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Sunday Morning Book Thread - 11-09-2025 ["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 (shut it all down!). 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...(Jolly Green Giant was unavailable for comment.)
So relax, find yourself a warm kitty (or warm puppy--I won't judge) to curl up in your lap, and dive into a new book. What are YOU reading this fine morning?
PIC NOTE
This is an image of the "Jacobean Traveling Library" which dates back to 1617. I suppose it could be the world's first truly portable library, like an analog Kindle. I know it might have come in handy when I traveled quite a bit in the days before we could all carry a huge library of books on the smartphones in our pockets. I usually take several physical books with me when I travel in addition to the books I have on the Kindle app. I just prefer paper.
AI WRITING IS TAKING OVER
Jared points out in the video above that AI is writing fake books for people who want to cash in on the success of others. Nowadays, it's trivial to create massive numbers of fake books based on successful books and then attempt to fool their audience into thinking the audience is purchasing the genuine article. It is a form of fraud if the purchaser is not paying close attention to their purchases. During the fire on Maui a couple of years ago, I once found a book that was written just DAYS after the fire the purported to tell the "real story" behind the fire. No one could possibly know the real story after that short period of time. The same "author" wrote numerous "biographies" about famous people. These books were being churned out in just weeks. Looking further into the matter, naturally all of these books were getting 5-star reviews, almost certainly generated by AI as well. Previewing the available content revealed that the books were "meh." It was obvious that they were not well-written or edited. The books disappeared off of Amazon after a while, so I'm guessing Amazon or someone removed them. Still, it was an odd situation.
Another problem Jared identifies is that AI writing is starting to infest the legal realm. For instance, he brings up situations where police officers rely on AI-generated reports. I'm sure they are not fun for cops to write them up, but relying on AI to do it for you just seems like a recipe for disaster, especially if they are not checked for accuracy. How many people will be arrested and convicted based on AI-generated police reports?
++++++++++
++++++++++
AI SLOP AND THE EPIDEMIC OF BAD WRITING
This another instance where AI-generated writing is causing problems. AI-generated writing that's fit to be printed in a magazine? Well, maybe, I suppose, which doesn't say much for the editorial quality of that magazine. The YouTuber above points out that the review uses a ton of academic buzzwords that sound important, but don't mean anything when you try to decipher the meaning of the sentences. Sure, the flow might be nice, and there's parallelism to make it sound good, but again, there's NO SUBSTANCE to the examples he describes. Where is the evidence for their claims?
In academia, students are realizing they can use these tools to pass their classes. I have students in MY class that have used ChatGPT for some of their work. It's pretty obvious when you know what to look for. Again, students using lots of buzzwords without providing any supporting evidence for their claims is one of those signs. I also have had students who provided sources that didn't exist (I check their sources). Some students just try to coast by in my class because they do not see the relevance or importance that writing/communication will have in their career. Their loss, I suppose, when they find themselves passed over for promotions and bonuses because the quality of their writing sucks.
MORON RECOMMENDATIONS
Just began reading Michael Connelly's new one, Nightshade, and it's not a Bosch, not a Ballard, and I am liking it.
Opens at dawn on Catalina island, the detective-deputy in charge of things is in his Deere Gator, awaiting the judge who motors in on his sailboat, emerging from the fog. Regular weekly trip to deal with routine matters.
After a bit of ordinary things happen, it's still morning, and someone reports a sunken corpse under the mooring line of a Venezuelan sailing yacht. It's a woman.
Thus begins the mystery.
Connelly doing Bosch bores me, but this new character might prove interesting.
Posted by: M. Gaga at November 02, 2025 10:12 AM (zeLd4)
Comment: I read one of Connelly's Bosch novels and wasn't too impressed. It was very much a police procedural with heavy emphasis on "procedure" as we followed Bosch through all of the grueling detective work he had to go through to solve a cold case. Just didn't find it too interesting and by the end I didn't much care what happened to the criminal.
+++++
For readers who like slam-bang, action-oriented fantasy fiction, I can't recommend too highly Farmer's World of Tiers series - or at least the first five, from "The Maker of Universes" through "The Lavalite World". The series' premise is that there was a race of super-scientists, who called themselves "the Lords", and whose technology permits them to create pocket-universes, each with its own laws of physics and biology. Over time, the Lords degenerated from scientific creators to solipsistic consumers; their ability to create or even maintain their technology has faded away, leaving them to fight over the devices that remain. Into this world, Farmer injects an Earthman from a farm in Indiana, and the fun begins.
Highly recommended. Enjoy!
Posted by: Nemo at November 02, 2025 10:18 AM (4RPgu)
Comment: I've had the Science Fiction Book Club editions of these books sitting on my shelves for years, if not decades. Just never got around to reading them. I'm not even sure where I got them though if I had to guess it was at a used book store or a library book sale. The dust jackets are a little bit torn but the books themselves are in excellent condition.
+++++
I started reading the L. Sprague de Camp-edited collection The Spell of Seven the night before Halloween. Starts off with Fritz Leiber's "Bazaar of the Bizarre", then Clark Ashton Smith's "The Dark Eidolon", Lord Dunsany's "The Hoard of the Gibbelins", de Camp's own "The Hungry Hercynian", and Michael Moorcock's Elric story "Kings in Darkness".
All of them amazing. And I still have a Jack Vance and a Robert E. Howard story to go!
Some of their introductions sound exactly like an amazing old-school D&D adventure blurb. The Virgil Finlay interior illustrations are pretty cool, too.
