Ace: aceofspadeshq at gee mail.com
CBD: cbd at cutjibnewsletter.com
Buck: buck.throckmorton at protonmail.com
joe mannix: mannix2024 at proton.me
MisHum: petmorons at gee mail.com
J.J. Sefton: sefton at cutjibnewsletter.com
Sunday Morning Book Thread - 11-30-2025 ["Perfessor" Squirrel]
Welcome to the prestigious, internationally acclaimed, stately, and illustrious Sunday Morning Book Thread! The place where all readers are welcome, regardless of whatever guilty pleasure we feel like reading (don't knock it 'til you've tried it!). Here is where we can discuss, argue, bicker, quibble, consider, debate, confabulate, converse, and jaw about our latest fancy in reading material. As always, pants are required, unless you are wearing these pants...
So relax, find yourself a warm kitty (or warm puppy--I won't judge) to curl up in your lap, finish off that pumpkin pie, and dive into a new book. What are YOU reading this fine morning?
PIC VIDEO NOTE
I admire the dedication of the curators at Montpelier for their attempt to reconstruct the full library of James Madison. By the time of hid death in 1836 he had an extensive collection of over 4000 books. However, many of them have been lost to the mists of time.
STICK THE LANDING!
Patrick provides some useful advice to writers on how to end their books. He breaks his advice into the following patterns he's seen when analyzing book endings:
Rushed resolution - Does the book wrap up its main conflict too soon? Patrick says that the resolution should take up approximately as much space as the setup in the beginning. This is more a guideline than an absolute, though, as I've read many satisfying stories that were resolved in a fairly short amount of time, but were a slow burn at the beginning. The key, as always, is whether or not the reader will walk away satisfied by the ending. Give the reader some breathing space at the end, especially if the book is emotionally intense in the middle section.
Unearned happy ending - Happy endings should be earned by the characters. They are a reward for the growth and development of the characters as they navigate the conflict in the story. Characters who experience a happy ending, but haven't earned it, will feel fake and will be unsympathetic to the reader. We want to root for the protagonist in the story, even as they experience horrible tragedy, so that we feel like they will be all right in the end. Make their eventual happy ending MEAN something to them--and it will mean just as much to us.
Betrayal ending - Brandon Sanderson has three rules for writing: Promise, Progress, and Payoff. Whatever you set up during the Promise phase must come to fulfillment in the Payoff phase. Don't bait-and-swith the reader without warning. It's OK to throw in a genre shift if you want to do that, but give the reader enough clues so that they recognize that the story is changing in a new direction. Done well, readers will appreciate the twists and turns because you've promised them a good story from the beginning, even if the ending is unexpected.
Earned tragedy - Tragic stories should feel inevitable. The characters destined for tragedy should feel like this is the only way their life could go based on the choices they make throughout the story. In Zelazny's Jack of Shadows, for instance, Jack's descent into tragedy is quite clear halfway through the story when he gets his revenge, but is still unsatisfied. From there, he quickly descends into lust for power, which becomes his undoing. It's telegraphed quite in advance in the story, but we keep reading because we want to see how it plays out.
Emotional landing - Stories should resonate with readers at a deep emotional level. The best stories, as Patrick points out, end with us closing the book, and then just sitting there as we process the journey we've just been through. Michael Ende's The Neverending Story is a powerful example of this. I *always* feel deep emotion when I read that book. I've been that way since the first time I read it when I was about nine years old.
Epilogue debate - Some stories can benefit from an epilogue, while others should probably avoid them. If the story ends with "happily ever after" then we usually don't need an epilogue to tell us how things turn out in the end. If the characters (or the world) go through traumatic experiences, then an epilogue can show us the long-term consequences of the events in the book. In Lord of the Rings, we have a fairly lengthy epilogue section because Frodo is suffering from PTSD from his journeys to Mordor. The only cure is to go over the seas with the Elves, which is eventually what happens. In the Appendices, we find out more about what happens to Sam, Merry, and Pippin, but we don't need a full epilogue to go into details of their lives.
Can you think of any other patterns or rules for endings?
++++++++++
It was also his last day...
++++++++++
NOVELIZATIONS OF THE FILM
Anyone a fan of reading novelizations of movies? I have several in my library. For some reason I have all three novelizations of the original Star Wars trilogy as well as five out of six of the original Star Trek movies (I had Star Trek V but ended up throwing it out because it was in such poor condition). I think the oldest novelization I have is 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke.
I sort of like novelizations because they often expand on the stories, providing details and context that are missing from the movies. Of course, because they novels are usually based on earlier drafts of the screenplay, the final cut of the movie may be vastly different than the novel in key ways because scenes may be cut or rewritten based on Executive Meddling or because audience test screening didn't go well.
I read Alien a week or so ago and then proceeded to watch the movie immediately afterwards. There are definitely some key differences. In the book, there's a scene where the alien's tail is caught in an airlock door trapping it before it can be expelled out into space. This is a key scene in the book that really hammers home the duplicitous actions of Ash the android. We also see just how corrupt and penny-pinching the Company is in the book, as air is strictly regulated with just barely enough to keep the crew alive as long as they spend nearly all their time in hibernation. In the movie, all of the characters start chain-smoking cigarettes as soon as they wake up from hibernation. I always find smoking scenes in space somewhat ridiculous because the particulates in smoke would play merry havoc with the air scrubbers aboard a space ship or space station.
In the novelization for Star Wars (also written by Alan Dean Foster), we see a few extra scenes, at least one of which made it into the Special Edition of the movie. Han Solo meets up with Jabba the Hutt, but at that point Lucas really hadn't defined the "Hutts" as we know and love them today (giant space slugs), so that scene is a bit incongruous compared to what we see a few years later in Return of the Jedi. In the book, Luke is assigned to "Blue Squadron" as an X-wing pilot, but in the movie his callsign is "Red Five."
In the Star Trek novelizations, particularly with Wrath of Kahn, Search for Spock, and The Voyage Home, we see more details about the stories that connect them more concretely to each other. The young engineer that Scotty cradles in his arms in Wrath of Kahn is his nephew, which is why Scotty is so devastated when the young man is killed in an attack. Lieutenant Saavik and David Marcus become lovers in The Search for Spock, giving David's death a little more emotional impact. And in The Voyage Home we see a few of the events from the perspective of the whales and the probe. The probe wasn't evil. It was a caretaker who saw that its charges were no longer alive, so decided to wipe out the planet and start over.
What about you? Any good novelizations of movies you've read? Any movies you think would make a good novelization?
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
WHAT I'VE BEEN READING THIS PAST WEEK:
The Black Hole by Alan Dean Foster
Written by Alan Dean Foster, this is the novelization of the movie produced by Walt Disney pictures once upon a time (1979). A research vessel searching the galaxy for intelligent life stumbles across something even stranger--the long-lost spaceship Cygnus, an earlier exploration ship thought to have been lost twenty years ago with all hands on board. Initially dormant, Cygnus wakes up to welcome the crew of the Palomino. Then things get strange as the Palomino crew explore the Cygnus and begin to unravel the mysteries hidden by its enigmatic commander, the megalomaniacal Dr. Hans Reinhardt.
Like a lot of novelizations, this story expands on a fair amount of lore and backstory, providing additional context for events within the movie. For instance, the psychic link between Dr. Kate McCrae and the robot V.I.N.CENT. is explained as a cybernetic implant in Dr. McCrae's brain that gives her a direct link to the robot. It's still a rare and unusual ability, though, as most implants tend to fail. We also see a more "scientific" explanation for what Dr. Reinhardt is attempting to do with the advanced gravitic technology he's discovered/invented. The ending of the book is considerably different than the ending in the movie, which ends on a very dark note indeed.
Doorways in the Sand by Roger Zelazny
Unlike the previous Zelazny book I read--Jack of Shadows--this one has a far lighter, fluffier tone. Fred Cassidy is a perpetual college student who lives quite comfortably on a stipend from his uncle under the stipulation that the money will only continue to flow so long as Fred never graduates college. He's been a student for thirteen years and enjoys his life, although his advisors keep trying to graduate him. Then he's caught up in a farcical quest by aliens, Men in Black, and other factions who believe Fred possesses the mysterious "starstone," a token of galactic importance that was given to Earth to symbolize Earth's eventual acceptance into a galactic federation.
Definitely ends on a much happier note than Jack of Shadows, with a fair amount of tongue-in-cheek humor from our narrator, Fred. All he wants is his life back, but events keep conspiring against him.
Deep Storm by Lincoln Child
Lincoln Child is one half of the duo who writes the Agent Pendergast series, along with Douglas Preston. But he also has several stand-alone novels written solo, though I'm pretty sure they take place within the same universe as the Pendergast novels.
Former Navy medical doctor Peter Crane is summoned to an oil rig in the North Atlantic. The rig has been transformed into a scientific deep-sea research facility and the inhabitants are starting to exhibit bizarre behavior and maladies that don't fit any known pattern of epidemiology. Deep, deep beneath the platform is a facility where the real work is conducted--drilling even deeper into the Earth's crust, where it's reported "Atlantis" has finally been found. The truth is far, far stranger and deadlier, of course. Are aliens involved? Maybe...
Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds
In some ways, this has a lot of the same plot points as Child's Deep Storm above, even though it takes place 500 years in the future. Humanity has spread to the stars, with incredibly advanced technology, but we are still limited to slower-than-light travel. This makes for a slightly disconnected story as events take place years or even decades apart due to the fact that it takes A LONG TIME to get from point A to point B in space. An ancient civilization went extinct over 900,000 years ago and archaeologist Dan Sylveste will stop at nothing to understand why it was wiped out just as it was on the cusp of achieving spaceflight. He hooks up with a renegade crew of "Ultras" (humans who crew the "lighthugger" ships that travel at 99% the speed of light), who all have their own agenda about Dan's fate. One person was hired specifically to kill him. Others want him to use his link to his dead father to revive their almost-dead Captain. I thought it was hilarious that the captain is named "Brannigan," like the captain from Futurama, but other than the name, there's no resemblance.
This story provides an interesting explanation for the Fermi Paradox, which asks a fundamental question: If it's plausible for the galaxy to be teeming with intelligent alien life, where is it?
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
Well, I finally read The Wind in the Willows. For the most part it's enjoyable. Grahame has a real gift for writing excellent lyrical prose. However, his world-building needs a bit of work. Although the main characters are all relatively small animals--a Mole, a Water Rat, a Toad, and a Badger--they interact with the "human" world as equals. So I'm not sure how the scale works here. At one point, Toad rubs his hand through his hair, which I found odd, since I don't ever think of toads having hair (or paws). So it's best to simply enjoy the story for what it is and try not to analyze the world-building too much. They also eat rabbit and bacon. Where do they get it? Do they find it problematic to eat other intelligent animals? (They have encounters with talking rabbits at least once.)
If at Faust You Don't Succeed by Roger Zelazny and Robert Sheckley
I needed some lighter fare after reading Revelation Space, so I turned to If at Faust You Don't Succeed by Roger Zelazny and Robert Sheckley. Like their previous story, Bring Me the Head of Prince Charming, thi is a farcical tale, this time about our good buddy Dr. Johann Faust. The powers of Light and Darkness are once again involved in a contest for the Millennium prize. Mephistopheles sets out to corrupt Dr. Faust, but unfortunately makes a pact with the thug Mack the Club, who just happened to be robbing Faust's home while Faust was knocked unconscious in an alleyway. Old Meph' didn't bother to check credentials. Dr. Faust finds out about the bargain Mack makes with Meph and decides that HE should have been the one to make the bargain. Now Faust is chasing Mack and Meph all over creation to set things "right." It's just a fun romp through the cosmos. Not meant to be taken seriously at all.
7
Good morning, fellow book freaks! Salutations, Squirrel!
