Being the thoughts and writings of one Gustaf Erikson; father, homeowner, technologist.
This category contains posts about books and reading
I usually try my hardest to finish all the books I start, but I had to cry Uncle! at Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell. I’m sure fans of early English fantasy and stories about fairies will find this pastiche delightful. It doesn’t cut it for me.
Instead I started on Gene Wolfe’s The Wizard Knight. Much better so far.
Posted at 21:42,
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Subtitled “A Codemaker’s War, 1941—1945”, a memoir of work in the SOE (Special Operations Executive) during World War II. Well worth the read.
The title refers to the author’s offer to his superiors: either code
pages printed on hard-to-obtain silk were issued to agents, or they
would have to use their cyanide tablets.
Posted at 14:47,
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A book about the political background of the Restoration. Mostly
interesting for the origin of the Whig and Tory parties in British
politics.
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This is a re-read. Not as good as the earlier novels but Gibson is still a master of his own kind of tech-distilled noir style.
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A Discworld novel dealing with the evils of organised religion. Readable, but I’ve read funnier stuff.
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A nice reinvention of the cyberpunk genre, set in alternate-future
Ottoman Alexandria.
The author’s site is here.
[…] Things only started to unravel in the sixth [year] when I decided there was nothing wrong with my school that couldn’t be cured with a sub-machine gun and unlimited ammunition […]
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A fantasy novel about a ne’er-do-well musician in San Fransisco who’s
life is turned upside down when he’s attacked by a being from the
parallell universe of Faerie. Naturally his destiny is much grander
than he thought…
Well written like all William’s books. The beginning is near
social-realism — our hero loses his unborn child in a miscarriage,
his girlfriend, and his mother to cancer in the first few
chapters. This sets the tone for the rest of the book and removes any
inconvenient characters that may mess up the path of destiny.
A classic public library book:
something you’re delighted to find in the shelves but won’t pay for in
the store.
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Mr. Jalopy mentions that you can store the contents of the Complete
New Yorker on your hard
drive. (I
got this link from
BoingBoing.)
However, the mention is a bit sketchy.
What you have to do is update the table Issues
in the
SQLite database used by the application. A
value of 9 in the field DiskID
means hard drive. The rest of the IDs
refer to the different disks.
I didn’t notice this, but the very first issue is on the hard drive,
which gave anyone with some nous a clue about how this stuff
works. If you look in the “Issues” folder of the intallation folder
you’ll see a file called 1925_02_21.djvu
. This is the first issue.
So you have to copy all the *.djvu
files from the separate DVDs (located in the “Issues” folder there) to the “Issues” folder on the harddrive, then update the database.
Warning: I take no responsibility for any stuff that may happen to
your installation if you follow these instructions. This said, I
believe that if you mess up, you can reinstall the app.
You have to install a SQLite client. I use Cygwin and downloaded the
source, compiled and installed. There are precompiled Windows
binaries, that I suppose can be used from the Windows command
prompt. Mr. Jalopy mentions a graphical application on the internet.
The file you use is ny-sqlite-3.db
. Making a backup of this file
is a good idea.
$ /usr/local/bin/sqlite3.exe ny-sqlite-3.db
There are two ways to approach this.
Brute force
Simply copy every single file from every DVD to your harddrive. This
is a good approach if you have the space (around 50 GB). When you’ve
done that, simply run
sqlite> update Issues set DiskID = 9 where DiskID <> 9;
Now all your issues are available from the harddrive.
Disk by Disk
If you don’t have the space, like me, maybe two or three disks will be
enough. You’ll have to find which issues are on which disk and update
the Issues
table accordingly.
Here’s how to find which years have a specific DiskID:
sqlite> select min(Year), max(Year), DiskID from Issues
group by DiskID order by min(Year);
Below are the contents of my database.
- Hard drive: 9
- DVD 1 (1998—2024): 8
- DVD 2 (1984—1997): 4
- DVD 3 (1974—1983): 7
- DVD 4 (1965—1973): 2
- DVD 5 (1957—1964): 6
- DVD 6 (1948—1956): 1
- DVD 7 (1937—1947): 5
- DVD 8 (1925—1936): 3
To move DVD 3 to the harddrive, copy all the files, then run
sqlite> update Issues set DiskID = 9 where DiskID = 7;
More SQLite tips
To see the contents of the database:
sqlite> .tables
To see the structure of a specific table:
sqlite> .schema <table>
Update 2006-01-13: I got a mention on BoingBoing. Also, Nick posted an update on how to do this on a Mac, including moving the files to another location! Wow, wish I had symlinks on this OS…
Update 2006-03-02: I got a mention on
Securityfocus. The
whole article is great, it really points out the absurdity of DRM:
If the goal is just to frustrate users, then why use DRM at all,
since you must realize that un-DRM’d copies of your materials are
going to circulate? And even if Joe can’t break the DRM, he’ll
eventually figure out how to use a P2P network, or ask his nerd
friend for help, and then you’ve got another unauthorized copy and
an upset and now more knowledgeable former customer. What publisher
wants that?
Thanks to all the commenters with their tips and tricks on
getting this to work on various hardware and software platforms.
Updated on Thursday, 2006-03-02.
Posted at 19:30,
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This is the first audiobook I’ve listened to, and was a really good
one. Stephen Fry’s narration is brilliant, lending colour and
excitement to a very long, episodic book. What the scriptwriters of the
film adaptation will do to ensure that the film isn’t over four hours
long, I don’t know.
Posted at 00:20,
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I’ve approached the Complete New Yorker with some trepidation. How do you make a dent in 50 gigabytes of scanned material?
