goobergunch: (tardis)
The Hanging Tree by Ben Aaronovitch (DAW, 2017; originally Gollancz, 2016). Rivers of London, book 6. Lady Tyburn doesn't want her daughter implicated in a drug overdose death at a party for rich teenagers, and lets Peter Grant know this. Turns out the death and the party have broader implications, including for the series metaplot.

Providence by Max Barry (G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2020). Humanity is fighting a species of salamander-like hive-mind aliens, who responded to first contact by slaughtering the crew of the ship responsible. Now a team of four crews the latest A.I.-run ship sent to continue the war. How much agency do our humans really have when the ship's A.I. seems capable of prosecuting the war by itself? Much of the story takes place in the Violet Zone, which I choose to read as a reference to the NationStates admin.

Yellow Jessamine by Caitlin Starling (Neon Hemlock, 2020). Novella. In the last holdout city of a falling empire, the perpetually-veiled Evelyn is one of the few remaining merchant magnates. But she's got some dark secrets of her own, and when something seems to be possessing others to get to her, has one of said secrets finally come home to roost?
goobergunch: (tardis)
"Dream Soft, Dream Big" by Hal Y. Zhang (Slate, 26 December 2020). A researcher discovers that we may dream the answers to fragments of hard problems, and develops an app to crowdsource said problems. Problems ensue.

"The Future of Work: Compulsory" by Martha Wells (Wired, 17 December 2019). A nice little Murderbot prequel story.

"Manuscript Tradition" by Harry Turtledove (Tor.com, 19 February 2020). A Yale professor from an extensively-described 2219 recognizes a probe's broadcasts from a nearby star system as similar to the Voynich manuscript's drawings.

"The Immolation of Kev Magee" by L.X. Beckett (Clarkesworld, August 2020). Novelette. It's the near future, where after escaping from a gun-ridden U.S., our protagonist lives in and works for an Arctic settlement created by a billionaire who's hoping to save the world's climate. They meet a woman offering to help them get ahead, but what's her actual objective?

Foxglove Summer by Ben Aaronovitch (DAW, 2015; originally Gollancz, 2014). Rivers of London, book 5. Peter Grant (and eventually his girlfriend Beverley Brooke) is dispatched to rural west England to investigate the disappearance of two girls. Unicorns are involved.

The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology
(Simon and Schuster, 1952):
"Meteor" by William T. Powers (originally Astounding, September 1950). Space control has to handle grounding/diverting space traffic when it loses track of a dangerously large meteor between Earth and Mars.

"Last Enemy" by H. Beam Piper (originally Astounding, August 1950). Retro Hugo finalist for Best Novella. A Paratime story, in which revelations about the true nature of the afterlife in this particular sector prove the socialist party wrong. (Although they don't work out so well for the aristocratic party either.)

"Historical Note" by Murray Leinster (originally Astounding, February 1951). A Russian scientist's discovery leads to the invention of the personal flying machine. Significant geopolitical consequences ensue since the USSR can no longer stop people from voting with their feet.

"Protected Species" by H. B. Fyfe (originally Astounding, March 1951). Humans arrive on a new world that has ape-like natives and ruins that suggest the presence of an earlier fallen civilization. I liked the ending.
goobergunch: (tardis)
Going to try omitting the comics going forward.

Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark (Tordotcom, 2020). Novella. Subtitled "Hunting Ku Kluxes in the End Times" and that's a pretty good summary really—set in 1921, it turns out members of the Second Klan tend to turn into hate-fueled monsters, the subtitular Ku Kluxes, from another dimension. Our main characters, of course, aim to stop the KKK and their ultimate plan. The Ku Kluxes and the other (non-human) monsters we meet are delightfully creepy. The climax is set on Stone Mountain, which is the highest point of DeKalb County, Georgia, and has to be one of the most ill-omened county high points of all 3143—most mountains just kill you, they don't host rallies to encourage you to kill others. Also I snickered at who gets referenced on the second-to-last page.

