01 December 2007

Archival Review: Star Wars: Republic Commando: True Colors by Karen Traviss

Mass market paperback, 482 pages
Published 2007
Acquired and read November 2007
Star Wars: Republic Commando: True Colors
by Karen Traviss

The Republic Commando series continues from strength to strength-- I thought the first volume, Hard Contact, was all right, but the second, Triple Zero, was excellent, and though this one is not quite as good as that, it is by no means bad.  It's less focused than the second book, gathering in a number of characters in unrelated situations across the galaxy, which is its biggest flaw, but it does have more rocking commando action.  As always, Traviss's biggest strength is the ability to get inside the heads of her characters.  The viewpoint of each one is strong and distinct, almost overpoweringly so-- you find yourself believing whatever the viewpoint character believes quite often.  It's a different perspective than most other novels-- focusing on Jedi characters-- give us on the Clone Wars, and it's a welcome one, too.  These are a group of clones with a little more awareness of their plight, and that raises some intriguing questions about the morality of the Clone Wars. 

I look forward to the further of adventures of Delta Squad, Omega Squad, the Nulls, and the Cuy'val Dar in Order 66, though I'm bummed out that that has to be a hardcover.  I really must pick up Traviss's original sf someday.

Archival Review: Star Trek: Corps of Engineers: Grand Designs by Dave Galanter, Allyn Gibson, Kevin Killiany, Paul Kupperberg, David Mack, and Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore

Trade paperback, 640 pages
Published 2007 (content: 2004)
Acquired August 2007
Read November 2007
Star Trek: Corps of Engineers: Grand Designs
by Dave Galanter, Allyn Gibson, Kevin Killiany, Paul Kupperberg, David Mack, and Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore

This collection only holds six S.C.E. stories (probably because Kevin Killiany writes so much), but that's all right-- includes three of my favorites.  Ring Around the Sky by Allyn Gibson is a beautiful look into new character Mor glasch Tev, Orphans by Kevin Killiany is a distinctively-written tale featuring Klingon engineers (who have disappointingly not yet returned), and Sargasso Sector by Paul Kupperberg is just plain fun.  And this time around, I enjoyed the other three stories more so than I remember previously, making this quite possibly the best stretch of S.C.E. stories in the series's existence-- the events of Wildfire certainly paid off in spades from a storytelling perspective, as its ramifications inform almost all of the tales in this volume.

Archival Review: Star Trek: Corps of Engineers: Aftermath by Christopher L. Bennett, Loren L. Coleman & Randall N. Bills, Robert Greenberger, Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels, and Aaron Rosenberg

Trade paperback, 640 pages
Published 2006 (content: 2003-04)
Acquired November 2006
Read November 2007
Star Trek: Corps of Engineers: Aftermath
by Christopher L. Bennett, Loren L. Coleman & Randall N. Bills, Robert Greenberger, Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels, and Aaron Rosenberg

This is the first of the rebranded, trade paperback collections of the S.C.E. series, collecting the first eight eBooks following the da Vinci's return to space after the Galvan VI disaster.  As always (am I possibly biased?), the series provided cracking adventures, intriguing dilemmas, and solid character work.  My favorite from this volume is The Demon by Loren L. Coleman and Randall N. Bills, the intense story of a journey deep into a black hole, almost to its event horizon.  What struck me most, reading these all at once for the first time, is the (welcome) increased focus on Soloman in this volume-- Ishtar Rising is all about him, of course, but Buying Time and Collective Hindsight also contain some very good moments for my favorite Bynar, who seems to fall by the wayside a little more often than one might like.

Archival Review: I, Robot: The Illustrated Screenplay by Harlan Ellison with Isaac Asimov

Trade paperback, 288 pages
Published 2004 (originally 1974)
Acquired March 2007
Read November 2007
I, Robot: The Illustrated Screenplay
by Harlan Ellison with Isaac Asimov

This isn't the script of the dreadful Will Smith film from a few years ago, but rather Ellison's 1970s straight adaptation of the Asimov "story-cycle", which never got produced because Ellison doesn't know when it pays to be polite to people.  It's an interesting thought experiment, though-- visually, it would have made a magnificent film, as the gorgeous illustrations show, though it's hard to imagine it satisfactorily being pulled off in the 1970s.  Nowadays, though... 

