Tuesday 30 October 2012

Post Captain by Patrick O'Brian

Started: 16 Oct. 2012
Finished: 26 Oct. 2012
Pages:496

You do know Patrick O'Brian don't you?  The pull quote on the cover reads "The best historical novels ever written".   I suppose Hillary Mantel might quibble, but the quote dates from long before Wolf Hall or even Sandra Gulland's The Many Lives and Secret Sorrows of Josephine B, so we can allow The New York Times to be a little more definitive than later writers might choose to be.

This is book 2 of a 20 book series set during the Napoleonic Wars.  They're widely praised as the best naval adventures ever written, not the least because although our hero Jack Aubrey and his physician friend Stephen Maturin are entirely fictional, every battle is based on a real encounter as recorded in British naval records. And the battles are thrilling, even if your average reader can't understand the fine points of sailing and all the many details of ship's rigging that you encounter in a blow by blow account of battle.

But that's not what makes the books great.  You watch Jack being forced to dodge tipstaffs to prevent being thrown into debtor's prison.  You ride beside Stephen and Jack as they choose to overnight at an inn rather than travel roads plagued by out of work soldiers who've turned to highway robbery.   You read the letters rapidly dictated by a naval official resisting entreaties for ship assignments or promotions made by various nobles for their relatives and proteges.

O'Brian published the Aubrey and Maturin novels in the 1970s and 80s, but he makes you feel that he lived at the turn of the 19th century.  And that he's bringing you along for the ride.



Sunday 21 October 2012

Monster by A. Lee Martinez

Started: Oct. 12, 2012
Finished: Oct. 15
Pages: 325

Monster is the kind of book that Tooth and Claw is not: it's funny, satirical, and exists both to make you laugh, and to make you laugh *at*.  What you're laughing *at* is mostly just everyday life.  It's the kind of book where the annoyance that disrupts your overnight shift stocking shelves at the supermarket isn't aggravating coworkers or a broken freezer....but yetis gorging on ice cream.  And the solution is calling the authorities, but the person who shows up to deal with the problem has received thaumaturgy training at the Community college.  Which would surprise you a lot more if your memory of magical events didn't get confusingly vague just moments after the yetis are removed or your apartment is destroyed by trolls.

Amusing, with no threat of profundity.

Sunday 14 October 2012

Tea from an Empty Cup by Pat Cadigan

Started: Oct. 4, 2012
Finished: Oct. 10, 2012
Pages: 254

Remember Omni Magazine?  It doesn't surprise me that Tea from an Empty Cup originated from an Omni short story:  the novel was published in 1998, but it has that early 90s cyber-punk feel.  It also doesn't feel as dated as some books written in that era, maybe because the "alternative reality" cyber-technology is neither as ubiquitous nor as "taken for granted" as it is in some books from the era.  The cyber-world is basically just an incredibly immersive MMORPG, rather than a replacement for every-day reality, and the viewpoint characters are themselves only marginally familiar with it, entering only to investigate a crime / friend's disappearance.  That makes the book still compatible with today's future:  you can imagine that we'll still invent such a thing even if we no longer talk about "virtual reality" or see booths with dorky eyeshade headsets at the fair.

Tooth and Claw by Jo Walton

Started: 24 Sept 2012
Finished: 3 Oct 2012
Pages: 292

Tooth and Claw is "Jane Austen with dragons".  No, not a pastiche of classic fiction, like "Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters" or "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies"   Tooth and Claw is a mannered romantic tale where all of the parts are played by dragons.

Books like this are generally a part of a separate sub-genre of fantasy/speculative fiction.  Depending on its tone,  you'd expect Tooth and Claw's readers to be either people who will read anything and everything about vampires or dragons or zombies or <insert favourite trope here>,  or, if the tone is arch rather than twee, to be people who enjoy satire.

But Tooth and Claw is simply a well-written regency-style romance that explores an interesting idea or two about what kind of society might be established by dragons, and what kind of role might be played by women (dragons) within that society.  It won the World Fantasy Award in 2004, which gives you an idea that the writing and plotting are well above average.

I'd previously read two of Walton's later books:  Farthing and Half-penny.  Be warned.  In the same way that a reader of To Say Nothing of the Dog might be surprised by the Domesday Book, a reader of Tooth and Claw might be a little taken aback by some of her later work.  Farthing and Half-penny take place in an alternative history where British fascists gain the ascendancy and Britain abstains from the Second World War.   The first book (Farthing) perfectly captured the zeitgeist of George Bush's America....a world in which certainties about logic, justice, and decency are heartbreakingly false.  Recommended, but not exactly something to curl up with with a cup of tea and a cat -- unlike Tooth and Claw.



Monday 1 October 2012

The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

Started: Sept. 8th
Finished: Sept. 24, 2012
Pages:544

This is what the future looks like.

Sea levels have risen.  Bangkok is protected from the ocean by huge dikes and pumps.   Whole forests of sacred trees stand as haunted lumber, and the appearance of a dragonfruit in the market is as puzzling and awe-inspiring a mystery as the appearance of a unicorn in downtown Vancouver.

Our great-great grandchildren live in a "calorie" economy.   Large machinery is driven by megadonts (genetically engineered elephants), and smaller devices by "kinksprings" that are wound by people or animals because global warming has made the everyday use of carbon-based fuels unthinkable.   But calories are not so easy to come by either:  the food chain has been catastrophically disrupted by genetically engineered accidents or attacks.  And the threat of a newly mutated plague is never far away.

This is another book that took me a long time to read.  It seemed far too vividly probable.  And the cast of characters too desperate, too corrupt, too sinned against, and too sinning to let you identify with any one of them.

I could never have finished it if the book weren't so brilliant.   Or if this were the depths of a dark November.