides.
The Island of the Colorblind
By Oliver Sacks
This book had been on my
shelves for several years before I opened it. I had forgotten the pleasure of
reading Sacks but was immediately reminded. His language and flow is
intriguing. This book is almost a "throw together" of three or four
island in Micronesia. Complete colorblindness is rare but on Pohnpei it is very common. Sacks explains how this apparent
lack of sensory perception for these people is hardly a handicap. The second
half of this small book, less than 200 pages, is about two neurological diseases
(the general expertise that Dr. Sacks possesses) that frequently join to
incapacitate select families on Guam. We see the ravages of the diseases and
the potential causes—cycads—and the mystery of the vanishing of the
disease. In a brief final chapter, Sacks takes us to the island of Rota where
he receives in depth instruction of cycad trees which instruction is an
extension of his own early childhood interest in uncommon plants.
The Lost Symbol
By Dan Brown
One part of the literary
definition of a short story is that it should take as long to read as the
action of the story takes to happen. Brown manages that time element better in The Lost Symbol than in his first
novels. Except for the final pages that are droll and an unwelcomed humanist
presentation for a natural religion tied closely to Free-Masonry, the tale
dashes madcap with more twists than he offers in his other novels. Brown does
employ deus ex machina in
places, but the general plotline is reminiscent of Saturday morning action
serials of sixty years ago. The belief that characters will not vanish from the
story is occasionally difficult to maintain and his ultimate twist should shock
for it is not foreshadowed: the reader has been lied to. Though I am not a
Mason, I imagine that his presentation of elements of that order are little
different in reality than the amassing of myths and legends and innuendo that
he employs in The DaVinci
Code.
Mariposa
By Greg Bear
Bear's latest futuristic
mystery loosely employs his characters from Quantico
as they try to defuse a scheme that will ruin the United States. Seemingly
fueled by the current crises the country and world face, a single bad guy has
technology, multiple moles in many government agencies, and assistance from
questionable governments around the world to aid his nefarious scheme. Mariposa does not take off until nearly
half way through, the first part placing his characters in mysterious vignettes
that the reader knows will fit together and must either try to sort out or
follow along for the ride. Once the action takes over, it runs as it did with Quantico. However, as Quantico seemed more plausible an event
that might plunge the world into chaos, so Mariposa
lacks the same potential, although it is fair to mention that Bear offers no
date line that might allow the reader to extrapolate the technology.
Unfortunately, the conclusion is less optimistic than his recent books and
seems a nod to his first novels when he was accustomed to destroy the Earth.
Skeptics and True Believers
By Chet Raymo
Raymo manages to create the dichotomy that one may
possess either science or religion. Within the realm of religion, without much
reason, he drops astrology, extra-terrestrials, fairies and elves, and general
misinformation. Unfortunately Raymo's concept of
religion is indeed childish and not evolved beyond his elementary school catechism
despite having dealt with Frank Sheed's Theology and Sanity (if he actually read
it) at Notre Dame. Consequently his "straw" arguments in deflating
believers come from notions that are equal in validity to his deflating of claims
of anti-science protesters. One might expect more understanding of his Catholic
upbringing. However, his statement that once he found science, religion no
longer meant anything explains his one-sided presentation that science is
superior to God.
It had been some time
since I had read what I determine a "garbage" book, one far off the
path of serious discussion or is intellectually dishonest. Raymo
writes long in the face of consensus of many that science and religion are not
mutually exclusive. Perhaps he should take his avowed intellectual openness and
extend it to an unbiased search of what his early Catholicism really meant.
The Death and Life of the Great
American School System
By Diane Ravitch
Ravitch knows what is wrong with education in the United
States and what must be done to turn things around. The subtitle "How
testing and Choice Are Undermining Education" recognizes that test results
do not prove education and the emphasis on that data will turn us into a nation
of ignorant test takers. Pat Reeb, late English
teacher at Barstow High, once wrote that students are not sausages and they are
not things on an assembly line. The powerful influences that are controlling
education today are not concerned with anything but their own power. They
repeatedly see that their methods are not fostering education, but they only
adjust the market strategies; they do not seek to educate. Perhaps they want a
nation of dolts.