The adaptation of the chosen short stories is handled quite well-- inserting Calvin into "Robbie" is an obvious but excellent choice; I was surprised but happy to see "Runaround" included, as it's one of the best "Law problem" stories, and the addition of Calvin works; "Liar!" is adapted almost exactly, which makes sense, as it's probably the best Calvin story Asimov ever wrote; and "Lenny" might not actually be in the original book, but its method of inclusion here is inspired.  All in all, it makes for an excellent (and ultimately much more optimistic than Asimov's own) vision of the future of mankind.  The world is clearly not a Asimov one, though, but rather an Ellison one, and though that bothered me at times, it's the nature of adaptations.  If there's any substantial flaw, it's that the frame story is a little too long and involved; not everything that that happens in it is particularly relevant to the story Ellison is trying to tell.  But as for Calvin, Byerley, Powell, Donavan, and the rest, this is the cinematic treatment they deserved.

Archival Review: The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster

Trade paperback, 400 pages
Published 2006 (content: 1985-86)
Acquired January 2007
Read November 2007
The New York Trilogy
by Paul Auster

After a number of quick and easy reads, it was time for something more substantial-- and substantial is what this book has in spades. In a class I took last fall, we read the comic book adaptation of Paul Auster's City of Glass by Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchellil, and having thoroughly enjoyed it, I picked up a (extraordinarily handsome) omnibus edition of the original novel and the other two installments in the series.  There's something about Auster's prose that keeps you reading, even though you have no idea what's happening at times.  Well, that's not fair-- I always knew what was happening, but rarely why, as some pretty dang bizarre things happened.  But I suspect that's not the point.  What links these three pseudo-detective stories together far more than their setting is their ideas-- about identity and about language, primarily, but a lot else, too. (As a side note, I was astounded at how accurate an adaptation the comic book was, despite its length.  Very rarely did I come across anything in the novel that I didn't remember from the comic, and if anything, the excellent art in the comic only added to the effect of the story.)

Archival Review: [nemesis], Volume One: Chapters 1-4 by Greg Holkan

Comic trade paperback, 104 pages
Published 2006
Read November 2007
[nemesis], Volume One: Chapters 1-4
by Greg Holkan

[nemesis] is possibly my favorite webcomic and certainly the one with the best art, but it suffers in its weekly Internet format-- as this collection shows, it's really meant to be read in large, continuous chunks. It's about superheroes; the world it occurs in is basically a combination of ideas from the DC and Marvel universes. But this world's "Superman"-- Mister Zenith-- has been murdered. And in a world where only "numen" can serve as law enforcement officers, it's up to Rick Murphy, the only normal human on the police force, to solve the case. After all, who would want to murder Superman? Holkan's vaguely manga-ish art is excellent, and his writing extraordinary-- he deftly weaves together disparate stories about a number of different characters affected directly and indirectly by the death of Mister Zenith. I will continue to eagerly read this story (usually) every week online, and will certainly buy another collected edition when it comes.

Archival Review: Norby Through Time and Space by Janet and Isaac Asimov

Mass market paperback, 202 pages
Published 1988 (content: 1986-87)
Acquired March 2007
Read November 2007
Norby Through Time and Space
by Janet and Isaac Asimov

This YA series about Norby, the Mixed-Up Robot, was one of my favorite reads as a child, not to mention my introduction to Isaac Asimov (even if Janet actually did do all the writing). Occasionally, I come upon paperback versions in used bookstores that collect two of them together, and I snatch them up instantly. This one collects Norby and the Queen's Necklace (what I remembered as my favorite) and Norby Finds a Villain.

