Reviews and Comments

LemmiSchmoeker

MironLiest@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 months ago

Just a reader of books.

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reviewed The Last Colony by John Scalzi (Old Man's War, #3)

John Scalzi: The Last Colony (2007) 4 stars

Retired from his fighting days, John Perry is now village ombudsman for a human colony …

Again, quite different from the first two books

4 stars

Again, this one is quite different from the first two books: everything encountered before falls together (or at least gets a cameo) to create a monumental story that encompasses even the parts of the universe not yet explored. There are a few threads that don't seem to go very far and are mainly used to shed more light on the situation as a whole, but that is hardly noticeable among the many other events that do form a part of the larger puzzle.

Politically, Scalzi doesn't want to take a clear stance for or against the Colonial Union and what it stands for, and instead has his characters discuss both sides thoroughly and with contantly shifting sympathies. The reader will have to follow along whatever arguments seem to make the most sense.

Originally, this was meant to be the last story in the Colonial Defense Forces universe, but at the …

reviewed The Sagan Diary by John Scalzi (Old Man's War, #2.5)

John Scalzi: The Sagan Diary (EBook, 2007) 4 stars

Often a bit too much poetic waxing

3 stars

Like Questions for a Soldier, this is just a filler that mainly repeats what we already know. (If you read the afterword, you'll see that he was compelled to write something for a special cause.)

However, Scalzi gets a little experimental this time and tries to look at his subject from different angles, both philosophically and linguistically. The result is interesting, but his (or Sagan's, as this is supposed to be verbatim from her brain) poetic phrasings are often a bit too much ("I have signed on for a mermaid’s sacrifice and will walk on knives for dumb love"), distracting from the quite touching notions this is meant to transport.

commented on Short Fiction by Frederik Pohl

Frederik Pohl, C. M. Kornbluth: Short Fiction (EBook, 2023, Standard Ebooks) No rating

This selection of Frederik Pohl’s science fiction short stories covers topics ranging from out-of-body experiences, …

Contains the following 15 short stories:

  • Asteroid of the Damned
  • Conspiracy on Callisto
  • Double-Cross
  • A Hitch in Time
  • Let the Ants Try
  • The Tunnel Under the World
  • Pythias
  • The Day of the Boomer Dukes
  • The Engineer
  • My Lady Greensleeves
  • Survival Kit
  • The Hated
  • The Knights of Arthur
  • Wolfbane
  • The Five Hells of Orion
Lyon Sprague de Camp: The Prisoner of Zhamanak (Paperback, 1983, ACE) 3 stars

Percy Mjipa, diplomat-adventurer, and Alicta Dycknan, interplanetary runaway, both aliens on the alien world of …

Really quite a fun read, but many issues make it hard to like the book

3 stars

Though Lyon Sprague de Camp was clearly fascinated by the diversity of peoples around the world, he was certainly not a racist. His vocabulary was not modern, and might sometimes appear offensive to today's tastes, but he always had an affection for all his characters that makes it easy (or at least possible) to forgive any inappropriate word choices.

However, the same is unfortunately not true concerning his view of women. While he tries to treat the female main character fairly, he has undeniable problems with the idea of "modern" women. Alicia Dyckman has zero regard for other people's lives (especially if they are alien) and demands somebody be killed more than once. She is a detached scientist without any sexual drive (but really just hasn't met the right man yet) and with a confused concept of men who should sometimes be more masculine and sometimes less. Of course, this …

reviewed Sea of Silver Light by Tad Williams (Otherland, #4)

Tad Williams: Sea of Silver Light (Paperback, 2002, DAW) 4 stars

Otherland—the private, multidimensional universe created and controlled by The Grail Brotherhood, an organization made up …

Not bad at all, but could have been much better

3 stars

After a rather perfunctory first book and two carefully constructed middle books, this last one is much less stringent. Williams really likes to talk, and can fill hundreds of pages with branches that serve no real purpose other than establishing (or maintaining) atmosphere. For the first three books, this was very apparent, but worked fairly well, especially in his long and empathic descriptions of fascinating worlds.

Here, however, he apparently found out during writing that he didn't have much story left, so a large part feels empty, with people wandering from one world to the next, only to find that they need to go somewhere else entirely. He starts inventing more obstacles that are sluggishly resolved, just to present more of less the same situation in the final quarter as in the beginning of this volume.

