Friday, 28 September 2018

Raymus by Gary Whitta

I do love these kinds of collections, where they fill in little corners of iconic stories and movies.

This one bridged the events of Rogue One and A New Hope.  In the opening sequence of the original movie, the rebel ship, Tantiv IV, was boarded and the captain questioned while being lifted off the deck and strangled.

This is his story.

Princess Liea has the Death Star data in her hands and the ship is trying to escape the star destroyer.

This was a personal war story.  One where the main character suspects that this is when his part in the struggle will come to an end.

We know just a little bit more about this poor man who died shortly after the opening credits. In movies, death is meaningless.  But here we come to understand how each body had a story, a history of its own.

A strong start to a giant collection that was published to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the release of the first movie.

Gary Whitta's website - http://www.garywhitta.com/



Gary Whitta

Wednesday, 26 September 2018

In Panic Town, On The Backward Moon by Michael F Flynn

Talk about the look and feel of a space western.

The story starts in a saloon, where a stranger walks in, and leaves something valuable with the owner of the establishment. 

This is the kind of SF I love; high tech, set in the future but still populated by recognizable people.

The object stored in the saloon's safe was stolen and the person who stole it has made enemies all over Mars.  Now he is dead and the object is gone.

In my mind's eye I could see all the dust, grit and roughness of life on Mars.

Flynn was able to create a giant backdrop in few pages.  Once I was done reading the setting lived on in my head.  The world he created was so rich, I felt as though I had read a novel.

Terrific stuff.


Monday, 24 September 2018

The Rise of the Graphic Novel by Stephen Weiner - Book Review #241

Like my previous post about short stories and novellas this book, about the history of the graphic novel, has given me permission to dig into the collection I have in my basement.

I grew up collecting comics in the 1980’s and witnessed the birth of the form myself.  It was a nostalgic ride through my days browsing the comic shops.

While reading the book I added many titles to my wish list on the Edmonton Public Library’s website.

This was a very approachable exploration of the form.  The chapters were short and the book was well seeded with panels from the graphic novels discussed.

An informative read that reignited my joy of sequential art.

Friday, 21 September 2018

Reflection by Aaron Wright

A fascinating story about the right to self determination, end of life and responsibility to others.

Reed Ellis has a terminal illness, which will see him suffer greatly in his last few years.  He has filled out all the required paperwork and is now waiting through his required “cooling off” period in the hospital he has chosen to end his life.  

While the days pass his sister cannot stand by to watch, believing that he should not be taking this action.  She leaves him to die alone.  In his room the hospital AI befriends him.  Through this relationship perspectives change.

It was a kind, warm and sobering story. 

I am glad I read it. 


Wednesday, 19 September 2018

Ocean by Warren Ellis - A Graphic Novel

This is the kind of Science Fiction I crave.

A straight-ahead mystery in a far off world.  Jupiter's moon Europa, in this case.

Something is lurking in the depths, under the ice, and it's not nice.

But then there are people and corporations who are also not nice, that want to exploit the discovery.

Enter Inspector Nathan Kane of the United Nations who is sent to investigate and prevent any profiteering of the discovery.

Things get dangerous and deadly very fast but then the story settles into a threat of violence rather than an all out gunplay.  It's teamwork and intelligence that drives the adventure to its wild end.  The majority of characters that moved the plot forward were women, which I found very refreshing.  Not one damsel in distress among them, these gals were in charge of their roles.

I liked the story very much, which was enhanced by the rich, clean art.  Chris Sprouse gave the story the immense scale the setting needed.  The spotless order of the interiors gave it that old-style, shiny Science Fiction feel that has been gone since Star Wars came along and made things gritty.  It was a nice change.

It is rare to find science fiction that does not rely on some kind of techno-magic or alien monster to drive a story.  The trick is to make the setting interesting and fill it with people we recognize.  Technology should be advanced but it doesn't need to bee too far out.  Guns shooting bullets on a space station is a recipe for disaster, but if you change the slugs to acid capsules that only burn organic matter, that's an advancement we can relate to.

If you can get your hands on a copy of this, you will be happy with the work.

Art by Chris Sprouse

Tuesday, 18 September 2018

Gate Crashers by Patrick S. Tomlinson - Boork Review #240

I want to thank Tor Books for continuing to expand my library to new and unusual authors.

This is billed as SF comedy, which got me interested right away.  To do good comedy you have to be confident in your knowledge of the genre.  I thought Tomlinson did an excellent job of it. The book was at times absurd but he never allowed himself to go over the top in the way that Douglas Adams got lost in his own creativity.  No.  The story was well thought out and planned.

Where the humour worked best was in the relationships between the crews of the Magellan and the Bucephalus.  It was people being people in a strange situation that gave rise to most of the humour.

I must say I was captivated by Tomlinson’s take on the First Contact trope.  Humanity has pushed into interstellar space but FTL has not been achieved.  Even with this limitation the exploration crew of the Magellan discover the actual limits of space, at least to humans.

An artifact is found drifting in space and, after it is brought on board to be examined, well, everything changes.

Honestly this was a lovely book, filled with warmth to humanity but absolutely cognizant of how ridiculous we can be.