It's excellent YA literature, with a decent breadth of imagination on display in just these two stories. Jeff and Norby and a variety of other characters find themselves in the near future, pre-Revolutionary France, Roman times, prehistoric times, far-future utopias, far-future dystopias, hyperspace, aberrant future versions of Mars, and dangerous alternate realities just within the confines of these two short tales! Norby himself is as fun as ever, and the supporting cast doesn't disappoint. The Queen's Necklace isn't quite as good as I remember (not all of the temporal shenanigans actually work out in the end), but it's solid fun, as is Finds a Villain.

Archival Review: Highcastle: A Remembrance by Stanislaw Lem

Trade paperback, 160 pages
Published 1997 (originally 1966)
Read November 2007
Highcastle: A Remembrance
by Stanislaw Lem

Speaking of Stanislaw Lem, here's the man himself. Not with a sf tale, though, but rather a memoir of his childhood. Lem grew up in Poland during the 1920s and 30s, and he certainly was a precocious child, making this an entertaining read, as he destroys his toys for the sheer fun of it, wanders the parks of his home town, runs afoul of his father, and invents entire worlds for himself in the form of bureaucratic papers. I was disappointed to realize it covered very little from World War II (just a few rumblings and precursors), but as that was undoubtedly set his childhood apart from his adulthood, I can scarcely complain. A quick, enjoyable read, with a few nuggets of insight to boot.

Archival Review: Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino

Trade paperback, 168 pages
Published 1976 (originally 1965)
Acquired December 2006
Read November 2007
Cosmicomics
by Italo Calvino

I first read this in high school, having enjoyed Calvino's Mr. Palomar, and I found this book even more to my liking. Taking a class fall semester where we read If on a winter's night a traveler rekindled my desire to read more Calvino, and I picked up this as well as his Invisible Cities, which I haven't yet gotten around to.

Though I suspect no one would classify this book as science fiction, it reminds me of nothing so much as the robot fables of Stanislaw Lem, as depicted in The Cyberiad and Mortal Engines-- Calvino uses ostensibly scientific jumping-off points to tell stories that, despite usually being about strange creatures from the dawn of the universe, are actually about people and all their quirks and foibles writ large. My favorite in the collection remains "The Light-Years", which I once read aloud in Science Fiction Club, a highly amusing look at the lengths one man takes to preserve his reputation with observers in distant galaxies.

Archival Review: Star Trek: The Next Generation: Before Dishonor by Peter David

Mass market paperback, 352 pages
Published 2007
Acquired and read November 2007
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Before Dishonor
by Peter David

This is the last of this year's installments in the TNG relaunch, and I don't have much to say about it, beyond that it's basically the ultimate Peter David Star Trek book, with all the positives and minuses that that entails these days.

Archival Review: Children of the Lens by E. E. "Doc" Smith

Mass market paperback, 255 pages
Published 1987 (originally 1954)
Acquired March 2007
Read November 2007
Children of the Lens
by E. E. "Doc" Smith

Two-and-a-half years after I began, and here it is at last: the conclusion of E.E. "Doc" Smith's famous Lensman series. What can I say about this book? Not much. While I felt that Gray Lensman was an improvement on Galactic Patrol, and Second Stage Lensmen one on Gray Lensman, this book was not such an increase in quality, mostly thanks to a somewhat muddled storyline-- exactly what was going on that kicked the Patrol and especially the Second (and Third!) Stage Lensmen into high gear? I never quite knew. Still, it was rollicking good fun, with plenty of extravagant weapons, battles, and thrills, and what else does one need from the Doc? Like all books in the series, it ends bigger and better than the one before it (whole planets being flung about as weapons!), and I'm disappointed to finally reach the end.