Strangely, that last quarter – starting around chapter forty, in the middle of the …

Agatha Christie: Eine reizende alte Dame (Hardcover, German language, 1992, Loewe) 3 stars

Als Tommy und Tuppence Beresford ihre Tante Ada im Altersheim besuchen, hat Tuppence eine eigenartige …

So penetrant sympathisch, dass eine ganze Serie kaum zu ertragen sein dürfte

2 stars

Sicherlich tut die Übersetzung von Edda Janus der Geschichte keinen Gefallen: Die feine britische Ironie verkommt zu angestrengter Langeweile, amüsante Dialoge werden zu Phrasentennis – und kein Wort darf in der Übersetzung ausgelassen werden, so dass es von "Nun ja", "Also", "sogar" und "Laß uns" nur so wimmelt.

Das größere Problem ist aber der Roman an sich. Die Hauptcharaktere sind so penetrant sympathisch, dass eine ganze Serie mit ihnen kaum zu ertragen sein dürfte. Man bekommt das Gefühl, es mit einem Ehepaar von Miss-Marple-Parodisten zu tun zu haben. Sämtliche Figuren sind in Klischees ausgearbeitet (bis hin zur Unverfrorenheit, von einer Person zu behaupten, sie „hätte aus einem Roman von Dickens stammen können“) und reden in Formeln – dabei wird an etlichen Stellen ohne erkennbaren Grund betont, wie unangenehm hektisch und unmoralisch die moderne Zeit doch sei.

Besonders schlimm ist, dass Christie von vielen Dingen keine Ahnung hat und geradezu trotzig …

reviewed The Ghost Brigades by John Scalzi (Old Man's War, #2)

John Scalzi: The Ghost Brigades (EBook, 2007, Tor) 4 stars

The Ghost Brigades are the Special Forces of the Colonial Defense Forces, elite troops created …

Different from the first book in many aspects

4 stars

This second book is different from the first one in many aspects: a more focused story, a different main character, a different philosophy. As before, Scalzi carefully lays out a background full of characters, histories and ideas before he starts building up the story.

There is certainly a lot of action, particularly during a central scene of strategic development, but the emphasis is firmly put on more peaceful concepts this time: family, life and purpose. While the galactic war is still the center of the action, Scalzi is more interested in exploring the moral implications of that war for all involved parties.

In the end, everybody - including the reader - is left with a feeling of fatigue, not of the story, or even just the events of the story, but of a war that it doesn't seem possible to end without unfathomable violence.

John Scalzi: Questions for a Soldier (2005, Subterranean Press) 4 stars

Just a quick short story

4 stars

This is just a quick short story that serves as a bridge between the life of the soldiers and the life of the colonists. It's framed as a Q&A session for John Perry where he answers all kinds of questions about his life as a soldier. The idea behind that was probably more to refresh the reader's memory than to add more detail to the world or its inhabitants (even though some amusing anecdotes are told as well).

reviewed Gedichte by Alfred Kolleritsch (Suhrkamp Taschenbuch)

Alfred Kolleritsch: Gedichte (German language, 1988, Suhrkamp) 3 stars

Die versammelten Gedichte sind gar nicht schlecht

3 stars

Die hier versammelten Gedichte sind gar nicht schlecht – und das will in der heutigen literarischen Welt ja was heißen. Meinen Geschmack treffen sie allerdings ganz und gar nicht, und so ist es bei einem flüchtigen Durchblättern geblieben.

Ein kleines bisschen geschmälert wird der Lesegenuss durch das Vorwort von Peter Handke, der es tatsächlich schafft, vier Seiten lang über nichts anderes zu schreiben als seine eigene Klugheit: denn der Gedanke, den er da immer und immer wieder breitwalzt, ist nach dem zweiten Satz schon hinlänglich erklärt.

Dafür kann aber Kolleritsch auch wieder nichts.

Wer ist Woody Allen wirklich? Ist er identisch mit seinen großen Leinwandfiguren? Oder führt er …

Immer eine dumme Idee, sich eine Biografie von einer noch lebenden Person zuzulegen

3 stars

Es ist immer eine dumme Idee, sich eine Biografie von einer noch lebenden Person zuzulegen: Menschen ändern sich, und die Bilder dieser Menschen ändern sich mit.

Dieses Buch beginnt gleich mit einem Foto der glücklichen Familie Allen/Farrow; Allen selbst wird als weltoffener, entspannter Normalmensch gezeichnet, als „intelligentester Komiker unserer Zeit“. Und das ist das Problem: Es gibt keinerlei Distanz, keine Kritik, sondern nur Bewunderung, die an keiner Stelle hinterfragt wird. So entsteht ein zwar ziemlich vollständiges Bild seines Schaffens und seiner Lebensstationen bis ca. 1987, die Persönlichkeit wird aber sehr einseitig angestrahlt. Da aber genau das, die Beschreibung der „Differenzen“ zwischen Filmpersönlichkeit und Wirklichkeit, die Zielsetzung des Buchs ist, fällt es schwer, diesen Versuch zu mögen oder auch nur ernst zu nehmen.