User Profile

Phil in SF

kingrat@sfba.club

Joined 2 years, 2 months ago

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. I make a lot of Bookwyrm lists. I will like & boost a lot of reviews that come across my feed. I will follow most bookwyrm accounts back if they review & comment. Social reading should be social.

2025 In The Books

This link opens in a pop-up window

Phil in SF's books

To Read

Currently Reading

2026 Reading Goal

63% complete! Phil in SF has read 19 of 30 books.

commented on Station Eternity by Mur Lafferty (The Midsolar Murders, #1)

Mur Lafferty: Station Eternity (EBook, 2022, Ace)

Amateur detective Mallory Viridian’s talent for solving murders ruined her life on Earth and drove …

The premise is that Mallory Viridian solves murders, but mostly because wherever she goes people keep getting murdered. The receptionist while she's at her therapist. A parishioner while she's giving confession. etc.

This makes me think immediately of how cozy mysteries have outsized numbers of murders for small towns. or how major crime figures always seem to conduct major murderous operations that just happen around Jack Reacher.

is Lafferty satirizing those stories? imma bout to find out.

reviewed The Traitor by Ava Glass (Alias Emma, #2)

Ava Glass: The Traitor (EBook, 2023, Bantam)

British spy Emma Makepeace goes undercover on a Russian oligarch’s superyacht, where she’s one wrong …

The 1st Emma Makepeace book was better

The first Emma Makepeace book was a race to safety across a night time London landscape. This one is a more standard over-the-top spy thriller. Emma is sent undercover to serve drinks on the yacht of a Russian oligarch suspected of selling weapons. She's to find out who the oligarchs partners are and what they are up to.

A mostly fun book, but I did grow a little tired of Emma Makepeace ignoring the Agency's many directives to get out or not engage, lest she put herself in too much danger. "But I'm the only one who can find out!" so she sneaks in the hotel where the oligarch is going to meet. Or she goes to an oligaarch party after some of them might recognize her. You can plot an agent going against the book once or twice, but after that it starts to feel like lazy writing.

reviewed 61 Hours by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #14)

Lee Child: 61 Hours (EBook, 2010, Delacorte)

Jack Reacher is back. The countdown has begun. Get ready for the most exciting 61 …

The title doesn't have a lot to do with the plot

Another very standard Reacher novel. Stranded in Bolton South Dakota, Reacher stumbles into a case against a biker gang that's been manufacturing meth in an abandoned military facility west of town. A witness has stepped forward willing to testify to seeing a biker hand over a brick of meth. The town has to keep her safe until the trial.

The complicating factor is that, like many rural towns in the western US, Bolton bid for and won the site of a massive prison complex. And if the prison has a riot or an escape, every single member of the Bolton police department is to drop whatever they are doing and assist the prison. Even if what they are doing is protecting a witness under threat. The cops can't protect her, but Reacher can. Or should be able to. Can he keep her alive the approximately 61 hours until she needs …

R. F. Kuang: Babel (Hardcover, 2022, Harper Voyager)

Traduttore, traditore: An act of translation is always an act of betrayal. 1828. Robin Swift, …

Up and down

In the world of Babel, magic works by inscribing similar words onto bars of silver which manifests the difference between the words as spells. What works really great are words in translation, because few translated words have exactly the same meaning.

Babel is the story of Robin Swift, a Chinese orphan with a talent for languages who is brought to England by an professor of translation. China forbids the teaching of Chinese to foreigners, so the British Empire steals young Chinese boys to provide words in translation. It's incredibly exploitative, and Robin starts to learn just what his purpose is meant to be.

As the subtitle implies, Robin gets caught up in opposition to Oxford's use of translators powering of empire. But he also really likes the creature comforts that come with being one favored by the British Empire and would really like to keep those. Can an empire be …

quoted 61 Hours by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #14)

Lee Child: 61 Hours (EBook, 2010, Delacorte)

Jack Reacher is back. The countdown has begun. Get ready for the most exciting 61 …

The prairie topsoil had been too deep for the excavation to reach bedrock, so the whole space was basically a huge six-sided wooden box built from massive balks of timber banded with iron.

61 Hours by  (Jack Reacher, #14) (Page 308 - 309)

new vocabulary: balks

a roughly squared timber beam

quoted 61 Hours by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #14)

Lee Child: 61 Hours (EBook, 2010, Delacorte)

Jack Reacher is back. The countdown has begun. Get ready for the most exciting 61 …

I was a Professor of Library Science at Oxford, and then I helped run the Bodleian Library there, and then I came back to the United States to run the library at Yale, and then I retired and came home to Bolton.

61 Hours by  (Jack Reacher, #14) (Page 245)

This is the second book in a row that I've read that referenced the Bodleian Library. Two very different genres.

Thomas W. Jones: Mastering Genealogical Proof (EBook, 2013, National Genealogical Society)

Mastering Genealogical Proof teaches family historians and genealogists how to reconstruct the relationships and lives …

Best on elements 1, 3, & 4 of the GPS

Like Mastering Genealogical Documentation, this is a useful but frustrating "textbook". As for helpful information, it's very useful explaining a reasonably exhaustive search, analysis & correlation, and resolving conflict. The information on citation isn't bad, but read his Mastering Genealogical Documentation book instead. The chapter on writing a solidly reasoned argument leaves a lot to be desired. Granted, that topic could & should be the subject of an entire book by itself. Jones writes in his usual pedantic, wordy style that made it a lot harder for me to slog my way through.