Posted by: Stephen Price Blair at November 02, 2025 10:23 AM (EXyHK)
Comment: Although people like to lump Dungeons and Dragons in with J.R.R. Tolkien, in truth he had very little to do with inspiring the Dungeons and Dragons role-playing game. Much of it was inspired by the authors above. In fact, in Appendix N of the Dungeon Master's Guide for Advanced Dungeons and Dragons (1st Ed.), Gary Gygax explicitly cites L. Sprague de Camp, Fritz Leiber, Robert E. Howard, Jack Vance, and H. P. Lovecraft as having the most immediate influence on the game.
I discovered a small, independent new/used bookstore not too far from my house. So I popped in there on Friday just to look around. Naturally, I am incapable of walking out of such a store empty-handed:
Warrior of the Altaii by Robert Jordan -- This is what he was working on before he published The Wheel of Time. It has a pretty cool full-color map on the inside cover.
Conan the Magnificent by Robert Jordan -- He wrote and published several Conan adventures before he published The Wheel of Time. I never noticed this before, but the map of these stories bears a close resemblance to the maps of Middle-Earth from Lord of the Rings and the Westlands from The Wheel of Time.
Conan the Defender by Robert Jordan
Conan the Triumphant by Robert Jordan
Conan the Victorious by Robert Jordan
Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds -- I've heard good things about his works, I liked the one book of his that I've read so far. He seems to be about on par with Peter F. Hamilton.
WHAT I'VE BEEN READING THIS PAST WEEK:
Last week I tried something new, attempting to drag this blog kicking and screaming into the twenty-first century. A few of you seemed to like it, so let's keep doing it!
Dropdown arrows? In the AoSHQ blog??
What kind of sorcery is this?
Posted by: Darrell Harris - Je Suis Charlie at November 02, 2025 11:37 AM (0CU3H)
The Jewel of Seven Stars by Bram Stoker
Jewel of the Seven Stars is not as famous as Dracula but it's pretty darned good by itself. It starts out as sort of a locked-room mystery when Mr. Trelawney, a renowned Egyptologist is found unconscious in his room, having been attacked by an unknown assailant. The facts seem to exclude the possibility of anyone infiltrating his chambers to perform the deed. Yet it happens again the next night, even while others are in the room. Eventually, the mystery starts to unravel when he details some of his past adventures in a forgotten corner of Egypt, the Valley of the Sorcerer. This is exactly the sort of story that no doubt influenced H. P. Lovecraft a few decades later as it has very much the same feel to some of Lovecraft's stories.
The Lair of the White Worm by Bram Stoker
This novella starts out much slower than Jewel, but it also has a Lovecraftian feel to it, as we find out details about an extended family that has lived in a remote corner of ancient Britain for centuries, preceding even the Roman invasion of Britain. Adam Salton has arrived from Australia to become acquainted with his family and his neighbors, who inhabit the eldritch land. The Lady Aribella seems to have some strange connection to the odd events throughout the story, though her role is never made explicitly clear. Another story that no doubt inspired H. P. Lovecraft.
Dracula's Guest and Other Stories by Bram Stoker
In addition to writing novels and novellas, Stoker also wrote quite a few horror short stories. They can be quite grim in the end, so reader beware! They are still quite good, though, often featuring a karmic twist of some sort. "Dracula's Guest" features a protagonist who becomes lost in the woods, and nearly dies, but he's rescued in the nick of time...because Dracula was watching and wanted to keep this particular mortal safe from harm.
A few of the stories are pretty disturbing, especially "The Dualitists; or, the Death-Doom of the Double-Born." Reader be warned...
Von Bek by Michael Moorcock
This is an omnibus edition of four of Michael Moorcock's novels that concern Captain Graf Ulrich von Bek, a German mercenary from 17th century Europe who becomes entangles in a cosmic battle between the forces of Law and Chaos (or Good and Evil). Hmmm...Sounds like a lot of Moorcock's OTHER heroes. Is there a connection? Of course! The Eternal Champion exists in all realities, as a nexus point upon whom the fate of the multiverse hangs.
These books also include a recurring character named "Groot." And yes, he does say, "I am Groot."
Tips, suggestions, recommendations, etc., can all be directed to perfessor -dot- squirrel -at- gmail -dot- com.
Disclaimer: If a dear friend and confidante invites you to participate in an ancient Egyptian ritual to resurrect a mummy, best turn around and walk away in the opposite direction as fast as you can.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 09:00 AM (q3u5l)
4
Snow and sleet on this fine Sunday morning. It's telling me to stay inside and read!
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:00 AM (kpS4V)
---
Always a solid plan!
Posted by: r hennigantx at November 09, 2025 09:03 AM (gbOdA)
6
“The Anti-Communist Manifestos” by John V Fleming. This is a compendium of four essays reviewing four books, and I’ll just list the reviewed books, so you can read those books first, then decide if you even want to bother to read this here Fleming book at all:
“Darkness at Noon,” by Arthur Koestler;
“Out of the Night,” by ‘Jan Valtin’ AKA Richard Krebs;
“I Chose Freedom,” by Victor Kravchenko;
“Witness,” by Whittaker Chambers.
Posted by: gp at November 09, 2025 09:03 AM (7imtn)
7
I got "The Spell of Seven" and it's on my nightstand. Thanks Stephen Price Blair for the recommendation.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:04 AM (kpS4V)
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 09:04 AM (uQesX)
9
Reading again "The Practice of the Presence of God" by Brother Lawrence , who was lay brother in a monastery in France in the 1600's. It's only about 103 pages. This version is edited by Alan Vermilye., and is designed as a 40 day devotional.
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at November 09, 2025 09:04 AM (guLpK)
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at November 09, 2025 09:05 AM (guLpK)
11
Booken morgen horden!
Still working my way thru The Hallmarked Man by Galbraith aka Rowling.
I NEED a mini version of that travelling library.
Lastly, anyone read any of John Henry Cardinal Newman's works?
