luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson
For my fannish book club; my choice. Wow, this book could've had "tailor-written for Luz" on the back--I could hardly put it down. The others in book club liked it fine, but did not match my level of enthusiasm. This book is in conversation with several of the author's previous works, and it especially adresses things I've been having issues with. So I was kind of "Ha, I see you've come around to my way of thinking!" KSR often is very positive about the potential of technology, but this book isn't, or not as much.

Basically, it's about a generation starship that turns around and comes back home. It digs deep down into the things that in SF books are often just the backdrop for the action--what happens to an ecosystem when it's shut into a small space? what if bacteria evolve that eat the guts of your spaceship? etc. There is so much tasty, tasty science in this book, yum. And it doesn't neglect the social side, either--what would happen to society on a spaceship like that? what if some people want to go back and others don't? Also, the narrator of the book is the spaceship computer, which is also really neat, so it gets to explore questions of artificial intelligence. I like how it practices and gets better at narrative. Also I like how much nature/landscape writing there is even if most of the story is set within a spaceship (ha ha, tailored for me indeed). Recommended!

The Ropemaker by Peter Dickinson
YA fantasy. I loved The Blue Hawk as a kid, and that is pretty much all my exposure to Dickinson. But I am delighted and charmed by this book! It was exactly what I needed right now. The characters and plot (if not the writing style) reminds me of DWJ a bit, in that they are creative and unexpected. Like, there's an empire where you need a permit to die (if you die without one, your relatives will be fined and/or enslaved). At first I thought that was just an inventive way to wring more taxes out of the people, but no, it turns out there's a reason for it that has to do with how the magic system works. The main characters are a girl and her grandmother, which is also pretty cool. Recommended!

(no subject)

Date: 2016-05-02 07:22 pm (UTC)
jesse_the_k: Two bookcases stuffed full leaning into each other (x1)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k
I know Dickinson from his wonderful detective books. He's a child of empire and is reliably snarky about the ruling classes, of which he knows a lot (Eton, Oxbridge).

He wrote this one as a lark, and won the British mystery award for it:
http://peterdickinson.com/books/a-pride-of-heroes-the-old-english-peepshow

....

I have a chip on my shoulder about KSR but this one sound good.

(no subject)

Date: 2016-05-03 01:01 am (UTC)
jesse_the_k: Professorial human suit but with head of Golden Retriever, labeled "Woof" (doctor dog to you)
From: [personal profile] jesse_the_k
Nah, it's also the hugeness of them. I have less patience for Brick-Books.

But it's delightful to read about your buttons being pushed. (My, that sounded more pornographic than I intended.)

(no subject)

Date: 2016-05-02 10:58 pm (UTC)
seascribble: the view of boba fett's codpiece and smoking blaster from if you were on the ground (Default)
From: [personal profile] seascribble
Lol, tasty tasty science is the short form summary of this book I'm giving if I ever rec it to anybody else. It really is the most Luz of books!
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