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Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 31, 2023 6:41:07 GMT -5
War of the Worlds by HG Wells This was my first time reading this actual book... of course, like most people, I'm well aware of the story and have seen it in other media. It's funny how the radio play and subsequent stuff doesn't actually resemble the book at all. The book is a first person account of a (very small scale) invasion from Mars. While the Tri-pods are there, there's only a few of them, and they actually build them after the land. Most of the book is the main character (who never names himself unless I missed it.. perhaps intended to be Wells himself?) scampering through the countryside and hiding... where he encounters a couple (but very few) other people. The tri-pods are far from invincible (in fact, one actually gets taken out) and it feels more like the British response to them was rather incompetent rather than the aliens being so awesome. He did offers a couple interesting bits (wrong, but interesting). He opined that evolution would eventually make it so we just needed hands and a big brain... or tentacles, as the Martians had. I guess crabs are about to take over? He also made an big thing about the Martians not having wheels at all, as if the wheel was a bad thing. He talked about the Tri-Pods being more an imitation of nature... not sure the sentiment caught on. But hey, I love me a good Martian invasion, and this was the very first one!
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on Aug 2, 2023 10:04:42 GMT -5
One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Time by Craig Brown. Since the 1980s, the number of books published about The Beatles seems to have grown exponentially year on year. If you're an obsessive, know-it-all fan of the band, like I am, you kinda wonder how much there is left to say about the Fab Four? I mean, after so many books – and particularly such landmark works as Philip Norman's Shout!, Ian MacDonald's Revolution in the Head, and Mark Lewisohn's The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions and All These Years, to name just four – how much more is there really to say? Turns out, the answer to that is, "more than you think." Craig Brown is very much interested in looking at the stories behind the main Beatles story that we've heard time and again. This is a book packed with the odd little anecdotes that haven't really been told before (or, at least, have only been seldomly told). It's made up of 150 self-contained stand-alone chapters, each providing insight into an array of supporting cast members to the Beatles' story whose only thing in common is their brushes with the Fab Four. Perhaps surprisingly, this method allows Brown to illuminate the bigger picture of The Beatles' tale in a quite wonderful and rather original way. We get chapters on such diverse people as actor Kenneth Williams, Richard and Margaret Asher (mother and father of Paul McCartney's '60s girlfriend Jane Asher), former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, playwright Joe Orton, German communist Walter Ulbricht and many more. I think for me, the most affecting and eye-opening chapters were the ones each dealing with Jimmie Nicol, Eric Clague, and Melanie Coe. Nicol was a surrogate Beatle who filled in for Ringo on drums for 10 days in 1964, while Starr was having his tonsils out, and whose life afterwards went totally off the rails; Clague was the off-duty policeman who ran over and killed John Lennon's mother Julia while drunk in 1958 and who later became a postman whose round took him back to Menlove Avenue in Liverpool – the sight of the accident – where he had to deliver bags of fan mail addressed to the son of the woman he'd killed; Coe was the young runaway girl whose story in the Daily Mirror inspired McCartney to write the song "She's Leaving Home" in 1967, but who, coincidentally, had actually met the musician three years earlier when he chose her as the winner of a dance contest on ITV's seminal pop program Ready Steady Go! (something that Macca would have been entirely unaware of when he wrote the song). Overall, this is a well written, light read, and Brown has a nicely satirical bent to his writing. His grasp of the era and the quirks of the story make this old familiar tale of the world's most famous band zing with a new freshness. It's not an essential Beatles book at all, but it is an enjoyable one for those of us who already know the basic events and maybe want to gaze through the cracks and learn more about the stories behind the story.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 2, 2023 14:35:23 GMT -5