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 09:01 AM (kpS4V)
8
Blucher Scourge of Napoleon
Campaign and Commanders series book #41 Michael V. Leggierre
Up to 1811, Didn't ever know some Prussians thought France was going to attack Prussia again ( already under France's control).when I already know France was about to attack Russia in 1812.
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 09:01 AM (Ia/+0)
9
Those pants yeah - holiday treats DO go straight to my thighs
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 30, 2025 09:01 AM (eZ5tL)
10
I remember that novelization of 2001, which gave a lot of background to dr floyd and his world
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:03 AM (bXbFr)
This week, lessee, finished Julian Symons's The Belting Inheritance from 1982, though the story is set in England in 1954, with wartime backstories. A good mystery all around. Currently I'm in his "novel of suspense," Something Like a Love Affair, set in the England of 1991. There's going to be a crime element; we know this from a prologue (labeled "Afterward") in which a body is found in a park, and also because the protagonist has now concluded that she has to kill her husband.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:06 AM (wzUl9)
I have Alan Dean Foster's novelizations of all ST:TOS and the original animated TV series
Posted by: San Franpsycho at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM (9ipOP)
18
I don’t like book endings that make me say something like ‘damn, I wanted that guy to die.’.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM (i+bC1)
19
I'm back into "Thunderball," which I read in high school but of which I remember little. I checked it out after I rewatched the movie, which I still bores me. Too much time spent on underwater combat.
One problem with the book is that it is so contemporary that it now pushes me out of the story. For example, a mention that Bond speculated that he strained his back by jumping off a train during the Hungarian uprising. It makes his printed adventures seem overblown -- as if nuclear extortion could ever be otherwise.
However, I do think that SPECTRE exists, just not under that name and organizational structure.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM (p/isN)
20
"Emotional landing - Stories should resonate with readers at a deep emotional level. The best stories, as Patrick points out, end with us closing the book, and then just sitting there as we process the journey we've just been through."
This is about us, isn't it?
Posted by: Every Hallmark movie ever made at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM (XQo4F)
21
Splinter in the mind eye, would have made as an interesting film
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:08 AM (bXbFr)
22
Also this week I finished Lee Child's Jack Reacher novel from 2018, Past Tense, which delves into JR's family history -- specifically that of his father. It's a good one, partly because JR meets an antagonist who actually gives him a hard time in a fight for once.
I haven't yet gotten to the literary novel I mentioned last week, Tell the Wolves I'm Home.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:08 AM (wzUl9)
23
Which is better, a filmization of a novel, or a novelization of a film?
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:09 AM (uQesX)
Posted by: fd at November 30, 2025 09:11 AM (vFG9F)
29
Only a few chapters into Chernow's biography of Ulysses S. Grant but will boldly predict it'll be one of my favorites. Great subject, great writer.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 09:11 AM (kpS4V)
30
Endings . . . in the classical mystery, of course, you not only should find out who the murderer is, but why he did it, and (in a locked room/impossible crime) how he did it. Ellery Queen, Agatha Christie, and John Dickson Carr were masters at that. EQ in particular was fond of the "false solution, then the true," which revelation sometimes changed the reader's perspective on certain characters.
Carr's The Burning Court has a final passage, kind of an epilogue, that is unique in the detective genre, and is remarkably chilling as well. You close that book with a sense of wonder and horror.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (wzUl9)
Posted by: fd at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (vFG9F)
32
Speaking of The Black Hole, did anyone else read that they found the wreckage of Malaysian Air Flight 370 in the Indian Ocean? Guess it didn't make it into a black hole after all.
Don Lemon hardest not-hit in his hole.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (uQesX)
33
OrangeEnt it's a case by case basis.
Know of book/ movies have read and seen both and it's usually the book but not always
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (Ia/+0)
34However, I do think that SPECTRE exists, just not under that name and organizational structure.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025
***
Those jumped-up Johnny-come-latelys! Hmph!
Posted by: Thrush Supreme Council at November 30, 2025 09:13 AM (wzUl9)
35
I liked the book "Risen" "based on a major motion picture."
Posted by: no one at November 30, 2025 09:13 AM (GLn15)
36 Do they find it problematic to eat other intelligent animals?
Hmmph?
*swallows mouthful of delicious grilled whale meat*
*takes drink of wine*
...uh......No.
*resumes meal*
Posted by: naturalfake at November 30, 2025 09:14 AM (iJfKG)
37
There are something from book like jason matthews red sparrow that cannot translate interior dialogues descriptions of recipss
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:15 AM (bXbFr)
38
When Isambard Brunel built the Great Eastern, she was by far the largest ship afloat, and yet a financial disaster. But she was ideally suited for a task that Cyrus Field had in mind; laying a transatlantic cable from Europe to North America. In A Thread Across the Ocean, John Steele Gordon recounts the history of the idea, the failed attempts, and the final, successful laying of a telegraphic cable across the Atlantic Ocean.
In the earliest days of America, news could take four months to travel across the ocean. When Samuel Morse invented his code, messages could be sent at the speed of light across wires on land, but what of the great oceans? The answer was to lay submerged cable, if possible. The problem was that so much cable was incredibly heavy, and miles of it hanging from a ship stressed both.
Attempts were made to lay cable using multiple ships and splicing cables together, but always the weather, the cable, or the salt water caused failure. The massive Great Eastern, holding the entire cable, finally found her calling. In July 1866, she successfully completed connecting Europe to the new world, and soon the entire planet would be similarly connected.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 09:15 AM (0U5gm)
39
However, I do think that SPECTRE exists, just not under that name and organizational structure.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM (p/isN)
WG, they now go by the name of WEF.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:15 AM (uQesX)
40
Earned tragedy - Tragic stories should feel inevitable.
--
Jodi Picoult is the worst offender in this category. Characters will be at their earned happy ending then BAM they get hit by a truck.
So emotionally manipulative.
Deshpicable /daffyduckvoice
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 30, 2025 09:15 AM (DoBxX)
41
"It was aliens!" Should be added to the endings list.
My absolutely most hated ending used by S. King.
Started and finished "Saint Odd" this week. This was the final "Odd Thomas" book in the Dean Koonz series. I think Mr Koonz must have been tired of writing about Oddie when he penned it. A good portion of the book was simply excerpts from earlier books and then the ending was anticlimactic. I thought I must have missed a chapter because by this time I was just skimming the pages, but no, it was finished. Like a S. King book.
Ugh
Posted by: p0indexterous at November 30, 2025 09:16 AM (wf0SQ)
I joined the book club at work, but I may regret it. This month's choice was The Intruder, by Frieda McFadden. It appears that she's one of those current "it girl" authors that the AWFL publishing industry is gaga over right now.
Two major problems with this book.
1: I really, really despise books written in the present tense. I suppose the author is trying to make you feel like you're in the moment, but I hate it.
2: The main character, at one point, allows herself to be overpowered by a malnourished middle-schooler, even though she is skilled at self-defense. It's preposterous.
That said, I love a good revenge story, and this is a good revenge story, however contrived. Some really horrible people got what they gave. Then again, maybe they got a bit more than they deserved. Whatever. It's a disturbing sort of feel-good story.
43
Speaking of James Bond, however: I finished Anthony Horowitz's "continuation" novel, Trigger Mortis, and enjoyed it immensely. He has Fleming's style down pat, and there is plenty of action -- a car race, shootouts, a live burial, and a climactic scene aboard a racing train. It's set in 1957, right after the events of Goldfinger, with a featured appearance by Miss Pussy Galore. Never fear, being "with" Bond, as we saw at the end of GF, has not tamed her or her DC preferences in the least.
Highly recommended for Bond fans. I need to buy a copy for my shelf.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:17 AM (wzUl9)
44
Oh duh,missed the pull down
Posted by: fd at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (vFG9F)
Please pull your pants down offscreen. There are ladies present!!
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:17 AM (uQesX)
45
I wonder what James Madison read? I suppose I'd know if I watched the video, but I can't be bothered to watch videos. Heh.
46
I thought it was good what did you think of the villains motivation
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:18 AM (bXbFr)
47
I've been enjoying my Annotated Lovecraft, but damn he never misses an opportunity to slam the lesser races (Italians merit several mentions). I guess seeing Boston overrun by Guineas will do that to a man.
Funny how the casually tossed off ethnic slurs dropped by this crusty old racist crank just make me giggle. Guess I'm made of sterner stuff than the delicate hothouse flowers of WorldCon.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 09:19 AM (kpS4V)
Not much reading the last several days (wonder why that is...), but received at long last the new translation of one of Simenon's darkest, The Cat. Will start that one this evening or tomorrow. One nice thing about Penguin's edition of this one is the note on the back cover that two others, Letter to My Judge and The Green Shutters are in preparation. Letter to My Judge was available some years back from NYRB Classics, but the other hasn't been in print in English in something like 50 or 60 years. Lookin' forward to that one.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 09:19 AM (q3u5l)
49
His last iteration, takes him into the soviet union after live and let die
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:20 AM (bXbFr)
50
The nice thing about reading history is you often know how it ends, it's the path that gets there is the question
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 09:20 AM (Ia/+0)
51
did anyone else read that they found the wreckage of Malaysian Air Flight 370 in the Indian Ocean?
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (uQesX)
-
52
I am reading John Wright's Andromeda series, which the author is releasing book by book. There are 12 books in total and the sixth is the most current to be released. It's called "Spaceman in the Iron Mask".
I cannot recommend it highly enough. So far, the series only gets better with each book.
Posted by: PG at November 30, 2025 09:21 AM (hC4Rp)
53
Reading report - I listened to the novella Livesuit by James A Corey, which is part of their new series The Captive's War.
I thought the novella was just an nice extra between books but WOW.
It really hit me.
Can be read as a standalone, clear homage to Forever War and Armor, but really deep emotional punch. Recommended.
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 30, 2025 09:21 AM (DoBxX)
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 30, 2025 09:22 AM (DoBxX)
55
Speaking of The Black Hole, did anyone else read that they found the wreckage of Malaysian Air Flight 370 in the Indian Ocean? Guess it didn't make it into a black hole after all.
Don Lemon hardest not-hit in his hole.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:12 AM (uQesX)
So what did they find, and where was it? (I don’t watch the ‘news’.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 09:22 AM (i+bC1)
56Thunderball, both book and movie, has always bored me. Not only because of all the underwater combat scenes, but also because Bond is at his best when he's working alone or with the lady of the moment. See Live and Let Die (after Leiter is taken out), From Russia With Love, and Doctor No, especially. Having him backed up by half the U.S. Navy is nowhere near as exciting.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:22 AM (wzUl9)
57
I saw a cartoon with T-Rex in bed holding a book in his tiny arms, overhung by his huge head blocking the view, with the caption "Rex regrets not getting the audiobook".
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 09:23 AM (kpS4V)
58
Also I have a much awaited sequel in hand and I can't remember enough of previous book to make sense of what is happening
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 30, 2025 09:24 AM (DoBxX)
The best was Fallen Angles by Jerry Pournelle, Larry Niven, and Michael Flynn. He nails the Green mentality, the consequences thereof, and has an interesting dystopia with added rapid glaciation and the destruction of America. There is droll humor throughout, and has science-fiction fans as the plucky main support for the heroes.
What's not to like?
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 30, 2025 09:25 AM (u82oZ)
60
Dash, I too dislike books written in present tense. There are exceptions, like Jay McInerney's Bright Lights, Big City (which is also told in *second* person!). But generally it makes me think the primary thought in the writer's mind was "My MFA thesis committee is really going to like this!"