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 09:05 AM (7gFa4)
12
Good morning fellow Book Threadists. I hope everyone had a great week of reading. Mine was delightful.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 09:05 AM (yTvNw)
13
No; It's does belong here . I thought I had gone to the tech thread by mistake.
Posted by: FenelonSpoke at November 09, 2025 09:06 AM (guLpK)
14
I've been using Kindle Unlimited to read John C Wright's Star quest series. I'm on book 4 of 5 but reviews of 5 indicate there will be at least one more.
As is often the case, they desperately need another pass by an editor, but other than that I am enjoying them. They are a blend of Star Wars, Green Hornet, and Biblical allegory described as space opera for those tired of woke.
Posted by: Polliwog the 'Ette at November 09, 2025 09:06 AM (lFFaq)
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 09:06 AM (bXbFr)
16
My first thought at seeing the picture was that it was wrapped chocolates designed to look like a bookshelf with books. I guess the picture needs a sense of scale.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 09, 2025 09:07 AM (0U5gm)
17Snow and sleet on this fine Sunday morning. It's telling me to stay inside and read!
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:00 AM (kpS4V)
Better you than me. I hate snow and winter, but I'm trapped in Maskachusetts for the rest of my life.
51 and cloudy here, and it will probably be this way for the rest of the day. I have book work to do and then, if I can pull myself out of this hangover and depressive slog, need to start putting together a Christmas gift for nurse ratched.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:07 AM (ufSfZ)
18 Dropdown arrows? In the AoSHQ blog??
What kind of sorcery is this?
Why not use them to create a dropdown gallery of all the "Perfesser's" portraits? He is, after all, one fine looking squirrel!
Posted by: Krebs v Carnot: Epic Battle of the Cycling Stars(TM) - what makes you think you are in charge? at November 09, 2025 09:07 AM (xG4kz)
19
I spent nearly four. Minutes. To write this with AI.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 09:07 AM (g8Ew8)
20
Went to library, picked up "Boomers: The Men and Women Who Promised Freedom and Delivered Disaster," by Helen Andrews. Whenever people complain about boomers, I always say "Yup, we really screwed things up, and I am more than willing to take my share of the blame!"
I'm a few chapters into Cory Doctorow's "Enshittification" now. His thesis is that the major online platforms (Google, Facebook, Amazon, etc) start out serving their users well, then shift their business model to screwing over their vendors, then shift again to screwing their users, in a predictable pattern. He's got some
good points to make, but I'm not as overwrought about it as he is
Posted by: gp at November 09, 2025 09:08 AM (7imtn)
21
The AI pathogen is only just showing its potential for viral annihilation of social trust and the human spirit.
Posted by: Ordinary American at November 09, 2025 09:08 AM (h/ffs)
This week I tried (again) Nathanael West's two famous novels, Miss Lonelyhearts and Day of the Locust. I could not finish ML. The lead character and everyone around him was disturbing. "ML" himself tells us that he killed two animals when he was younger, a sheep (though ML was drunk) and a frog. Once I read that, I gave up.
Locust is a good portrait of the looniness evident even then in 1938 Hollywood. There's a little humor, but it's no screwball comedy. It even features a character named, brace yourself, "Homer Simpson"! I have to wonder if Matt Groening had that in mind when he created The Simpsons.
They are both short books, and the latter is readable, though again I didn't care much for the characters. It was more about the milieu.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:08 AM (wzUl9)
23 A more permanent way of recording events
Posted by: Miguel cervantes
Sumerian baked clay tablets have entered the chat.
Posted by: Krebs v Carnot: Epic Battle of the Cycling Stars(TM) - what makes you think you are in charge? at November 09, 2025 09:08 AM (xG4kz)
24
Well, I have a writing complaint - or, rather, a certain cri de coeur - this morning. I discussed it with the Perfessor last night, but I don't know if I should burden you all with it. The problem is that I don't have anyone to talk to and I really need to get it off my chest.
Let me make some tea and think.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:09 AM (ufSfZ)
25
Comment: I've had the Science Fiction Book Club editions of these books sitting on my shelves for years, if not decades.
--
I miss the SFBC
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 09:10 AM (7gFa4)
26
"The problem is that I don't have anyone to talk to and I really need to get it off my chest."
Me too.
Posted by: gp at November 09, 2025 09:10 AM (7imtn)
In 2015, Matthias Weßel stumbled across an entry in the archives of the Zurich Central Library that is a scholar's dream: “Koestler, Arthur. Rubaschow: Roman. Typoskript, März 1940, 326 pages.” What he had found was Arthur Koestler’s original, complete German manuscript for what would become Darkness at Noon, thought to have been irrevocably lost in the turmoil of the war. With this stunning literary discovery, and a new English translation direct from the primary German manuscript, we can now for the first time read Darkness at Noon as Koestler wrote it.
Posted by: r hennigantx at November 09, 2025 09:10 AM (gbOdA)
29
I have been reading since i was a wee lad so the notion never ocurred to me
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 09:11 AM (bXbFr)
Last week, MP4 recommended "The Gales of November: the Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by John U. Bacon. I ordered it, Mr. Dmlw! started reading it and couldn't put it down until he was done. I think he stopped to sleep for a few hours. I love it when I find something he likes to read. Thanks, MP4. I'll probably get to it this week.
Then All Hail Eris told us about The Bayeux Tapestry by David M. Wilson. He promptly snatched that from me while I was out of the room. I did get a chance to look at the pictures of this amazing piece of work.
31"Homer Simpson"! I have to wonder if Matt Groening had that in mind when he created The Simpsons.
IIRC, Homer is named for Groening's father.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:11 AM (ufSfZ)
32
Currently I am reading The Ax, a 1990s black comedy novel from Donald E. Westlake. It's not a Dortmunder crime caper. In this one, set in the Northeast, a middle-aged middle-manager in the paper business -- real paper, not newspapers -- has been out of work for two years. He concludes the only way to get himself to the top of the resume pile is to identify the other unemployed middle-managers who would be his serious competition . . . and kill them.
