Books belonging to series.
Laurie R. King, "The Beekeeper's Apprentice"
It must have been nearly an hour later that I became aware of Holmes, sitting on a stump and tossing his jackknife repeatedly into the tree next to him.
Holmes?
Yes, Russell.
Is it always so grey and awful at the end of a case?He didn't answer me for a minute, then rose abruptly and stood looking down the road towards the house with the plane trees. When he looked around at me there was a painful smile on his lips.
Not always. Just usually.
The first in a series of novels starring Mary Russell and a retired Sherlock Holmes, now living (more or less) quietly on the Sussex Downs. The mysteries aren't especially complex, but that's not really the point; it's all about the characters, and the story is beautifully written.
This is another of those books where I'd ordered the next half-dozen in the series before reaching the end — thoroughly recommended.
ISBN 0312427360.
Neal Stephenson, "The System Of The World" (reread)
I've a sort of riddle for you, to do with guineas,was how Daniel ended the twenty-year silence between himself and Sir Isaac Newton.
The final instalment of The Baroque Cycle
.
Stephenson has hit his stride in terms of style and plot dexterity by this
point; this is a fine example of large-scale literary engineering, with a
satisfying conclusion.
There is probably little point in me recommending this book, since anyone who's
made it through the first 1800-odd pages of the trilogy is unlikely to give up
before the third volume.
Nonetheless, if you've just finished The Confusion
and are wondering
whether it's worth continuing: it is.
ISBN 0434011770.
Robin Hobb, "Blood Of Dragons"
This is either the thirteenth Realm of the Elderlings book, or the fourth Dragon book, depending on how you look at it; it's the conclusion of the story about the resurrection of dragons that began back in the first Fitz trilogy. The writing and characterisation hers is up to Hobb's usual standard; good stuff.
I wonder which universe we'll get a book from next — it'd be nice to hear more about the Soldier Son world…
ISBN 9780007444168.
Neal Stephenson, "The Confusion" (reread)
The sun rose. What a moment ago had been glowing pools of spilled fire on the black velvet ground, were revealed as damp patches on khaki dirt. The bubbler ripped loose, hurtled away, and impacted on the roof of a monastery half a mile downrange. The chimney and dunce-cap shot into the air, spiraling and pinwheeling through the night sky as if the Big Dipper had scooped up a load of the sun's own fire.
See my previous review; and we're now moving into Newton and the Counterfeiter territory.
Rather more action-oriented than Quicksilver, although with occasional interesting alchemical interludes; I'd remembered the bit about steel but forgotten the striking description of phosphorus production. The epistolary approach to Eliza's sections works effectively.
ISBN 0434008788.
Neal Stephenson, "Quicksilver" (reread)
Forgive an ignorant Vagabond, but I am used to men of action—so when the Doctor spends all day, every day, talking to people, it seems to me as if he's doing nothing.
He's accomplishing nothing—that's very different from doing nothing.Enoch said gravely.
Continuing my programme of rereading books I last enjoyed ten years ago, this
is the first volume in Neal Stephenson's 3000-odd-page Baroque Cycle series.
The series is a prequel to Cryptonomicon
,
and explores some of the same themes: cryptography, the history of computing,
and most importantly the nature of money.
As the founders of the Royal Society are key characters, it also sort of works
as a sequel to An Instance of the Fingerpost
— although Stephenson's characterisation of John
Wilkins is rather different!
While this is an impressive and wide-ranging piece of work, with a number of
Good Bits (my favourites generally being the Eliza-and-Jack sections), it's not
as tightly-written as Cryptonomicon
.
Recommended if meticulously-researched, extremely long novels are your kind of
thing.
ISBN 0434008176.
Neal Stephenson, "Cryptonomicon" (reread)
My second favourite Neal Stephenson novel; just beaten by Anathem
.
When this first came out, it was partly set in the present day and partly during the United States' involvement in World War 2 — so now, of course, it's partly a historical novel set in 1999 (pagers! GSM phones! BeOS!), involving a bunch of cypherpunks attempting to set up a slightly-shady digital currency. Which has, of course, happened in the meantime.
In general, this has aged pretty well. It's structurally very neat, being written as an ordered set of standalone vignettes (many of which would make decent short stories) rather than as continuous narrative. It's a long work but not an overpadded one, and maintains an even pace throughout. There's certainly enough complexity here to reward rereading several times, especially if you've gone away and read more of the relevant history in the meantime…
(The typesetting in this paperback edition leaves quite a bit to be desired, though, especially the maths near the start and anything set in a monospace font. It's not unreadable, but it is jarring. Other editions may be better; I've certainly not had the same problem with Stephenson's more recent books.)
ISBN 0434008834.
Michael Chabon, "The Amazing Adventures of The Escapist, Volume 3"
Third anthology of Escapist comics, and the final one to date — the best
of the three, I think.
I particularly liked Another Man's Escape
and The Final Curtain
,
but all the stories are strong and there's a range of interesting art styles.
ISBN 1593074921.
Michael Chabon, "The Amazing Adventures of The Escapist, Volume 2"
Second collection of Escapist stories; not as much to my taste as the first.
The Boy Who Would Be The Escapist
by Kevin McCarthy and C. Scott
Morse is my favourite here; the cigarette-cards cover is also nicely done.
ISBN 1593071728.
Henry Mayhew, "London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1"
Henry Mayhew wrote a comprehensive series of articles for the Morning Chronicle in the 1840s about the poor in London, interviewing hundreds of Londoners about their lives and livings. He collected and summarised his articles in three volumes in 1851, of which this is the first.
Some of the analysis has dated badly, but the raw information is fascinating: his interviews are extremely impressive both in breadth and depth. This is a key source for anyone who wants to write about — or in the voices of — 19th-century London. Well worth reading — or at least flicking through for the bits that interest you.
Available from the Internet Archive. The copy they've scanned belonged to Edward Healy Thompson; I imagine he found the sections describing Irish Catholic life in London particularly interesting.
Michael Chabon, "The Amazing Adventures of The Escapist, Volume 1" (reread)
It would clearly be a shame not to try and realise some of the Radio Comics
stories from Kavalier and Clay
, and that's exactly what this Dark Horse
series is doing, with a variety of guest artists and writers playing Sammy, Joe
and Rosa at various stages of their careers.
There's some really nice artwork here; in particular, the Luna Moth stories
drawn by Bill Sienkiewicz and Dan Brereton, and the lost
Escapist story
illustrated by Gene Colan.
ISBN 159307171X.
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