• Archives

  • Topics

  • Meta

  • The Boogeyman - Working Vacation
  • Coming Home
  • Via Serica

Book Review – War to the Knife

Peter Grant has debuted his newest book, War to the Knife.  If you enjoyed his “Maxwell Saga” books, you’ll like this even more.

This book takes place in the same universe as the Maxwell series, but centers on the small, backwater planet of Laredo.  The planet has been invaded and conquered by the Bactrians, but resistance continues.  The Bactrians are a despicable breed, and are either killing or enslaving what is left of the planet’s population to make it into a new possession.  The story centers around efforts by the resistance to hurt the Bactrians, until an opportunity to mortally wound them comes along.

This book is a page turner, and you will find it hard to put it down.  Since the setting doesn’t encompass an entire galaxy as it did in the Maxwell books, Peter was able to concentrate on describing the people and places on Laredo in detail.  The action comes early, and is frequent, but there are also a lot of places where the story is carried along with conversation.  This is not a thriller by any means, but neither is it a bunch of talking heads going on for 100 pages at a stretch.  The story is compelling and grabs you in the first few pages.  Don’t be surprised if you finish it in one sitting.

If you’re looking for  Tom Clancy techno-babble or a Star Trek “everything works really well and happens pretty quickly in space” book, then keep looking.  Grant asks that you believe that faster-than-light travel is possible, that fusion reactors and energy weapons work, and that space travel within star systems is common, and that’s about it.  He makes an attempt to stick with at least a bit of Newtonian and Einsteinian physics when it comes to space travel, in that you can’t just drop into hyperspace at the drop of a hat or get across a star system or between star systems in a few hours.  Communications between systems are handled via messages on ships, and everyone is restricted by the speed of light when it comes to space combat and communications.  It makes the story longer when you have to say “The missile will get there in six hours”, but I find it more realistic.

The principle characters in this book, both good and bad, are straight out of central casting.  The gritty, honorable resistance fighters, true to their last act, are there.   So are the despicable Bactrian security forces, who are even called the “SS”.   Some of the more interesting characters are in the Bactrian army.  Where the black-suited security guys are sadists and villains, the brown-uniformed professionals of the army seem to be honorable and fair, even if they are part of the forces repressing and destroying the Laredan population and culture.

War to the Knife can probably be enjoyed by anyone from teenagers to senior citizens.  It’s not a children’s novel, but it definitely can be enjoyed and understood by younger readers.  There is a bit of language and implied sex in it, but it’s not flagrant.  I would definitely allow Girlie Bear or Little Bear to read it.I wouldn’t suggest starting this book after dinner, because you’ll be up late finishing it.   Like I said, it’s a page turner.  Get in the hammock with a cool beverage, tell the kids to leave you be for a few hours, and enjoy.

Disclaimer – I was a beta reader for this book, and Peter gave me a gift card to Amazon to thank me for my help.  However, I used that gift card to purchase a copy of the book once it was published, and I received nothing for this review.

Book Review – Pendragon Resurgent

Holly Chism has come out with the second book in her “Pendragon” series, in which the knights of the Round Table were really dragons, magic still lives in the world, and old rivalries can become bloody.  I reviewed the first book in the series here, and Pendragon Resurgent is an excellent follow-on to the original story.

The story opens with Sara, the main character from “The Last Pendragon”, preparing to shut down her career as an educator to join Mordred, son of Arthur Pendragon, leader of the European population of dragons, and the love of her life, when someone attempts to assassinate her.  A rogue group of dragons is trying to rekindle a millenium-old war, and the European dragons are in danger of being snuffed out just as they are beginning to rebuild.  Mordred and Sara have to not only figure out how to survive this onslaught, but also how to create a new home for their family in Europe.

Chism truly seemed to enjoy telling this story, and the characters she creates are easily visualized and filled out, at least on the good-guy side.  The bad guys, who are rogue dragons, tend to be less three-dimensional than the good guys, but they aren’t cardboard cutouts.  This may be because the story is told from the perspective of Sara, so the only time we see the antagonists is when they are interacting with her or when she is magically eavesdropping on them.  The exception to this is Morgan, Mordred’s mother.  Her character gets more time in the story than the other antagonists, and she is filled out quite nicely.

Overall, the book is a great page-turner.  It’s not a thriller, but it keeps your interest through the interactions of the characters, human, dragon, or wizard.  Chism doesn’t belabor the plot by going into excruciating detail about settings and tactics, but neither does she gloss over things.  The book is a quick read, but after reading it, I broke out my copy of the first book and re-read both stories again.

If you’re looking for a good weekend book, I’d suggest checking this one out.

 

Disclaimer- I was a beta reader for “Pendragon Resurgent”, but I bought a copy of the finished work.   I received nothing for doing this review.

Musings

  • Dear Motorcycle Man – If you’re going to scoot out from behind me on an on ramp and get into the traffic lanes, please follow through and pass me before I get to the end of said on-ramp.  Hanging back in my blind spot tends to make it hard for me to safely merge.  Luckily for you, I saw you behind me when we started onto the highway, or something awful might have happened.
  • Dear Bicycle Guy – Yes, it was a beautiful day Sunday to go out for a ride with your mates.  But if you’re going to ride three abreast on a narrow, two-lane country road, please make sure you’re not riding your tires on the lane dividers, because I really don’t like having to pull two of my tires off the road so that I don’t clip you in the head with a mirror.
  • Dear Louisville People – Really?  You managed to shut down traffic on all three of my routes home due to accidents?  Thanks.  I love taking surface streets across town during rush hour.
  • Today will go down in family history as the day that Girlie Bear had her head licked by a giraffe.
    • She sometimes has a rough patch with the animals at the zoo.  She had a swan try to eat her leg.  She’s been urinated on by a snake.  When she was little, an alligator snarled at her and she climbed me like a tree.
    • I couldn’t make this stuff up if I tried.
  • Someone needs to tell my Labrador Retrievers that they are indeed water dogs, and being asked to stay outside for 15 minutes while it is sprinkling is not going to bring about a horrible death.

