Assassin's Quest (Farseer Trilogy, #3)

** Some books that wander are lost ** After returning from the dead, our hero, Fitz, goes wandering. … and wandering. … and wandering. He checks voicemail to find that the boss wants meet up in the mountains. So Fitz continues wandering; … and wandering. … and wandering. Then they find an air-wing of F-16s and kill all the bad people. The end.

2023.05.30 · 1 min · Robin Hobb

Alfred's Basic Adult Piano Course: Lesson Book, Level One

Picking piano back up after about 20 years this was good sight reading practice. Hope to make it through the whole series.

2023.05.25 · 1 min · Willard A. Palmer

Untethered Sky

Not on the same level as Green Bone Saga, Fonda’s writing excels in interpersonal relationships, and a desert avian obsession is no substitute. If you really want a book on avian obsession, Bernd Heinrich is a better choice. Still a fun and satisfying plot for a novella.

2023.05.16 · 1 min · Fonda Lee

Mixed Signals: How Incentives Really Work

A great framework on incentives being a tuple of {utility, social signal, self signal} lost in a sea of mediocre anecdotes about cognitive biases. Worth an article, not worth a book.

2023.05.14 · 1 min · Uri Gneezy

Change Agent

A goofy interpretation of CRISPR tech in the vein of face/off, combined with a future fugitive chase like Minority Report. At his best, Daniel Suarez stretches the bounds of believability to find a thriller such as in Daemon or Critical Mass , but here he overreaches into silliness. I nearly DNFed after the face swap, and wasn’t rewarded for sticking around.

2023.05.11 · 1 min · Daniel Suarez

Julius ceasar

***Et tu, Brutus? *** Even if you haven’t read this play before, if you’ve gone through enough English text you’ve read this play before. As one of six Roman plays, Ceaser does the most to pull Roman sensibilities into what was about to become the British empire, and cements the wholly fictitious ties between the ancient world and English Renaissance. Most surprising was the structure, where our eponymous character dies halfway through, only for the climactic action to take place on the battlefield among successors. Like all Shakespeare, fun quips abound. I appreciated the incitement to war without daring to impinge upon the honor of the enemy, in addition to the the many pre-suicide meditations on honor and life. ...

2023.05.10 · 2 min · William Shakespeare

Kill Decision

Disappointing. A cross between Sicario and Dan Brown. A fever dream of the 2010’s, * what if all the conspiracies were true? * I’m no fan of the military industrial complex, but I’m also not a fan of simplified conspiracies that wars started to build a weapons system. Read The Last Good Soldier instead.

2023.05.07 · 1 min · Daniel Suarez

Critical Mass (Delta-v, #2)

Apparently space-engineering-drama is a whole sub-category at this point, but Suarez is the right author for the job

2023.04.27 · 1 min · Daniel Suarez

The Best and the Brightest

TBW

2023.04.12 · 1 min · David Halberstam

Consider Phlebas (Culture, #1)

**Typical Action Movie Book ** Picking up a popular scifi book is a roll of the dice. Sometimes, through pure luck you find exceptional ideas or a riveting plot. Often, you’ll find a commentary on our modern civilization through examination of a different perspective. Yet the other half, you roll mediocre, and get white male boomer wish-fulfillment instead. Consider Phlebas is in the latter category. I’m the target audience, so don’t mind reading a space-adventure. Nothing was egregious enough to set this book down and go back to reading about the Vietnam War. But by the end, nothing stood out as anything more than a GPT4 remix of other scifi novels. ...

2023.03.28 · 1 min · Iain M. Banks