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:25 AM (wzUl9)
https://tinyurl.com/3bpdp489
Posted by: Biden's Dog sniffs a whole lotta malarkey, at November 30, 2025 09:21 AM (mOv6P)
I can't find anything now either, but I thought it was a link on Citizen Free Press. It was about a week or so ago.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:25 AM (uQesX)
62
This one's so good I can't put it down. "The Doorman," by Chris Pavone. New York city, Central Park West, maybe a block from the Dakota, this building much the same. Chicky Diaz is the doorman. That's his day job. Half-billion-dollar art inside the upper floors, with a George Floyd event to unsettle things, rattling the thugs, the billionaires, and their wives with their thirty-thousand-dollar bags.
Posted by: M. Gaga at November 30, 2025 09:28 AM (KiBMU)
63
Not much reading this week, except for a few pages in my trigonometry textbook. I'm hoping to finish up Rules of the Game in the near future, then I'll have to decide which book gets pulled from the TBR pile.
Posted by: PabloD at November 30, 2025 09:28 AM (GALGA)
64
Reading adjacent, maybe. The National Archives 250th exhibit includes Washington's personal annotated copy of the Constitution. That's not enough to get my ass into DC, something I've avoided for fifteen years. But I'm going to look for a facsimile of the annotations. Everything was new and untried and his remarks should be highly revealing about the man and the times.
The reading adjacent part is I hope this 250th exhibit and other celebrations sparks more reading about George Washington. Especially the years after the Revolution. I find Washington the first President and as a farmer to be fascinating.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 09:29 AM (yTvNw)
65
I'm also listening to Ballistic, a Gray Man book. It is ok but the language is a bit much for me. It will probably be my last book in the series.
I'll listen to The Running Grave by Robert Galbraith, aka J. K. Rawlings, next. Talk about bang for your buck. The audible book is about 34 hours.
I hate the audio books that have sound effects and multiple narrators like a play. Just give me a good narrator with a pleasant voice that fits the book being read!
66
In Trigger Mortis, too, Horowitz has his details right. For instance there is this tiny bit. In this novel, set in 1957, Bond is still driving the 1953 Bentley Mark VI he bought at the end of Moonraker. At the end of the MR book, we're told that the car has dark blue leather upholstery. And Horowitz actually mentions the blue color in one TM scene.
AH says in his afterword that he's loved the Bond books all his life. It shows.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:29 AM (wzUl9)
67
So what did they find, and where was it? (I don’t watch the ‘news’.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 09:22 AM (i+bC1)
Can't find the source, maybe someone found more wreckage and thinks they know where the plane is.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:30 AM (uQesX)
"The Utterly Uninteresting and Unadventurous Tales of Fred, the Vampire Accountant: Fred the Vampire Accountant #1" by Drew Hayes.
Meet Fred, mild-mannered accountant, who was bullied through his school years and now just wants to be left alone to quietly and competently be a CPA. Then somebody turns him into a vampire. Suddenly, he is thrust into a Matt Helm-like world, filled Tolkien-esque
characters. I liked it.
(Mandatory Matt Helm and Tolkien references achieved for the week)
Posted by: Idaho Spudboy at November 30, 2025 09:32 AM (8QVSJ)
69
Been picking up a lot of 99 cent Collected works of ...
Like Kipling, HG Wells, George MacDonald, and Edgar Rice Burroughs. I note with the later that the description lies, and my own library is much more complete that Kindle's promised complete works of ERB.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 30, 2025 09:33 AM (u82oZ)
70
Almost finished with the two part alternate history of WWII era wars in the Andes by D.G. Valdron. Very well done with believable battles and realistic dealings with the logistical and financial problems of the combatants. Plu an unexpectedly hilarious scene where Quechua/Aymara rebels confront the last ‘president’ of Bolivia’.
Posted by: Who Knew at November 30, 2025 09:34 AM (TdNm+)
71
In Trigger Mortis, too, Horowitz has his details right. For instance there is this tiny bit. In this novel, set in 1957, Bond is still driving the 1953 Bentley Mark VI he bought at the end of Moonraker. At the end of the MR book, we're told that the car has dark blue leather upholstery. And Horowitz actually mentions the blue color in one TM scene.
AH says in his afterword that he's loved the Bond books all his life. It shows.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius
Horowitz also wrote The House of Silk, a Sherlock Holmes novel, and he managed to capture Doyle's style as well.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 09:34 AM (0U5gm)
72However, I do think that SPECTRE exists, just not under that name and organizational structure.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM
Unpossible!
Posted by: Big Penguin at November 30, 2025 09:35 AM (0sNs1)
73
Reminder: now is a good time to pick which "Through the Bible in a Year" plan you'd like to start with the best of intentions on Jan. 01 but quickly fall behind and abandon before Valentine's Day.
Posted by: PabloD at November 30, 2025 09:35 AM (GALGA)
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 09:36 AM (p/isN)
75
Just ordered a used copy of the Vacuuming in the Nude book mentioned in the 'guilty pleasures' link. It sounds like a funny romp through Peggy Rowe's (Mile Rowe's mom) writing career. Thanks, Perfessor, for bring it up.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 09:36 AM (yTvNw)
76
18 I don’t like book endings that make me say something like ‘damn, I wanted that guy to die.’.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 09:07 AM (i+bC1)
Posted by: Karen, with septum piercing and hair color not found in nature at November 30, 2025 09:37 AM (0sNs1)
78
2001 wasn't exactly a novelization; the book and movie were worked on at the same time. 2001 also got a comic adaptation by Marvel Comics which *kept going*.
[2010 (both versions) is/are a sequel to the movie version.]
Novelizations are interesting in several ways. One, they're a kind of marketing or advertising, in addition to being merchandise. They're also not usually really adaptations of the finished film-- they're typically based on earlier drafts, which explain some of the differences. (Blue Squadron becoming Red in Star Wars was a result of the matting/"green screen" composition process-- red worked better than blue , f'rinstance.)
But others are from the author's creative license.
My favorite thing about novelizations, though, is that they're kind of a relic of the Olden Days before video. Before cable/syndication and VCRs, if you wanted to see a movie that wasn't in theaters anymore, good luck. The novelization (and comic book adaptation, and storybooks, and trading cards, soundtrack albums, etc) let you experience the story at home or school or whatever.
I could go on and on, and if I wasn't so laaaazy, I'd write a monograph and start a blog for it.
Posted by: Lance McCormick at November 30, 2025 09:39 AM (/JT24)
79
{{{All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes}}}
I echo your praise for Chernow's biography of Ulysses S. Grant.
Illuminating and thought-provoking, while being well written, with spotlights on the telling details.
Grant should be in the top 10 of all Presidents. But the Left hates him. He freed the slaves and helped the former slave integrate into American society.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 30, 2025 09:40 AM (u82oZ)
80
Think I've commented before that present tense, rather than giving a you-are-there-right-now vibe, always seemed to me to put the reader at a distance and keep him at arm's length or more for the duration of the story. I'd think that second-person present tense would be a PITA to read for more than a few pages. First-person present? Maybe for something not too long, and then it too would be a pain to read. Third-person present, yeah sometimes, but that arm's length quality would tell me not to get attached to any of the characters.
I'd have to double check, but I think Silverberg, Malzberg, and Moorcock have all used present tense on occasion and made it work. Of course when they're cookin' those guys could get away with just about anything.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 09:40 AM (q3u5l)
81
In the novelization for Star Wars (also written by Alan Dean Foster),
---
Point of order! The novelization was credited to George Lucas and it is terribly written.
82Watership Down avoids all the ending pitfalls the Perfessor lists, and achieves the desired elements at the same time. It's hard to do much better at an ending than that.
I also like endings where the major character(s) briefly reflect on how things will be different now after the events of the story. Or when we *see* without being told how they are different now, as with the ending of The Caine Mutiny.
Is the ending of For Whom the Bell Tolls an "earned tragedy"? It's certainly tragic, but heroic too, like the end of Stephen King's The Dead Zone. Both are inevitable, yes, because of the choices the hero has made. Johnny Smith makes a difference in the world, yet we are pretty sure Robert Jordan will not.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:40 AM (wzUl9)
83
Its a challenge between exposition and character development fleming was a reporter so he did a lof of research hong kong south africa turkey
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:42 AM (bXbFr)
84 Think I've commented before that present tense, rather than giving a you-are-there-right-now vibe, always seemed to me to put the reader at a distance and keep him at arm's length or more for the duration of the story. I'd think that second-person present tense would be a PITA to read for more than a few pages. First-person present? Maybe for something not too long, and then it too would be a pain to read. Third-person present, yeah sometimes, but that arm's length quality would tell me not to get attached to any of the characters.
I'd have to double check, but I think Silverberg, Malzberg, and Moorcock have all used present tense on occasion and made it work. Of course when they're cookin' those guys could get away with just about anything.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025
***
Jay McInerney's novel written in present and second person has the advantage of being funny in the right places, so I think it works. Otherwise, these exceptions to the use of third person work better in short stories.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:42 AM (wzUl9)
My youngest decided to re-read Lord of the Rings. We read it as a family years ago, but a lot of it went over her head. She was inspired by re-watching the movies, and when I blurted out that they were terrible, she chastised me for always being so critical and negative.
Two chapters later, she observed that Peter Jackson really screwed things up. Welcome to the club!
I could have joined her (we have at least six copies in the house, just in case), but I decided to pick up The Hobbit, which I haven't read in 15 years or so. The humor really stands out to me now, and I'm admiring the way Tolkien seamlessly blended rural Victorian England with high fantasy.
87
I finished up reading "Dragons of Spring Dawning," the last installment in the original Dragonlance trilogy. It is unquestionably the best of the books. All the characters and concepts have already been established and set up, so all the time can be spent with the story, and delivering payoffs. Narratively, the core group of heroes established in the first book have been split into groups, but instead following each group through their own adventure, the story jumps from group to group detailing their actions as they affect the main sweep of the story. In a land undergoing world-changing events, we finally see the full scope of events! Even if certain events still happen off-screen.
Most importantly, we finally get some dragon-riding and the titular dragon-lances! And while the story is clearly sequel-baiting/setting up a sandbox for future stories, it does satisfying wrap up the major plotlines of the trilogy. Overall, I enjoyed it.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 09:44 AM (Lhaco)
88
Forsyth was also a reuters reporter, and an M i 6 stringer
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:44 AM (bXbFr)
89
I am so glad Perfessor finally read Wind in the Willows. Hope it had the E. H. Shepard illustrations or similar. (Not the later Disney style stuff.) When I read it now, I imagine I was reading it aloud to a child with different voices for the characters and expressing the moods, often pure excitement and joy, in the story. It brings the book even more alive.
Malcolm Guite has a few YT videos where he reads segments out loud. They are a joy to hear.
Don't forget the recent William Horwood homages to the original book. They are a delight.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 09:46 AM (yTvNw)
90
Is the ending of For Whom the Bell Tolls an "earned tragedy"? It's certainly tragic, but heroic too, like the end of Stephen King's The Dead Zone. Both are inevitable, yes, because of the choices the hero has made. Johnny Smith makes a difference in the world, yet we are pretty sure Robert Jordan will not.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:40 AM (wzUl9)
---
I should re-read For Whom the Bell Tolls. It has been many years, and like Homage to Catalonia, my deeper knowledge of the Spanish Civil War will probably enhance my enjoyment.
91
The only reading I've done this week was the greens on the golf course. In most cases I needed to reread them because they were like a story I didn't understand the first time.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025 09:47 AM (y3bZw)
92
Novelizations of films: One of the earliest I know of (ca. 1962) is David Westheimer's adaptation of Days of Wine and Roses. He adds some scenes, excellent ones, which are not in the finished film, and the final effect is as strong as the Lemmon/Remick film is.
Westheimer also wrote that WWII classic novel Von Ryan's Express, a very different kind of tale. He had range.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:47 AM (wzUl9)
93
I love my Kindle (eyesight issues), and this week picked up John Ringo's "Not That Kind of Good Guy", part 1 of his new Shadow Path series. First impression,...
