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Olympos

By Dan Simmons.
Begun 04 July 2009; finished 12 July.
Review written 14 July 2009.

Ilium, Dan Simmons’ science fiction adaptation of Homer’s Iliad, ended with the scholic Hockenberry’s successful turning of the Greeks and Trojans against the gods on Mount Olympus, and Earth’s posthumans’ epiphany of their collective history and existence. Nevertheless, Ilium had only started to uncover the greater truths, and there were still many puzzles that have not been resolved yet. Olympos is the novel that promises to bring all the storylines together and reveal all the mysteries — and it does, albeit in a byzantine and flawed manner.

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Stardust

By Neil Gaiman.
Begun 15 June 2009; finished 22 June.
Review written 14 July 2009.

Neil Gaiman is good at writing timeless stories where there is no sense of time and and historical place, but the story could take place at any time you can imagine. That’s the quality of the Sandman graphic novels, and also Stardust. Gaiman’s fairy tale of a young man from a village who goes on a quest into Faery to bring back a fallen star for his beau — but discovers that desires and sentiments change, and he is destined for more than just a simple village life.

A fine fairy tale, mixing elements of various mythologies, and with a characteristically Gaiman ending — ambivalent, realist, and neither tragic or happily ever after. A good story, but like all of Gaiman’s other works, impersonal and a bit detached. I’ve never been able to warm to Gaiman’s stories or characters, and he’s never invited me to. So far I remain appreciative but indifferent to his writing.

I also had a chance to look at the graphic novel of Stardust, illustrated by Charles Vess. (It’s actually the novel with copious illustrations.) Vess’ artistic style doesn’t capture me, but it is colourful, intricate and fairy-like, and appropriate for the story. I also saw snatches of the movie adaptation, and whilst I can understand the movie’s very different ending, I prefer the novel’s ending much more.

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Being, Majestrum and The Spiral Labyrinth.
By Matthew Hughes.
Begun 29 May 2009; finished 13 June.
For ‘10 Books From My Library’ reading challenge.
Review written 14 July 2009.

If you like the wit and humour of Charles Dickens or Terry Pratchett, an anachronistic “gaslight romance”-esque setting where technology and magic clash and meld together, and light-hearted, optimistic detective stories, Matthew Hughes’ tales of Henghis Hapthorn will surely appeal to you. These stories are set in a very distant future that could well be fantastical, in an age where Reason, or “linear rationalism”, and its attendant technologies prevail. But the forces of Magic, or “sympathetic association”, are on the rise in this universe, and they intrude prematurely into the life of Henghis Hapthorn, Old Earth’s foremost freelance detective. Hapthorn’s sensible, orderly and logical life is thrown out of kilter when his integrator (an A.I. or computer) transforms into a small fruit-eating mammal, and the intuitive part of his psyche takes on a persona of its own, essentially becoming a separate person but sharing the same body. The two novels of Majestrum and The Spiral Labyrinth follow Hapthorn as he struggles to cope with this (to him) infuriating situation, all the while tackling two mysterious cases which ultimately bring him to the chaotic interface of Reason and Intuition/Magic.

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By Sean McMullen.
Begun 22 May 2009; finished 29 May.

I had the misfortune of reading Sean McMullen’s Greatwinter trilogy out of order — The Miocene Arrow before Souls in the Great Machine — and have finally read Eyes of the Calculor almost 3 years late, when I’d forgotten much of the previous two books. But memories began to come back, and I was able to recall the backstories to some degree and understand the entire series as a whole. As these novels run together with little pause, I recommend that you don’t do as I did, and instead read the series in quick succession before you forget the details (of which there are many).

The Greatwinter trilogy is about a future-Earth where the human race, after a series of apocalyptic catastrophes followed by a long “dark age”, has rebuilt into a agrarian, semi-technological civilization. It is a saga spanning continents, cultures and numerous characters, and could be best described as a future-Earth geopolitical epic.

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Zoe’s Tale

By John Scalzi.
Begun 16 May 2009; finished 21 May.

Zoe’s Tale complements The Last Colony (complete Scalzi review), as a retelling of the same events of the earlier novel from the point of view of Zoë Boutin-Perry, the adopted daughter of John and Jane Perry. Whilst it is essentially the same story of the human colony colonizing the new planet of Roanoke amidst astro-political upheaval and warring between the human Colonial Union and the alien Conclave, it is narrated in Zoë’s distinct voice, provides a new perspective on the same events, and fills in some gaps that weren’t dealt with in The Last Colony.

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By Harold Rhenisch.
Begun 13 May 2009; finished 16 May.
For ‘10 Books From My Library’ reading challenge.