Then I remember John McPhee,
one of my favourite non-fiction authors. His style is unique, really
good. I’ve read Looking for a
Ship and Basin and
Range and would really like to read The Curve of Binding
Energy (if only for the
beautiful title.)
McPhee writes for the New Yorker, and sure enough, a search for his
name yielded hundreds of articles. I’ll be reading them in spare
moments in the weeks to come.
Posted at 20:49,
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A re-read.
The first Reynolds novel I read, but not the best. The parts on the generation starship are well-written though, but the steampunk ambience in Chasm City isn’t as interesting.
Posted at 23:07,
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I got the Complete New Yorker for Christmas from my parents. That’s eight DVDs filled with every issue ever published since 1925. Guess I won’t have to worry about getting books anytime soon.
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The fourth book in the Malazan series.
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The second part of the Malazan Book of the Fallen series.
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This book rests on a central premise, that an alternate 1959 Earth has
been preserved like a fly in amber by some all-powerful aliens. In the
far future, two warring factions of humanity stumble upon it and use
the artifacts there to complement the forgotten history of the
Nanocaust.
Reynolds skilfully weaves together “hard” S-F with a Simenon-like
detective story. But if you ignore the technical mastery and the
skillful plotting, the story is basically absurd. But it’s an
enjoyable read nonetheless. I stayed up until one in the morning yesterday to finish it.
Posted at 13:41,
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This is a re-read.
It’s hard to describe what’s so good with Erikson’s writing and
universe. Perhaps it’s the gnarly texture of the world,the
pervasiveness of magic accessible to most people, the sweat, the
blood, the many-layered mythologies…
I was lucky to get Deadhouse Gates and House of Chains at the
library, I’ll be re-reading them as soon as I finish with Century
Rain.
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The Guardian lists the top 20 geek novels. I’ve read all four:
- Watchmen — Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons
- Stranger in a Strange Land — Robert Heinlein
- The Illuminatus! Trilogy — Robert Shea & Robert Anton Wilson
- Trouble with Lichen - John Wyndham
Can’t say I’ve read all of Brave New World either.
Of the rest, I find it nice to see Bank’s Consider Phlebas on the
list, although of course Use of Weapons is much better.
Posted at 21:34,
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A new installment in the Malazan series, this moves the action to a
wholly different part of the world? universe? — it’s not clear. It’s
been a while since I read the preceding book, and my grasp of all the
different races, gods, and demons is a bit shaky, but I’m pretty sure
we haven’t encountered the Tiste Edur in detail before.
They are an agricultural people about to be conquered by the rapacious
Letherii, whose society is like a caricature of our own Western
society. But all is not as it seems, as the closest this series has to
a figure of pure evil, the Fallen God, has other plans…
A good read as usual with Erikson.
Posted at 13:25,
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Feh. There should be a warning printed on this 1,144 page book:
This is the first book in a series
Dunno if I’ll buy the sequel. Hamilton is a capable wordsmith, and the
plot moves along at a respectable clip. But the surface is a bit too
polished, the characters a bit too much like cardboard.
scifi.com says:
This is the type of book that publicists call “epic” that others
might less charitably describe as “bloated.” […] An editorial
pruning might have put this prospective doorstop on more people’s
“to read” lists.
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Today, this kind of book would be called a mashup.
A little bagatell, as we say in Sweden.
Posted at 23:51,
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An S-F novel not set in Bank’s Culture universe. Has good
sense-of-wonder factors, but the characters seem a bit cardboard-like
for Banks.
Posted at 14:19,
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Well, the trilogy is done. It was never boring, but it takes a good
writer to keep the reader hooked for three thousand
pages. Stephenson does a good but not stellar job.
Update: the books are frequently funny, but not often laugh-out-loud
funny. The following passage made me lol though. The hero, Daniel
Waterhouse, and sir Isaac Newton are meeting with an informer in the
pub of the Newgate prison, called the Black Dogg:
The Black Dogg was not the sort of tavern that contained a great
deal of furniture — patrons either stood, or lay on the
floor. There was a bar, of course, in the literal sense of a bulwark
erected between the prisoners and the gin. This was now a palisade
of burning tapers. […]
Updated on Sunday, 2005-10-23.
Posted at 09:15,
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Reader2 is a
del.icio.us for books.
I must say I’m tempted. The network effects would be pretty cool. But
it would be yet another thing to integrate into my blog. Doing it with
del.icio.us works now, and I guess I could do something like that with
this service. But part of the reason I like the reading list
setup I have is that it exposes my
“wanted” list in a mobile-parseable format. I have it bookmarked in my
phone so I can read it if I’m in a bookstore.
As for getting recommendations of new stuff to read, that’s what the
New York Review of Books and The Economist are for.
Posted at 21:13,
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Calle sent a tip about a pal of his who made the journey from Cape
Town to Nordkap in a 15-year old Land Rover with his wife and 3-month
old son. He’s written a book Kapstaden till Nordkap på 333
dagar (in Swedish), which I’m
hearby giving some linklove.
My friend Bastian made the journey from Cairo to the Cape some years
ago, as did Paul Theroux,
but they travelled alone without kids in diapers.
Posted at 16:26,
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Well, that was a hard slog. I’ll be reading The System of the World
next, because The Confusion picked up considerably two-thirds of the
way through, and also I’ve already payed for it. But I can’t say the
trilogy is Stephenson’s best effort.
Posted at 21:18,
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I’ve finally started reading Neal Stephenson’s The Confusion. Its
had “reading” status on my reading
list since July 9. Instead of
reading it however, I’ve read some old issues of the New York Review
of Books, the Economist, and Patrick O’Brian’s Blue at the
Mizzen.