It's very much a black comedy in the vein of his early short stories "The Curious Facts Preceding My Execution" and "Anatomy of an Anatomy." The narrator is engaging, shocked at what he's doing, but determined that it's the only way to get himself re-employed. I'm hooked, as always with a Westlake, and curious to see how it will play out.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:12 AM (wzUl9)
Couple of the later Maigrets -- much better than the first in the series, but for my taste Simenon's non-Maigret novels are much better.
Stark House Press re-issued Build My Gallows High by Geoffrey Homes/Daniel Mainwaring this week; it's the basis for the classic noir film Out of the Past, and it's a good read.
Really will get back to Nabokov soon.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 09:12 AM (q3u5l)
34
I discussed it with the Perfessor last night, but I don't know if I should burden you all with it.
--
Now that you've piqued our curiosity, pray continue.
Here's the decision tree: will posting about it possibly make the problem worse?
If yes, then don't
If no, then do
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 09:13 AM (7gFa4)
Posted by: Krebs v Carnot: Epic Battle of the Cycling Stars(TM) - what makes you think you are in charge? at November 09, 2025 09:13 AM (xG4kz)
36
Read a lot of Alan E. Norse short stories, collected in:
Tiger by the Tail, The Counterfeit Man and Others, Psi High, and Others, and The Mercy Men.
He is a smooth story teller. He wrote Intern X, and made a living as a doctor. Writing was for fun. He has a droll wit, and the medical part of the stories was a welcome addition.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 09:13 AM (u82oZ)
37Well, I have a writing complaint - or, rather, a certain cri de coeur - this morning. I discussed it with the Perfessor last night, but I don't know if I should burden you all with it. The problem is that I don't have anyone to talk to and I really need to get it off my chest.
Let me make some tea and think.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025
***
Please do. I'm in a dry valley on my own work now, and I wonder if helping someone else would get myself up and out of it.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:14 AM (wzUl9)
38Jared points out in the video above that AI is writing fake books for people who want to cash in on the success of others. Nowadays, it's trivial to create massive numbers of fake books based on successful books and then attempt to fool their audience into thinking the audience is purchasing the genuine article. It is a form of fraud if the purchaser is not paying close attention to their purchases.
The Asylum films business model.
Posted by: toby928(c) at November 09, 2025 09:14 AM (jc0TO)
39
This AI writing business will get out of control. It will get out of control and we'll be lucky to live through it.
Posted by: Count de Monet at November 09, 2025 09:14 AM (UMTiu)
40
I'm progressing slowly through "The Night Stalker" by Jeff Rice. We're up to three corpses and a theft at a hospital's blood bank.
But ...
I've also started a reread of "Thunderball" to go with its DVD, both of which I checked out of the library -- so much for that New Year's resolution -- on a whim.
And then ...
I'm rereading Ragman, a DC limited series from 1991. The Ragman is a neighborhood protector in Gotham City. He wears an outfit of stitched rags, which capture souls. This all stems from the Holocaust.
Finally ...
I've started a hardbound collection of the 1950s comics strip "King Aroo," of which I learned only a few months ago through a Facebook group devoted to classic comic strips. The collection was published by New American Library, an IDW imprint, which folded after only two volumes came out. In the first storyline, the Fairy Godmother has a competitor in the wish-granting business: a guy who wishes upon a star.
So ...
What's on TV?
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 09, 2025 09:14 AM (p/isN)
41
Obviously peoole didnt carry sumerian tablets with them
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 09:15 AM (bXbFr)
42
I've been reading the first book in the THICK two-volume comic "My Favorite Thing Is Monsters" by Emil Ferris. It's written in the form of a journal in a lined school composition book, a sketchbook telling a girl's life story in elaborate pencil drawings. The little oddball protagonist envisions herself as a werewolf detective as she prowls around her 60's Chicago neighborhood poking into the weird goings on (she calls it "the greasy clockwork of the night machine") and observing suspicious activity after a beautiful woman in their apartment building supposedly commits suicide.
What's astounding is that Emil, a commercial artist and sculptor, got very sick and lost full motion of her legs and dexterity in her hands, and she had to switch from the bold confident lines of a cartoonist to the layered hatching of her current style. Here is a video:
https://tinyurl.com/bdexs58s
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:15 AM (kpS4V)
43
Don't get me started on AI. I have to deal with it in all my classes, every time I assign something that requires even a modest amount of writing.
ChatGPT is bad enough, but easily detectable once you've had some experience with it. What's even worse are programs like Grammarly and Otter that pitch themselves as "just cleaning up your language, bro," and essentially trick students into turning in AI-generated essays. I don't care if I'm waging a losing battle against this stuff, I'm waging it anyway.
Posted by: Dr. T at November 09, 2025 09:15 AM (lHPJf)
44 Read a lot of Alan E. Norse short stories, collected in:
Tiger by the Tail, The Counterfeit Man and Others, Psi High, and Others, and The Mercy Men.
He is a smooth story teller. He wrote Intern X, and made a living as a doctor. Writing was for fun. He has a droll wit, and the medical part of the stories was a welcome addition.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025
***
There is unexpected humor in Intern, too. I read it as a boy and loved it.
Nourse suggested in one tongue-in-cheek SF story that the ape is not humanity's common ancestor -- but the pig!
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:16 AM (wzUl9)
45Last week, MP4 recommended "The Gales of November: the Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by John U. Bacon. I ordered it, Mr. Dmlw! started reading it and couldn't put it down until he was done. I think he stopped to sleep for a few hours. I love it when I find something he likes to read. Thanks, MP4. I'll probably get to it this week.
