aka @kingrat@sfba.social. I'm following a lot of bookwyrm accounts, since that seems to be the only way to get reviews from larger servers to this small server. Also, I will like & boost a lot of reviews that come across my feed. Social reading should be social.
Two “paleonerds” embark on a roadtrip across the West in search of fossils.
The new …
When I quizzed artists as to why they were painting bare earth, they told me that paleobotanists had forbidden them from using grass because it didn't involve evolve until the dinosaurs had gone extinct. Remove the grass and you're left with bare earth. This prompts the question "What was the ground cover in the Cretaceous?"
TIL that grass is younger than dinosaurs. Wikipedia tells me there is some overlap between dinosaurs and grass, but grass largely evolved later. Johnson goes on to describe plants like buttercups, nettles and hops.
I might do a more thorough review later, with spoilers, once I'm on my computer
I read this a while ago and re-read it. It's a challenge to read, dense with invented jargon and hard to follow just because of how weird everything is. It's probably the most nihilistic book I've ever read, and the characters are not at all sympathetic. Nevertheless, having half understood it from reading it too fast 10 years ago, it has stuck with me since then, and held up even better the second time and I'm giving it a rare 5 stars.
The first time I read it, it was more emotionally impactful - more horror than sci Fi and in ways I was not at all expecting. The second time I felt like I could at least wrap my head around it completely.
Coming back in the age of LLMs certain concepts about what …
I might do a more thorough review later, with spoilers, once I'm on my computer
I read this a while ago and re-read it. It's a challenge to read, dense with invented jargon and hard to follow just because of how weird everything is. It's probably the most nihilistic book I've ever read, and the characters are not at all sympathetic. Nevertheless, having half understood it from reading it too fast 10 years ago, it has stuck with me since then, and held up even better the second time and I'm giving it a rare 5 stars.
The first time I read it, it was more emotionally impactful - more horror than sci Fi and in ways I was not at all expecting. The second time I felt like I could at least wrap my head around it completely.
Coming back in the age of LLMs certain concepts about what intelligence and sentience actually are start seeming a lot more relevant. Some of the ways the main character is unable to relate to other people reminds me of some of the dangerous Internet subcultures that have grown prominent in the past few years. It feels alarmingly more relevant than the first time despite not being at all about any of these things.
The characters are not like conventionally sympathetic but I think you have to approach the book with a willingness to empathize with a broader range of people than most books ask you to - not in the sense of being bad people but of being people who relate to the world differently than most people depicted in fiction.
The vampire thing is unnecessary and out of place, you could have the exact same story and not call them that
Two books I've read that I would say are most similar are Annihilation and Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep (not the movie though)
Adele Joubert loves being one of the popular girls at Keziah Christian Academy. She knows …
This one took me by surprise.
4 stars
Adele has held one of the coveted popular rich school spots in her school circle. Until she is suddenly kicked out and replaced with someone else. She winds up bunking with one of the poor girls in a creepy dorm that has been reported to be haunted.
She has a hard time adjusting to her lower status and focuses on how to get it back over adjusting to her new roommate. This was a girl that Adele would have bullied and talked bad about with her old group. And her mom has always been telling her that she should be nice to the poor girls, but she never explains why.
This is a lovely book about someone being thrown from grace and coming to terms with how nasty of a person you have to be to keep that status. Adele grows a lot and for being a YA book, there's …
Adele has held one of the coveted popular rich school spots in her school circle. Until she is suddenly kicked out and replaced with someone else. She winds up bunking with one of the poor girls in a creepy dorm that has been reported to be haunted.
She has a hard time adjusting to her lower status and focuses on how to get it back over adjusting to her new roommate. This was a girl that Adele would have bullied and talked bad about with her old group. And her mom has always been telling her that she should be nice to the poor girls, but she never explains why.
This is a lovely book about someone being thrown from grace and coming to terms with how nasty of a person you have to be to keep that status. Adele grows a lot and for being a YA book, there's some decently heavy topics that are covered.
Two “paleonerds” embark on a roadtrip across the West in search of fossils.
The new …
We know that wind, water, and freezing and thawing cause rock to be slowly worn down over time. There are about 25 millimeters in an inch. If we assume that it takes a year to weather down one-quarter of a millimeter (one-hundredth of an inch) of rock, then it only takes 4 million years to wear down a kilometer of rock, or 6.4 million years to get rid of a mile of rock. At this rate, we could rasp Mount Everest off the face of the Earth in less than 40 million years. Remember that the Earth is 4,567 million years old, more than enough time to get rid of Mount Everest a hundred times, and you begin to realize that mountain ranges can come and go.
HOW HUMANITY CAME TO THE PLANET CALLED ANJIIN IS LOST IN THE FOG OF HISTORY, …
Vibes like The Expanse
4 stars
Ensemble characters. Characters that say "yeah" semi-resignedly a lot. Some characters will die on you. It's constructed like The Expanse, but the plot is definitely going to go very differently.
The Carryx suddenly swoop in to the world of Anjiin, where humanity lives but where their origin is lost to time. The Carryx quickly conquer humans, killing 1 out of every 8. Dafyd Alkhor's group is transported across the universe to a glorified prison planet where the team is given the task of making themselves useful to the Carryx. If they do not, humanity will be obliterated. Lots of intra-group conflict. Lots of conflict with other prisoner species. Lots of perceived conflict with the Carryx, who mostly ignore them until they've proven themselves useful.