Crucible of Gold by Naomi Novik (Del Rey, 2012). Temeraire, book 7. At this point the plot feels like it's kind of turned into an excuse to go on a world tour of dragons. This time, Laurence, Temeraire, and the reader visit South America: the Inca and Brazil.

The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology
(Simon and Schuster, 1952). Picking this up from where I left off last April. (When I'm reading an anthology and I hit a story I just read recently, I tend to put it down for a few months to avoid instant rereading.)
 
"First Contact" by Murray Leinster (originally in Astounding, May 1945). Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette. A human spaceship makes contact with a humanoid alien race in the middle of the Crab Nebula. They'd like to trade with each other for mutual benefit, but can't risk leading the other back to invade their home planet.
 
"Meihem in ce Klasrum" by Dolton Edwards (originally in Astounding, September 1946). A short parodic plan for "simplifying" English spelling.

"Hobbyist" by Eric Frank Russell (originally in Astounding, September 1947). Novelette. A human (and macaw) who finds himself on a distant planet through a navigational mishap discovers that something is off with the world he's on, and he is not the most advanced intelligence present.

"E for Effort" by T. L. Sherred (originally in Astounding, May 1947). Novelette. Our protagonists have discovered a way to view anything on Earth that has ever happened, and seek to use this to stop war. Will the powers-that-be put up with their subversive technology?

"Child's Play" by William Tenn (originally in Astounding, March 1947). Novelette. A young nebbishy lawyer accidentally receives a "Bild-A-Man" kit from the future. Consequences that he did not (but perhaps should have) foresee ensue when he uses it.

"Thunder and Roses" by Theodore Sturgeon (originally in Astounding, November 1947). The U.S. has been destroyed in a nuclear war, and the survivors are one-by-one going insane. There may be hope for humanity to survive outside of America—but only if the remnant soldiers do not retaliate.
 
"50 Things Every AI Working with Humans Should Know" by Ken Liu (Uncanny, November/December 2020). An obituary of a pioneering AI, followed by the titular list.
goobergunch: (tardis)
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #34 ("Shake Down!") by Larry Hama, Rod Wigham, et al. (Marvel, April 1985). Dogfight! It's Ace, Lady J, and their Skystriker versus Wild Weasel, Baroness, and their Rattler.

G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #35 ("Dreadnoks on the Loose!") by Larry Hama, Rod Wigham, Mark Bright, Bob Camp, et al. (Marvel, May 1985). The Dreadnoks disrupt Rock 'n' Roll, Clutch, and Breaker's vacation! Also some Air Force jets.

The Doors of Eden by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Orbit, 2020; originally Macmillan UK, 2020). Turns out our Earth is just one of a set of branching realities, and the course of evolution took different paths on all of them. The walls between the worlds are thinning, and some people—for broad definitions of people—have related plans, whether for good (spoilers!) or for ill (say, the Little Englander). Recommended, especially if you liked the spider civilization in Children of Time—we get quick recaps of the rise (and sometimes, fall) of a bunch of the alt-Earth intelligent species.

G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #36 ("All the Ships at Sea!" by Larry Hama, Rod Wigham, Mark Bright, Bob Camp, et al. (Marvel, June 1985). The Joes attack the Cobra atoll base in the South Atlantic! Meanwhile, Scarlett and Snake Eyes fight a C.G. quartet on the Staten Island Ferry!

G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #37 ("Twin Brothers") by Larry Hama, Frank Springer, et al. (Marvel, July 1985). The Joes go to the circus, and meet the Young Executives for Community and Home—led by twins Tomax and Xamot!

[File #243] Broken Homes by Ben Aaronovitch (DAW, 2014; originally Gollancz, 2013). Rivers of London, book 4. I was planning on catching up on the 2017 Hugo finalist series I wasn't already up-to-date on last year. That got derailed by the pandemic (it required LINK+) but is back on now. As the kind of dork that watches Planning Commission meetings, I greatly appreciated all of the architecture in this novel. Also I, uh, didn't see that ending coming.
goobergunch: (tardis)
Crossposted from Acrophilia.