Archival Review: Doctor Who: Castrovalva: No. 76 in the Doctor Who Library by Christopher H. Bidmead

Mass market paperback, 128 pages
Published 1983
Read November 2007
Doctor Who: Castrovalva: No. 76 in the Doctor Who Library
by Christopher H. Bidmead

When I was first getting into Doctor Who some six or so years ago, my friend Chris loaned me this book, and I read and enjoyed it-- Bidmead remains one of my favorite Doctor Who contributors (both as a writer and a script-editor). I actually held onto Chris's book for quite some time, because it wasn't his; it was a library honor book he'd borrowed as a wee child and never returned. Eventually, I dropped it into our family's return pile-- and a couple weeks later found a copy in the used bookstore! Convinced it was fate, I bought it. Like all Doctor Who novelizations, it's a fairly slight book, but unlike most, it's interesting even if you've seen the television serial. The written word captures Bidmead's ideas much better than a BBC budget ever could, and is all the better for it. The regulars are all well-written (unsurprising, as he created most of them!), and the ideas (the TARDIS caught in Event One, the recursive occlusion, block transfer computation) shine.

Archival Review: The Blithedale Romance by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Mass market paperback, 288 pages
Published 1971 (originally 1852)
Read November 2007
The Blithedale Romance
by Nathaniel Hawthorne

When I read Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter in high school, I hated it. So when the chance came to reread it in ENG 141 last fall, I eagerly passed it up and read Washington Irving's The Sketch Book instead. But I also read three of Hawthorne's short stories ("The Birth-Mark", "Rappacini's Daughter", and "Young Goodman Brown" (a re-read)), and enjoyed them. A lot. So I decided to give another Hawthorne novel a go, and this was the one I picked.

It was all right. Whatever the concentrated Hawthorne of the short stories did for me was not present here. I'm not turned off by his prose style to the extent I was in high school, but I do tend to glaze right over whole pages waiting for something to happen. It started promisingly enough, but halfway through I realized it just wasn't interesting me, as I didn't know exactly what was going on-- but didn't care either. So I finished it dutifully enough, but I already can scarcely tell you anything about but what happened in the book's second half. I'd still like to try some more of his short stories, though.

Archival Review: Foundation's Triumph by David Brin

Mass market paperback, 400 pages
Published 2004 (originally 1999)
Acquired March 2007
Read November 2007
Foundation's Triumph
by David Brin

The final volume of The Second Foundation Trilogy is on par with the second-- it's impossible for me to decide which one is better. Foundation and Chaos was a perfect Asimov story of his early sort (much like the stories of the original novel Foundation), one where characters sit around and talk about things and go through a crisis in a brief amount of time. This is the later sort of typical Asimov story, the travelogue where people sit around and talk about things as they move from destination to destination (like Prelude to Foundation and the two Golan Trevize tales). As a result, the ideas are what have to sell the book, and they do. The Trilogy's themes of Chaos and Renaissance are brought to their culminations, as we finally learn how Daneel kept the Galaxy together for so long-- and how it is finally tearing itself apart. Brin's characterization of the aged Hari Seldon is spot-on (though I didn't much like his Dors), and the idea of him having one last adventure in his old age is too perfect to pass up. Aside from some continuity quibbles (if Hari's psychohistory is modeled on the history of the Empire, how can it be accurate once the giskardian neural dampeners fail?), this book pulls all of Asimov's works (even "Blind Alley"!) together magnificently. 

This was my second time reading it, and once again, I was massively disappointed when Hari failed to jump through the time warp in the end. And I want my followup: the adventures of Mors Planch and Biron Maserd in the far future appeal, as do the hints we get about those times from the Encyclopedia Galactica quotations. And as for the on-line coda... The Foundation series has spent too much time wallowing in the past; it needs to get back into the future again.

Archival Review: Star Wars: Clone Wars Adventures, Volume 9 by the Fillbach Brothers

Comic digest, 80 pages
Published 2007
Acquired October 2007
Read November 2007
Star Wars: Clone Wars Adventures, Volume 9

Writers: the Fillbach Brothers
Art: the Fillbach Brothers
Colorists: Ronda Pattinson, Pamela Rambo, Dan Jackson, Tony Avina
Letterer: Michael Heisler

When this series of short comic stories done in the style of Cartoon Network's Clone Wars cartoons started back in 2004, I was pretty tepid-- how much for a book that small? The first volume, by regular Republic writer Haden Blackman, didn't really impress either. But my determination to gather all literary incarnations of the saga of the Clone Wars demanded I go on, and so I did. Fortunately, the series improved with time, as the writers came to understand the kinds of stories the highly visually stylized art was best suited to tell.