Movie Quotes – Day 161

We have an expression in prize fighting: “Everyone has a plan until they’ve been hit.” Well my friend, you’ve just been hit. The getting up is up to you. — The Ghost and the Darkness

This is a cliche, but you’re not judged based on the amount of punishment you can take, but rather by the amount of times you can take the punishment and keep going.  If you’re looking for an easy trip, you bought a ticket to the wrong ride.  Life will kick you in the gut on occasion, and it’s how you deal with it that matters.

Movie Quotes – Day 160


Palmer Joss: [Ellie challenges Palmer to prove the existence of God] Did you love your father?
Ellie Arroway:What?
Palmer Joss:Your dad. Did you love him?
Ellie Arroway:Yes, very much.
Palmer Joss:Prove it.

Contact

Faith is an intangible.  It is not something that can be proven.  It is something that you feel, not something you count and describe mathematically.  Trying to impose a rational standard of evidence into something that is not subject to rational evidence is worthless.

On the flip side, faith is not science, and should not be a substitute for it.  I can believe in my religion and trust in science at the same time, but they are separate fields of study.  Science cannot model and describe the human soul and its interactions with God, but saying “God made it that way” when asked “Why does this work like this?” of “How did this happen?” is a cop-out.

It has to be both

I don’t watch beauty pageants.  My main reason is that I’m a fat, balding 43 year old guy, and oggling 20 year old women in evening gowns and bathing suits would be creepy.  But of course, reading the news this morning, I saw that there was a big national show in Louisiana this weekend.  Apparently the young lady from Nevada won a new tiara to put above the family mantle, and she seems to have gotten a few backs up while she did it.

When asked about the problem of sexual assault on college campuses, Miss Sanchez replied that getting the problem out in the open and teaching young women to defend themselves are important.  I tend to agree.  No woman should be ashamed to come forward if she is attacked, and no woman should feel she has to be helpless in the attack.  Women should be encouraged to get the training, skills, and equipment necessary to deter attacks, defend themselves, and get away from the attacker.  Like Kathy Jackson says “If you have to fight, fight like a cornered cat.”

Now, it seems that some disagree that teaching young women that it’s OK to fight back and how to do it is the right thing to do.  Some have taken to social media to decry Miss Sanchez and assert that if only men were taught to not rape, then we wouldn’t need to teach women to defend themselves against rapists.  They’re correct, but I don’t think they live in the same world I do.

“If only we taught young men to not rape” is, to me, the same as saying “If only we taught people to not drink and drive” or “If only we taught people to not steal”.  No matter how much you educate, remind, and threaten, there are always those who are going to jump right over boundaries and hurt other people.

But they do have a point.  Young men need to be taught, preferably by people of both sexes, that a woman’s body is inviolate.  They should be taught that there is no exception to that rule, and no excuse for breaking it.  Men need to be a good example to their sons of how to think about women and act toward them.  A boy who is taught to respect women, to protect them, and to treat them as at least equals is less likely to look at them as objects or toys.

We have to cover both bases.  Our young men need to be raised up to believe that rape and rapists are abhorrent, and that they should never come close to the bright lines around sexual assault.  Our young women need to be raised up to respect themselves, to demand that men not use and abuse them, and to defend themselves against those who either don’t get the message or disregard it.

Movie Quotes – Day 159

What shall we hang first? The holly or each other? – The Lion in Winter

You know, there’s something immensely satisfying about being catty every so often.  Of course, you have to do it with someone who will return fire just as quickly and as accurately as you.  Some of my best friends have been able to cut me down to nothing, and just for fun, I’ve returned the favor.

Movie Quotes – Day 158

The only way to win a war is to be as nasty as the enemy. — The Guns of Navarone

I can’t agree with this one.  There has to be a limit to what you will do to advance your cause or defend your position.  What the other side in a conflict does does not excuse bad behavior on our part.  “They did it first” or “They started it” is for children, not for adults.  Beware acting in the same way as your enemy.  Eventually, you might find it hard to tell yourself from them.

One of Our Own Needs Help

Tin Can Assassin is going through rough times and could use a little help.  I’ve been in a similar situation, and I’ll be giving him what I can.  If you’ve got a little extra, please consider giving a member of our tribe a hand up.

Thoughts on the Day

  • I love the smell of sour mash in the morning.
  • Success goes not to those who innovate.  Rather it tends to go to those who acquire the innovators.
  • It’s uncomfortable to sit and listen to someone discuss automated data analysis techniques for business that you used to do for other purposes by hand.
  • What’s good?  Bourbon.
  • What’s better than bourbon?  Single barrel bourbon
  • What’s better than single barrel bourbon?  Free single barrel bourbon.
  • There is a science and an art to making liquor, and bless those who practice it.
  • If a master distiller is going to put his name on a bottle of vodka, who am I to not buy one so that I may try it out?
  • Lightning bugs are very hypnotic.