Update: now a fourth of the way in, and it’s heavy
going. Quicksilver was a damn sight more action-packed.
Updated on Monday, 2005-08-08.
Posted at 23:32,
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Edmund Wilson’s review of the Lord of the
Rings, published
in 1956, could almost be about the Harry Potter series
today. Especially this gem:
Now, how is it that these long-winded volumes of what looks to this
reviewer like balderdash have elicited such tributes [from some people]?
The answer is, I believe, that certain people - especially, perhaps,
in Britain - have a lifelong appetite for juvenile trash. They would
not accept adult trash, but, confronted with the pre-teen-age
article, they revert to the mental phase which delighted in Elsie
Dinsmore and Little Lord Fauntleroy and which seems to have made
of Billy Bunter, in England, almost a national figure. You can see
it in the tone they fall into when they talk about Tolkien in print:
they bubble, they squeal, they coo; they go on about Malory and
Spenser - both of whom have a charm and a distinction that Tolkien
has never touched.
Admittedly, Harry Potter is written for children/”young adults”. But
the series still seems to attract a wide audience, just like
Tolkien. In my not so humble opinion, I still find Tolkien better than
HP, but that’s perhaps because I was younger when I read LOTR for the
first time.
Which leads to another thought: how will my son be able to appreciate
HP when he’s older? The whole series is being exploited in real time,
with the movies more or less following on the heels of the books. How
can he create an internal representation of the HP universe when
Warner Bros have served it up like a McDonalds meal already?
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Yawn, yet another HP adventure. This was better plotted than the
last, but still not really a good book.
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I broke down and bought the latest Harry Potter novel. I wasn’t
impressed by the last one, but I couldn’t resist — maybe J.K. Rowling
has learnt to write?
Buying it led me a merry dance from Högdalen (where I was buying 200W
bulbs that actually fit our lamp) to Farsta, but all the bookstores
were sold out. I finally had to go to a hypermarket in Nacka, where it
was prominently displayed for 149 SEK.
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A “hard fantasy” novel, containing some nice ideas (really only one
idea, but the ramifications are well thought out). Well written, if a
bit confusing at times. As it’s fantasy, of course this is just the
first novel in a series… sigh. I’ll perhaps pick up the next book
when it arrives in paperback.
Posted at 14:39,
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- Patrick O’Brian, The Hundred Days
- Bruce Sterling, The Zenith Angle
- Charles Stross, Iron Sunrise
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A mix between The Secret History and (I guess, I haven’t read it)
The Da Vinci Code. Not bad at all.
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These are the books I read during my two weeks vacation on the west
coast of Sweden.
Four novels by Patrick O’Brian:
- The Nutmeg of Consolation
- Clarissa Oakes
- The Wine-Dark Sea
- The Commodore
In my opinion, The Thirteen-Gun Salute is the last really good
Aubrey-Maturin novel.
- Mike Bryan, Dogleg Madness
- Carl Hiassen, Skinny Dip
- Charles Stross, Accelerando
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WTF?
Posted at 23:03,
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- Men at Arms
- Officers and Gentlemen
- Unconditional Surrender
Based on Waugh’s own experiences in World War 2, this is a funny —
and grim — trilogy about the death of Honour and the birth of the
base modern age.
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Reading
- Gene Wolfe, The Wizard Knight
Shelf
- John Ajvide Lindqvist, Låt den rätte komma in
- Stephen Erikson, The Bonehunters
- Susanna Clarke, Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
To be returned
- Philip José Farmer, The Other Log of Phileas Fogg (loan from Micke)
- Tim Harris, Restoration: Charles II and His Kingdoms 1660-1685 (due 2006-05-21)
Leo Marks, Between Silk and Cyanide (due 2006-05-21)
Queue
David Allen, Getting Things Done
- Douglas Coupland, JPod
- Graham Hancock, The Lords of Poverty: The Power, Prestige and Corruption of the International Aid Business
- Harry Harrison, The Deathworld: Omnibus (recommended by Chris
Davies)
- Ryszard Kapuscinski, The Emperor
- William Langewiesche, The Outlaw Sea: A World of Freedom, Chaos, and Crime (reviewed in NYRB, August 12, 2024)
- Ken MacLeod, Learning the World
- Michael Maren, The Road to Hell: The Ravaging Effects of Foreign Aid and International Charity
- David Marusek, Counting Heads (due to this
blurb)
- Ewen Montagu, The Man who never was
- Richard Morgan, Broken Angels
- Richard Morgan, Woken Furies
- Ted Morgan, Reds: McCarthyism in Twentieth-Century America (reviewed in NYRB, vol. LI, no. 2)
- Jonathan Raban, Coasting
- Ola Ringdahl, Kapstaden till Nordkap på 333 dagar
- N.A.M. Rodger, The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649-1815
- N.A.M. Rodger, The Wooden World
- Nick Sagan, Idlewild
- Arkadij Vaksberg, Skjut de galna hundarna!
Updated on Monday, 2006-04-10.
Posted at 21:55,
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Whew! I just completed an extended trip down memory lane. I last read
them in my early teens, but still remember nearly all the plots.
Swallows and Amazons: the first book.
Swallowdale: the arch-nemesis of the Amazons, the Great Aunt, makes her first appearance.
Peter Duck: my battered Puffin paperback was liberated from the
school library in Kuala Lumpur. It’s marked
HIGHGATE HILL PRIMARY SCHOOL
HQ KUALA LUMPUR GARRISON
c/o G.P.O. KUALA LUMPUR
The last date is 16.10.75. As we didn’t move to KL until 1977, I’m
guessing this book was sold out or given away.