Station ElevenEmily St. John Mandel, 2014 I recently watched the TV series that’s based on this novel, and I liked it so much that I really wanted to read the source material. The basic story in both the book and the show is that most of the planet’s population is killed by an extremely virulent strain of swine flu that has an incubation period of only a few hours. The book begins on the night of the outbreak in North America during a production of King Lear in Toronto (Chicago in the TV show) starring a famous movie star who dies of a heart attack on stage during Act IV. The narrative shifts from the period on and around that day and that event and roughly 20 years in the future, with flashbacks to much earlier periods. The focus is on several characters, including the aforementioned actor, two of his ex-wives (esp. the first one) and a girl/woman named Kirsten, who was a child actress with a small role in that play and who later becomes a member of a traveling theatrical and musical group that performs music and Shakespeare plays for the remnants of humanity living in communities around Lake Michigan. The book’s title, by the way, is also the name of a limited print-run SF comic book that was created by the actor’s first ex-wife – and Kirsten has two issues of it that she has kept with her as prized possessions for all of the years after the pandemic. There are so many plot threads and themes that it would take more than a full page to summarize it adequately, so I’ll just say that this is a real page-turner, every bit as good as the TV show – although the stories diverge significantly in several essential aspects.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on Aug 4, 2023 11:23:58 GMT -5
Egyptomania: Our Three Thousand Year Obsession with the Land of the Pharaohs by Bob Brier. Professor Bob Brier is an American Egyptologist of some repute and is probably best known for having mummified a modern cadaver in the traditional ancient Egyptian manner – earning him the nickname of "Mr. Mummy" – and for his theory that Tutankhamun was murdered in a palace coup. Though he has authored many scholarly books and magazine articles on ancient Egypt, 2013's Egyptomania is an entertaining and accessible look at how the West has been romanced and captivated by the Egyptian civilisation throughout the years. It traces Egyptomania from the Greek tourist Herodotus, who visited the Nile area in about 445 BC (by which time Egyptian civilisation was already ancient) and brought back to Greece the idea that Egypt was the source of much of their culture, causing a sensation which Brier sees as an early manifestation of Egyptomania. From there, we get chapters on Napoleon's attempt to conquer the land of the Pharaohs (accompanied by a team of scholars and academics, which resulted in the monumental French reference work, Description de l'Égypte), the moving of obelisks from Luxor, Alexandria and Heliopolis to Paris, London and New York in the late 19th century, and the wave of 20th century Egyptomania brought on by the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb in 1922, which resulted in a still ongoing parade of songs, films, household items and knickknacks of all kinds to cash in on our enduring interest in all things Egyptological. Throughout the book, Brier attempts to pinpoint exactly what it is about Ancient Egypt that has fascinated us in the West for over 2,000 years. Why is it that children still beg to be taken to the Egyptian sections of museums, but never ask to see exhibits about the ancient Greeks or Mayans? Brier believes it is a combination of the romantic desert locale, the distance of thousands of years providing an ideal setting for a fantasyland in which to escape our modern lives, and the way in which the ancient Egyptians seem to have cheated death through the process of mummification and the enduring presence of their stone monuments. Brier, himself, is the owner of a large collection of Egyptomania items from across popular culture and the book contains gorgeous colour plates of many of his pieces. He's a good writer too, with an entertaining and easy to read style, which makes this a breeze to get through. One criticism would be that his account of the moving of an obelisk from Alexandria to New York's Central Park in 1881 is given far more space than it probably deserves and causes the book to drag slightly at this point. Nevertheless, this is a fun popular history book, aimed squarely at the general public, rather than a more academic audience. So, if you're at all interested in the ways in which ancient Egypt has been misunderstood, appropriated and exploited by the West, this book does an excellent job of illustrating the history of how Egyptian fever seduced the world.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 4, 2023 12:06:31 GMT -5
Haven't read that, but I loved Bob Brier's videos. Thanks for mentioning them here a few years back, Confessor !
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on Aug 4, 2023 18:19:42 GMT -5
Haven't read that, but I loved Bob Brier videos. Thanks for mentioning them here a few years back, Confessor! Yeah, I'm glad you liked them. He's a tremendous lecturer: very easy to watch, listen to and absorb information from. I've actually started re-watching his Great Courses series of lectures on Ancient Egypt on YouTube again from the start (currently up to lecture 18 out of 48). It's just so watchable. Here's episode 1 if anybody else wants to give the series a try...
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Post by wildfire2099 on Aug 4, 2023 22:08:20 GMT -5
Tress of the Emerald Sea by Brandon Sanderson
I feel like I should like Brandon Sanderson. He's the guy that writes good fantasy/sci-fi novels, right? He actually writes them, and doesn't stop near the end and annoy you for the rest of your life.