OMG, HOLY CHRIST ON A CUPCAKE!!!!!
I say that, not because of the storytelling, but the political/social commentary. This is "Illuminati" plus "Atlas Shrugged" mixed with a little "Logan's Run".
Ringo delivers an EPIC takedown of crime and social failure in Baltimore right at the beginning of the book. It's vicious and pointed. Living out here, it misses a few things, but the topics he hits on, are items that have been on WBFF for the last couple years.
Only halfway through it, but that's because I've had to re-read some sections because of the depth to make sure I understand what Ringo is really saying. This isn't your normal Ringo book. Sometimes I think sarcastically to myself, "So how do you REALLY feel, John?!?"
-SLV
Posted by: Shy Lurking Voter at November 30, 2025 09:49 AM (e/Osv)
94
"Perfessor" Squirrel, thank you for your efforts. Your work, and the knowledgeable Horde, puts a smile on my face.
Have a great week in reading.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 30, 2025 09:49 AM (u82oZ)
95
Present tense, a lack of quotation marks (as in Cormac McCarthy), or use of introductory dashes instead of quote marks (as in Joyce's Dubliners stories and a lot of Euro works) -- all make me feel oddly claustrophobic, or as if the writer is whispering in my ear instead of simply telling me the story as he should.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:50 AM (wzUl9)
96
An additional note after reading the original Dragonlance trilogy; one of the major characters (in the latter books) was a woman named Kitiara. Now in 1985, that was a perfectly acceptable name for a sword-and-sorcery character.
However, when reading the story in 2025, Kitiara sounds very similar to Katara. Katara is the name of a character in a more recent and more well known (in certain circles) sword-and-sorcery story. And while Kitiara's and Katara's names may sound similar, and while they both have blue color schemes, their personalities are polar opposites! Mixing up the two of them, even momentarily, can really mess up how you picture the story!
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 09:50 AM (Lhaco)
97
"a Mole, a Water Rat, a Toad, and a Badger--they interact with the "human" world as equals. So I'm not sure how the scale works here."
This is odd, coming from a squirrel.
Posted by: fd at November 30, 2025 09:50 AM (vFG9F)
98
The big development in writing news is that I actually have some writing news. I'm finally getting around to doing a revision of Conqueror: Fields of Victory, my fantasy/historical miniatures rules. First edition was in 2013, revised in 2019, and now I'm going for 3.0.
This will be a comprehensive overhaul to clean up all the typos and rules inconsistencies as well as building out army lists and making it feel more like a complete game rather than a toolbox to build your own fantasy world.
The plus side is that the path before me is very clear, it's just time and careful execution. Plus, lots of playtesting!
99
Rushed ending is probably the most common problem I've encountered over the years, the most prominent in my memory is the ending of the Death Gate Cycle. Great series and then the ending was completely rushed.
Posted by: Farquad at November 30, 2025 09:51 AM (CFMhl)
100
Speaking of film novelizations, I understand that Earl Mac Rauch's own book version of his film The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the Eighth Dimension is absolutely legendary. It is also very rare, having never been reprinted for some weird business-related reason, and really expensive. Has anyone here had the privilege to read it? Is it worth the cost for a falling-apart, decades-old paperback? Thank you.
Posted by: werewife at November 30, 2025 09:51 AM (5ayY3)
101-
I should re-read For Whom the Bell Tolls. It has been many years, and like Homage to Catalonia, my deeper knowledge of the Spanish Civil War will probably enhance my enjoyment.
Posted by: Ace-Endorsed Author A.H. Lloyd at November 30, 2025
***
I re-read the final chapter of FWtBT and studied it carefully when I was writing a story in which the one of the main characters deliberately sacrifices himself to save his companions.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:52 AM (wzUl9)
102
Not long after Heinlein's The Cat Who Walks Through Walls came out, I was at an SF con, talking with some fans. One said, "I hated the ending of Cat. It felt like a cop-out."
I goggled at him. "Haven't you ever read For Whom the Bell Tolls? It's the same kind of heroic sacrifice scene." And he -- an aspiring writer no less -- admitted he'd never read it.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:57 AM (wzUl9)
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:57 AM (bXbFr)
104
I enjoyed that brief video linked in the post about James Madison's library at Montpelier. I consider a personal library to be indicative of the person. Learning what Madison , or Jefferson, etc., read to form their philosophy, tempered by hard experience, is fascinating. Collections of their personal correspondence are in the same category.
I take the same approach to authors I especially enjoy: Tolkien, Lewis, Chesterton, Churchill, George MacDonald, or Wendell Berry. What books did they read for pleasure and edification? What did they express on day to day matters in personal letters?
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 09:58 AM (yTvNw)
105
Westheimer also wrote that WWII classic novel Von Ryan's Express, a very different kind of tale. He had range.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:47 AM (wzUl9)
Shouldn't every good writer be able to write in more than one genre?
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 09:58 AM (uQesX)
106
James Kahn's novelization of Return of the Jedi is brilliant. It formed the core of my inspiration to write the Man of Destiny series, which was a correction to the terrible prequel films.
As in most novelizations, there are some expanded dialogue sequences, thus Luke and Obi-wan go deeper into the history, which was likely in the script but cut. It totally undermines the prequels, which are a direct contradiction. Anakin was not a kid, but an adult, about the same age as Luke when his adventure began.
This was central to my reimagining the story and while I'm biased, others (some in the Horde) will agree with me.
Kahn also has a nice turn of phrase, and the book includes a twist on the Death Star attack, which is that when the shield generator is actually taken out, the Emperor orders the station to destroy Endor in order to further enrage Luke. A bit much for the movie, but a nice touch.
My favorite part was the character portrait of Jerjerrod, the Death Star's commander.
107
Grant should be in the top 10 of all Presidents. But the Left hates him. He freed the slaves and helped the former slave integrate into American society.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 30, 2025 09:40 AM (u82oZ)
---
Yes. Frederick Douglass held him in as high regard as Lincoln for improving the lot of the black American.
Agree with you on "Fallen Angels" too. It's fun to speculate who his characters are based on, like Forrest J. Ackerman, etc.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 09:59 AM (kpS4V)
108
I must have missed that nuance but i havent read it years
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 10:01 AM (bXbFr)
109
I got hioked on some of the early novelizations of Star Trek TOS that led me to collect and read the first 75 books. Many were excellent stand alone adventures and filled in a lot of background of the characters. I thought it was interesting how the different authors kept the story lines consistent. I still reread some of them today.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025 10:01 AM (y3bZw)
110
I'm finally getting around to doing a revision of Conqueror: Fields of Victory, my fantasy/historical miniatures rules. First edition was in 2013, revised in 2019, and now I'm going for 3.0.
Posted by: Ace-Endorsed Author A.H. Lloyd
That reminds me, I bought a war board game several years ago, but never played the game; I just wanted the infantry, cavalry, and cannon pieces. I designed a war game for my kids with it's own board and rules. Those games could go on for hours.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 10:01 AM (0U5gm)
111
So, after finishing the Dragonlance trilogy, I decided to jump to some modern sword-and-sorcery novels. I've started reading "Ascendent" by Michael R Miller, because the ebook was cheap. It's a dragonrider book; with all the classic tropes. Intelligent, telepathic dragons, who form a psychic bond with their rider immediately upon hatching. There are color-coded powers and rankings. Dragonriders live in a parallel society and exist to fight to fight swarms of mind-less world-threatening force-of-evil monsters... Anyways, this story focuses on an emotional acts-before-he-thinks teenage boy, who breaks the rules to ensure a sickly-looking dragon-egg hatches, and thus forms a bond with a very unique pale dragon.
Note; everything I just said could also describe Anne McCaffery's "The White Dragons from way back in...I dunno, maybe the late 80's. The author of this story HAD to have read The White Dragon as a kid. That parallels are just too blatant.
I am still reading the book, but I'm a little annoyed at how much Mary Sue is in the main characters...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:01 AM (Lhaco)
112
I goggled at him. "Haven't you ever read For Whom the Bell Tolls? It's the same kind of heroic sacrifice scene." And he -- an aspiring writer no less -- admitted he'd never read it.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:57 AM (wzUl9)
Can't read everything, Wolfus. Classic or not.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 10:01 AM (uQesX)
113
Dune very much has a rushed ending. After plodding along, with tons of detail on the setting, it suddenly races to conclusion, even to the point of killing Paul's son offscreen - not even offscreen, almost as an afterthought.
I'm wondering if Herbert's publisher got impatient and demanded the deadline be honored, because that's what it feels like.
114
One problem with the book is that it is so contemporary that it now pushes me out of the story.
-
Similarly, I recently rewatched The Matrix, you know, the first one, the good one, well, the only one really. Anyway, not exactly cutting edge. They had flip phones and phone booths.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:02 AM (L/fGl)
115
Eris, NaCly, the Ulysses S. Grant book. Is that author Ron Chernow?
I'm thinking of some reading series I'd like to do, one being a biography of each of the U. S. Presidents. I don't know what authors are good, and reliably accurate.
The other project I'm thinking of is reading something by/of the world's most influential revolutionaries, so I can point out in discussions exactly how and why they f**ked everything up so much.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:03 AM (L/fGl)
117
I'm continuing with Pride and Prejudice. Still enjoying it but it's going slower than I expected because I find myself savoring the writing, especially the dry humor, Austen is so good at. Which is fine. I'm not in a hurry or in a race.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 10:03 AM (yTvNw)
118 Shouldn't every good writer be able to write in more than one genre?
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025
***
I think so. Sometimes literary authors manage it, but far too often they get some of the tropes of the genre (mystery or SF) wrong or leave them out entirely. Ira Levin, on the other hand, successfully penned a mystery novel and a crime play, at least two SF novels, a horror fantasy, and more than one Broadway comedy, No Time for Sergeants. He's a good example of an author with a wide range.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:04 AM (wzUl9)
119
Each Frank Herbert "Dune" book was half as good as the one before it. -Somebody, not me.
Posted by: Idaho Spudboy at November 30, 2025 10:04 AM (8QVSJ)
120
That reminds me, I bought a war board game several years ago, but never played the game; I just wanted the infantry, cavalry, and cannon pieces. I designed a war game for my kids with it's own board and rules. Those games could go on for hours.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 10:01 AM (0U5gm)
---
I have a bunch of things like that kicking around the house.
The last project was a card-driven version of Kingmaker, and I pirated tokens from a tactical Risk-branded game that sucked.
121
Have been thinking about revisiting Hemingway and Fitzgerald too. Except for Gatsby and some of Hemingway's short stories, I haven't read them in decades.
I envy people who can read the works of a single author front to back without jumping to something else in the middle. But that just doesn't seem to work for me these days. Sorry, Nabokov -- I'll get back to you Real Soon Now...
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 10:05 AM (q3u5l)
122
With Levin, make that three SF novels, or two horror fantasies. I forgot The Stepford Wives.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:05 AM (wzUl9)
123
This past week I've been reading _The Romanov Rescue_ by Kacey Ezell, Tom Kratman and Justin Watson. It's an alternate-history story about a plot to save the Romanovs from the Commies. Some of my favorite German WWI characters get involved -- Max Hoffmann and Ludwig Bockholt among others. Too bad they couldn't work in Von Lettow somehow.
You'd expect a nonstop slam-bang action story but there's actually quite a lot of the novel devoted to the nuts and bolts of building a commando strike force out of Russian royalist POWs, training and equipping them with captured gear, and how to get them deep into Russian territory without being noticed (the name Bockholt should be a clue). That's really the heart of the story so if you don't go for that kind of military-history wonkery the book will probably bore you.