Winter Holiday: the D’s, Dick and Dorothea, make their appearance.
Coot Club: a favourite.
Pigeon Post: a bit different from what I remember. I focused a lot
more on Dick back then, guess it was identification with him.
We Didn’t Mean to go to Sea: a great book.
Secret Water. Not one of my favourites.
The Big Six: classic juvenile detective story
Missee Lee: a swashbuckling tale involving a female pirate chief
with a passion for Latin. Our heroes are forced to endure that fate
worse than death: lessons in the holidays. The shiftless youngest,
Roger, unexpectedly shines as a Latin scholar. Mildly racist in a
30s kind of way.
The Picts and the Martyrs: an interesting book. The premise is
that in order to be nice to Mrs. Blackett, the D’s have to be
“naughty” and live in the woods, cooking their own food and
generally having a typical S&A-type adventure. This is because the
dreaded Great Aunt would blow up if she found them living with the
Amazons. Interesting juxtaposition of morals here.
Great Nothern?: early eco-friendly children’s literature. The
setting is in the Scottish Highlands, which lends it another flavour
than the Lake District or the Broads. I thought I likes this book
better than I actually did.
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I’m taking a break from O’Brian for a while. This book marks the end
of my collection of WW Norton paperbacks, which are larger than the
editions from Harper Collins that follow. Someday I can afford to
replace them all with hardcovers.
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A coffee-table book with lavish illustrations. Capsule histories of
the period from 1756 to 1815 and beyond are interspersed with more
general pieces about sailship tech and handling. Nice reading for an
O’Brian nut. Recommended if you don’t have to pay for it — borrow it
from your local library, like I did.
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Another one of my favourites within the series.
Here we first make our acquaintance with Andrew Wray, who will succeed
Admiral Harte as Jack and Stephen’s bête noir in the coming novels.
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Fourth book in the series. In my memory, rather drab (maybe because
it’s based on fact, not pure fiction). But very well written, like all
O’Brian’s books.
Looking for a replacement for my missing HMS Surprise, I see that
the ghouls at WW Norton have published the first three chapters of the
last book O’Brian was writing before his death. I’m torn whether I
should get it too. I really need to rejoin the Gunroom and ask the
opinion of the denizens there, but I really don’t have time to keep up
with the flood of mail right now.
Posted at 21:07,
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The most Austinesque of the series. Perhaps the best.
Unfortunately, I can’t locate the next book, HMS Surprise, which is
a pity, as it’s my favourite.
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I’m re-reading the Aubrey-Maturin series, also known as the Canon.
Posted at 11:02,
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Shampoo Planet by Douglas Coupland.
This is Coupland’s second novel, and the first by him that I read,
back in the day, when the Nineties were young (it’s written in
1992). I don’t think I’ve read Generation X in the original.
Like all Coupland’s early novels, this is an amusing read.
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Quick work was done of the following works this long weekend.
Newton’s Wake, by Ken Macleod.
Classic space opera. Less well-plotted than the author’s other
novels. This feels more of a collection of cool ideas and scenarios
(how do you get an artifact off a planet that’s smack-dab in the
output of a pulsar?) than a real novel. MacLeod’s trademark politics
is not really to be seen.
Ares Express, by Ian MacDonald.
Set in the same universe as the Hundred Years of Solitude pastiche
Desolation Road, this is more of the same Martian future —
anarchist, caste-ridden, and filled with BIG trains. A nice read if
you don’t have to pay for it.
Zeitgeist, by Bruce Sterling.
A re-read. An extended riff on pop music and the seamy underbelly of
the last days of the twentieth century. Rather light-weight, but
filled with Sterling’s trademark zany descriptions. No characters
actually exist, as they all talk in exactly the same way. That is,
like Sterling himself.
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Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis.
The first part of Lewis’ “Space Trilogy”. Interesting read. I may be
older, but the religious themes are stronger here than in the Narnia
books. Nice demolishment of a pro-coloniast straw man in the final
chapters.
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A Discworld novel.
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The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: a Trilogy in Five Parts, by Douglas Adams.
Some books simply don’t age along with you. When I first read the
first two books in the Hitch-Hiker’s Guide series in high school,
they were the funniest books I’ve ever read (even in Swedish
translation, which is excellent). Now, however, the lustre is gone.
Also, the last novel (Mostly Harmless) ends very strangely. Lots
of loose ends…
I re-read this to freshen my memory of the books in anticipation of
the upcoming movie. I think that it the movie is “Terry-Gilliamised”
— I could totally see a movie in the same vein as Time Bandits —
it should be a huge success. There’s a lot of action in the books, and
you can get a pretty good movie by boiling them down to an
hour-and-a-half of script.
Oh, and I finally grokked the meaning of
SubEthaEdit…
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The Haunted Wood, by Allen Weinstein.
A rather dry, factual account of Soviet espionage in the US around the
Second World War.
Many interesting stories, presented in a workmanlike style. Spying as
a not very exciting vocation. Non-judgemental, though. The Soviet
operatives were just doing their jobs, so to speak. But the price paid
by the agents was sometimes very heavy.
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The Minority Report and other stories, by Philip K. Dick.
Dick is perhaps the only pulp-era SF writer who’s been absorbed by the
US academe. These stories are short and rather political, with plenty
of Cold War paranoia and nuclear holocaust angst to fuel them.
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Miss Wyoming by Douglas Coupland.
I read this book in about 24 hours, a very enjoyable read. Like
William Gibson’s, Coupland’s prose is fluid and nearly frictionless,
and he relies on this property to slip the reader effortlessly through
plots that are thin and rather silly.