And because of that, some of the best stories have been consistently penned by the Fillbach Brothers, who first began serving on the series as artists. This of course made the prospect of Volume 9, as an all-Fillbach spectacular, highly appealing to me. And fortunately, it did not disappoint. It features four stories of the usual types in this series-- a dialogue-light "giant creature" story, a clone trooper story, a spy story, and battling Jedi story-- and pulls them all off with aplomb. Mindless fun, but superbly done mindless fun. Though it probably took me longer to write this review than it did to read the book.

Reading Roundup Wrapup: November 2007

I quite enjoyed doing this last month (though it certainly took me longer to write than I thought it would!), so I decided to give it another go. In the month of November, I read fifteen books, and this is what they were:

1. Star Wars: Clone Wars Adventures, Volume 9 by the Fillbach Brothers
2. Foundation's Triumph by David Brin
3. The Blithedale Romance by Nathaniel Hawthorne
4. Doctor Who, No. 76: Castrovalva by Christopher H. Bidmead
5. Children of the Lens by E.E. "Doc" Smith
6. Star Trek: The Next Generation: Before Dishonor by Peter David
7. Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino
8. Highcastle: A Remembrance by Stanislaw Lem
9. Norby Through Time and Space by Janet & Isaac Asimov
10. [nemesis], Volume One: Chapters 1-4 by Greg Holkan
11. The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster
12. I, Robot: The Illustrated Screenplay by Harlan Ellison with Isaac Asimov
13. Star Trek: Corps of Engineers: Aftermath by Christopher L. Bennett, Loren L. Coleman & Randall M. Bills, Robert Greenberger, Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels, and Aaron Rosenberg
14. Star Trek: Corps of Engineers: Grand Designs by Dave Galanter, Allyn Gibson, Kevin Killiany, Paul Kupperberg, David Mack, and Dayton Ward & Kevin Dilmore
15. Star Wars: Republic Commando: True Colors by Karen Traviss

Books acquired in the month of November:
1. A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin
2. Star Trek: The Next Generation: Before Dishonor by Peter David
3. Star Wars: Republic Commando: True Colors by Karen Traviss
4. Star Wars Omnibus: Tales of the Jedi, Volume 1 by Kevin J. Anderson and Tom Veitch
5. Jack Kirby's Fourth World Omnibus, Volume Three by Jack Kirby
6. Wisdom: Rudiments of Wisdom by Paul Cornell
7. Star Trek: Titan: Sword of Damocles by Geoffrey Thorne

Books remaining on "To be read" list: 119

03 November 2007

Archival Review: Foundation and Chaos by Greg Bear

Foundation and Chaos
by Greg Bear


I read all of the books in The Second Foundation Trilogy as they came out, but in 2002, I loaned many of my supplementary Asimov books to a "friend" and never got any of them back, aside from Gregory Benford's Foundation's Fear. (I wish I had loaned him William F. Wu's Robots in Time books.) So I've been searching out these gaps in my collection, and I got this one for Christmas 2006.  But acquiring a book means you read it in my worldview, and so this one went on the reading list for another go.  It's an all right book-- like the others in the trilogy, its real success is in sketching out the millieu of Asimov's Robots/Empire/Foundation series more, tying the books together and providing a lot of detail on the politics and organization of the Galactic Empire.  This one also goes through some effort to retcon out some of the stupider bits of Foundation's Fear, like the galactic wormhole network.  But the plot ranges from nonexistent to uninteresting, as everyone is swept up in either psychohistorical forces or R. Daneel Olivaw's machinations.  Which is really par for the course for an Asimov book, isn't it?