Then All Hail Eris told us about The Bayeux Tapestry by David M. Wilson. He promptly snatched that from me while I was out of the room. I did get a chance to look at the pictures of this amazing piece of work.
Nice recs last week, friends.
Posted by: Dash my lace wigs! at November 09, 2025 09:11 AM (h7ZuX)
You're welcome. I'm glad you enjoyed the Fitzgerald book. I don't have the Wilson one, but I do have a 1994 Tapestry book by Wolfgang Grape, and I suspect the two are roughly the same.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:16 AM (ufSfZ)
46
I binge-read a collection of Somerset Maugham short stories this week. All excellent, and I recommend his short fiction unreservedly. Never tackled his novels so I don't know about them.
His stories are like a mix of Graham Greene, Kipling, and Conrad. He did some real-life intelligence work during WWI, so some of the stories are spy stories and I find myself wondering how much is based on real stuff he saw or heard about.
The Kipling/Conrad side comes from some time he spent in the Pacific and southeast Asia. The stories are all about westerners in that region and the odd strains of expat life. His most famous story, "Rain" is set in Samoa, and became a play and a film "Miss Sadie Thompson."
Good stuff. Recommended. Plus he was gay so your English teacher has to approve of him.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 09:18 AM (78a2H)
47
We had a little excitement here earlier (more noise than serious) which woke me up with a good shot of adrenaline. So, here I am, awake at the unusual (for me) hour of 07:15 MST. I guess I'll throw something out that's not the usual past NOOD.
I found book at the library by John Lescroart, The Ophelia Cut. It was ok, and the next time there, I ran into 3 of his other books on the shelves, so I brought them home and read through them.
I'm not going to review the individual books, but rather state an overview of the theme of these 4, which will probably carry over in many of his other books.
The theme? Book versions of the TV series Law and Order except that the characters are (mostly) on the defense side, rather than prosecution, and set in San Franciso, instead of NYC. As in the TV show, the Cit-tay is a character in its own right. They have a continuing cast of characters, with the protagonist role shifting from book to book, with others playing supporting roles.
(contd)
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 09:18 AM (C+UIq)
48
After it was mentioned last week, I ordered a copy of "The Golden Thread: A History of the Western Tradition, Volume I: The Ancient World and Christendom". This is a magnificent book. The writing is straightforward and the pictures used really capture the point of each section. It reminds me of a focused encyclopedia. I was looking and found no political 'slant' to the information, which is rare these days. This is the best intro to Western civilization I've seen. It would serve for junior high students, maybe earlier, and older. Although adults with any humanities background will know parts of the story, it will lead to so many side tracks that you want to investigate further. The thoroughness and illustrations remind me of the Landmark series of histories.
Cont. ...
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 09:19 AM (yTvNw)
49
Still working my way through the second book of the Von Bek series.
It has a very long burn before the story really takes off. The main character (Manfred von Bek) eventually hooks up with a con man and the two of them set out to swindle most of Europe. Things go a bit pear-shaped when one of their financial backers demands to be taken along for the ride...
50
(contd)
The publishing dates were far enough apart that the characters age, and some major characters are actually killed off. The books have lots of plot twists, along with some Perry Mason-like courtroom dramatics.
OK, I looked on the intertubes, and found that he has been quite prolific, publishing 30 books, 25 of which seem to be in this "universe", borrowing terminology from comic books graphic novels. for reference.
I am not going to rush onto Amazon to pick up other books of his, but I will grab one from the library, or at a used book store.
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 09:19 AM (C+UIq)
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:20 AM (kpS4V)
52
Also read S.M. Sterling Drakon, the last of the Draka dystopia stories.
This holds your interest, as a NYPD detective is up against a 400 year old female Draka, genetically engineered to dominate crude, unmodified humans.
Their world is an environmental paradise, but there are no humans left. She came to this Earth due to a wormhole accident. She strives to take over the entire world for her species. And she looks like she can win.
Better characterization than most of S.M. Sterling's stories. The plot rip-snorts to a good climax.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 09:21 AM (u82oZ)
53
11 Booken morgen horden!
Still working my way thru The Hallmarked Man by Galbraith aka Rowling.
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 09:05 AM (7gFa4)
I was listening to this on audio on my trip to TX. I was listening on Spotify. I didn't realize that you only get 15 hours of audio book time a month, so I have to wait until the 15th to finish it (when Spotify renews). I'm still way down the wait list on Libby.
54
Eric Ambler is a very influential author who unfortunately is not very well known now. His stories to me are the bridge between the golden age of mysteries and modern novels. Several of his excellent novels have been reviewed here, and they are fantastic reads. Ambler wrote few short stories, but the complete collection of them can be found in Waiting for Orders
The first story is The Army of the Shadows, a tale set in prewar Switzerland, with a doctor stumbling across a group of anti Nazi Germans seeking to turn their fellow citizens against the party.
Next are six consecutive short stories concerning Czech Dr. Czissar, a refugee policeman in London, who like Poirot, assists the police, though his help is often met with embarrassed anger by Scotland Yard, who have been on the wrong track before he shows up.
The final story is The Blood Bargain, a clever tale of a coup in a central American country, where the deposed president outsmarts the revolutionaries who seek to imprison him or worse. These stories set the stage quickly, and have a twist in the last few paragraphs, similar to Ambrose Bierce stories.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 09, 2025 09:21 AM (0U5gm)
55
After the recommendation, I read Bram Stoker's "The Duelists". W. T. F.
Posted by: Josephistan at November 09, 2025 09:21 AM (FLx59)
Over a year ago, I completed reading and summarized the most tedious book read ever: The Life of Lenin. Something like 700 pages of the Marxian mush that was swirling around the cranium cesspools of the Soviet Union's founders.