I was very happy that the heart and soul of the book was the out-of-his-depth scientist Felix Fletcher and the level-headed captain of the Magellan, Alison Ridgeway.

To give you some idea of the comedy I’d say the antagonists are similar to the ones found in the movie The Fifth Element and that is as out-there as the characters get.  The rest of it has the feel of The Orville.  It’s an interesting blend of the competently humours meeting an overconfident race that has been its apex for centuries.

The book works perfectly as a stand alone novel but it has certainly been set up for sequels.  According to the author’s website there will be at least two more instalments.

I look forward reading more from this author.  Lucky for me this is not his first novel.

NOTE -  I loved the inclusion of the sketches of the ships.  Publishers need to do that kind of thing more often.  A little illustration here and there adds much to the visuals of a story.

Check Patrick S Tomlinson’s web page at:  http://www.patrickstomlinson.com/

Patrick S Tomlinson


Wednesday, 12 September 2018

Gaia’s Children by Lawrence Buentello

Space is big.

So big that if you are a colonist on a new planet, there is essentially no hope of a rescue.

The Colony Organizers are responsible for discovering candidate planets, analyze the planets’ suitability, “seed” them with a human population and to support that colony as best they can. 

But when that support can take decades to arrive you best be prepared to make due..

When Persephone crash lands on the colony world of Aeolus, her mission to help repopulate the colony, with improved DNA, is threatened.  She is the only member of the crew to have survived.  Most of the ship was destroyed beyond use.  However the ship’s AI and part of the surgical suite remained useful.

With these limited resources she does her best to help a dying colony that does not want it.  They’ve not only fallen into a Darwinian situation they have written his ideas into law.

This was a sad story of hope, circumstance, despotism, and points of view colliding. 

I was taken into the story by the immense isolation described here.

Wonderful work indeed. 

You can read the story online at Compelling Science Fiction:  http://compellingsciencefiction.com/index.html

Wednesday, 5 September 2018

The President’s Brain Is Missing by John Scalzi

I use to love watching The West Wing; the dialogue, the intelligence of the characters and the humor all worked so well that I kept coming back to the show.

This story was a lot like that, okay the premise was silly, but all good science fiction plays with the question, "What If?"

So you go with it; a dim-witted president discovers that he cannot keep his head under water when he goes for his morning swim and he's feeling rather light-headed, come to think of it.  The resident doctor does some tests and sends the president to bed for some rest.

A meeting is called for the senior staff in the oval office.  The doctor's discovery is discussed and a plan is set in motion to discover how this could have happened.  And why is the president not dead, you know, by being without a brain?

What follows is a terrific romp with intelligent people trying to unravel a mystery that is utterly impossible but they have to deal with it.

Like The West Wing this story had excellent dialogue and that sharp Scalzi that made it a joy to read.  I actually put it down once just to savour it.

Honestly, this could be filmed.  It would make a terrific episode of The Veep.

Find John Scalzi here:  https://whatever.scalzi.com/

John Scalzi

Sunday, 2 September 2018

Short Stories and Novellas.

Image from the article.
I read a terrific article on the WIRED website:  HOW TECHNOLOGY SHAPES THE WAY WE READ by some poor, uncredited staff member.  It tells the story of the resurgence of the novella and how it is the perfect format for our society today.

I must say the I completely agree.  I am often overwhelmed by the commitment involved in a series or even stand alone novels.

Way back, when the paperback revolution was underway, books often came in around 150 pages.  These were tightly plotted and sparse that got to the point of things.  But then, in the past few decades, books began to top out over 400 pages, my guess is to justify the cover price; readers wanted quantity over quality.

How often have you read a chapter knowing full well that it is nothing but filler?  I once read a Star Trek novel that took three pages (!) to answer the door.

Anyway, the article was rather liberating to me.  Short stories and novellas are often only available to mystery and science fiction readers in magazines or anthologies.  After reading the piece, I felt I had permission to enjoy myself, to read a short story or novella and appreciate it for what it can be - a story well told.

Although I've given short stories their fair share, here on my humble little blog (usually posted on Wednesdays), I've always felt that it is not "real" reading, you know?  Novels are the thing.  I've often felt that some of the best short stories could have easily been expanded into a novel.  But maybe that's not quite right.  Maybe I liked it so much, because it was just the right length, that it left me wanting more.

I went straight to Chapters Indigo and bought the first TOR.Com ebook that appealed to me.  It was by John Scalzi, more on that in my next post.

Sunrise on Mercury by Robert Silverberg

The story is of a follow up mission to land in the Twilight Belt of Mercury. The band of area that is neither on the night side, being too cold, nor being exposed to direct sunlight, which would bake the crew and ship into ash. 

The mission is threatened by a suicidal member of the crew. 

When we discover why the crewman threatened himself and the mission, well, that’s what makes the story interesting. 

Nicely done. Although the dialogue felt a bit stiff, it still held my interest. 

I found the story fun and interesting. I couldn’t help thinking that it would make a terrific Netflix Original series. 

Robert Silverberg's website: http://www.robert-silverberg.com/index.html