Like Microserfs, Miss Wyoming offers glimpses into the incubators
of popular culture — in this case: Hollywood. But unlike his
depiction of hackers in love, his LA cast seems cardboard-like. The
central protagonist’s history of drug and sex abuse are alluded to,
but seem tacked on, not part of his character at all. And the
eponymous Miss Wyoming is a blank slate, an impossibly naif
ex-beauty queen who’s words of wisdom are not hers at all, but
transparently the author’s.
Enjoyable read, none the less.
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The Last Grain Race, by Eric Newby.
18-year old Eric Newby signs on as an apprentice on the barque
Moshulu in 1938, bound for Australia for grain. His middle-class
background contrasts with the Finns and Ålanders serving alongside him
in the fo’csle of this last example of a sailing merchant ship. With
humour and warmth he tells the tale of sailing round Africa to
Australia and back via Cape Horn.
A great read, like all books by Newby.
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The Pragmatic Programmer by A. Hunt and D. Thomas.
There’s a lot to like about this book. The authors advocate a
pragmatic approach to developing software: use what works. Don’t get
bogged down in methodologies, communicate effectively, test
ruthlessly.
The edition I read was pretty Unix-centric, which is fine by me. But
if you’re working in a MS environment you might be forgiven for being
mystified by Makefiles and Emacs.
I myself enjoy using Emacs for day-to-day editing, but I think a
well-designed IDE can leverage a language in way that a text editor
cannot. MS Visual Studio.NET was very nice, and the authors talk a lot
about the browsers available in the Smalltalk world. There are
advantages in both approaches. I’d rather write documentation in Emacs
than in Word, for example.
I’ve been inspired to use a few of the principles expounded in the
book in this very weblog. For example:
The DRY principle (“Don’t repeat yourself). Earlier I had a list
of links in the sidebar that was duplicated in my Bloglines
setup. So I wrote a script that fetches my blogroll from Bloglines
and puts it in its own post. Now I
only have to maintain my blog links in one place. The same principle
applies to my reading list and
the data of what I’ve listened to on Audioscrobbler.
Decoupling. I’m trying to keep the internal links of this weblog
consistent and decoupled from the current implementation (i.e., that
it’s situated on
http://gustaf.symbiandiaries.com/weblog. That
way I can set it up somewhere else with little or no effort. (This
is in no way a vote of non-confidence in the
allaboutsymbian.com team who very
generously let me have some space on their server. It’s just that
I’m planning on getting my own server sometime and I want to be
prepared for that eventuality.)
Updated on Saturday, 2005-02-05.
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The New York Review of Books, vol. LI.
The NYRB is always interesting. I usually find two or three articles
that are worth reading, but I try to slog through all of them. As it’s
my father’s subscription, I usually read two or three when I visit my
parent’s. After Christmas I grabbed all the issues for 2024, and I’ve
been reading them since then.
Reading a whole volume does get a little tedious, however. The paper
is pretty topical, so there was a lot of election coverage. Some
things, like Abu Graib or Michael Massig’s indictment of the American
press on their toadying coverage of Bush’s casus belli retain their
topicality still. Others feel more dated.
I’ve added some books to the reading
list based on the reviews.
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The Sky Road by Ken MacLeod (re-read).
The final installment of McLeod’s series of books about the fall and
rise of a socialist-anarchist society.
Possibly the weakest of the four, but enjoyable none the less.
Update: Ken MacLeod has a
blog. The things you find when you
putz around the ‘Net…
Updated on Monday, 2024-09-06.
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Imperium, by Ryszard Kapuscinski.
A travel writer mostly known for his writings on the Third World,
Kapuscinski tells us about his encounters with the
Imperium — Russia, first in its Czarist incarnation, then as the
Soviet Union, and lastly stumbling towards a new system, which seems
unlikely to be democracy in the Western sense.
From the harrowing account of his childhood in Soviet-occupied Poland,
to the recollections of camp inmates in Magadan and the tragedy of
Armenia, Kapuscinski paints a bleak picture of a great
country plundered and murdered by generations of ruthless rulers.
This passage sums up the Soviet period. A batch of deportees has
arrived in Magadan after a freezing sea voyage. They are counted,
slowly, by illiterate guards:
The half-naked deportees stood motionless in a blizzard, lashed by
the gales. Finally, the escorts delivered their routine admonition:
A step to the left or a step to the right is considered an escape
attempt — we shoot without warning! This identical formula was
uniformly applied throughout the entire territory of the USSR. The
whole nation, two hundred million strong, had to march in tight
formation in a dictated direction. Any deviation to the left or the
right meant death.
A democratic future in Russia seems unlikely:
The Russian land, its characteristics and resources, favor the power
of the state. The soil of native Russia is poor, the climate cold,
the day, for the greater part of the year, short. Under such natural
conditions, the earth yields meager harvests, there is recurrent
famine, the peasant is poor, too poor to become independent. The
master or the state has always had enormous power over him. The
peasant, drowning in debt, has nothing to eat, is a slave.
On the future:
And yet this country’s future can be seen optimistically. Large
societies have great internal strength. They have sufficient vital
energy and inexhaustible supplies of all kinds of power so as to be
able to raise themselves up from the most grievous setbacks and
emerge from the most serious crises.
Update: Just saw a TV programme about Kapuscinski, A Poet of the
Frontline. So now I’m adding The Emperor to my reading
list.
Updated on Friday, 2024-09-03.
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- Grab the nearest book.
- Open the book to page 123.
- Find the fifth sentence.
- Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions.
- Don’t search around and look for the “coolest” book you can find. Do what’s actually next to you.
