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The Prefect by Alastair Reynolds

The Prefect is big, smart, and fun -- and really has everything you'd want in a speculative fiction novel. The novel begins with Prefect Dreyfus (Prefects are like detectives) investigating the recent destruction of a habitat. The investigation ultimately leads Dreyfus to information of a takeover plot from a hostile AI that threatens the entire collection of habitats in the system. Buttressing the drama of the main plot is Reynolds' fascinating imagining of a 25th Century society of thousands of orbital habitats and evolved technology. Note: The Prefect is set in the Revelation Space universe but as near as I can tell (without having read all the other books), it's completely standalone.

Fruitless Fall by Rowan Jacobsen

Fruitless Fall explores the perilous state of honey bees, which in recent years have been dying at unprecedented levels. Jacobsen sifts through the evidence and current theories for the decline -- dubbed Colony Collapse Disorder -- and concludes that a number of factors are contributing. In addition to harmful mites, which have played a significant role in decimating hives, the author spends much of his focus on the components and byproducts of industrial agriculture, particularly pesticides and the modern apiary practice of working bees almost year-round and sending them to different states to pollinate different crops based on the season. The net result, quite literally, is sick, over-stressed bees. Jacobsen concludes the book with a skein of hope by showing what some innovative beekeepers are doing to reverse the alarming trend. These practices include re-breeding hives with hardy, Russian honey bees and allowing bees to build more natural hives.

Emerging

The mother of all work projects has kept me away from this blog for about two months now, but we're nearing the end of the project, and I wanted to resurface to signal that I will be posting again soon. I've still been reading during this busy period at work and have built up quite a list of belated reviews. Below is a partial list of posts I'm planning. Books Fruitless Fall by Rowan Jacobsen The Prefect by Alastair Reynolds The Big Necessity by Rose George The Millionaire Next Door by Thomas J. Stanley & William D. Danko This Land Is Their Land by Barbara Ehrenreich Snoop by Sam Gosling The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell Music Green Day ~ 21st Century Breakdown Computer Games Fallout 3 Neverwinter Nights 2

travisbelrose.com

My friend Travis Belrose -- who I have written about previously on this blog -- has launched a new website and blog . In his own words, the site "is devoted to Ishikawa Jozan, Shisendo, and writing" and the blog "focuses on Ishikawa Jozan, Shisendo, and the odyssey of getting The Samurai Poet published". Best of luck to Travis with his new websites!

Here. My Explosion...

Reid Gershbein is one of my root friends I grew up and he's just released a new movie entitled Here. My Explosion... under a Creative Commons license. There's also a Boing Boing thread about film here .

Junior League of Buffalo

I've been pretty busy at work, and haven't had much time for posting. In addition, one of the after-hours projects that was keeping me busy through much of April was the development and launch of a new website for the Buffalo chapter of the Junior League . I was pleased to be able to assist this organization, and hope the new site adequately serves their present and future needs. Junior League of Buffalo Website

Graceling by Kristin Cashore (Book Review)

I don't read that much Fantasy these days, but if Graceling is any indication of what's out there now, maybe I should read more. In the world of Graceling ,  some individuals are born with graces, or heightened talent and advanced skills in various areas, such as archery, swimming, or dueling. Physically, graced individuals are distinguished by different colored-eyes. Of course, some graces are deemed more useful than others, such as the (apparent) fighting grace of the novel's main character, Katsa. The conceit of graces works well as Katsa learns more about her grace as the novel progresses, and she begins to distance herself from those who would use her abilities for their own ends. She also befriends and later falls in love with a fellow graceling, and together they travel to confront an evil king with a powerful and far-reaching grace. Overall, Graceling is very enjoyable and I recommend it to anyone looking for some Fantasy. For a more detailed review, check out Ran...

Portal (Game Review)

Portal is one of those innovative, ground-breaking games that's been so popular that even infrequent and casual gamers have played it. The praise is well deserved. Fundamentally, Portal is a classic first person, puzzle level game in which you must get through various game levels. What radically differentiates the experience, though, is that in Portal you are equipped with a portal gun that you use to make portals in the walls, floors, and ceilings. This enhancement forces you to reconsider the typical spatial awareness in game levels and think in portals. The implications are fun and far-reaching. For example, you sometimes need to create two portals on opposite sides of a room to bypass a chasm. Or you may have to create a portal on the floor a few levels down and an exit portal high up on a wall so you can jump into the portal below and have your momentum take you from the portal above to a high, previously inaccessible ledge on the other side of the room. You are led through th...

Half-Life 2: Episode Two

I actually played Half-Life 2: Episode Two shortly after it was released, in October 2007. Like its predecessor, Episode Two continues the Half-Life story and provides another four to six hour adventure in which you battle the Combine as Gordon Freeman, sometimes on your own and sometimes with the assistance of Alex Vance. As an installment, I enjoyed Episode Two a little more than Episode One - I thought the levels and environments were fun and a bit more varied, and the pacing was just right. I thought the ending with the timed Strider sequence was too difficult, though, and could not beat it initially. After two dozen or so tries, I gave up and only tried again recently when I replayed the game. My luck was no better the second time through, and I ultimately resorted to cheat codes to finish the game, one of the only times I've ever done so. My difficulty with the ending is the reason I did not blog about the game after first playing it, and am only posting now, following the r...

T.O. in B-Lo

I never post about sports, but I had to post something about Terrell Owens signing with the Bills [1]. My first reaction was utter shock and disbelief. Terrell Owens is a high-maintenance, bright lights, football celebrity. Buffalo is the last place one would expect him to land. Granted, it's a business and money is a powerful lure, but it's still surreal, like a philosophical category mistake: green ideas sleep furiously. Or, in football parlance, epicanthic footballs prevaricate fulsomely. [1] For those of you who don't know me, I reside in Buffalo, NY.