Archival Review: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 9 edited by Dean Wesley Smith with Elisa J. Kassin and Paula M. Block

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 9
edited by Dean Wesley Smith
with Elisa J. Kassin and Paula M. Block


I got this book at Shore Leave, back in July 2006, and I finally got around to reading it.  A common theme in this report, I know.  Pretty much on par with previous volumes of the Strange New Worlds series, the standout story was "The Last Tree on Ferenginar: A Ferengi Fable from the Future" by Mike McDevitt, though the one where Reed and Porthos switched bodies ("Rounding a Corner Already Turned" by Allison Cain) was pretty good too.

Archival Review: Sparkling Diplomacy: A Starslip Crisis Collection by Kristofer Straub

Sparkling Diplomacy: A Starslip Crisis Collection
by Kristofer Straub


In this volume, the story really starts to ramp up, with the first inklings of titular crisis coming into play.  This is also the last part of this series of reprints-- before doing a planned third volume, Straub canceled it and replaced it with a new format that included over three times as many strips in a single book, starting from the beginning once again.  And I bought the first volume of this new series, despite the fact that I'd already paid for almost two-thirds of its content-- and I could have gotten all of it for free!  I guess I'm just a sucker like that.

Archival Review: A Terrfying Breach of Protocol: A Starslip Crisis Collection by Kristofer Straub

A Terrifying Breach of Protocol: A Starslip Crisis Collection
by Kristofer Straub


Ask me what my favorite webcomic is, and the answer will probably be Smithson or maybe [nemesis], but of all the daily strips out there, Starslip Crisis is undoubtedly the best.  Always funny, it manages to also have a fantastic over-arching storyline that always keeps you guessing, and a far-out array of characters.  Plus. it's set on an art museum housed inside a luxury warship.  In space.  Even though you can read the whole strip on the web for free, I still shelled out for this collection.  It's that good.

Archival Review: Mystery in Space with Captain Comet, Volume One by Jim Starlin

Mystery in Space with Captain Comet, Volume One

Writer: Jim Starlin
Pencillers: Shane Davis, Jim Starlin
Inkers: Matt "Batt" Banning, Al Milgrom
Colorists: Jeromy Cox, Jim Starlin
Additional Colors: Guy Major
Letterers: Phil Balsman, Rob Leigh, Jared K. Fletcher


Once I was in the comic book store, and I saw this series called Mystery in Space.  No 2007 book can normally have such an awesome title, and it was all I could do to stop myself from buying the whole series on the spot.  I succeeded in self-control by going home and putting the trade paperback collection on preorder. 

Fortunately, the book did indeed turn out to be quite good-- it's exactly what it says on the tin, a mystery story set in space.  Captain Comet is an instantly likeable protagonist (now I am very tempted to seek out his previous adventures) and Hardcore Station is a good setting (good enough that I immediately tracked down the 1998 miniseries of that title and read it too).  The standout character is Tyrone, Comet's bulldog that has been genetically engineered to be sentient-- artist Shane Davis manages the extraordinary feat of giving him discernible facial expressions.  Looking forward to Volume Two.

Archival Review: Star Trek: The Next Generation: Q & A by Keith R.A. DeCandido

Star Trek: The Next Generation: Q & A
by Keith R.A. DeCandido


I honestly didn't really have expectations for this book going in, so I was pleasantly blown away by it.  The best of the (so far) three books in the "TNG relaunch" by a long shot.  Keith, as usual, nails all of the show's regular characters perfectly, and all of the new characters are intriguing in their own rights as well.  I look forward to hearing more from all of them.  As everyone has said, the best part of the novel is Q himself-- Keith gets De Lancie's portrayal down on the page perfectly, a feat that only Peter David has also managed, and he also manages to make a coherent story out of everything that Q has ever done to annoy the Heroes of our various shows.  If there's any flaw, it's that nothing happens for half the book, but I admit I did not even notice this until I was doing a mental recap of the "story so far".  An easy candidate for the best Trek novel of the year.

Archival Review: Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson

Snow Crash
by Neal Stephenson


When taking a class on digital narrative in Fall 2006, I came across a reference to Neal Stephenson's The Diamond Age, which sounding rather intriguing.  But apparently it was set in the same universe as another book, Snow Crash, which occurred earlier, and of course I had to do the whole thing in order.  I acquired Snow Crash as a Christmas present in 2006. 

