Entries Tagged as 'My Ann Arbor Library Feeds'

COLD AS ICE by Charles Sheffield

5
Review of: Cold as ice by Sheffield, Charles

The first chapter of this book, which describes the inevitable death of a father and his eight-year-old son at the hands of a hunter-killer robot, is as perfect as everything I have ever read in fiction.

GODSPEED by Charles Sheffield

4
Review of: Godspeed by Sheffield, Charles

I thoroughly enjoyed this YA hard-sf novel by the late Charles Sheffield, who was then chief scientist of the EarthSat corporation. He was a terrific writer, with the knack for combining realistic human motivation with fascinating science.

NULL-A CONTINUUM (John C. Wright)

5
Review of: Null-A continuum by Wright, John C. (John Charles), 1961-

An eagerly anticipated "sharecropping" sequel to Van Vogt's classic NULL-A. John C. Wright is the perfect choice.

STAR DRAGON by Mike Brotherton (Tor)

4
Review of: Star dragon by Brotherton, Mike

I started reading this once and stopped part way through because I thought the idea of a dragon living inside a star was too silly for belief. I came back to this book after reading the author's second book, SPIDER STAR, and made it all the way through this time. It was worth it. There was a satisfying science fictional explanation for everything.



The one weak spot that still remains is the premise that a corporation would send a hunting party to capture a "star dragon" and start casting nets and firing off photon torpedoes right away. It seems a lot more likely that super smart people in the 26th Century would start the same way we would start today, i.e. with a couple of years of careful, passive observation. After all, they flew 250 light years to find this thing, what's the hurry?

Outsourced — R. J. Hillhouse — disappointingT

Rating: 3
Review of: Outsourced by Hillhouse, Raelynn

This was eagerly anticipated. The author knows her stuff about the world of "black" operations and she has done a major public service by raising public awareness about outsourcing in the intelligence budget. But the book itself is overly full of technojargon; I found it hard to identify with the protagonist; and most importantly, the plot (which concerns CIA v DOD conflict using "outsourced" contractors") is part of the problem, not part of the solution. By which I mean the book is written from very much a "US-centric" perspective; as if U.S. government bureaucratic squabbles are the center of the universe.

tantalizing …

Rating: 3
Review of: The accidental time machine by Haldeman, Joe W

tale of a likable MIT student who invents an accidental time machine... for a while the book had me thinking of classics like Stapledon's LAST AND FIRST MEN, but in the end things sort of fizzled out, and the obligatory "closed loop" at the end of the book isn't very surprising or illuminating.

DUDE: THE BIG BOOK OF ZONKER by G.B. Trudeau

Rating: 4
Review of: Dude : the big book of Zonker by Trudeau, G. B., 1948-

My 15-year-old daughter saw this and had absolutely no idea what it was. Who's this "Doonesbury" guy?



I love all funny books, I love all humor collections, and I love Doonesbury. I didn't enjoy this quite as much as I enjoy the yearly collections -- when you get right down to it, Zonker is, by definition, a rather thin character. Still, a must for anyone with '70s nostalgia or a Doonesbury habit.



PERSEPOLIS 2 by Marjane Sartapi

Rating: 4
Review of: Persepolis 2 : the story of a return

Fully up to the standard of PERSEPOLIS 1 -- but read that first.

PERSEPOLIS — very moving

Rating: 4
Review of: Persepolis : the story of a childhood

A very moving account of a young woman's growing up in Revolutionary Iran.

FOOL’S WAR by Sarah Zettel — another SF talent lost to fantasy

Rating: 5
Review of: Fool's war by Zettel, Sarah

This was an excellent SF novel, but, unfortunately, Zettel is yet another promising SF writer lost to the bigger dollars of the fantasy market.

THE RINGWORLD THRONE by Larry Niven

Rating: 3
Review of: The Ringworld throne by Niven, Larry

Almost as soon as I started re-reading this book I remembered why I didn't particularly care for it. Early in the book there is a prolonged excursion into the lives of the unpronounceably long-named Ringworld dwellers, who are very hard to identify with compared to Louis Wu and crew.

RINGWORLD’S CHILDREN: Niven at his best

Rating: 5
Review of: Ringworld's children by Niven, Larry

Amazing and gratifying that Larry Niven has returned to his top form late in his career. RINGWORLD'S CHILDREN brings the series of four RINGWORLD novels to a surprising and profoundly surprising conclusion.