Eifelheim
By Michael Flynn
A second of two books my
daughter gave me this year, this historical fiction is a fine example of
bringing the middle ages to the modern world with the anachronistic addition of
alien encounters. Flynn's details are equal to Ken Follett's detailing of the
people of the time and his presentation of Catholic belief and philosophic
dissertations is much better. Eifelheim scarcely
covers a year's time and the description of the Bubonic Plague is effectively
frightening. Almost lost in the story is the appearance of aliens who
demonstrate that a species able to travel the universe must be benevolent not
malevolent. These Insectoid creatures possess the technology we expect to see
from any advanced species and they (some of them) also have the eagerness to
learn of and from the creatures they have been stranded with. The book does
have some slow spots and it is much longer than one might expect from a story
of alien encounters. The original novella "Eifelheim"
was reworked and interposed with appropriate chapters of the fourteenth century
narrative.
Metatropolis
Edited by John Scalzi
This brief anthology of
five long short stories purports to describe the future of cities on planet
Earth. The reviews suggest each story
provides "hopeful" possibilities. If the intent is to turn the
planet into a green society, then they are hopeful. Unfortunately I find them
more "Mad Max" descriptions of the destruction of all that is
technological and recognizable in our current societies. The poor are
everywhere and the wealthy are the ones who still make sure the poor remain so.
Some technology is present, but the utopian concept is as it might have been
with Brave New World, only for a select few who have gated themselves from the
rest. Scalzi's contribution was the best of the lot
at the beginning as he described a smartass who did not get rewarded for his
refusal to accept education. By the story's end we discover that being a
recalcitrant smartass still provided the hero his success in spite of his poor
education.
The Lessons of History
By Will & Ariel
Durant
This short book of
thirteen brief essays recounts the basic elements of human civilization.
Written more than 40 years ago, its incisive thought about human beings and
what they do has been demonstrated repeatedly since the book was written. We
should not be amazed that we have not changed much from the 5,000 year history
that the Durants point out as important pegs that we
align ourselves with from that distant past. Easily read, it does require a
familiarity with historical information from around the world.
Terminal World
By Alastair Reynolds
This novels departs from Reynold's usual fare as he ventures into future holocaust,
some magic, animal-machine combination, Mad Max, good angels and bad angels.
Imagine Saturday serials and Terminal
World fits the genre. Although the story seems to drag some and the book is
longer than Reynolds seemed accustomed to create, the extra length is found is
tedious descriptions of intricate activity. His cast of characters is about
normal and they are well-drawn. However the foundation for his plot is not well
drawn and the reader is left without explanations other than "that's just
how it is." For those who are willing to accept the unexplained and follow
the action, the plot moves well and the reader can almost always stay ahead of
the solutions that evolve from the personality of his characters, except for
the handful of gotchas that Reynolds uses to get out of "now what?"
101 Theory Drive
By Terry McDermott
The way science works and
what goes on in labs is what my daughter told me about this book. If so, it
takes a special person to work in a lab and do science. Gary Lynch, a
neurophysiologist, seeks to find how the brain remembers and what makes memory.
Difficult to read as the science is filtered through the specific personality
of Lynch, driven to find the answer to a search that has not altered in three
decades, the solution is probably not available to a scientist. Francis Crick
in his Improbably Thesis was trying
to discover the biological foundation of thinking in much the same way Lynch is
attempting to discern the biology of memory. Both fail because their goal is
more than biological and they will not admit philosophy and the spirit is
involved. The book does offer some insight into what and how treatment for
brain disorders can be based on drugs that interact with specific brain
chemistry.
More than anything this book offers one graphic demonstration of why
"reading someone's brain" will never take place. It is one thing to
recognize where the memory may be indicated, but considerable more to imagine
what the memory is of and where else it connects.