I think I've found a book with even more extreme Marxist "philosophical" content but relevant to the here and now: The Marxification of Education - Paulo Freire's Critical Marxism and the Theft of Education, by James Lindsay. The book's mere 190 pages were a killer to read!
There's double problem with this book: 1) Freire's theory of education is soooo convoluted! Just think of any woke concept beginning with the word "critical" and you can thank Brazilian Freire for helping bring it into the western norm from kindergarten through high school, and into university education and workplace agendas. And 2) Lindsay does a poor job of explaining it. So much so, that the end of the book has a chapter named "The Short, Short, Short Version" where Lindsay tries to sum it all up. I said "tries."
This is an important subject. I hope there are other books out there which transmit the warning messages in a more simplified manner.
Homeschool your kids, folks!
Posted by: Biden's Dog sniffs a whole lotta malarkey, at November 09, 2025 09:23 AM (yS/3v)
57
Trimegistus, Maugham is a favorite when I'm in the mood for him. His short story "The Verger" is probably in one of the collections you mention. His novels The Razor's Edge and The Moon and Sixpence are fine work. I liked Of Human Bondage -- especially the portrait of sociopath waitress Mildred -- but I haven't reread it.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:23 AM (wzUl9)
58
i was speculating here many months ago about the possibility of training an AI to live in one of the scifi worlds like "The Culture".
I think it would be great to use AI to write more books by authors who left us too soon.
Posted by: pawn at November 09, 2025 09:23 AM (sPsWv)
59
After the recommendation, I read Bram Stoker's "The Duelists". W. T. F.
Posted by: Josephistan at November 09, 2025 09:21 AM (FLx59)
----
Yeah, that was my reaction as well. Very disturbing.
60
After it was mentioned last week, I ordered a copy of "The Golden Thread: A History of the Western Tradition, Volume I: The Ancient World and Christendom". This is a magnificent book. The writing is straightforward and the pictures used really capture the point of each section. It reminds me of a focused encyclopedia. I was looking and found no political 'slant' to the information, which is rare these days. This is the best intro to Western civilization I've seen. It would serve for junior high students, maybe earlier, and older. Although adults with any humanities background will know parts of the story, it will lead to so many side tracks that you want to investigate further. The thoroughness and illustrations remind me of the Landmark series of histories.
Cont. ...
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 09:19 AM (yTvNw)
Hmm. I usually read and enjoy books without any pictures. My mind does the imaging for me.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 09:25 AM (g8Ew8)
61
All right, let's do this. It may break up into several posts, but I'll try to keep it as short as possible.
Most of you know I have a dear friend of many years who has been both a muse and a sounding board for my books. About a year and a half ago, she decided that she'd like to try her hand at penning a book, and took as her subject her own family history (she had a great-grandmother who was kidnapped as a child and, though later found, never was able to reconnect).
Her first book, Becoming Hazel, is on Amazon, like my stuff. As she is retired, she has plenty of time to write and, loving the work she had done and loving to write, has since gone on to pen three (!) more novels, all continuing her family's story. I will say here that, even though I helped her with editing and storyline, just as she helps me, she has turned out to be a wonderful storyteller and her books are very good.
A few months back, not caring for the limited Amazon sales, she signed up with a publishing house that, for an amount of money, promises to get your book out to various outlets and provides editing, publicity services, &c.
(cont.)
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:26 AM (ufSfZ)
62
I think you can all see where this is going. . .
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:26 AM (ufSfZ)
63
I think it would be great to use AI to write more books by authors who left us too soon.
Posted by: pawn at November 09, 2025 09:23 AM (sPsWv)
-----
No. Just no.
It's bad enough when someone else takes over an IP after the original author dies.
Yes that story was there. Family Resemblance in Tiger By the Tail. He has a lot of fun with the concept. A story to make you smile.
The pun at the end was awesome. He figured it all out using the scientific method. First used by Roger Bacon.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 09:27 AM (u82oZ)
65
I have wondered about "The Ax." The local secondhand book store has several copies of it.
I've resisted buying one for the usual reasons, but this description has planted a seed.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 09, 2025 09:27 AM (p/isN)
66
I finished reading "Dragons of Winter Night," the second Dragonlance novel. It's the story of a group of heroes who go on D&D quests in a world suddenly beset by war. It has an odd structure; the book is divided into three....books. They should have come up with a better name for the sub-sections. Anyways, book 1 splits the party into two, and follows one group on their quest. Book 2 naturally follows the second group on their quest. Book 3 subdivides the groups further, and tries to follow everyone, as well as providing an overview of what is happening to the world at large.
The world-building is very much appreciated. But the way the narrative jumps from character to character...means it never picks up much narrative momentum. And it leaves many of the characters without a conclusion, nor even the dignity of a cliffhanger. They are just in the middle of doing their thing when the narration moves on to someone else, and never gets back to them...
Fortunately, book 3 does end strong. It finally picks a single batch of characters to follow, and gives them a really compelling adventure to close out the story. Now it's on the final book...of the original trilogy.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 09:28 AM (Lhaco)
67
Didn't get much reading done this week. I'll be on vacation in a few days, which means that I should at least get some reading done on the airplane - assuming the FAA doesn't cancel my flight(s).
Also, those dropdown arrows are of the Devil. Next thing you know, we'll have "thumbs up / down" buttons.
Posted by: PabloD at November 09, 2025 09:28 AM (HqfBN)
68
I think you can all see where this is going. . .
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:26 AM (ufSfZ)
-
Into the publisher's pockets?
Posted by: Biden's Dog sniffs a whole lotta malarkey, at November 09, 2025 09:28 AM (yS/3v)
The Golden Thread is a huge HEAVY book of over 1,300 pages. Seriously, don't drop this on your foot unless you like broken toes. I'm reading it on a table instead of in a chair. I'm flashing back to grade school, writing homework on the kitchen table with a volume of the World Book Encyclopedia open next to the note book.