Not for the squeamish, either. Late WWI and Russian Revolution era involved a lot of real savagery and the authors don't shy away from any of it.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 30, 2025 10:07 AM (78a2H)
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 10:08 AM (bXbFr)
125
Similarly, I recently rewatched The Matrix, you know, the first one, the good one, well, the only one really. Anyway, not exactly cutting edge. They had flip phones and phone booths.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks
I know. I watched How the West was Won not too long ago, and they didn't even have phones.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 10:08 AM (0U5gm)
126
With flavors of zahiroff the dodgy arms dealer
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 10:08 AM (bXbFr)
127
Similarly, I recently rewatched The Matrix, you know, the first one, the good one, well, the only one really. Anyway, not exactly cutting edge. They had flip phones and phone booths.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:02 AM (L/fGl)
IIRC, that was intentional, as the Machines had set up the Matrix to mimic the 1990s, the peak of American civilization. Little did we know that they were correct.
Posted by: Idaho Spudboy at November 30, 2025 10:08 AM (8QVSJ)
128
I think so. Sometimes literary authors manage it, but far too often they get some of the tropes of the genre (mystery or SF) wrong or leave them out entirely. Ira Levin, on the other hand, successfully penned a mystery novel and a crime play, at least two SF novels, a horror fantasy, and more than one Broadway comedy, No Time for Sergeants. He's a good example of an author with a wide range.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:04 AM (wzUl9)
Well, I think so. That's why I'm trying more than one.
Anyway, gotta go. Prolly miss the rest of the thread.
Thanks, Perfessor.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 10:09 AM (uQesX)
129
Finally hung two maps in my library, the Pauline Baynes map of Narnia and her "There and Back Again" map from "The Hobbit". Really classes up the joint. Now all I need is a plinth and a globe that opens up to reveal a curated wet bar.
My map of Middle Earth should be back from the framers in a week.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 10:09 AM (kpS4V)
I cant even begin to describe it
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 09:57 AM (bXbFr)
A sequel to Buckaroo? Buckaroo Banzai? How would someone improve on it?
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 10:09 AM (i+bC1)
131
I envy people who can read the works of a single author front to back without jumping to something else in the middle. But that just doesn't seem to work for me these days. Sorry, Nabokov -- I'll get back to you Real Soon Now...
Posted by: Just Some Guy
I can't even stick to one book at a time; I always have three or four going, and jump back and forth.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 10:10 AM (0U5gm)
132
I envy people who can read the works of a single author front to back without jumping to something else in the middle. But that just doesn't seem to work for me these days. Sorry, Nabokov -- I'll get back to you Real Soon Now...
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 10:05 AM (q3u5l)
---
It depends upon the author and nature of the work. I was on the Graham Greene train for a while, but he has a pretty big catalog, and I get distracted.
I think the season also matters. Summer reading is a thing. In Michigan, we get all of the seasons, and when the weather turns, lots of cozy reading time, but in my case, also gaming. As soon as the weather breaks, we can't wait to get outside.
But in the meantime, happiness is fresh minis to paint for an upcoming game.
133More like moriarty outfit writ large
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025
***
Which was David McDaniel's exact origin story for Thrush in his first U.N.C.L.E. tie-in novel, The Dagger Affair. He does not name Moriarty, but says the late founder of the criminal organization that later became Thrush had been talented "in two somewhat related areas, mathematics and crime." That I think is an exact Holmes quote describing Moriarty.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:11 AM (wzUl9)
-
I see they're making a William the Conqueror movie. I can still hope it'll be good.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:12 AM (L/fGl)
135
We visited Madison's Montpelier in 2012 along with Mount Vernon and Monticello. They are all special but Montpelier was our favorite, I guess because it felt more personal and less grand. It was also pretty empty at the time and I'd be interested to see how they have repopulated the house in the last 13 years.
Posted by: Art Rondelet of Malmsey at November 30, 2025 10:12 AM (FEVMW)
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 10:12 AM (i+bC1)
137
In the world of comic books, I was working through a "Tomb Raider" collection, and came across a truly shocking story. Lara Croft, our bad-ass strong-female-character action-hero main character, got captured by the villain's henchmen. She was surprised, outnumbered, thoroughly out-matched, and about to be dragged away....And then Lara was rescued. By a guy. Specifically, by her potential love-interest! And the moment wasn't ruined or undercut in any way!
Imagine; a male character being allowed to be useful in a story about an action-girl! That's downright un-heard-of! At least in today's environment. It become a little more believable when you remember that the comic was written in 1999 or 2000...
As a quick, super-general review, I don't think these Tomb Raider comics (in the Tomb Raider Colossal Collection 1) have any real connection to any of the games. They are just stand-alone stories in that genre. I don't even know if the love interest mentioned above is an actual character from the games... The stores are too wild to be taken seriously, but they are well-drawn, so they work as light-hearted pulpy fun.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:12 AM (Lhaco)
138
"Flashman's Lady" has a scene in which a top aide to the White Rajah of Sarawak takes his riverboat farther ahead of the Rajah's vessel to spring a trap consisting of armed natives lying in ambush along both sides of the river. Flashy fell overboard and thus survived.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 10:13 AM (p/isN)
139
69 Been picking up a lot of 99 cent Collected works of ...
Like Kipling, HG Wells, George MacDonald, and Edgar Rice Burroughs. I note with the later that the description lies, and my own library is much more complete that Kindle's promised complete works of ERB.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 30, 2025 09:33 AM
****
The best source for all your public-domain reading needs is the Delphi Classics series. They're easily available at Amazon and Delphi's own site; most collections cost $2.99, but for those two extra dollars you get navigable tables of contents, author biographies, important contextual material, and often the illustrations from the original editions! Even more exciting, if you purchase a Collected Edition (say of ERB or Johnston McCulley or whomever) because the Complete Works are not yet available under US copyright law (curse its bloated name!), it'll get updated with new material as later works enter the public domain. I've bought at least a dozen of the suckers!
Posted by: werewife at November 30, 2025 10:14 AM (5ayY3)
140
Speaking of Founding Fathers' libraries, John Adams's library at Peacefield is really beautiful too.
Posted by: Art Rondelet of Malmsey at November 30, 2025 10:14 AM (FEVMW)
141
C S Lewis wrote on the questions you have about Wind in the Willows. He thinks it is a particular feature possible only in children's books. The move about freely, but have all their needs taken care of.
Also, the interaction question tells me you don't read that much children's lit. It's a common feature there, too. Jungle Books, Oz, many more.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 10:15 AM (s0JqF)
142
Buckaroo sequel.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 10:12 AM (i+bC1)
---
Over the last few years I've been going back and watching all the movies I missed in the 80s. Some were just as well, as I wasn't old enough to get them, others were date flicks and I was tragically lacking in that department.
Buckaroo Banzai was one that I kept meaning to see and never did. The crazy thing was that we had a Sci-Fi Club in high school that watched movies after school on Friday, and it was in regular rotation, I just always missed when it was showing.
I finally closed that circle and it was amusing, and also packed with people who would shortly go on to bigger and better things. We don't have that today. You can't go see a film whose entire cast will go on to stardom.
143
A lot of us have large personal libraries now, but think back to 250 years ago, when books were extraordinarily expensive, and these men had quite a bit of money tied up in books.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 10:17 AM (0U5gm)
144
Good morning all.
Late and haven't read all the comments yet because I did not want to get out of bed this morning. Still looked like night when I woke up. No snow just rain but dreary.
No progress with Zelazny but read a new J.R. Ward that was pretty good.
Exciting though is a new Sanderson co-written with MaryKowal called The Original. Sci Fi mystery. Just started but really good. Report next week.
145
I see they're making a William the Conqueror movie. I can still hope it'll be good.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land
Expect race swapped actors. That seems to be the norm these days.
Posted by: Tuna at November 30, 2025 10:18 AM (lJ0H4)
146
Someone had asked about Michael Gilbert, on of my favorites. It set me off on rereading some of his. One thing - I don't think I know of any other author (in English) with so many alternate titles. A quick scan shows that about 1/4 to 1/3 have 2 names. I don't think even Wodehouse runs that high.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 10:19 AM (s0JqF)
147
41 Started and finished "Saint Odd" this week. This was the final "Odd Thomas" book in the Dean Koonz series. I think Mr Koonz must have been tired of writing about Oddie when he penned it. A good portion of the book was simply excerpts from earlier books and then the ending was anticlimactic. I thought I must have missed a chapter because by this time I was just skimming the pages, but no, it was finished. Like a S. King book.
Ugh
Posted by: p0indexterous at November 30, 2025 09:16 AM (wf0SQ)
I know older tv shows had clip-show episodes, which were created because of budget/filming/time constraints. But it's hard to imagine what circumstances would force a novel to use clips of other books....Anyways, yeah, I'd find that disappointing, too.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:19 AM (Lhaco)
148
45 I wonder what James Madison read? I suppose I'd know if I watched the video, but I can't be bothered to watch videos. Heh.
Posted by: Dash my lace wigs! at November 30, 2025 09:18 AM (h7ZuX)
_______
They don't say.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 10:20 AM (s0JqF)
149
Eris, NaCly, the Ulysses S. Grant book. Is that author Ron Chernow?
----
Dash, yes it is by Ron Chernow. Big thumuppage from me.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 10:21 AM (kpS4V)
150
C S Lewis wrote on the questions you have about Wind in the Willows. He thinks it is a particular feature possible only in children's books. The move about freely, but have all their needs taken care of.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 10:15 AM (s0JqF)
---
One of the many great things about Tolkien is how he considers logistics. Food is a big deal, and he goes into it quite a bit. It's one of the things that make it all feel so real.
Obviously his Army experience helps this, and when Pipping brings it up in Minas Tirith, you can't help but smile that it's true that "old campaigners" are always worried about their next meal. I think a huge amount of conversations in the military are about when we eat and what will it be.
151
I so enjoyed Dean Koontz' A Big Little Life, about his dog, that I bought copies for both my sisters and my mother. It was disappointing in one respect, however. Koontz publishes so much I thought surely he had sold his soul to the Devil. But no, he describes his writing set up and his routine of hard work. Anthony Horowitz may well be the same, not mere genius but hard work.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:21 AM (L/fGl)
152
The Earl Mac Rauch novelization of Buckaroo was very good. It maintained the fiction that this was all "real" and part of a long ongoing series of exploits by BB&co. Footnotes referencing previous adventures, that kind of thing.
They did much the same with the DVD release: there's a commentary track _by the characters_ about how well this "movie adaptation" depicts the real events of the story.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 30, 2025 10:22 AM (78a2H)
153
Expect race swapped actors. That seems to be the norm these days.
Posted by: Tuna at November 30, 2025 10:18 AM (lJ0H4)
---
The Saxons will all be black.
154
The question arises: Is Rosemary's Baby a suspense-paranoia novel, or a horror fantasy? Until the final chapter, when Rosemary sees her baby's horns and claws, it seems to be the former. Unless Rosemary is hallucinating somehow, along with the members of the cult, this detail moves it out into the area of fantasy.
The Stepford Wives: Is it SF or not? The robotic wives bring it under the former heading. The novel is intended to be satirical, so it's hardly an Asimov-style robot story, but the underpinnings qualify it, just as The Boys From Brazil is qualified by the then-future idea of cloning.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:22 AM (wzUl9)
155
They don't say.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 10:20 AM (s0JqF)
Oh, then I'm especially glad I didn't sit through the video. Thanks.
156
50 The nice thing about reading history is you often know how it ends, it's the path that gets there is the question
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 09:20 AM (Ia/+0)
I dunno, I often dread the moment when it all comes crashing down.