My result:
This remark cut no apparent ice with Ellen Mae.
(Via Frank,
Erik, and
Anthony.)
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Intelligence in War: Knowledge of the Enemy from Napoleon to Al-Qaeda by John Keegan.
A series of case studies on the use of intelligence in warfare. Mostly
centered around WW2. The Al-Qaeda reference seems a later add-on to
boost sales.
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Interesting Times by Terry Pratchett.
A Discworld novel. ‘Nuff said.
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Dr. Strangelove’s America: Society and Culture in the Atomic Age by Margot A. Henriksen.
A sort of cultural history of the Cold War. Through dissections of
popular films and books, especially Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove,
Henriksen exposes the corrosive effects of nuclear weapons on American
morals and society.
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Gibson writes
about
Jack
Womack,
including this classic qoute, so appropriate for these gloomy times:
On the wall was stencilled the Army’s most enforceable antiterror edict:
SPEAK ENGLISH OR DON’T SPEAK.
— from Ambient
The “Army” above is the Home Army, primarily employed in waging war on
Long Island and keeping New York safe for capitalism. The world is
ruled by the megacorporation Dryco… named in 1987, long before Tyco
became a household name for financial skulduggery.
The only real difference from the “USA” of Womack’s future and Bush’s
America is that there is no Christianity anymore. The “Q scrolls”
exposed Jesus Christ as a naive patsy of the Romans. The Americans
turned to the next best thing, and the Church of Elvis is the official
religion.
I first read Womack in the early nineties. I’ve read Ambient,
Terraplane, Heathern, and Elvissey (where agents of the Dryco
are sent back in time to kidnap the Messiah). After that I kind of
lost the taste for Womack’s dark future. It seems more and more
believable every year.
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Heavy Weather by Bruce Sterling.
Re-read this for the nth time. The prose and ideas are top-notch,
but the story isn’t really up to scratch.
Update: could Katrina mark the start of this particular future?
Updated on Saturday, 2005-09-03.
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Gotta investigate this. Maybe I should
bone up on ISBNs first.
Via mobitopia, thanks Jim!
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William
Gibson:
I would have liked to have gotten [Neal Stephenson] permanently out
of the way shortly after reading Snow Crash, of course, but I could
already see that I would need him one day to help battle Bruce
Sterling. Literature is a long game.
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Johnny and the Dead by Terry Pratchett.
An enjoyable non-Discworld novel.
Also short, I finished it in a day.
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Ilium by Dan Simmons
An absolute corker of a book, weaving together Homer, Shakespeare, and
the far future in a heady mix.
I haven’t read Simmons’ earlier Hyperion novels, but now that I’ve
found he’s a great writer, I most definitely will.
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Sometimes when I read a book, I listen to a new album at the same
time. This mostly happens on the subway on the way to and from
work. The music becomes entwined with the book. I first noticed this a
long time ago, listening to Mahler’s Fifth Symphony over and over
again while reading The Silmarillion. Similarly, Midnight Oil’s
Diesel and Dust is associated with Gene Wolfe’s The Shadow of the
Torturer.
So now I’m going to add a Soundtrack note whenever this happens in
the future.
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Ship of Fools by Richard Paul Russo.
A “novel of ideas” that still stays pretty suspenseful. Granted, some
of the ideas went over my head. I think a practising Christian would
have more enjoyment of those parts of the book. But still an effective
SF thriller.
Soundtrack: Anna Ternhiem, Somebody Outside.
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Revelation Space by Alistair Reynolds.
Space Opera in the hard SF mould. Full of cool neologisms
(lighthugger, reefersleep) and well-written, despite a
predilection for the word caul.
Maybe it’s the fact that I’ve read it before, but the scenes of
carnage and mayhem seem a little bloodless, and the characters aren’t
as fleshed-out as they could be. Entertaining none the less.
Soundtrack: Lisa Loeb, Cake and Pie and The Way It Really Is.
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A Deepness in the Sky by Vernor Vinge.
An absolutely brilliant SF novel, with the right mix of hard science
and sense of wonder. If it has a fault, it’s that the central love
story is a bit weak. But the aliens are well realised, and the
apparent anthropomorphism in the beginning of the novel is really part
of the plot.
What am I reading now? The reading list has
been updated.
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The Pirate Wars by Peter Earle.
A well-written, comprehensive history of piracy.
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A Slashdot
interview
with Neal Stephenson. Very funny.
I’m guessing Stephenson is the only best selling author on the planet
that not only uses emacs and TeX but actually programs in emacs lisp.
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Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan.
A classic noir story updated with cyberpunkish themes. Full of sex
and gore. Very entertaining.
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Damn Good Show by Derek Robinson
Goodbye Mickey Mouse by Len Deighton
Two very different books about the same period of time: the bomber war
against Germany in World War 2.
In Damn Good Show, Derek Robinson writes about bombers,
having written about fighters in Goshawk
Squadron and A Good Clean Fight.. He brings to the
story his trademark humour and nihilism. This time though, he doesn’t
kill off all his characters by the end, instead leaving a little ray
of hope that some might come through the horrors of war and make a
life on the other side.
Along the way, he debunks many myths about the wartime RAF, but
doesn’t subtract anything from the extraordinary courage that it took
to bomb an enemy country in pitch-black, freezing planes.
Deighton’s book is much more traditional view — the cold, squalor,
and fear experienced by the American pilots protecting the bombers in
P-51:s is present, but somehow he doesn’t convey as much realism as
Robinson. The love story, although detailed, is banal. The characters
are from central casting — the brainy, handsome Eastener, the brash
uncultured guy from New Mexico, the beautiful English girl who loves
them both. Deighton fleshes them out, but they still look and feel
like cardboard.