One complaint. I got it from Amazon. This is a hundred dollar book. It was shipped, no padding or plastic wrap, in an oversized box that left room for it to slide around. One of the corners was slightly bent. Not much but a little. If it had been raining, the book could have been ruined. This is inexcusable. I will keep this in mind for similar book purchases. Better to pay a bit more and get the book from B and N. At least they know how to package a book. And I can have the book delivered to the local B and N store where I can inspect it before accepting.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 09:28 AM (yTvNw)
70 "The Gales of November: the Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald"
I was in my senior year at Michigan Tech, which is located on Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula (the long and curved piece of land that juts northward and eastward into Lake Superior) when the storm sank the Fitzgerald.
The Keweenaw Waterway and the Portage Lake Harbor of Refuge cut across the Peninsula at Houghton and Hancock. As the sun set that afternoon before the Fitz was lost, there was a continuous procession of large whitecap waves streaming down that waterway from west to east. The winds gusts were so fierce that the large plate glass windows in stairwells of the Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Building were visibly bowing and flexing as the gusts occurred.
When we later heard reports that evening on the radio that a lakes carrier had gone missing, we knew without saying that all aboard her had likely perished.
Posted by: Krebs v Carnot: Epic Battle of the Cycling Stars(TM) - what makes you think you are in charge? at November 09, 2025 09:29 AM (xG4kz)
71
Buddhaha, I belive Lescroart produced one novel, Son of Holmes (?), in which he outlines the early life of the private detective we came to know as . . . Nero Wolfe! Wolfe dropped some hints over the course of Stout's stories about his early and adventurous life in Montenegro, and we got quite a bit in the novel The Black Mountain.
It's been a while since I read the Lescroart. Thus I don't know if his vision matches up with Stout's info. Still, I recall it as a fun story.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:29 AM (wzUl9)
72
Haven't read nearly all of Maugham, but what I have read is really good. There have been who knows how many collections of his short stories, but the Everyman Library hardcover is really nice.
Don't know if they're in print here any more but Penguin UK had a 4 volume paperback set of his complete short stories. They have paperbacks of his criticism too, and those aren't too dusty either.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 09:29 AM (q3u5l)
73
Nothing new, but telling yesterday I wanted to play a American Revolution game at the miniature war convention was because I was reading Rick Atkinson's The British are Coming book. Many playing also said that was a fantastic book and get the next volume
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 09:29 AM (+qU29)
74
Almost all financial news stories are written by AI, and it is obvious. They spew the same sentence structure and meandering style, and sometimes don't even get to the point that the headline promised.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 09, 2025 09:29 AM (0U5gm)
75
One problem with Maugham is that he did write a bunch of short stories, was famous, and has been in print basically forever. As a result, any collection of his stories is likely to overlap considerably in contents with every other collection, so you wind up with six books on your shelf, all with "Rain" in them just so you can get all the Ashenden/spy stories.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 09:30 AM (78a2H)
I'm still chipping away at Josephus' The Jewish War. Vespasian has left Judea to assume the Imperial throne and Titus his son is running operations. The advance of the Roman army on Jerusalem is a welcome development in many towns since the rebels were heavy on looting and not so much on national liberation. Another recurring theme of history.
The Romans are now outside the walls and systematically preparing for the siege. The Jews sortie and screw things up, one legion shames itself and Titus parades them since they deserve decimation, but relents when the other two legions call for clemency, so the sentence is suspended on the condition that the show everyone what they can do.
Jerusalem at that time was one of the most heavily fortified placed on earth, a function of Herod The Great's building boom, but also its rapid growth. Rather than knock down the old walls and build a new perimeter, Herod (and his successors, also named Herod) left the old ones up, and even reinforced them so that the city has incredible strategic depth. You take one quarter, but the others are untroubled.
77I have wondered about "The Ax." The local secondhand book store has several copies of it.
I've resisted buying one for the usual reasons, but this description has planted a seed.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 09, 2025
***
Westlake rarely lets you down. So I'm pretty sure it will end in a satisfying way.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:31 AM (wzUl9)
78
Nothing new, but telling yesterday I wanted to play a American Revolution game at the miniature war convention was because I was reading Rick Atkinson's The British are Coming book. Many playing also said that was a fantastic book and get the next volume
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 09:29 AM
I'm going to a lecture and book signing by him on Tuesday!
Posted by: Josephistan at November 09, 2025 09:31 AM (FLx59)
79
For the nonce, I shall ignore AI like I did cryptocurrency.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:31 AM (kpS4V)
80
Obviously peoole didnt carry sumerian tablets with them
Posted by: Miguel cervantes
I guess they would if they insisted on hardbacks only.
Posted by: Thomas Paine at November 09, 2025 09:31 AM (0U5gm)
81
Just gobbled down the 3.5 books in the "Black Badge" series by Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle, starting with the first one, Cold As Hell. Damn, they were good stories, well-written with an intriguing characte.. Also acquired the illustrated graphic novel of the prequel novella Dead Acre which was beautifully drawn and totally faithful to the story. Premise is that the protaganist, an outlaw in 1800's Wild West who is killed rebelling against the heinous head of the outlaw gang, is brought back to Earth and directed by an angel "handler" to combat Lucifer's evil wherever it breaks out. As he puts it about his current state, "I ain't dead, but I ain't exactly alive, either." He's sent from place to place and has no idea if eventually he'll have expiated his sins and be released to heaven, sent straight back to hell or just disappear when it's over. Western action with supernatural elements popping up, the authors call it "a weird Western." I haven't enjoyed a new read like that in such a long time, and it left me sad that it was over far too soon!