I enjoyed it.  It has a lot of fascinating concepts (the professor of said course would do well to incorporate it) and good writing to boot, though, I'm not exactly sure why events came to head at the end when they did, but that may have been more my fault than the book's-- I was trying to finish it quickly before it got dark out (I was on a car ride).  The idea I found most fascinating was the whole Sumerian original virus thing-- it reminded me of some of the stuff about "performative speech" I learned about in a course that I took on 'Oscar Wilde' and theatricality, not to mention Paul Auster's City of Glass.  I need to get The Diamond Age now.

Archival Review: The Haunted Bookshop by Christopher Morley

The Haunted Bookshop
by Christopher Morley


Some time ago (at least three-plus years ago), my friend Christopher's Great Aunt Helen passed away.  His mother was going to donate her books to Goodwill, but allowed us to pick over them first.  Pretty much at random, I grabbed Brander Matthews's An Introduction to the Study of American Literature (1896) and Christopher Morley's Parnassus On Wheels (1917)-- original printings both and the two oldest books in my collection.  I never read the former, but the latter (to both my surprise and delight) turned out to be a charming story about what a wonderful thing books were, a sentiment I can whole-heartedly agree with.  I read it in June 2004 and began searching for the sequel, The Haunted Bookshop, shortly thereafter. 

I'm not sure when I finally turned up a 2004 reprinting, but I finally got around to reading it this month.  It was fun, with a number of good lines, including one that sums up my life, I think: "It saddens me to think that I shall have to die with thousands of books unread that would have given me noble and unblemished happiness."  The plot takes half the book to show up, but when it does, you rather wish it would have stayed away, because it's pretty far-fetched (it ends with the titular bookshop exploding!) and it is far more entertaining to read about the gripping ethical dilemmas faced by sellers of secondhand books.

Archival Review: Doctor Who Classics: The Myth Makers / The Gunfighters by Donald Cotton

Doctor Who Classics: The Myth Makers / The Gunfighters
by Donald Cotton


This book is Donald Cotton's novelizations of his two first Doctor historical stories quite literally jammed together-- the page numbering starts over again and everything.  I'd not seen The Myth Makers (of course, as it's a lost episode), and his novelization of it is good fun, having the Doctor reject the idea of the Trojan Horse as being absurd.  It's narrated by Homer himself, and we get to learn how the man became blind.  The Gunfighters I have seen and found dull, but fortunately the novel is a bit more entertaining, though it sort of drags on at the end.  Much like the television serial, really.

Archival Review: Ahistory: An Unauthorized History of the Doctor Who Universe by Lance Parkin with Lars Pearson

Ahistory: An Unauthorized History of the Doctor Who Universe
by Lance Parkin with Lars Pearson


This chronological guide to every Doctor Who episode, novel, and audio drama came out in late 2005, and I acquired it then.  Of course, like one should with a reference book, I dipped in and out it as I wanted to know things, but I also started a straight readthrough when I first got it.  Somewhere along the line, this stopped, but recently, the news of the forthcoming second edition of the book (which will add in the comic strips) caused me to go back to and attempt to finish from where I had left off, in the 1990s.  The future history of Doctor Who actually makes for enjoyable reading; the various random pieces we've seen over the years fit together remarkably well into a coherent whole, showing as Earth rises, is invaded, falls, creates an Empire, falls, joins a Federation, and so on time and again.

Archival Review: Z-Lensman by David A. Kyle

Z-Lensman
by David A. Kyle


I don't think this book was about Nadreck of Palain at all, even by the standards of the first two Second Stage books.  It's a competent enough conclusion to the story, but by this point, I was getting pretty tired of the whole thing.  Kyle does mindless action-adventure all right, but Doc does it much better.  Again, it focuses quite a lot on Cloudd, but I liked him, so that's all right.