Do they collaborate and maybe live to fight the Carryx another day, or go out in a blaze of glory since it's likely humanity is going …
Ensemble characters. Characters that say "yeah" semi-resignedly a lot. Some characters will die on you. It's constructed like The Expanse, but the plot is definitely going to go very differently.
The Carryx suddenly swoop in to the world of Anjiin, where humanity lives but where their origin is lost to time. The Carryx quickly conquer humans, killing 1 out of every 8. Dafyd Alkhor's group is transported across the universe to a glorified prison planet where the team is given the task of making themselves useful to the Carryx. If they do not, humanity will be obliterated. Lots of intra-group conflict. Lots of conflict with other prisoner species. Lots of perceived conflict with the Carryx, who mostly ignore them until they've proven themselves useful.
Do they collaborate and maybe live to fight the Carryx another day, or go out in a blaze of glory since it's likely humanity is going to die anyway so why not go down fighting? Climax is a giant trolley problem. Don't forget that trolley problems are largely constructed as thought exercises, and here it's a thought exercise to move the plot along. In other words, don't get too attached to the philosophy. Whichever way they go it's just a story.
Clear is the story of a minister dispatched to a remote island to "clear" its …
Excellent audiobook
5 stars
John Ferguson is a minister in the Free Church of Scotland as it is trying to establish itself. With no parish to support him, he takes a job for an estate landlord to "clear" or remove the last remaining tenant on a remote island owned by the estate. Although conflicted, he really needs the money. Shortly after arriving, he falls off a cliff and is rescued by Ivar, the tenant he is supposed to evict.
A really well-written story of a relationship between John and Ivar. You get a bit of the history of the Scottish Free Church, a bit of the history of the Highland Clearances, a few moral dilemmas deftly handled, some feminism appropriate for the time, and North Sea adventures. I suspect this is quite good as a read, but it's amazing narrated by Russ Bain with a Scottish accent, a bit over 3 hours in length.
In In the Bleak Midwinter, Julia Spencer-Fleming's Malice Domestic-winning first mystery, Reverend Clare Fergusson was …
Held back by too fantastic scheme
2 stars
Clare Fergusson gets embroiled in a series of gay-bashing crimes in Miller's Kill. Spencer-Fleming captures how liberal uncomfortableness with homosexuality contributes homophobia even when they think they are supportive. But the gay-bashing is too obviously calculated and the ultimate motivation is economic. It's a too-fantastic of a scheme. As a police procedural, the story doesn't hold together well either due to how involved Russ Van Alstyne (the Miller's Kill police chief) allows Clare Fergusson to be. He can bring in professionals, but allows a hard-charging Fergusson to drive the investigation, even when he says it's a bad idea.
An astronaut’s interstellar mission is a personal journey of a thousand second chances in an …
Second chances through interstellar exploration
4 stars
Humanity invents a way of traveling at near light speed by encoding people as energy and reconstituting them at the destination. So one traveler sneaks an engagement ring onto his body when he is scanned, because his ex-wife will also be one of the people sent to the stars. I didn't understand why, but the original encoded group is then sent on to further destinations, giving the main character even more chances at a do-over.
The story does understand just how wrong-headed the attempt at a do-over is.
Emma Makepeace is chosen to lead a team trying to figure out how Russia plans to disrupt a G7 meeting in Edinburgh. The catch is that she may have to be a "honeytrap" for Nick Orlov, a Russian asset, in order to find out what they are doing, and she's not sure how she feels about that.
Not thrilled with the story. Makepeace isn't really leading the team, for instance. That seems more like a line thrown in by the author to justify Makepeave getting to sit in on a meeting between the heads of the Home Office, MI5, MI6 and the Agency. Another is that the Russian plot is extremely clumsy. Early on, an FSB agent wanders around photographing Carlowrie Castle, the site of the G7 meetings. When we find out who some of the characters carrying out the plot are, I cringed. It's a convenient authorial reason to …
Emma Makepeace is chosen to lead a team trying to figure out how Russia plans to disrupt a G7 meeting in Edinburgh. The catch is that she may have to be a "honeytrap" for Nick Orlov, a Russian asset, in order to find out what they are doing, and she's not sure how she feels about that.
Not thrilled with the story. Makepeace isn't really leading the team, for instance. That seems more like a line thrown in by the author to justify Makepeave getting to sit in on a meeting between the heads of the Home Office, MI5, MI6 and the Agency. Another is that the Russian plot is extremely clumsy. Early on, an FSB agent wanders around photographing Carlowrie Castle, the site of the G7 meetings. When we find out who some of the characters carrying out the plot are, I cringed. It's a convenient authorial reason to involve a character from the Scottish police, but it makes little sense from a plot perspective.
Emma Makepeace is a good character, but I want to see better stories written around her.
The billionaire entrepreneur and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has become inextricable from the social media …
Perfect Journalism; Painful to Read
No rating
Reading Character Limit is like watching a man repeatedly punch himself in the face and then blame the people around him for his nose hurting. It is an utterly embarrassing portrait of a narcissistic egotist who believes that he is a genius because he has often been lucky. Musk's purchase of Twitter was a tragedy, in both the literary and dramatic senses. Conger and Mac tell it gently with minimal editorial — why would they need to: these facts are absolutely the worst. RIP Twitter. I could not put this book down.