The Hippocampus is Lynch's playing field and it may be the underlying file
system for what is stored in the rest of the brain. This concept was not
mentioned, probably because it returns one to the metaphor of the computer
which is not the brain.
The Dark Beyond the Stars
By Frank M. Robinson
This tale of a colony,
generational spaceship is ponderous. Written from the perspective of the hero,
the vision is the despairing belief that only humans from earth inhabit the
galaxy or universe. I discovered this book in my pile of books yet to be read
and seemed to have started it several years ago and mistakenly left it
unfinished. I thought of many possible endings that diverged from RobinsonÕs
who maintained his somber belief until the epilog. The tale does not turn until
very close to the end and rushes to the complete explanation of the intrigue,
mutiny, and explanation of the currents and riptides that are present
throughout. I prefer rosier conclusions, but the presentation of humanity is
faultless. Would we had more principled ideals.
GalileoÕs Dream
By Kim Stanley Robinson
Perhaps every author has
one bad book. This departure from what Robinson does best is one more
discussion of the travesty that took place between the Catholic Church and
Galileo, except Robinson adds a ridiculous construct of time-travel related to
the Galilean moons. One more time the thrust of the accusations are couched in
the worst possible light on the Church because the real reason is not only
glossed over but omitted. GalileoÕs problems did not begin because he said that
the earth revolved about the sun, but because he said ÒThe Bible is wrongÓ referring
to the text in Joshua that the sun stood still in the sky while the Israelites
were winning the battle. Had Galileo recanted his ÔBibleÕ statement, things
would have been different. The Church had to prosecute over his accusation of
the BibleÕs inaccuracy. Except for this traditional discussion that has been
hashed too many times, the presentation of GalileoÕs problems was reasonably
presented although the swooning, syncopes, provide
questionable explanation for what transpired in GalileoÕs encompassing medical
difficulties.
Able One
By Ben Bova
A second novel by Bova that is not happening in the solar system, presents a
similar possible scenario of a potential devastating effect for the world as
Greg BearÕs Quantico does. This novel
developed in short byte-chapters bounces from character to setting from
Southern California to the Pacific to Washington D.C. builds the tension until
the very end. There is one sidebar that seems completely out of place, as if it
were intended as a red-herring for the plot. Fast-paced, Able One is a page-turner that frequently injects fear from the
Òwhat ifÓ conjectures.
Islands in the Sky
Edited by Stanley Schmidt
and Robert Zubrin
This collection of essays
form Analog purports to explain how humanity might leave the planet and
continue its existence throughout the galaxy. Zubrin
is known for his fostering ways to emigrate to Mars. But Mars is hardly the
focus of this book which offers, sometimes very esoteric, ways to leave earth,
populate the solar system and move on. The physics and math are not easy, but
the narrative are very encouraging despite the impressions that most of the
book seems more science fiction that potential. The saving element is that our
sun will not destroy Earth for another 5 billion years and assuming we do not
destroy our home, there is enough time to create the physics necessary for the
outrageous schemes proposed.
Ghost Train to the Eastern Star
By Paul Theroux
Thirty-three years after
his extended jaunt around Asia, Theroux repeats the trek ostensibly to see what
changes have happened to that part of the world. Mostly he discovers that
countries are worse and the people, those he comes in contact with are still
friendly, kind, helpful, and social: the hope for the world. I have read much
of Theroux who is mostly a travelogue writer who shows in vivid description the
world to those of us who are too timid, too introvert, too poor to attempt the
same personal research. Theroux excels in travel and telling the rest of the
world. He is also impossible to read quickly. He uses words interestingly and
combines them into long, periodic sentences (an incredibly pleasant discovery
during a time of short sentences being the unwritten rule) is captivating and
unusual ways that no one else can. Ghost Train is more a series of essays about
human beings than it is anything else. It is difficult to be uninterested in
humanity and Theroux is unbiased is his presentations.