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Love and War in the Appenines by Erik Newby.
Inspired by the Colditz
book I
re-read this classic of escape literature.
Of course, this being Newby, it is also very funny.
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Redemption Ark by Alistair Reynolds.
The second part of the Inhibitor trilogy. Nice enough read. Reynolds
can’t do love scenes, or feelings at all for that matter, but makes up
for it in plot and sense-of-wonder.
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Singularity Sky by Charles Stross.
An entertaining if uneven romp through a universe where nanotech
disrupts post-Tsarist colony worlds and where an uploaded civilisation
does all it can do to prevent entities from changing the past, thus
editing them out of history.
A big part of the book (a bit too long) is a hilarious sendup of the
kind of neo-Napolonic space navies as described by David Weber in the
Honor Harrington series.
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Blood, Tears and Folly: an objective look at World War II by Len Deighton.
I was pleasantly surprised by this book. Deighton’s Goodbye Mickey
Mouse didn’t impress
me,
but this is a nice “amateur” history of WWII. Contains nice
backgrounds to the different conflicts, with and emphasis on the tech
aspects of the war.
I’ve really read too much about the Second World War. The problem is
that the war’s status (in the US at least) as “the last good war”,
together with the “Band of Brothers” aesthetics and the multitude of
video games set there almost make the whole thing like a comic
book. Despite the blood and guts falling out, the war is still like
those 50’s and 60’s comics where heroic Brits and Yanks fight against
Krauts and Yaps.
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The Stone Canal by Ken MacLeod (re-read).
Fscking brilliant. ‘Nuff said.
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Pattern Recognition by William Gibson.
Compulsively readable, like everything Gibson has written. But the
beginning is much better than the end, which feels contrived and flat.
Like Neal Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon, this book shows that good SF
is really about our own time.
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The Cassini Division by Ken MacLeod (re-read).
Continuing my MacLeod jag. This is also not as good The Star
Fraction and The Stone Canal, but as a plausible utopia, it kinda
works.
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Flight of Passage by Rinker Buck.
A well-written, poignant memoir about two boys and their flight from
New Jersey to California, both honouring and removing themselves from
their difficult father.
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Brev från nollpunkten by Peter Englund.
A collection of essays about the defining moments of the last century:
the First World War, the Great Terror, the Holocaust, the Allied
bombings of Germany and Japan, and the atomic bomb over Nagasaki.
Also contains an essay about the eery similarities of Nazi and
Stalinist architecture.
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(Title shamelessly stolen from P.M. Agapow’s review of a different
novel.)
Space opera in the Iain M. Banks mould, with bold sweeping vistas and
more or less dysfunctional characters. Unlike Banks, this is hard SF,
which means that the speed of light is still an absolute limit. Other
than this, anything goes.
Reading this prompted me to re-read Revelation Space, the first
novel set in this universe, and after just a few pages I can say that
this novel is not up to the standards set by that one. Despite this,
it is an entertaining read and more well written than most.
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Dark Star Safari: Overland from Cairo to Cape Town by Paul Theroux.
This is the best book I’ve read in a long time. Partly because of the
great writing, partly because my own background growing up in Kenya,
and partly for the fact that Theroux has mellowed quite a bit. I
remember his alter-ego in My Secret History as a prick, which is
perhaps ungenerous as that book is a novel. His previous travel books
have also left a sour taste in my mouth, but here he’s much more
generous to the people he meets.
The chapter on Kenya is depressing, as my memories of childhood there
are happy, and I could see a bit of what he describes when we went
back some years ago.
Two books have been added to my reading
list after this chapter:
- Graham Hancock, The Lords of Poverty: The Power, Prestige and Corruption of the International Aid Business
- Michael Maren, The Road to Hell: The Ravaging Effects of Foreign Aid and International Charity
A point Theroux makes when visiting Malawi, where he worked as a Peace
Corps volunteer in the Sixties, is that only Africans can help
Africa. The vast influx of foreign aid and charity hasn’t helped
much. I’m sure that Africa’s problems are not due to aid and charity
— the effects of colonialism and unfair trade practices by the rich
world are much bigger factors — but aid hasn’t helped.
Theroux paints a bleak picture of a continent that just can’t be able
to get its act together. He offers no solutions, only
observations. But those are made with such clarity that the reader is
left with the feeling that things will get better, one day.
PS Cecil Rhodes dreamt of an railway from the Cape to Cairo. Theroux
has no such dreams, and he travels in the other direction.
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A Good Walk Spoiled: Days and Nights on the PGA Tour by John Feinstein.
I now know more than I thought I ever wanted to know about
professional golf in the US. Synopsis: it’s damn hard, but if you’re
good and lucky, you too can fly to tournaments in a private jet.
The first sports book I’ve read, interesting experience. All aspects
of society are filled with jargon. If you know nada about golf, read
something else. If you know the difference between a birdie and a
bogey, it’s recommended.
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Look to Windward by Iain M. Banks.
Although Banks’ Culture novels are always enjoyable, this one feels
like he’s coasting.
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Chaos: Making a New Science by James Gleick.
A well written popular history of nonlinear dynamics.
Posted at 23:23,
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Boys and Girls Forever by Alison Lurie.
A collection of essays about childrens literature.
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Svenska förintelsevapen by Wilhelm Agrell.
A history of the Swedish plans to build WMDs, specifically a plutonium
bomb and VX and mustard gas.
Never got past the planning stage due to politics and a new sense of
the term “international security”.