“The robins have an advantage over the cats: they see the whole scene … all at once. For them, there is only the flock. The individual robin itself — the bird that sees — is the only point of absence in the world: it is the other robins that are present. This kind of Stalinist social organization drives the predatory cats wild, for they are obsessed with presence, with strong borders mapped between the self and everything else. They are the great, Romantic individualists.” (p. 19)

“Geese are the border guards between Hungary and Austria in 1973. Their heads are full of maps about who lives where, what stamp they need on their visas, the countries you’d rather they didn’t live in, the countries you’d rather you didn’t live in. … The geese come in like Flying Fortresses on a bombing run over Hamburg. One particularly persistent pair has chosen the north shore of our lake. These two are the kind of geese who wear matching leather jackets from his amateur bowling league: she sits close to him, in the centre seat of the pickup, and his driving is not exactly straight. They have been coming in for years now — a big gander and his more dimunitive goose. He takes a 44 chest. He played football in high school. She’s a size 6 petite. In all this time … they have never raised a gosling on the lake. That’s a pretty impressive record.” (p. 61-62)

“The whole reason for the kafuffle was that the otters had shown up. Otters are the RCMP [Royal Canadian Mounted Police]. They are not birds. They don’t have a sense of humour.” (p. 76)

“The cranes return in the fall, when the air vibrates like a glass of red wine, a rounded mouthful of music in tones of copper and wool died with onionskins, chrysanthemums, and black currants. After the first frosts, the yellow leaves are streaming off the poplars so rapidly it sems they will never stop — as if in their shifting, musical rustle the tree is generating leaves as quickly as it casts them off. A thin skin of ice lays up in the bay, along and among the reeds. … When I hear the cries of the sandhill cranes today I am no longer standing in space, with evanescent gusts of time blowing over me, but am standing in time. It is a solid country. It is space that is a thin veil of cobwebs blowing in a cold October wind now, a thousand little tents of frost in the morning grass, vanishing as the day rises.” (p. 187-188)

“Suddenly [the owl] was there, in a tall dead aspen above the bulrushes. The moon floated behind her shoulder, huge and cold, rimmed by tiny prisms of broken light. The owl watched me without blinking and all time vanished. She stared at me for a million years.” (p. 209)

…And I can keep quoting luminous, entrancing prose from this luminous, entrancing book by Harold Rhenisch. Read the rest of this entry »

By R.C. Sproul.
Begun 10 May 2009; finished 13 May.

I learnt of The Truth of the Cross when Christian blogger Bill Muehlenberg reviewed it favourably on his blog. This small book by theologian R.C. Sproul discusses the supreme significance of Jesus’ death on the Cross. As a Christian who is well-versed in the Bible but has little training in theology, I understand Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection on a personal level, but wanted a greater understanding of its theological implications. Indeed, the subject of the Cross is so important, that I decided to buy this book for keeps and lending to friends.

The Truth of the Cross may be small and more of an introductory text, but I can tell it has a deep theological foundation. Sproul covers all areas regarding the significance of Jesus’ death: the significance of sin and why a sacrifice is required; the legal and judicial meaning of man’s sinfulness in relation to God; the “wrath of God” being his righteous judgement over sin; the meaning of expiation and propitiation; how Christ’s death — and crucifixion in particular — was itself a legal and judicial act that was sufficient atonement of judgement; and also touches on how Christ’s death is interpreted in the Calvinist vs. Arminist question of of predestination.

All heavy-duty theology, but Sproul distills it into a readable and accessible form, using many examples and analogies to illustrate the meanings. His explanation of expiation and propitiation was particularly timely: I’d heard of both theological terms but didn’t understand them until now. I definitely learnt a lot from this little book — whilst I’m familiar with the significance of the crucifixion to me as an individual, this book showed me how Jesus’ death has a larger “global” sigificance. Indeed, Jesus’ death is exceedingly important on so many levels both theological and practical.

My only complaint about this book is that it was very short, and didn’t have footnotes/references, even though Sproul often quoted Scripture and other theologians. I definitely want to read more comprehensively about the significance of Christ’s death and resurrection, and would’ve appreciated a guide to weightier works. However, I must thank Sproul for writing an accessible book that educated me in the first place. This book is an excellent starting point for Christians who have no theological background, to gain understanding of the most significant event in history, and learn about why the Cross is so fundamentally important to the faith. I urge all Christians to read The Truth of the Cross, and recommend it to any interested reader as a good starting point. We need to fully understand the foundations of what we believe! and this book is a good stepping stone to greater understanding.

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By Ursula K. Le Guin.
Begun 09 May 2009; finished 11 May.
For ‘10 Books From My Library’ reading challenge.

I’ve come to the conclusion that Ursula Le Guin’s short stories (also her novels, but especially short stories) need to be read slowly, ruminated, pondered and mulled over. Reading A Fisherman of the Inland Sea at my usual speed — and thinking about it on the fly — nearly caused my brain to implode. Like munching on peppercorns. No-oo. Must take time, chew each paragraph thoroughly, taste all the implications, roll the ideas around in my mind prior to internalizing their consequences. That’s the best (safest?) way to read a Le Guin short story.

So I can only give you an overview of this collection of short stories right now, as I haven’t fully digested it yet. There are seven stories in A Fisherman of the Inland Sea, all fantastical and speculative. Read the rest of this entry »

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