Assegai
By Wilbur Smith
The Courtney saga, a
continuous narrative of the Courtneys who were
privateers in the early 1600Õs continues with Leon in Nairobi. Smith spins the
tale of a willful British soldier who is sheltered by his uncle, while learning
to be a hunting guide in Africa and working intimately with the Masai, during the time immediately before the First World
War. Leon Courtney soon becomes a spy and finds that there are others around
him. SmithÕs inimitable style provides the reader with fine description woven
around the political climate and an image of the coming European disaster that
has implications for Africa. Assegai is a fun read and those who pay
attention to the details will not be shocked at the ending.
The Temporal Void
By Peter F. Hamilton
Volume 2 of the Void
trilogy spends more time with fantasy inside the void as it is defined by the
dreams of Inigo than in the futuristic Federation
some 12 centuries older than the time frame of Judas Unchained. The link between the two concurrent tales is made
more clear but it continues to be tenuous. Hamilton has revealed some answers
and has directed the reader to recognize our society in many ways as he is a
master at placing the future in very contemporary concepts. His cast has
increased greatly and the arena of his action is truly the galaxy. He does not
leave the reader with the traditional Òcliff hanger,Ó many TV series employ, to
keep readers anxious for the next installment. However, the only disadvantage
to finishing The Temporal Void months
before the concluding volume is available—September 2010?—is that
his story telling does not continue to entertain.
House of Suns
By Alastair Reynolds
Epic in scope, Reynolds
has an unfolding tale of civilization and its galactic implications. Taking,
perhaps, a page from Peter Hamilton in creating characters and complex
interaction, Reynolds offers a story of the far future of our galaxy as human
clones, machine intelligence, and intrigue shape the fears of one line of
long-lived creatures. Slow starting, the book does not take off until it is
about half over. The flashbacks describing the development of the Gentian line
of eon-existing clones does not satisfy the ultimate conclusion of the story.
Starship: Flagship
By Mike Resnick
And so the saga of Wilson
Cole ends as it begins: Cole manages to make the galaxy safe for all species
while removing the bad guys from their positions of power. And he does it all
without killing anyone. He threatens, he cajoles, he persuades and others jump
to his side. ResnickÕs format for this five part
series is much more evident in this concluding book. Dialog carries the story;
narrative is practically non-existent, nor are details lacking. Resnick is a master at providing the reader with everything
he needs within the conversation of the characters. The solution to ColeÕs
dilemma does seem to be far afield, but it fit with the aura of ÒluckÓ that
seems to clothe Cole in all of his adventures.
Resnick is just plain fun to read. Unfortunately I read the
book in one sitting and enjoyed it. The problem is, of course, that there is no
more to read until he puts something else out. ThatÕs why my reading is
eclectic. I have enough authors that I am intrigued by all without entering a
void of nothing to read.
The Dreaming Void
By Peter F. Hamilton
Following PandoraÕs Star and Judas Unchained after a chronology of some 12 centuries, Hamilton
continues his epic saga of populating the galaxy with the first of a new
trilogy. The intrigue involved in the previous narrative has been increased
several fold as the option of downloading minds and personalities into an
over-reaching artificial intelligent consortium in the federation is fraught
with rejuvenation, superhuman abilities, and multiple levels of ESP. However
Hamilton mixes sci-fi with fantasy as the new religion seems to seek a time Hamilton
presents as a fantasy medieval Earth society mixed with magical powers. In a
mix I have not seen since LeGuinÕs The Dispossessed Hamilton alternates the
science future with the medieval in what is essentially two stories each of
which might stand alone. Occasionally the reader is must recall characters from
the previous two part saga, but Hamilton properly provides enough background
and brief flashback in detail to make sure the connections are present.
The Greatest Show on Earth
By Richard Dawkins
For several years Dawkins
has steadfastly refused to mount a rebuttal to Creationism. Apparently he has
finally succumbed to the need, no doubt from the statistical information about
the science knowledge of the general public of the United States and his home
country, England (which is found as an afterthought chapter). This book does
present information about why evolution does found the existence of life on
this planet. Dawkins moves slowly and systematically to cover how it formed and
branched out into the kinds we know about. Had he stayed with the biology and
development of evolution, the book would have been sufficient (except for the
expected refusal of creationists to read it) but he let his atheism take
control in the last pages where he summarily rejects the concept of
Òintelligent designÓ by offering his explanation of why a creator was really a
bungler using a few examples of biological development which he says were
poorly done—a nerve in the giraffeÕs neck, the vas deferens in males—and
maintains his critique demonstrates the lack of intelligence, since he would
have done a better job.
