This weekend Locus Magazine announced the winners of this year's Locus Awards. John Scalzi's novel, The Kaiju Preservation Society, won the award for best science fiction novel. Shortly after the announcement, Scalzi took some criticism online for the quality of his writing. Apparently people don't think he does it right, that his writing is too … Continue reading Slow Time Between the Stars
Category: Science Fiction
Heaven’s River
Some years ago I did post reviewing Dennis E. Taylor's Bobiverse series. In the first book, Bob Johansson wakes up in the future to discover that he died but that his mind was uploaded into a computer. He's forced into being the control system for a Von Neumann probe, a self replicating interstellar craft. Being … Continue reading Heaven’s River
Avatar: The Way of Water, and mind uploading
As usual, I'm late to the party, not having seen this in the theaters. But it became available for streaming this weekend. As with the first, it's a visually stunning movie. And also as with the first, while I know I was supposed to be captivated by the animals and vegetation, and was to some … Continue reading Avatar: The Way of Water, and mind uploading
The Immortality Thief
Still on a fiction binge. The most recent one is The Immortality Thief by Taran Hunt. It appears to be Hunt's first novel, and the writing shows a few rough edges, but not in any way that detracts from the experience of the story. The setting is an interstellar future. Humanity appears to be dominated … Continue reading The Immortality Thief
The Final Architecture
Still fighting dental issues, and so still burning through a lot of fiction. The latest is Adrian Tchaikovsky's The Final Architecture trilogy. This is epic space opera in the spirit of James S.A. Corey's The Expanse, featuring a ragtag spaceship crew finding themselves embroiled in a war between different species and empires, and an overall … Continue reading The Final Architecture
The Protectorate trilogy
I haven't been posting much lately, mostly due to complications from a dental procedure. Often when sick and in pain, I fall back on entertainment to pass the time, and Megan O'Keefe's Protectorate trilogy turned out to be what I needed: a long epic tale with interesting concepts and compelling characters. In the far future … Continue reading The Protectorate trilogy
Children of Memory
Children of Memory is the third book in Adrian Tchaikovsky's trilogy: Children of Time. This series chronicles the rise of an interstellar civilization. At the beginning of the series, humanity has begun projects to terraform several planets in other solar systems. The plan is to use a genetic virus to uplift (make sapient) an implanted … Continue reading Children of Memory
The Peripheral
(Warning: spoilers) Back in November I watched the first season of The Peripheral on Amazon. It's science fiction based on a book by William Gibson. If you're familiar with Gibson's works then you'll have an idea of what to expect, a work of cyberpunk, a genre he basically pioneered. I find Gibson's writing difficult, but … Continue reading The Peripheral
The Dying Earth genre
Ever since first reading Jack Vance's Dying Earth stories many years ago, I've been interested in the Dying Earth genre. It includes stories of an earth millions or billions of years in the future, one where the planet is running down, often with the sun also near the end of its life. The setting is … Continue reading The Dying Earth genre
Westworld and the dangers of artificial people
It's strange that I've never posted about Westworld. Looking back, it might have been because the first season finished in late 2016 during a period of high distraction (at least for me), the second season happened during my "blogging winter" in 2018 (another period of distraction), and the third, while mildly entertaining, was nothing to … Continue reading Westworld and the dangers of artificial people