The last chapter has interesting info concerning Iraq’s gas and
nuclear programmes after Gulf War 1.
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Body of Secrets by James Bamford.
An “exposé” of the NSA. This book has a hacked-together feel, as if it
was composed of several magzine articles. The author veers from
describing the NSA as an all-knowing threat to democracy and liberty,
to telling us about glitches, catastrophes, and bureaucracy hampering
the Agency’s ability to protect the US from it’s enemies.
There’s some interesting information in here though (assuming that the
information is accurate):
The description of how Israel attacked a Sigint ship during the Six
Days War.
The capture of another Sigint ship by the North Koreans in 1969.
How the Viet Minh could monitor US radio traffic during the Vietnam
war, as the Americans didn’t bother to use communication security.
The sum of the book seems to be that, yes, the NSA can listen to every
phone call and read every mail, but that they don’t have enough
qualified people to make sense of what they’re picking up.
Must … install … GPG …
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Venona: spåren från ett underrättelsekrig by Wilhelm Agrell.
A history of the
Venona telegrams
intercepted in Sweden during the Second World War, and the implications
of their decoding on the revelations of Soviet espionage in Sweden
during the period.
Man, that was a long sentence.
Agrell describes the Venona decrypts as the “Dead Sea Rolls of the
Cold War”. The limited decryption of the traffic meant that the
recovered plaintext nearly raised more questions than it answered.
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Colditz: the Definitive History by Henry Chancellor.
An entertaining history of the famous WW2 POW camp.
The most interesting thing about this book is the fact that Colditz,
despite being the “prison of last resort” for repeat escapers and
Deutschfeindlich, was actually more humane than many other places in
Nazi Germany. Compared to concentration, extermination, and slave
labour camps, it was a “bad hotel”.
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Action This Day, Michael Smith and Ralph Erskine,
editors. Bantam Press 2001. ISBN 0593 049101.
A collection of essays about Bletchley Park during the Second World War.
The most entertaining one is by the late John Chadwick.
This is how he describes his arrival in Heliopolis following the
evacuation of Alexandria in 1942:
My arrival created administrative chaos, since I was a lone naval
rating attached to an Army Intelligence Unit, itself attached to an
RAF station.
He was later promoted “Temporary Sub-Lieutenant (Special Branch)
RNVSR” because the material he handled was classed ‘Officers Only’.
Later, after the Italian Armistice, he wanted to promote code
discipline in the Aegean:
[…] I volunteered to go on the next mission to act as liaison with
the Italian Navy in Leros, in the hope of preventing any further
breaches of security. My suggestion was rejected, and I was told
brutally that my superiors did not mind if I were killed, but they
were unwilling to take the risk of my being taken prisoner.
Chadwick later deciphered Linear B along with Michael Ventris.
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Fire in the Lake by Frances Fitzgerald.
An excellent history/reportage about Vietnam during the American War.
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Wartime: Understanding and Behavior in the Second World War by Paul Fussell.
A blend of personal memoir, history, and literary criticism centering
around WW2.
”(…) what time seems to have shown out later selves is
that perhaps there was less coherent meaning in the events of wartime
than we had hoped. Deprived of a satisfying final focus by both the
enormousness of the war and the unmanageable copiousness of its verbal
and visual residue, all the revisitor of this imagery can do, turning
now this way, now that, is to indicate a few components of the
scene. And despite the preponderance of vileness, not all are vile.”
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The Bomber War: Arthur Harris and the Allied Bomber Offensive
1939-1945 by Robin Niellands
A “fair and balanced” history of the Allied bombing campaigns during
World War 2. A book similar to The Most Dangerous Enemy: A History of
the Battle of Britain by Stephen Bungay.
Niellands doesn’t make any excuses for the Allied bombing. As he
writes, there was a war on. And it is worth remembering that area
bombing of civilians was initiated by the Germans, in Guernica,
Warzaw, Coventry, and London. But the futility and horror of the
bombing still remains. The point is not that area bombing was
immoral. The war was immoral. But it still had to be fought.
Arthur Harris and his Command fought and died for the right of others
to vilify their memory.
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The First World War by John Keegan
A history of WWI.
The opening and closing chapters are eloquent in their condemnation of this horrible conflict, the defining event of the twentieth century. But the intervening ones are dry history, failing to convey the horror of the fighting.
For a novelist’s view of the war, read Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks.
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Piece of Cake by Derek Robinson.
A brilliant book about fighter pilots in France and England in the beginning of World War 2.
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Eastern Standard Tribe by Cory Doctorow.
20 years in the future, IRC pals from the same timezones help each
other out to try to further their Tribes way of life — easygoing PST,
hard-hitting EST, and stodgy, state-loving GMT. Each Tribe has agents
in the other’s territory, working in management consultancies, trying
to undermine the enemy’s competitiveness with hare-brained theories.
When our hero comes up with a great P2P scheme his friend and lover
conspire to put him away in a mental hospital so that they don’t have
to share the profits.
Not as far “out there” as Down and out in the Magic
Kingdom by the same author, but still a great
read. Especially since it’s free.
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Goshawk Squadron by Derek Robinson.
This is Robinson’s first book about war in the air. The
dogfighting over France in 1918 is presented as just as
bad as the fighting in the trenches. Powerful stuff.
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The Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien.
Re-reading this for the n-th time. The final episode of
the film trilogy inspired me. I was pleased to find out
that my internal movie was still the same. I was also
impressed that Jackson was so faithful to the book.
Too bad the Swedish translation is so flawed. I would
really like Leo to read this. He’s old enough but his
English’s not good enough for the original. Viking will
be old enough when the new translation is ready.
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