Human
By Michael S. Gazzaniga
Thirty some years ago,
Mortimer Adler in a Great Books Yearbook discussed the differences of humans
and other animals and why biologists and animalists and others who thought the
difference was one of degree. His approach was basically philosophical as he
was the reigning Aristotelian scholar of his time. Michael Gazzaniga
has reprised Adler but from the scientific side of the field. Adler mentioned
that none of those dealing with the problem were fit to discuss it because they
were either scientists or philosophers; the problem was one contained in both
areas. Gazzaniga is well-grounded in both areas. His
presentation of why and how humans are different and able to do the things we
do covers the philosophy Adler was demanding and supports it with the science
of brain theory and biology. Human
dismantles the concept that humans are different from other animals in degree
and demonstrates why our difference is in kind. More than anything, he
celebrates us as being separated from other animals because, although some of
the biology is similar and some is not, we possess other biology and abilities
dependent on that biology that makes us unique and unable to be duplicated. In
a brief conclusion he discusses why AI cannot be achieved if it means a
mechanical being with human abilities that are superior to human ability.
Hazards
By Mike Resnick
Mike Resnick
has to be the funniest author I have ever read. Introduced to him in his novel Kirinaga, a
utopia concept that fails miserably as all utopias must, I didnÕt know his
brand of humor until I read The Outpost,
a long series of tall tales of the galaxyÕs greatest heros.
Hazards seems to be a detour from his
Spaceship five part series, but it
still resides in tall tales peppered with very old ÒgoanerÓ
jokes. Reading Resnick is just plain enjoyable and
unfortunately because he reads so quickly the fun is gone until another book
appears. Resnick is also the first author I ever read
who carries his stories almost totally through dialogue.
Terraforming
By Martin Beech
More technical than I had
hoped for, this relatively short book offered reasons why the Earth is our home
and what characteristics we demand for life. Only after a long presentation of
why the Earth is as it is, does Beech begin to consider how Mars and Venus
(yes!) must be altered to allow humanity a place to live. Then he considers
some far future and seemingly incredibly expensive methods for terraforming
other bodies of the solar system. He deals with Jupiter and its four major
moons, SaturnÕs moon Titan, the larger asteroids in the belt between Mars and
Jupiter. Other bodies of the system, including the Kuipper
Belt are shown to have natural resources we might use to make these other
bodies habitable. Lots of math and some far out thoughts make the book
difficult and exciting. Mostly this concept is something that will take tens of
millennia from happening.
Genesis
By Bernard Beckett
A very brief novel from
one of New ZealandÕs fine writers—150 pages—that presents a good
discussion of some of the ideas currently in the forefront of consciousness and
mind and free will discussions. Description is almost non-existent as the
sequence is dialog which occasionally does drag. A good book that should
surprise nearly any reader can be read in an extended sitting.
Science at the Edge
Edited by John Brockman
Human beings, computer
technology, and cosmology are the three topics discussed extensively by the
leading scientists in each field. Nor do they merely rehash the state of each
scientific study; they extend the field and parameters well beyond current
status. Theories, premises, and imagination abound as one reads about human
development and the possibility of dissecting consciousness and what humans
might become, the possibility of conscious machines and their impact on our
lives, and the dimensionality of the universe and how we might experiment to
show them.
The Golden Torc
By Julian May
Volume two continues the
saga of humans and aliens in time past. Still very slow, the humans do show
their superiority in the midst of fantasy and magic and abilities that are
incomparable.