Somehow though, I just don't... Mistborn didn't impress me that much... Elantris was ok. I'm reading this for book club, and I've figured it out. Brandon Sanderson doesn't exist.. he's an AI. How else do you explain it? This book is exactly what would come out if you told an AI to write a novel gender swapping the main characters of the Princess Bride and make it less fantasy and more Sci Fi. There are some bits were he even tries (unsucessfully) to channel Terry Pratchett. Then of course he pretended to be Robert Jordan. And the Steelhart books could easily be 'write a modern Young Adult story in the style of Stan Lee'
It's not that this is a bad book.. it's quite fun actually. it's an excellent homage/swipe of Princess Bride... apparently there's a bit of a connection to other stuff he's written too, which I'm sure is great fun for his fans. But the lack of ending (I can't stand it when conflict is resolved that way), definitely took alot of points off.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 6, 2023 10:38:29 GMT -5
The Making of an African Legend: The Biafra StoryFrederick Forsyth, 1977 I’ve been interested in reading this for quite some time now, and was pleasantly surprised to find it recently in a local library’s giveaway box (just after I had coincidentally checked out another book on the same topic). This is a slightly updated version (it has a new prologue, epilogue and a few updated chapters) of The Biafra Story, originally published in late 1969, making it Forsyth’s first published book. It’s based on his reporting on the Nigeria/Biafra in the late 1960s, first as a BCC correspondent and then as a freelance journalist. Forsyth provides a pretty good overview of Nigerian colonial history and, especially, a rundown of the events in 1966 that eventually led to the Biafran secession in 1967. The subsequent individual chapters contain a pretty detailed account of wartime operations, several rounds of abortive peace talks and international aid efforts. What makes this book quite interesting is that Forsyth makes no claim to provide an unbiased account: he’s very pro-Biafra, and he’s unsparing in his criticism of the British government in particular (which claimed neutrality through most of the conflict but was secretly selling arms to the Nigerian central government the entire time) but also other international actors – so the US State Department gets its own share of invective, as one would expect. There are, however, some problematic aspects. Personally, although I share Forsyth’s admiration for the Igbo people (the majority of Biafra’s population), I found his need to compliment them by putting down pretty much everyone else in Africa rather offputting (e.g. at one point, he says of them: “Rarely among Africans, they have a gift of unceasing hard work.”). Despite that, and the fact that there are now many more authoritative books and memoirs on the Biafran war (also known as the Nigerian civil war), Forsyth’s book still makes for interesting reading.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 8, 2023 9:44:59 GMT -5
Another Fine Myth by Robert Lynn Asprin
I was a long time member of the Science Fiction Book Club for two reasons. One was hardcover copies of SF classics. The other were their amazing omnibus books that gave to three or four books in a series in nice hardcover collection. One of those big books collected the first four books of Asprin's Myth series. I found them funny and endearing and just subversive enough of general fantasy to be interesting. Ultimately I tapped out at about book nine as my interests shifted. So I haven't read one of these in over thirty years. But I was looking for something humorous and decided to see how the first volume held up. Skeeve is a magicians apprentice who isn't really going great guns. His plans are to use his learned powers to help him become a thief. But all plans are put on hold when when his master is killed by an assassin's crossbow bolt and Skeeve is stuck with a demon (dimensional traveler) who has lost his magic powers and thrust in to a quest to stop the insane magician Istvan who is planning to take over the various dimensions. Along the way they're joined by a gullible demon-hunter and a Trollop. And while that all sounds pretty standard fantasy fair, it's just askew enough to keep it funny and interesting. Where Asprin really shines is in his character development. You get to know and care about Skeeve and Aahz and he imbues them with personalities and motives that make this more than a punny pastiche or a cookie cutter fantasy.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 10, 2023 13:47:36 GMT -5
High Sierra by W.R. Burnett
I'm can't pinpoint exactly when I first watched the film version of High Sierra, starring Humphrey Bogart and Ida Lupino and directed by Raoul Walsh. It was probably on the late show on TV when I was in junior high. I've seen it a number of times since because, Humphrey Bogart. What I had never done, until now is read Bunbett's novel. Burnett was probably equally well known as a screenwriter as he was a novelist. He frequently adapted his own work including Little Caesar, uncredited work on the adaptation of The Asphalt Jungle and co-scripting High Sierra with the great John Huston. If you've seen the movie you're going to already know the book. Burnett and Huston followed it very closely. The biggest changes are in the ending, which still rings true in the film but is a tad more Hollywood. Bank robber and Dillinger confederate Roy Earle has been sprung from prison on a paid for pardon in order to head up a robbery at a fashionable resort hotel in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. On the way he meets an older gentleman and lady from the Midwest traveling with their lovely granddaughter who suffers from a clubfoot. This constitutes a fairly important sub-plot. The other members of the group are all small-timers and one has brought along Marie, a dime-a-dance girl from L.A. Of course she causes dissension and the inexperience of the other three, in particular the "inside man" at the hotel cause the job to go awry. This is one of those instances were the book and the movie are extremely similar and since I watched the film first (and a number of times at that) I can't help but see Bogie and Ida Lupino as Earle and Marie, Henry Travers as Pa, etc. Whether you've seen the film or not, this is a very solid crime novel from a writer who probably isn't as well remembered as a novelist as he should be.
