Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts

Friday, 21 January 2022

Review: Burning Chrome by William Gibson

Burning ChromeBurning Chrome by William Gibson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A collection of short stories from the man who defined cyberpunk. Some (inevitably) were better than others. For example, I couldn’t quite get my head around “New Rose Hotel” but “The Winter Market” conjured up believable technology and the society it would create. The big surprise for me was “Johnny Mnemonic” an interesting short story that spawned a truly awful film; William Gibson deserves better from Hollywood.

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Monday, 1 March 2021

Review: Next

NextNext by Michael Crichton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This book had some potentially very interesting ideas at its heart... but it didn’t quite come together for me. Lots of unconnected stories although some (but not all) came together (in a way that seemed ridiculously tenuous) at the end. Scientists that behaved in a way that wasn’t just unethical but, frankly, unbelievably stupid... and yet appeared to be rewarded at the end. A lawyer that was supposed to be smart but acted in ways that were exceptionally dumb. And don’t get me started on the parrot.

Having said that, I enjoyed it... mostly.

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Sunday, 3 January 2021

Review: The Lathe Of Heaven

The Lathe of HeavenThe Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I was looking for a copy of A Wizard of Earthsea which I read when I was a teenager. Instead, I found this book which I had never read. I couldn't quite make up my mind if I liked it or not. In the end, I decided I did but it is probably a three and a half rather than a four.

There are many interesting ideas explored in the book, for example: how do dreams impact on reality; are there multiple universes (or "continuums" as I think they are called in the book) and can we become aware of them; does power inevitably corrupt and if not, what sort of person can avoid the corruption?

There was a fair amount of Eastern mysticism stirred into the mix, so I cannot resist retelling the joke about the Dalai Lama ordering a pizza and when asked what toppings he wanted, he replied: "Make me one with everything.". He paid for it and waited for change but was told: "Change comes from within." Perhaps my ignorance of Eastern philosophy (as evidenced by my culturally insensitive attempt at humour) is why I did not understand the "solution" that (for want of a better designation) the protagonist of the novel was offered or, indeed, how it helped!

I think it would have worked better as a short story as I thought the narrative had raised the issues, and come to a natural conclusion when I was only about a third of the way through. I was quite enjoying thinking through the issues and working out the moral consequences myself. Instead, the story continued but it seemed to be stretched too thin.

Having said all that, it was a good story and I enjoyed reading it.

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Sunday, 25 February 2018

Review: Doctor Who: The Pirate Planet

Doctor Who: The Pirate Planet by James Goss
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Doctor Who: The Pirate PlanetThe last Doctor Who novel I read was extremely disappointing (Doctor Who: The Coming of the Terraphiles). I was worried that someone creating a novel from a TV story by Douglas Adams would fall short and disappoint me again. I could not have been more wrong. Where the Michael Moorcock story completely fails to capture the character of the Doctor, James Goss nails it. Of course, it helps that he had access to early drafts, full scripts and a bucket load of other stuff from the Adams Archive. It is difficult to see where Adams ends and Goss begins; an astonishing achievement. I will be looking for more James Goss soon to see what else he can do.

I’ll finish with a couple of (non-spoiler) quotes that to me say Douglas Adams but could be James Goss. What do you think? Can you see the join?

Quote 1:

Romana still had a lot to learn about the universe. How could a planet have a soul? Well, she had yet to see an English country garden on a summer's day.


Quote 2:

‘Doesn’t matter. We’ll never get in!’ Last time, she’d had the element of surprise on her side. And had landed an air-car on them. This time, they were pinned down.

‘Never?’ The Doctor looked hurt. ‘Never say that to a Time Lord.’

‘Never say what?’

‘Never.’

‘Never what?’ asked Romana.

‘Mind,’ the Doctor sighed.

‘What mind?’

‘Never mind.’

‘Never mind what?’

‘What?’ Now the Doctor was thoroughly confused.

‘What?’ Romana heartily hoped someone would shoot them. The Doctor first, though.

‘Doesn’t matter,’ the Doctor said. ‘We’ll get in somehow.’

‘We can’t!’

‘Never say that to a Time Lord,’ the Doctor beamed.

‘Oh, you’re impossible.’

‘No, just very, very improbable.’
Update

Famously, Adams was writing The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy while working on Doctor Who. The links between the two are clear in this book (for example, the “very improbable” quote above) but it is particularly clear in the section at the end where James describes some of the material he had access to from the Adams archive. My favourite from the archive is in the appendices where James reproduces Adams’ thoughts on who might be behind the Key To Time. There, at the end of a list of possible villains, Adams had handwritten a single word: “Mice”!

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