Right now I'm listening to a lecture series on the nomadic cultures of the steppes, and I'm just about to reach the point where Islam enters the picture. So maybe I'm just in a dour mood, as far as history goes...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:24 AM (Lhaco)
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 30, 2025 10:24 AM (bXbFr)
158
I’ve started reading Many Dimensions by Charles Williams.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 30, 2025 10:24 AM (3uBP9)
159Someone had asked about Michael Gilbert, on of my favorites. It set me off on rereading some of his. One thing - I don't think I know of any other author (in English) with so many alternate titles. A quick scan shows that about 1/4 to 1/3 have 2 names. I don't think even Wodehouse runs that high.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025
***
Do you mean different titles for American editions vs. the English editions? John Dickson Carr's The Hollow Man was known as The Three Coffins when it was published in America, for example.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:25 AM (wzUl9)
160
I dunno, I often dread the moment when it all comes crashing down.
Right now I'm listening to a lecture series on the nomadic cultures of the steppes, and I'm just about to reach the point where Islam enters the picture. So maybe I'm just in a dour mood, as far as history goes...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:24 AM (Lhaco)
---
A huge amount of great novels are set on the edge of disaster, and IIRC, the Perfesser used that as one of his themes. Gone with the Wind, The Winds of War, North and South...the list just goes on and on.
161
I see they're making a William the Conqueror movie. I can still hope it'll be good.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land
Expect race swapped actors. That seems to be the norm these days.
Posted by: Tuna at November 30, 2025 10:18 AM (lJ0H4)
William the Conqueror was actually a black, transexual, illegal alien who was raised by lesbian space witches.
Posted by: Netflix and Disney at November 30, 2025 10:26 AM (8QVSJ)
162
I like "The Great Gatsby." There is a moral to the story.
Don't chase a married woman.
Posted by: no one at November 30, 2025 10:27 AM (GLn15)
163
William the Conqueror will be a Trannie
Bishop Otto is a pedophile, Harold was married to a man
Ok, getting cynical with constant woke movies
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 10:27 AM (Ia/+0)
164
William the Conqueror was actually a black, transexual, illegal alien who was raised by lesbian space witches.
Posted by: Netflix and Disney at November 30, 2025 10:26 AM (8QVSJ)
---
No, that would make him sympathetic. The new hotness is that Britain *always* was packed with Muslims from Pakistan and Nigeria, they were just hidden by bigoted historians.
165
I've also been re-reading some SF anthologies from the past decade or so, and being disappointed. A lot of what Sarah Hoyt calls "gray goo" fiction. A lot of stories which just _assume_ that humans are the bad guys. Tiresome -- and not particularly original, either. I've been seeing that since the 1970s.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 30, 2025 10:29 AM (78a2H)
166
Dash, I'm trying to think of other presidential biographies I enjoyed.
One is definitely "Mornings on Horseback : The Story of an Extraordinary Family, a Vanished Way of Life and the Unique Child Who Became Theodore Roosevelt" by David McCullough. It's as much about his family as the man himself.
And as usual I'll tout "The River of Doubt" by Candace Millard, about that arduous trip to the Amazon.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 10:29 AM (kpS4V)
167
Just started "The War for Middle-Earth" by Joseph Laconte. It's sort of a continuation of his previous book, "A Hobbit, A Wardrobe and a Great War". He deals with the mindset that led Europe into both world Wars and the dehumanization, dissolution, and nihilism that came out of the wars, especially WW I. Dadaism, communision, fascism, and anti-Christian attitudes in academia, the arts, and government generally. Against that backdrop, some like Lewis, Tolkien and a few others who still valued and celebrated traditional values and the individual stand out like candles in a dark space. And how the public, despite everything they are taught to the contrary, craves those values. The feeling is one of hope, maybe redemption, in a struggle to remain human and positive.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 10:30 AM (yTvNw)
168
And as usual I'll tout "The River of Doubt" by Candace Millard, about that arduous trip to the Amazon.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes
I second that recommendation. Excellent book.
Posted by: Tuna at November 30, 2025 10:30 AM (lJ0H4)
Blackstone Publishing has reissued all of his work. The novels and the plays except for a single play that was never produced on stage. All of it's worth a read. He could do the suspense novel, the horror story, the comedy, the dystopian sf novel, and do it all well.
Offhand, I can't remember anyone else who worked so consistently well across multiple genres.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 10:32 AM (q3u5l)
170
And as usual I'll tout "The River of Doubt" by Candace Millard, about that arduous trip to the Amazon.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes
Teddy had a first generation laptop running Windows?
(I read TRoD and loved it.)
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (L/fGl)
171
"Rushed resolution" - in the Manga/Manhwa world, this is one of the unsatisfying conclusions of a work, but one that is usually much better than the alternative - "Axed". If a story isn't bringing in the money, they may just cut their losses midway into the product. Right in the middle of a storyline.
And similar to the cliffhanger season ending that became the series ending, most folks won't want to start it if they know it doesn't have a proper ending point. Which means less of a long tail of readers/watchers/buyers, as well.
Posted by: Another Anon at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (4h45B)
172
Against that backdrop, some like Lewis, Tolkien and a few others who still valued and celebrated traditional values and the individual stand out like candles in a dark space. And how the public, despite everything they are taught to the contrary, craves those values. The feeling is one of hope, maybe redemption, in a struggle to remain human and positive.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 10:30 AM (yTvNw)
---
The Christmas Truce of 1914 was part of that fading culture.
For a brief moment, the guns stopped and there was a fear that the troops would refuse to continue. In the early days of the interwebs, I was on a WW I discussion forum and they always had a Christmas truce where flame wars and shitposting were forbidden.
173
And as usual I'll tout "The River of Doubt" by Candace Millard, about that arduous trip to the Amazon.
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 10:29 AM (kpS4V)
Oh, yeah! I started that once, on audio, and decided I'd rather read a hard copy when I'm not distracted by driving and chores. It's somewhere in my hundreds of TBR lists. Will check out Mornings on Horseback, as well. Thanks!
174
In regard to history and historical fiction, I'll recommend the comics maxiseries The Kents, featuring the ancestors of Jonathan Kent. Adopted son Clark finds a trove of journals, and we go off following the experiences of an Abolitionist father and his two sons after they move to Bleeding Kansas.
The writer, John Ostrander, blended in a lot of real events, exploring the "why" they happened.
And with art by Tim Truman! ... I should reread this.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (p/isN)
175
JTB, Laconte's book sounds very interesting. I've been wanting to get back into some more nonfiction, including history. I wonder if my local library has it or can get it.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:34 AM (wzUl9)
176
And as usual I'll tout "The River of Doubt" by Candace Millard, about that arduous trip to the Amazon.
Posted by: All Hail Eris
Very good book.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 30, 2025 10:35 AM (0U5gm)
177
"Rushed resolution" - in the Manga/Manhwa world, this is one of the unsatisfying conclusions of a work, but one that is usually much better than the alternative - "Axed". If a story isn't bringing in the money, they may just cut their losses midway into the product. Right in the middle of a storyline.
Posted by: Another Anon at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (4h45B)
---
I will not watch a series that is not complete. I know that hurts ratings, but I've been taught multiple times that either they get dropped while I'm watching them, or go crazy woke and tank.
178
Over the years of my husband's illness, I formed the habit of getting up at 4 and writing till he woke up. You can build up a lot of product that way!
So my reading now is going back over those mss to what editing they need. I'm actually enjoying this. It often seems like someone else's work, and I'm just looking over her shoulder.
Posted by: Wenda at November 30, 2025 10:36 AM (/WpRi)
179
And if you like _River of Doubt_ let me recommend once again _Into the Amazon_, a bio of TR's co-commander on that expedition, Brazilian Col. (later General) Candido Rondon. Fascinating guy. Born a poor and probably illegitimate half-breed in a remote Amazon settlement, got an appointment to military academy, picked the winning side in Brazil's anti-monarchist revolution, built telegraph systems and roads across the Amazon region, and founded the Indian Protection Service. He has a state named after him now in Brazil.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 30, 2025 10:36 AM (78a2H)
180I will not watch a series that is not complete. I know that hurts ratings, but I've been taught multiple times that either they get dropped while I'm watching them, or go crazy woke and tank.
Same for books.
Posted by: Ace-Endorsed Author A.H. Lloyd at November 30, 2025
***
I got lucky with Breaking Bad. Not only did it complete, and very satisfactorily, but I never saw it while it was running, just viewed the entire set after it was all over.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:37 AM (wzUl9)
181
Presidential auto-biographies. "At Ease: Stories I Tell to Friends" by Dwight Eisenhower.
During the inter-war years, Ike considered giving up his commission and becoming the football coach at West Point.
Posted by: Idaho Spudboy at November 30, 2025 10:37 AM (8QVSJ)
182
Ira Levin, on the other hand, successfully penned a mystery novel and a crime play, at least two SF novels, a horror fantasy, and more than one Broadway comedy, No Time for Sergeants. He's a good example of an author with a wide range.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:04 AM
****
Said mystery novel, A Kiss Before Dying, has the most astonishing twist I've ever encountered -- had to stop reading it for a bit to assimilate the change. And one of the SF novels, This Perfect Day, has a twist almost as astonishing, and is probably my favorite dystopia.
Posted by: werewife at November 30, 2025 10:38 AM (5ayY3)
183
He deals with the mindset that led Europe into both world Wars and the dehumanization, dissolution, and nihilism that came out of the wars, especially WW I. Dadaism, communision, fascism, and anti-Christian attitudes in academia, the arts, and government generally.”
I should like to read that, because I’ve long been interested in those themes. The anti-Christian attitude in Europe, especially - they felt that God betrayed them by allowing them to be destroyed by the terrible wars, even though the wars were the products of their own prideful and violent hearts.
Posted by: Tom Servo at November 30, 2025 10:38 AM (3U2FH)
184
Jim Acosta: Leftwing media should threaten to not show up to Trump’s press avails anymore “until you clean up your act."
Great idea. Do it. Please.
-
Yeah, Jim, you ugly dumb c*nts gotta stick together.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:41 AM (L/fGl)
185
Thanks for all the presidential suggestions. Gotta go make the dog food, but I'll peruse later for any additional.
186
One thing about Rondon -- he was obviously a genius. Spoke who knows how many languages, excellent engineer, etc. And yet he simultaneously refutes both hereditary and environmental theories of intelligence. His ancestry on both sides were dirt-poor, utterly unremarkable. No hint of brilliance. But remote Amazon villages and the Brazilian Army were also not particularly renowned for churning out geniuses, either, so his upbringing and environment didn't make him brilliant, either. Apparently he had some innate spark, and the guts and sheer perseverance to turn that potential into reality.
Amusing note: in every photo of him I've seen, even when in the depths of the Amazon jungle or relaxing at home, he's wearing his Brazilian Army uniform with the tunic buttoned right up to his chin.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 30, 2025 10:42 AM (78a2H)
187
Zelazny on your list takes me back. When in early grades I had joined the Science Fiction Book Club, where I got 20?) free books to join in exchange for a monthly commitment of some sort. There I found Chronicles of Amber and read many others of his following
Posted by: German Shepherd at November 30, 2025 10:42 AM (6CWpO)
188[Levin's] mystery novel, A Kiss Before Dying, has the most astonishing twist I've ever encountered -- had to stop reading it for a bit to assimilate the change. And one of the SF novels, This Perfect Day, has a twist almost as astonishing, and is probably my favorite dystopia.
Posted by: werewife at November 30, 2025
***
Stephen King described the AKBD twist as immune to the Reader Who Looks at the End to See How It Comes Out. If you look at the end of Kiss without reading the first half, it means nothing. If you've read everything up to that twist point, it means everything.
I need to re-read TPD, though, to see what you mean on that one.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:43 AM (wzUl9)
189
Never saw Breaking Bad during its run. Ditto The Wire. Never started the Game of Thrones books. Caught The Wire and Breaking Bad after they were complete. Don't like getting burned with a series cancellation before they finish.