The 2018 Nebula nominees were announced on Thursday, and for once I have actually read all of the Best Novel nominees before the announcement. (Not the case for the short fiction; I'm hoping to track all of it down before Hugo nominations close, but we'll see.) Accordingly, some quick thoughts.

First of all, this list definitely skews more fantasy than science fiction, and series fiction is still big:
  • The Calculating Stars is alternate history, about an accelerated space program developed after a meteorite wipes out much of the Eastern Seaboard and sets in motion some unpleasant climate effects. I called it "SF-adjacent alternate history" on Twitter; the genre has always had a soft spot for anything related to the space program even if going to the moon is more science fact than science fiction. First in a series (at least from a novel perspective), although it stands alone fine.

  • The Poppy War is secondary-world fantasy inspired by China. More specifically, the second part is specifically inspired by the Second Sino-Japanese War, but with more gods. First in a planned trilogy; the main plot is resolved but the consequences of such are mostly left to the sequel.

  • Blackfish City is the only novel on the list that I'd really describe as science fiction. It's dystopian SF, set post-climate catastrophe, set in a floating city where the breaks are beginning to show. Actually stand-alone!

  • Spinning Silver is Russian fairy-tale inspired fantasy. The other stand-alone; the cover art invites comparison to Uprooted, but they're only connected insofar as they're both fantasies based on Eastern European fairy tales.

  • Witchmark is secondary-world fantasy in a Western setting reminiscent of Edwardian Britain. It's also a (m/m) romance. First in a series, and I'm not sure that it stands alone particularly well given spoilers ) as you turn the final page.

  • Trail of Lightning is post-apocalyptic urban fantasy set in the Navajo Nation. It's the first in a planned four-book series, and stands alone reasonably well plotwise (although it also ends with spoilers ) so yeah).
Climate change is also one of the obvious themes running through this list; it's directly featured in both Blackfish City and Trail of Lightning, and there's an alternate version in The Calculating Stars. Given that it's probably the biggest crisis we as a civilization face, this seems only appropriate.

Half of these are first novels, and Blackfish City is a second novel. There's a lot of exciting new talent in speculative fiction and this list does a good job of highlighting that.

Is this particularly similar to my Hugo nominating ballot? Not really. There's a little overlap, but while I enjoyed most of these enough to want to read the sequels when they come out my socks generally stayed on. I'm not sure there's much of a takeaway here other than "SFWA's tastes are broadly different than mine", but unfortunately "I liked this but didn't super love it" is a zone that I find particularly difficult to write about. I will try to have a better post on the Hugo finalists once that is timely.

I don't want to dig too deep into issues of representation as I suspect I am not the best person to talk about them, but we did have some notable Jewish representation in two of the novels listed. First the one I liked: the protagonist of The Calculating Stars is a Jewish woman from South Carolina. Her Jewishness is a core part of who she is, but at the same time doesn't feel overwhelming in a way that might feel stereotypical. And I expect for many readers the existence of a large Southern Jewish community might come as a surprise. (If that's you: read a history book.)

That brings us to Spinning Silver. The Russian Jews in this novel might be closer to my actual ancestors, but unfortunately, while their portrayal is positive (and a lot of people liked it! YMMV), this ended up really detracting from the book for me. First off, one of the main characters (and our first narrator) is a Jewish moneylender; this is historically accurate for, well, the reasons stated in the book, but "Jews are good with money" is so tired of a stereotype at this point that it's really hard for me to get excited about reading something where a main character is, in fact, a Jew who is good with money (and centrally so), even if no disrespect is intended and it's not presented as a universal truth.

Second, Spinning Silver is set in a secondary-world Russia with all the names changed a bit, except Jewish people are still the House of Israel and use real Jewish prayers. So does the Land of Israel exist in this setting? Does Egypt? Did the Jewish population actually come over from a portal that got opened up on our Earth early in the Diaspora? (I'd read that.) The typography doesn't help either, with the prominent descender on the capital "J" making every incidence of the word "Jew" seem like a shout in my head.

Spoilers )

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