Reviewed on January 31, 2008 »

Douglas Adams’s Starship Titanic, by Terry Jones

Douglas Adams (Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) plus Terry Jones (Monty Python’s Flying Circus) equals “Douglas Adams’s Starship Titanic.”

And it’s good, too.

If anybody’s seen the latest installation of Doctor Who — the Christmas episode where the Doctor ends up waltzing around aboard a starship Titanic — then you’ve got the idea. Well…that’s not quite accurate. Actually, what you have is a completely different idea with a few vague similarities.

Actually, you have the best idea just from these six key terms: Douglas Adams, Terry Jones, Starship Titanic. If you know anything about either of the key parties involved in creating this book and the history of the real Titanic, then you should be able to assemble the general ideas in your head: they are weird, bizarre, and confusing.

It’s a short book, based on the ideas Douglas Adams came up with while working on the computer game of the same name. Terry Adams ended up writing it because…well, that’s all in the introduction.

Really, there’s nothing at all I can say about this book in the way of a review. If you look the zany humor the Douglas Adams and Monty Python put out, you’re likely to enjoy it. If not, you won’t. Suck it up.

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Reviewed on January 12, 2008 »

Sundiver, by David Brin

“Sundiver” is, fundamentally, a mystery novel stuck in the science fiction genre. It’s also a voyage of discovery — not so much in the Star Trek sense as in the sense of “search for self.”

The events of the book revolve around something which you should be fully able to ascertain from the title of the book. A voyage to the center of the sun. (I guess you could say that’s a spin off from Jules Verne? Unlikely, but an interesting thing to note in passing.

Like many novels dealing with extraterrestrial species, the fear of “otherness” is a recurring theme in the novel. Unlike many other novels, this book specifically relates “otherness” to issues in our own history including the massive relocations the United States government imposed on Native American tribes in the 19th century.

If you like a novel which makes political statements relevant to our own historic decisions, this may be the book for you!

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Reviewed on November 24, 2007 »

Jinx on a Terran Inheritance, by Brian Daley

Man, this is a fun story. Now, this blog is likely to have a bit of a tendency toward praising the books I’m reviewing, but this isn’t that surprising…given that I’m primarily reviewing books I already own, and haven’t gotten rid of.

Anyhow, with that minor disclaimer out of the way, let’s get down to business!

Jinx on a Terran Inheritance (and it’s sequels) make up a really fun trilogy. The plot is this: Hobart Floyt, a minor bureaucrat on an Earth devastated by interstellar combat and an amateur genealogist, suddenly finds himself and inheritor (actually, an Inheritor) of an unknown inheritance from a man I’ll describe as an interstellar tyrant. The Earth bureaucracy, rather shy of interstellar travel (more than a little bit xenophobic) allow him to travel largely out of pure greed, wanting to have access to his inheritance.

The politics surrounding the nature of his inheritance and the reasons for the inheritance are highly significant…but also provide rather a lot of information about the overall plot for the trilogy which is probably left absent in these comments.

At any rate, the story is well worth reading, and I recommend it!

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Reviewed on November 23, 2007 »

The Warrior’s Apprentice: A Miles Vorkosigan Adventure by Lois McMaster Bujold

The whole series of science fictional novels concerning Miles Vorkosigan are very well worth reading. Fun, exciting, etc. This particular volume is the first one I read, and, in my opinion, among the best. This is where the adventure starts.

Thankfully, these volumes don’t waste too much time trying to explain their physics. I feel that this can be one of the worst mistakes for science fiction to make, since (practically speaking) most authors a) don’t have enough experience with astrophysics, propulsion, etc., for their logic to be altogether convincing and b) since no means of “faster than light” travel actually exists, they always need to make something up. Making something up, while brilliant in the abstract, sometimes falls apart a bit when explained in too much detail.

Anyhow, the key elements of the story: Miles Vorkosigan is from a planet with a ruling society made up of a military caste, in which he is a cadet member. The planet, isolated from interplanetary trade and travel for many centuries, has a historical problem with mutation. Miles, while not a mutant, is significant…ah…stunted in growth due to an assassination attempt prior to his birth.

This particular story revolves around his failure to be accepted into the military, and his subsequent adventures while trying to prove his worth to his society.

A sadly deficient description, but it doesn’t give anything significant away, either.

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