They tried a reboot of the Fugitive some years back, with Tim Daly and Mykelti Williamson as Kimble and Gerard respectively. Cast was okay, but I didn't think the series had the writing it needed. It lasted one season. The last episode ended on a cliffhanger, never to be resolved.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 10:44 AM (q3u5l)
190Zelazny on your list takes me back. When in early grades I had joined the Science Fiction Book Club, where I got 20?) free books to join in exchange for a monthly commitment of some sort. There I found Chronicles of Amber and read many others of his following
Posted by: German Shepherd at November 30, 2025
***
Zelazny had a fondness for the crime genre. His novelette "Home Is the Hangman" shows his interest in that kind of story without destroying the SF parts.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:45 AM (wzUl9)
191
Any recommendations for good books about Thailand? Novels, histories, travelogues, whatever.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 30, 2025 10:46 AM (78a2H)
192
174 In regard to history and historical fiction, I'll recommend the comics maxiseries The Kents, featuring the ancestors of Jonathan Kent. Adopted son Clark finds a trove of journals, and we go off following the experiences of an Abolitionist father and his two sons after they move to Bleeding Kansas.
The writer, John Ostrander, blended in a lot of real events, exploring the "why" they happened.
And with art by Tim Truman! ... I should reread this.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (p/isN)
Hm. Not sure I've read much by Ostrander, but I'm pretty sure he's got a good reputation. I know he's not on my do-not-buy list... So maybe that's something to look at.
On the other hand, I just spent waaaaaaaaaay too much on a Black-Friday comic-buying-binge, so I really shouldn't be looking for any new series until....sometime in 2027.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:47 AM (Lhaco)
193
Perfessor - Thank you for reminding me of the Disney movie The Black Hole. I remember seeing it in the theater when it came out and liking it a lot. I don't remember much else about it, however.
May need to give that a rewatch/reread.
Posted by: Darrell Harris at November 30, 2025 10:48 AM (0CU3H)
194. . . They tried a reboot of the Fugitive some years back, with Tim Daly and Mykelti Williamson as Kimble and Gerard respectively. Cast was okay, but I didn't think the series had the writing it needed. It lasted one season. The last episode ended on a cliffhanger, never to be resolved.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025
***
I remember that -- early 2000s, I think. At that point the concept of a lone man, even with some occasional help, staying ahead of law enforcement was hard to sustain belief in, and would be harder now. In 1963-67, ID was not anywhere near as universally required, and law enforcement didn't talk to each other across different domains as much as they do now. So Kimble's continuing quest was believable.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:50 AM (wzUl9)
195
171 "Rushed resolution" - in the Manga/Manhwa world, this is one of the unsatisfying conclusions of a work, but one that is usually much better than the alternative - "Axed". If a story isn't bringing in the money, they may just cut their losses midway into the product. Right in the middle of a storyline.
Posted by: Another Anon at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (4h45B)
Back when I was trying to find good animes, I felt like I ran across a lot of rushed/randomly epic endings. All of a sudden, the story would get 3 or 4 new plot lines, which end in a big messy climax, that felt like it had nothing to do with the main characters that we had been following. The only ending like that that I can still remember was Escaflone, so maybe it wasn't as common a trope as I imagined.....But that ending really annoyed me.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 30, 2025 10:52 AM (Lhaco)
196
Zelazny did a novel that was published by Hard Case Crime long after his death. The book was called The Dead Man's Brother and it was not sf/fantasy. Couldn't get into it at all. Seemed readable enough, but we just weren't in Zelazny country and the book just wasn't working for me at all.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 10:52 AM (q3u5l)
197
175 ... "Laconte's book sounds very interesting. I've been wanting to get back into some more nonfiction, including history. I wonder if my local library has it or can get it."
Hi Wolfus,
The new Laconte book just came out a week or so ago, so libraries probably won't have it yet. They might have the previous book. The paperback for that is about 8 bucks on Amazon and the Kindle version is two dollars. Since it is mostly text, the Kindle version is adequate.
Fair warning. The books celebrate the values and life choices of Lewis and Tolkien but also deals with matters that make my blood boil. Just in the first chapter Laconte brings up Sigmund Freud, who I despise on many levels, and eugenics, which is an abomination against humanity and Heaven.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025 10:52 AM (yTvNw)
198
Wakipedia more or less says if America had just given Japan what they wanted they wouldn’t have done that thing December 7, 1941.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 10:53 AM (i+bC1)
199
Well, it's been settled. Trump is not Hitler. He's worse than Hitler.
David Letterman on Donald Trump: “It’s just a wonder of idiocy. It’s never ending. He’s our dictator. His appearance is fraudulent as is everything about the regime. It’s like 18 times the worst behavior one has witnessed ever anywhere. Think of the worst thing that you’ve ever seen humans accomplish. This is so much worse.”
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 10:53 AM (L/fGl)
200The new Laconte book just came out a week or so ago, so libraries probably won't have it yet. They might have the previous book. The paperback for that is about 8 bucks on Amazon and the Kindle version is two dollars. Since it is mostly text, the Kindle version is adequate.
Fair warning. The books celebrate the values and life choices of Lewis and Tolkien but also deals with matters that make my blood boil. Just in the first chapter Laconte brings up Sigmund Freud, who I despise on many levels, and eugenics, which is an abomination against humanity and Heaven.
Posted by: JTB at November 30, 2025
***
Maybe I can get the earlier one to start with. As far as Freud and eugenics, those were hot topics at the time, so any book on the era has to deal with them.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:54 AM (wzUl9)
201
If you torrent, the Earl Mac Rauch novelization of Buckaroo is available in epub.
Posted by: jayhawkone at November 30, 2025 10:55 AM (atzbh)
202 Wakipedia more or less says if America had just given Japan what they wanted they wouldn’t have done that thing December 7, 1941.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025
***
Sure. We could have sold them all the oil and rubber they wanted, so they could make war on and take over all of east Asia. /s
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:56 AM (wzUl9)
If they were hunting Richard Kimble these days, all they'd have to do is sic the vehicle-extended-warranty people on him. They'd catch him in a week.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 10:58 AM (q3u5l)
205
I've been watching Person of Interest on Prime. On the last season, there are 5, and just encountered the first slightly Woke scene.Really good Sci Fi. Pretty clear cut good guys, bad guys. Theme"The Government is watching your every move."
206
I was going to read The Never Ending Story but just didn’t have the time.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 10:59 AM (KDPiq)
207
“ No one who hopes in you will ever be put to shame, but shame will come on those who are treacherous without cause.”
Psalm 25:3
Posted by: Marcus T at November 30, 2025 11:02 AM (60OBK)
208
David Letterman on Donald Trump: “It’s just a wonder of idiocy. It’s never ending. He’s our dictator. His appearance is fraudulent as is everything about the regime. It’s like 18 times the worst behavior one has witnessed ever anywhere. Think of the worst thing that you’ve ever seen humans accomplish. This is so much worse.”
Worse than setting up a love nest next to your office to bang employees?
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:02 AM (KDPiq)
209
206 I was going to read The Never Ending Story but just didn’t have the time.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 10:59 AM (KDPiq)
Spoiler alert-
They flew away. Just flew away.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 11:02 AM (i+bC1)
210
159 Someone had asked about Michael Gilbert, on of my favorites. It set me off on rereading some of his. One thing - I don't think I know of any other author (in English) with so many alternate titles. A quick scan shows that about 1/4 to 1/3 have 2 names. I don't think even Wodehouse runs that high.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025
***
Do you mean different titles for American editions vs. the English editions? John Dickson Carr's The Hollow Man was known as The Three Coffins when it was published in America, for example.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 10:25 AM (wzUl9)
________
A good example of what I mean. Oddly enough, my copy of The Hollow Man was so named, though published here. Some of my Gilberts also use the Brit title, though published here.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 11:03 AM (s0JqF)
211
At the end of one late 1940s Ellery novel, the Queen cousins have Ellery concluding -- after his logic has led to the death of two innocent people -- that he will no longer involve himself in real-world mysteries but stick to writing his detective stories. It feels like the end of the series.
At the start of the next book, he is still determined to stay aloof -- but he is drawn into a case against his will and better judgment, because his father the Inspector is in charge of a peculiar serial killer case. It doesn't feel as though the writers are ignoring the previous novel, but continuing and amplifying the situation.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:04 AM (wzUl9)
212
18 times the worst, huh? Why 18? Is he sure it wasn't only 17?
And was Letterman in a boxcar when he made the comment? If not, I think he was exaggerating just a smidgen.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 11:05 AM (q3u5l)
213
If you ask the idiots what actions Trump has taken as a dictator they they wouldn’t have an answer except some retarded nonsensical reply.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:07 AM (KDPiq)
214
Charlie Sheen Reveals His Political Shift After Doing His Own Research: “Hypnotized by State-Run Media”
-
And the cocaine! Don't forget the cocaine!
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 11:07 AM (L/fGl)
215
177 "Rushed resolution" - in the Manga/Manhwa world, this is one of the unsatisfying conclusions of a work, but one that is usually much better than the alternative - "Axed". If a story isn't bringing in the money, they may just cut their losses midway into the product. Right in the middle of a storyline.
Posted by: Another Anon at November 30, 2025 10:33 AM (4h45B)
---
I will not watch a series that is not complete. I know that hurts ratings, but I've been taught multiple times that either they get dropped while I'm watching them, or go crazy woke and tank.
Same for books.
Posted by: Ace-Endorsed Author A.H. Lloyd at November 30, 2025 10:35 AM (ZOv7s)
_________
For TV, I go farther. I will not watch continued stories, period, unless it's something I know. (I, Claudius. Band of Brothers.)
I make an exception if it's set in Frostbite Falls, MN.
Posted by: Eeyore at November 30, 2025 11:07 AM (s0JqF)
216
>>> 13 Just finished Fade by Daniel Humphries. I think he's a moron. About to start the second book in the series.
Posted by: lin-duh is offended at November 30, 2025 09:06 AM (VCgbV)
Lower case or capital M? istr he pops in here every so often as "Emile Antoon Kadaji".
Posted by: Helena Handbasket at November 30, 2025 11:08 AM (ULPxl)
217
Worse than setting up a love nest next to your office to bang employees?
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:02 AM (KDPiq)
Worse than growing a unabomber beard and hoping no one will notice?
Posted by: Tom Servo at November 30, 2025 11:10 AM (3U2FH)
218
Morning, all. Slept late (feeling pretty depressed).
WRT Trek novelisations, I picked up a kid's / teen's version of The Search For Spock the other week. I'll let you know how faithful to the movie it is.
Guess the thread's near the end. Hope you all have a happy day.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 30, 2025 11:11 AM (ufSfZ)
219They tried a reboot of the Fugitive some years back, with Tim Daly and Mykelti Williamson as Kimble and Gerard respectively. Cast was okay, but I didn't think the series had the writing it needed. It lasted one season. The last episode ended on a cliffhanger, never to be resolved.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025
They filmed several episodes in Tacoma WA and used the building I worked in for several scenes. Got to see many of the actors but only chatted with several co-stars and stand-ins. It was interesting to watch them. A hell of a lot of standing around.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025 11:13 AM (y3bZw)
220
Worse than setting up a love nest next to your office to bang employees?
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:02 AM (KDPiq)
Worse than growing a unabomber beard and hoping no one will notice?
Posted by: Tom Servo at November 30, 2025 11:10 AM (3U2FH)
There has been a growing respect for the "unibomber beard" in the last few years.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 30, 2025 11:15 AM (g8Ew8)
221
I’m currently reading a two volume work on Van Gogh written by three authors , Walter, Metzger and Taschen.
You can make it two volumes because Van Gogh wrote about 800 letters to his brother Theo so there was a lot of first hand info on Vincent.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:15 AM (KDPiq)
I think William Goldman once said that your first day on a movie set is exciting, and the second day is a bore because it registers on you just how much time you spend waiting.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 11:17 AM (q3u5l)
224
I’m currently reading a two volume work on Van Gogh written by three authors , Walter, Metzger and Taschen.