The Many-Colored Land
By Julian May
The first of a four
volume fantasy/sci-fi epic about
humans who traveled to the Pliocene era and managed to defeat a group of aliens
who had long before taken control of the era. The motley group of characters
from the latest exile to the Pliocene carry the plot even though their whole
group has been split (second volume dealing with the split). Interestingly the
races all cooperate to create the success and without the need to press the
issues with strong urging. Pliocene details are reasonable for letting the
story flow. Interesting speculations about what humans and aliens might do in
this era.
The Pillars of the Earth
By Ken Follett
Historical fiction that
is epic in scope and more characterized than Dickens is maddening to read. Good is always
trumped by devious evil; good seems never to gain. In that concept is truth and
it suggests that the civilization is not much better off now than eight hundred
years ago. But good, in its quiet, subdued manner does triumph. Perhaps that is
a lesson—the patience—that we all need to recognize. What is just
and proper and fitting is not necessarily to be exulted in or splashed over
all. The book seems to drag for much of its 800+ pages. Follett is able to make
the twelfth century come alive with his detailed descriptions, but that imagery
is not particularly exciting, though it is accurate. That mundane interweaving
of the characters is what drags: MurphyÕs Law exemplified—if justice is achieved,
the success is short-lived.
The Black Swan
By Nassim Nicholas Taleb
In the world of finance
most believe that there are patterns within which Òblack swansÓ are the
unexpected singular happenings. Black swans are both good and bad events that
impact economics. Taleb does not believe in patterns
or axioms, and in the beginning of the book it is difficult to imagine that one
should even be reading his own philosophy. Assuming, according to Taleb, that there are no patterns in randomness and that
all economics are founded on those who are not manipulative, then one must make
oneÕs choices random as well. However, his belief seems to be that there is no
manipulation. Such a belief is hard to imagine given the current spate of
economic advisers, companies and other con-jobs that seem all connected with
traditional pyramid schemes.
Everyday Survival: Why Smart People
Do Stupid Things
By Laurence Gonzales
Instead of a general
explanation of the stupid things people ordinarily do with great regularity,
Laurence Gonzales spends most of the book explaining who humans do not spend
much time looking for different solutions to the same problems. According to
Gonzales we are our own worst enemies because we are too comfortable with how
we live. He begins with several explanations of how we are different from all
other animals, especially other primates. Then he shows us that we are
unwilling to accept the challenges of the world that have arisen because of our
lack of global thinking. Whether he actually believes humans control the fate
of the planet in our lifestyle or not, he does present a good case for our
considering other cultures and the planet itself as principles that should
guide our future.
The Man Who Loved China
By Simon Winchester
Regardless of the subject,
Simon Winchester is a delight to read. His research is extensive and we are
allowed to pull back the veil of history and become a spectator. Joseph Needham
is portrayed as a man obsessed with all things China. Against the snippets of
the Chinese and their ÒmagicalÓ culture, Needham is shown to be almost as
strange as the ÒmadmanÓ in WinchesterÕs The
Professor and the Madman, the story of the beginning of the Oxford English Dictionary. WinchesterÕs
intensity of explaining and picturing his subject is more an exercise in the
breadth and depth of his own extensive studies from the geology of Britain in The Map That Changed the World, and
volcanology in Krakatoa: The Day the
World Exploded.
Starship: Rebel
By Mike Resnick
The fourth installment of
Captain Wilson Cole, the mutinous hero escapee of the FederationÕs Navy finally
leads him back to a promised confrontation with Federation forces. ColeÕs space
armada has grown and it has also begun to create rifts within his own dominion.
The fast pace of the first three books has not relaxed and the story is still
propelled by pages of dialogue.
Misspent Youth
By Peter F Hamilton
As HamiltonÕs other books
go, this was a short story. Rejuvenation at the beginning is fraught with
problems that are not told to Jeff Baker (or the problems are unknown, leading
to the general lack of foresight humans have). More a subdued battle of the
generations, the story compares a father and son in their sexual exploits in
living and reliving their youth. A quick read and generally transparent,
Hamilton does offer a relook at being able to Òdo that again.Ó