For One More Day by Mitch Albom

I'm not a big fan of audiobooks and only under rare circumstances will listen to one. Last Thanksgiving was one of those occasions, when my wife and I were driving back to Buffalo from a holiday getaway in Montréal and had a long stretch that was perfect for an audiobook. For One More Day is in the tradition of It's a Wonderful Life and tells of Charles "Chick" Benetto, a man who was once a baseball star with a loving family, but who has since fallen far, and is now out of baseball and estranged from his family. When the text begins, Chick has hit rock bottom and is contemplating suicide. As with George Bailey, though, before Chick completes the act, he encounters the supernatural in the ghost of his dead mother. This is the setup for the rest of the novel as Chick gets to spend "one more day" with his mother and recall crucial events from his past. Along the way, he'll ask and tell his mother all the things he wanted to express but didn't before s...

Broken Music by Sting

The album Synchronicity came out in 1983 when I was in junior high and just getting into music. I was immediately hooked by the lyrical density and blending of rock, reggae, and jazz, and quickly became a fan of The Police. Sting's first two solo albums -- The Dream of the Blue Turtles and ...Nothing Like the Sun -- came out when I was in high school. To this day, I remember listening to songs like "Message in a Bottle", "King of Pain", "Don't Stand So Close to Me", and "Russians" over and over. With Sting's solo albums, I remember reading the liner notes and how impressed I was with Sting's simple yet expressive writing, and the narrative behind the songs. As I'm sure it was for other cerebral teenage boys, to me, Sting was the epitome of cool, literate and brooding, yet debonair and adored by women everywhere. Broken Music is Sting's memoir and recounts his life up to the formation and early successes with The Police. I...

Ordinary Heroes by Scott Turow

Ordinary Heroes is an introspective WWII action drama that follows a young US Army JAG Corps lawyer assigned to investigate the alleged insubordination of a Major in the CIA-forerunner OSS. I don't read many WWII novels and had never before read anything by Turow, but I enjoyed the book, and would recommend it to any fan of war fiction.

Dear American Airlines by Jonathan Miles

The conceit of Dear American Airlines is brilliant: a novel in the form of a complaint letter to the airline from a man who missed his flight to the wedding of the daughter he's not seen since she was a baby. Of course, the letter begins as a rail against the airline and missed flight and then devolves into a fugue that encompasses everything that went wrong in the narrator's life that led him to this point. Jonathan Miles is a talented writer and there's no doubt that the novel is clever, but it felt a bit too indulgent at times, and I had no sympathy whatsoever for the narrator. Perhaps that was the point, but at times it made reading his account not unlike being stuck on a long layover.

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

I've added a link to Mike "Mish" Shedlock's Global Economic Trend Analysis blog in my Blogroll. For the unfamiliar, Mike Shedlock is a registered investment advisor who blogs just about every day about the U.S. and/or global economy, and he cuts through all manner of economic double-speak, forecasts, and other seemingly abstract financial information with hard data and clinical acumen. His blog was recently selected as one of the best 25 financial blogs by Time Magazine . In these grim economic times, his blog is an invaluable resource for economic straight-talk. I should note that Mish does not pull any punches and his posts are not for the faint of heart who may not want to know the depth of the problems with the global financial system.

Rabbit R.I.P.

As has been reported and commented extensively, John Updike passed away today. Though I've never been a huge fan and in fact have resented some of Updike's attempts at SF, I felt compelled to comment because Updike's Rabbit novels were very key for me in graduate school, particularly when I wrote my thesis about coming of age and rites of passage in American literature. Like many modern fictional characters, including Holden Caulfield from The Catcher in the Rye , Sal Paradise from On the Road, Updike's Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom epitomized the immature adult who is unwilling and unable to articulate or responsibly confront his problems. Rabbit almost gets it of course and Updike's prose is dead on in demonstrating the failed realization: "You don't think there's any answer to that but there is. I once did something right. I played first-rate basketball. I really did. And after you're first-rate at something, no matter what, it kind of takes...

Wicked by Gregory Maguire

I knew I wanted to read Wicked after seeing the entertaining theatical production inspired by the novel last year . Not suprisingly, the novel was far different from the upbeat and funny musical, darker and brooding, with deeper traces and pathways from the source materials. Maguire's mediation on Elphaba's (the Wicked Witch) formation spans her birth (with green skin that immediately casts her as an outsider) and troubled upbringing, to her headstrong young adulthood when her idealism pits her against the statist propaganda and discriminatory policies of the Wizard, and, finally, to her emergence as the Wicked Witch, when her idealism gives way to cynicism and she becomes no better than those she formerly railed against. I recommend Wicked for anyone who enjoys well-crafted literary fantasy, and, of course, fans of the movie and original story. That said, fans of the musical who are looking for a novel that reads and feels like the theatical production may want to steer clea...

I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell by Tucker Max

I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell is lewd, crude, in poor taste, and altogether offensive, but it is also very funny, if I'm being honest. I'd venture that a fair bit of what the author recounted is a stretch or an outright fabrication, but I'm not sure it matters, at least not for the reasons it mattered when James Frey exaggerated events in A Million Little Pieces . To the extent that the stories and vignettes in I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell are entertaining -- and some readers will argue vociferously that they are anything but -- it is because of the author's constructed but authentic-seeming tone and storytelling voice, not the alleged facts of the events he recalls.