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Post by berkley on Aug 10, 2023 14:54:26 GMT -5
I can pinpoint when and where I saw this one: the autumn of 1980, when CBC was doing late-night movies with a different theme each week and this week it was Bogart. I remember they also showed They Drive by Night, another good one, and Treasure of the Sierra Madre. Can't recall the 4th but I'm pretty sure it wasn't Casablanca because I remember feeling surprised they skipped that one. It might have been the Maltese Falcon - I've seen that one so many times I can't recall now. The reason I can pin it down so certainly is that it was my first time going away to university and I stayed in those particular lodgings only that one term. I remember especially enjoying High Sierra and They Drive by Night (also with Ida Lupino, as it happens), because I had never heard of either one of them before. Or Ida Lupino, for matter, who has been a favourite ever since.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 10, 2023 15:01:05 GMT -5
I can pinpoint when and where I saw this one: the autumn of 1980, when CBC was doing late-night movies with a different theme each week and this week it was Bogart. I remember they also showed They Drive by Night, another good one, and Treasure of the Sierra Madre. Can't recall the 4th but I'm pretty sure it wasn't Casablanca because I remember feeling surprised they skipped that one. It might have been the Maltese Falcon - I've seen that one so many times I can't recall now. The reason I can pin it down so certainly is that it was my first time going away to university and I stayed in those particular lodgings only that one term. I remember especially enjoying High Sierra and They Drive by Night (also with Ida Lupino, as it happens), because I had never heard of either one of them before. Or Ida Lupino, for matter, who has been a favourite ever since. I absolutely adore Ida Lupino, who was an accomplished actress a very good director and just absolutely lovely.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Aug 13, 2023 8:17:28 GMT -5
Fall of the White Ship Avatar Brian Daley
You might think it odd the the cover of a book that sounds like space opera has the two main characters on horseback on it.. but that's entirely accurate.
Despite what the summary says, about 1/2 of this book is spend in the woods of a planet where our heros meet up with a herd of sentient Buffaloes and have to convince them to help them get back to civilization. Unfortunately, it's not nearly as interesting as it sounds.
Perhaps I would have likely this book more had a realized when I got it it was the 3rd book of a trilogy, but I'm not sure that would have helped. The characters are both pretty boring... Alacrity sort of resembles Han Solo a bit, but really only in the sense of the space pilot rogue trope, and the fact that Brian Daley is writing. Hobart get no character development at all of his own... perhaps he did in the previous books. Definitely not good enough to want to find the others of the series.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Aug 13, 2023 13:05:20 GMT -5
There Was a Country. A Personal History of BiafraChinua Achebe, 2012 Far more than Frederick Forsyth’s book on the same topic (reviewed above, just scroll up a bit), I’ve been interested in reading this one ever it had been published because a) Achebe is a favorite author of mine (I love his novels), and b) he was a front-row witness to and even participant in the events of the Biafra secession and war in Nigeria. So while recounting many of the general events of the time, he also recounts his personal travails, because as an Igbo (the largest ethnic/national group in Biafra) he and his family had to flee from Lagos, the Nigerian capital at the time, in west, where they were living at the time, to the east, where Biafra was. He also briefly served as an envoy, traveling to other African countries as well as Europe and US to advocate on behalf of the new country. Achebe provides a great deal of insight into the internal politics and social relations in Nigeria during the 1960s in the lead-up to the Biafran secession, as well as considerable details on the policies of both the Nigerian federal government and the Biafran leadership during and just after the war. In particular, I found his views of the Biafran leader, Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, far more nuanced and critical than Forsyth’s, who really lionized him, and later wrote a biography about him. (An interesting detail, that Achebe does not make much of, is that his older sister was Ojukwu's first wife - they had already divorced by the time of the events recounted in this book). Also, his conclusions, writing with 40 years of hindsight, are quite depressing, as he notes that in many ways things only got worse in Nigeria: the country is still dealing with sharp ethnic divisions and corruption is so rife as to almost be comical. This is a very informative, sobering and above all worthwhile book.
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Post by berkley on Aug 14, 2023 21:35:52 GMT -5
Transplanted from the Meanwhile Thread: While we're on the subject, is there a single-volume history of the Mafia that you recommend? The ones I've come across in bookstores all seem to get less than unqualified praise when I look them up.
Honestly, no...not in my opinion. The best single volume is probably still Selwyn Raab's "Five Families." It's not without its problems and definitely spends way too much time on the history post-Apalachin versus the earlier time period. But as far as I can tell it's still the best. In that case, is it better to go with specific books for specific aspects or periods of Mafia history? And if so, which do you like? I saw one a while back on the history of Canadian organised crime that I wish I'd picked up at the time - because I no longer recall the title or author and I don't seem to have added it to the list of books to look for that I keep on my computer at home. But there probably aren't all that many published histories of that particular subject so maybe'll I'll be able to figure it out with a bit of searching.
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