Archival Review: Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Sky's the Limit edited by Marco Palmieri

Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Sky's the Limit
edited by Marco Palmieri


For obvious reasons, I briefly paused my reading of the Second Stage trilogy to read this, the collection of short stories released in tribute to Star Trek: The Next Generation's 20th anniversary, which of course includes mine and Michael's own "Meet with Triumph and Disaster" and "Trust Yourself When All Men Doubt You".  Good stuff.  My favorite was probably Christopher L. Bennett's "Friend with the Sparrows".  If you haven't bought a copy yet, you should.

Archival Review: Lensman from Rigel by David A. Kyle

Lensman from Rigel
by David A. Kyle


Last month, I happened to find books two and three of the Second Stage trilogy, which given that The Dragon Lensman was coming closer and closer to the primary position on my list, was rather lucky indeed.  I decided to read all three in one go.  This book was on par with the first (maybe a little less fun)-- and like the first, didn't actually focus on its title character.  Instead of depicting Tregonsee, the inscrutable Rigellian Lensman, it focused on another Kyle creation, "Double D" Cloudd.  And the first half of the book is taken up by a rather interesting plot to fake Tregonsee's death which goes totally nowhere, when he casually reveals to the Galaxies that he's still alive to no real advantage.

Archival Review: The Dragon Lensman by David A. Kyle

The Dragon Lensman
by David A. Kyle


I've been working my way through E.E. "Doc" Smith's Lensman series very slowly, ever since July 2005, and after reading the second-last book, Second Stage Lensmen, I decided to take a side-step and read some related books that occurred in the gap.  These would be Masters of the Vortex, a tale set in the Lensman universe and referencing some of the same character/species (read in July 2006), and The Second Stage Lensman Trilogy, an authorized continuation written in the 1980s.  I acquired this, the first of the series, in October 2006, but only got around to it now.  Rather than write about the main character of Doc's Lensman books, Kimball Kinnison, Kyle opted to write about the three other (alien) second stage Lensman, starting with Worsel the Velantian.  It's a fun book, aping Doc's style satisfactorially, and just as able to deliver on the non-stop action.  Kyle takes the time to update the universe with some post-1930s concepts, such as computers (which works) and women being allowed to do things (which doesn't).  The real failing of the book is that it's not about Worsel at all, but rather a new, Kyle-created character.  Lalla Kallatra is interesting-- but not as interesting as a gigantic evil-fighting dragon.

Reading Roundup Wrapup: October 2007

Here's something I've been meaning to do for a while-- talk about the books I've read of late.  In the month of October, I finished fourteen books, and this is what they were:

All books read:
1. The Dragon Lensman by David A. Kyle
2. Lensman from Rigel by David A. Kyle
3. Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Sky's the Limit edited by Marco Palmieri
4. Z-Lensman by David A. Kyle
5. Ahistory: An Unauthorised History of the Doctor Who Universe by Lance Parkin with Lars Pearson
6. Doctor Who Classics: The Myth Makers / The Gunfighters by Donald Cotton
7. The Haunted Bookshop by Christopher Morley
8. Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
9. Star Trek: The Next Generation: Q & A by Keith R.A. DeCandido
10. Mystery in Space with Captain Comet, Volume One by Jim Starlin
11. A Terrifying Breach of Protocol: A Starslip Crisis Collection by Kristofer Straub
12. Sparkling Diplomacy: A Starslip Crisis Collection by Kristofer Straub
13. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 9 edited by Dean Wesley Smith with Elisa J. Kassin & Paula M. Block
14. Foundation and Chaos by Greg Bear

All books acquired:
1. Star Trek: The Next Generation: Q & A by Keith R.A. DeCandido
2. Mystery in Space with Captain Comet, Volume One by Jim Starlin
3. Doctor Who: Short Trips and Side Steps edited by Stephen Cole & Jacqueline Rayner
4. Starslip Crisis, Volume 1 by Kristofer Straub
5. Checkerboard Nightmare: A Brief History of Webcomics by Kristofer Straub
6. Star Wars: Clone Wars Adventures, Volume 9 by the Fillbach Brothers

Books remaning on "To be read" list: 126