You can make it two volumes because Van Gogh wrote about 800 letters to his brother Theo so there was a lot of first hand info on Vincent.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:15 AM (KDPiq)
He wasn't a pleasant person.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 30, 2025 11:18 AM (g8Ew8)
225
I am reading "The Wind in the Willows" because of last week's recommendation.
Very charming.
Posted by: no one at November 30, 2025 11:21 AM (GLn15)
226
When are they going to learn that Trump is a counter puncher?
White House Debuts “Media Offender of the Week” Website To Target “Fake News”
https://is.gd/bwr1vU
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 11:24 AM (L/fGl)
I think William Goldman once said that your first day on a movie set is exciting, and the second day is a bore because it registers on you just how much time you spend waiting.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 11:17 AM (q3u5l)
***
I believe it. They did all the filming on the ground floor, making it look like a bank. My office was on the second floor. We couldn't use the elevators so had to take the stairs. I found several extras hiding in the stairwell while they shot a few scenes. Some very pretty extras too. They were all very nice to us as we tried to stay out of their way. It was all very cool and professional.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025 11:26 AM (y3bZw)
228
Highly recommended for Bond fans. I need to buy a copy for my shelf.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 09:17 AM (wzUl9)
Interesting, thanks. If he's even remotely replicated Fleming's style he'll have accomplished what no one else has.
Posted by: Ordinary American at November 30, 2025 11:26 AM (VnsnO)
229
If you ask the idiots what actions Trump has taken as a dictator they they wouldn’t have an answer except some retarded nonsensical reply.
Posted by: the way I see it
---------
"He's destroying the Historic East Wing!"
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:26 AM (XeU6L)
230
Hey Horde! Did I tell everyone about my new part-time gig shelving books at the local library? Tough gig. Difficult to reach the shelves. They asked me to help running the vacuum cleaner too...
ABBY PHILLIP: 53% say that process for deporting people has been mostly unfair!
SCOTT JENNINGS: I agree, it’s unfair that it takes so LONG.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 11:28 AM (L/fGl)
232
Continuing this week with 'Six Frigates'. The best, most interesting non-fiction that I have read in years.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:28 AM (XeU6L)
233MP4, what does your home library look like?
Posted by: All Hail Eris, She-Wolf of the 'Ettes 'Ettes at November 30, 2025 11:15 AM (kpS4V)
I sent a pic of it in years ago. Perhaps I should do it again.
In the house proper, I have two full-length sets of shelves (dining room and parlor), each divided into sections - true crime, history, religion, American history, ephemera, &c.
In the attic, where I write and work, are where I keep all my Hollywood books and magazines.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 30, 2025 11:29 AM (ufSfZ)
234
Hey Horde! Did I tell everyone about my new part-time gig shelving books at the local library? Tough gig. Difficult to reach the shelves. They asked me to help running the vacuum cleaner too...
Posted by: TRex - dewey decimal dino at November 30, 2025 11:26 AM (IQ6Gq)
Cool!
I've been offered a P/T job at a telescope factory. That is something I'll look into.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025 11:29 AM (y3bZw)
235
He wasn't a pleasant person.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 30, 2025 11:18 AM (g8Ew
He actually was very well liked by a number of fellow artists. He was probably on the spectrum and a genius beyond his painting. He spoke five languages and spent time translating the Bible into various languages. He was just unintentionally weird though he had enough self awareness to realize it and felt bad about it.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:29 AM (KDPiq)
236
Oh, I forgot - also an entire Third Reich section.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 30, 2025 11:30 AM (ufSfZ)
237
I started to try to read Alfred Korzybski's seminal work, Manhood of Humanity but it is a work on philosophy, not what you might otherwise think from the title.
To be serious, Korzybski was famed at one time to have a view of formal logic as applied to human language, but I have yet to find any use of what is in this book
Posted by: Kindltot at November 30, 2025 11:31 AM (rbvCR)
238Cool!
I've been offered a P/T job at a telescope factory. That is something I'll look into.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025
***
Remember to focus on your work
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:31 AM (wzUl9)
239
Cool!
I've been offered a P/T job at a telescope factory. That is something I'll look into.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025
I saw that coming from a million miles away.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:32 AM (KDPiq)
240
The Sparks of the Divine are going out all across America.
BREAKING: Many Somalis are getting fed up with the West, saying they will leave and go home.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 11:32 AM (L/fGl)
241
Well, it's been a very dispiriting couple of days. I'd prefer to go back to bed and not wake up again, but that's not going to happen. I do have to go to the dairy at some point, so perhaps I should just do it now.
I might expand on it later, but it's really a knife to the heart to come face to face with the realization that you are most definitely not liked. At all.
Although, first I might just take pics of my home library for a future thread.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing (aka Eloquent Depression) at November 30, 2025 11:33 AM (ufSfZ)
242
BREAKING: Many Somalis are getting fed up with the West, saying they will leave and go home.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Stranger In a Strange Land at November 30, 2025 11:32 AM (L/fGl)
I would sweeten the pot and offer them 10,000 to self deport.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:35 AM (KDPiq)
243Interesting, thanks. If he's even remotely replicated Fleming's style he'll have accomplished what no one else has.
Posted by: Ordinary American at November 30, 2025
***
In the chapter where Bond pilots the Maserati race car, there are several points where he gives us Bond's short mental commands to himself, a la the moments in Moonraker, Doctor No, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and others. It increases tension and puts us right there with Bond.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:36 AM (wzUl9)
244
I might expand on it later, but it's really a knife to the heart to come face to face with the realization that you are most definitely not liked. At all.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing (aka Eloquent Depression)
That can't be. We love you. You're a perfectly charming gentleman.
Posted by: Tuna at November 30, 2025 11:36 AM (lJ0H4)
245I've been offered a P/T job at a telescope factory. That is something I'll look into.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025
*
I saw that coming from a million miles away.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025
***
Sounds like a real grind
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:37 AM (wzUl9)
246
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:36 AM (wzUl9)
That was a scene device Ritchie used in his Sherlock Holmes movie.
Posted by: the way I see it at November 30, 2025 11:37 AM (KDPiq)
247
I've been offered a P/T job at a telescope factory. That is something I'll look into.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025 11:29 AM
Keep your head up and looking at the stars
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 11:38 AM (Ia/+0)
That can't be. We love you. You're a perfectly charming gentleman.
Posted by: Tuna at November 30, 2025 11:36 AM (lJ0H4)
You're very kind. As I said, I may expand on it sometime.
Off to the dairy.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing (aka Eloquent Depression) at November 30, 2025 11:40 AM (ufSfZ)
249
"I've been offered a p/t job at a telescope factory."
What is the scope of your duties?
Posted by: PabloD at November 30, 2025 11:40 AM (GALGA)
250
239 Cool!
I've been offered a P/T job at a telescope factory. That is something I'll look into.
Posted by: Diogenes at November 30, 2025
I saw that coming from a million miles away.
Posted by: the way I see it
-------
Try to remain focused.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:40 AM (XeU6L)
251
One more item about Trigger Mortis: In his afterword, Horowitz tells us that approx. 500 words in Chapter Two, a scene with Bond, M, and Bill Tanner, came directly from an episode treatment Fleming had written for a proposed TV series before the first Bond film was made.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:41 AM (wzUl9)
252
Thanks for the TRex in the library Perfessor...in case the shenanigans resume, that'll be the perfect space for their 39 foot plastic friend...
253
it
-------
Try to remain focused.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:40 AM (XeU6L)
Here’s to you old Copernicus, a nation turs its lonely eyes to you, woo woo woo.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 11:44 AM (i+bC1)
Posted by: Ptolemy at November 30, 2025 11:48 AM (0RiMX)
255
'Bout time I shuffled off to handle some chores. Thanks to all for a strong Book Thread entry!
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:50 AM (wzUl9)
256230 Hey Horde! Did I tell everyone about my new part-time gig shelving books at the local library? Tough gig. Difficult to reach the shelves. They asked me to help running the vacuum cleaner too...
Posted by: TRex - dewey decimal dino at November 30, 2025 11:26 AM (IQ6Gq)
Oh boo hoo...
Posted by: Michelle Fields at November 30, 2025 11:50 AM (PiwSw)
257
And it's time to pretend I'm doing something constructive here at Casa Some Guy.
Perfessor, thanks for the thread.
Have a good one, gang.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 30, 2025 11:51 AM (q3u5l)
Amazon has new paperback printings of Buckaroo Bonzai, and the sequel for about $16 a piece.
If you're looking for them, there they are.
Posted by: naturalfake at November 30, 2025 11:52 AM (iJfKG)
259
Remember to focus on your work
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 30, 2025 11:31 AM
------------
Try to remain focused.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:40 AM
-------
[note to self: Read comments before posting]
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:54 AM (XeU6L)
260
Why is it that the book I'm looking for is always on the bottom of the library shelf? I find myself practically on my hands and knees, squinting at titles.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:58 AM (XeU6L)
Posted by: Skip at November 30, 2025 12:05 PM (Ia/+0)
262
260 Why is it that the book I'm looking for is always on the bottom of the library shelf? I find myself practically on my hands and knees, squinting at titles.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 30, 2025 11:58 AM (XeU6L)
Mirror on a stick.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 12:05 PM (i+bC1)
263
I finished A Civil War Soldier's Tramp by Mahon Douglass, a private printing of the collected letters and diary entries of two brothers from Pomeroy, (New Boston township) Mercer county Illinois for the Union army. The older brother, Willian Sheriff was killed September 1862 at Medon Station TN, and his younger brother John volunteered the same month and was under Grant's Grand Army of the West until discharge at the end of the war.
John's Diary and letters cover moving down to invest Vicksburg, being wounded and then taken prisoner and released when his hospital was overrun and then recaptured at Raymond MS, the march on Atlanta, to the Sea under Gen Sherman, and onto the Carolinas, and the final victory parade in DC
The author put in quite a bit of extra explanation to give context to the diary entries and letters; the emphasis John puts on the camp meetings and church is quite different than what the formal histories focus on. Lots of camp work, clearing roads for wagons, waiting for boats and getting rained on, as well.
Posted by: Kindltot at November 30, 2025 12:05 PM (rbvCR)
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 30, 2025 12:15 PM (VgU/8)
265
Posted by: Kindltot at November 30, 2025 12:05 PM (rbvCR)
Co. Aytch by Samuel Watkins is a pretty good account from the other side.
Posted by: Eromero at November 30, 2025 12:17 PM (i+bC1)
266
I was very impressed by Stacey Abrams's work as The Probe in "The Voyage Home." It was typecasting, sure, but she really sold the part of an inarticulate shapeless mass, somehow managing to look hefty even when just hanging there in space, like some eldritch Mother Of Whales. Not many could've pulled that off. Bravissima!
Posted by: SciVo at November 30, 2025 01:22 PM (Sy6m/)
267
A book I have on the making of "Mission: Impossible" the series said that on a good day, you'll have four minutes of usable film. That's before editing.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 30, 2025 01:39 PM (p/isN)
268
Folks, thanks for the recommendation on the Ron Chernow biography on Grant. I downloaded that, plus his other bios on Rockefeller, Hamilton and Washington.
Posted by: Joemarine at November 30, 2025 02:36 PM (y171U)
269Last week I mentioned that I had not read The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, nor had I seen the movie Alien directed by Ridley Scott. Both oversights have been corrected.
i didn't realize alien was the film adaptation of the wind in the willow. learn something new every day!
Posted by: anachronda at November 30, 2025 04:36 PM (edU/H)
Processing 0.05, elapsed 0.0513 seconds. 14 queries taking 0.0129 seconds, 277 records returned. Page size 192 kb. Powered by Minx 0.8 beta.