Posted by: tankascribe at November 09, 2025 09:32 AM (NtoJk)
82
You're welcome. I'm glad you enjoyed the Fitzgerald book.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:16 AM (ufSfZ)
There's almost no point in my reading it now, as he described it to me in every detail when I got home Friday. LOL. I stay with my mom all week, and when I get home on weekends, he talks non-stop for hours because he hasn't had anyone to talk to all week.
83
60 ... "Hmm. I usually read and enjoy books without any pictures. My mind does the imaging for me."
The images used in The Golden Thread are often contemporary with the subject matter in that chapter and provide more information than just the text. They really are an added benefit.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 09:33 AM (yTvNw)
84
Maugham was a successful playwright for a time, too. Thus he knew how to construct a dramatic story.
Dorothy Parker/Maugham story: They were guests at a dinner party, seated next to each other. Maugham expressed pleasure at her work, and asked her to write him a poem. (Dottie did not care for gay men.) She wrote:
'Higgledy-piggledy, my white hen,
She lays eggs for gentlemen.
You cannot persuade her with gun or lariat
To come across for the proletariat."
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 09:34 AM (wzUl9)
85
I find reading in silence to be distracting, so I always put on some background music when reading. Sometimes it's a randomized playlist of 2-star songs. (songs without any real redeeming qualities, but that are not distractingly bad) Other times I listen to movie soundtracks; Lord of the Rings, Pirates of the Caribbean, Conan the Barbarian/Destroyer...Whatever seems like it would best fit the mood of the book I'm reading.
Well, when I was finishing off "Dragons of Winter's Night" I put on the soundtrack of "Game of Thrones Season 4." (Back when the show was still generally good) That soundtrack has a lot of mournful or ominous tracks, and they fit perfectly with the final chapter of that novel! It was a truly magical experience! There were a few moments when it seemed like the soundtrack was tailored to the specific scene I was reading. Man, you can't plan for synchronicity like that...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 09:34 AM (Lhaco)
86
So, instead of being one of those authors who feel that they've been scammed, the publisher has come through in spades for her. She's had a good review penned by a member of the Writers Guild of America who has proceeded to pitch Becoming Hazel to investors. As a side note, this man is a screenwriter who has also wrote The Bourne Identity, at least one Star Wars movie and brought something called "Bluey" to Disney.
Yesterday, my friend called me, and is over the moon. She has spoken with Kathleen Kennedy (yes, that one) as well as a rep from Hallmark Movies, both of whom are interested in picking up the option not only for the first book, but possibly the entire series. A film crew is going to be flying in early next month to put together a pitch film to show to investors.
Let me stress - she is a good writer, and everyone from the publisher upwards has stressed how much they love Becoming Hazel and the concept of the series.
I know I'm boring the shit out of you. One more post, I promise.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:34 AM (ufSfZ)
87
I'm watching feral kittens play in the snow. It's so adorable.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:34 AM (kpS4V)
88
In addition to their peerless engineering, the Romans have another advantage to offset Jerusalem's defenses: the fact that the defenders hate each other more than the Romans. The massive stockpiles of food were largely destroyed by infighting, so hunger is already a threat.
The Romans are also able to draw upon Jewish troops loyal to the Judean king as well as displaced locals angered by plundering rebels.
This translation dates from 1959, republished in 1970, and I understand that some of the archeology referenced in the translator's notes is incorrect. I'll look into that later.
90
I posted this on the Hobby thread. Reposting here for any spinners.
New spinning book "Listen to the Wool" by Josefin Waltin is worth the money. She is Swedish so some of the fcus is on Swedish wool breeds. She is both a wheel and spindle spinner and has taught spinning. He focuses on is on preparing raw fleece and, more importantly, enjoying it all. It is really inspirational. She posts on Substack, also has a blog and some online classes. If you are a spinner, buy the book.
Posted by: Notsothoreau at November 09, 2025 09:35 AM (znHU2)
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:36 AM (kpS4V)
92
If memory serves, Maugham wrote a number of stories dealing VERY closely with his intelligence work, closer even than the ones collected in Ashenden. Closely enough that he had to clear them with the bosses (may have been Churchill), who said "No way," and those stories wound up in the fireplace.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 09:38 AM (q3u5l)
I think it would be an interesting experiment. Of course it would be driven by the need to make a buck and bring in "market forces" like the undeserved empowered.
Not sure how this could be done.
Your probably right but there was so much more development left in the Culture world that will never be realized.
Posted by: pawn at November 09, 2025 09:39 AM (sPsWv)
If you havent read Blade Runner, I recommend it. Eerily prophetic, especially post-2020.
It is also the book that the movie version of PKDs Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep got its title from. Apparently the same people had the film rights to both, and cannibalized Nourses title for the Dick film.
95 She has spoken with Kathleen Kennedy (yes, that one) as well as a rep from Hallmark Movies, both of whom are interested in picking up the option not only for the first book, but possibly the entire series.
Given KK's Shit Midas touch, I'd tell your friend to give that creativity black hole a wide berth.
Posted by: Krebs v Carnot: Epic Battle of the Cycling Stars(TM) - what makes you think you are in charge? at November 09, 2025 09:40 AM (xG4kz)
96
I am happy for her. I am proud that I inspired her to write. She is my friend.
But I am absolutely drowning in envy, anger and hate. Within the space of a year and a half, she's achieved my dream. "But MP4," you will say, ]i]"she's written a story about a woman overcoming the odds, which is always popular. You write about silent movies, which isn't, so much."
I know that. I've told myself that. But it hurts. And what makes it worse is that I cannot tell her how I feel, as she is very sensitive. As well, I knew this would happen! Right from the start, as I read her early drafts, I knew that her work would catch attention and that she would be picked up by either a major publisher or a movie studio.
She's grateful to me. She's said, "We're taking this ride together, because you inspired me." She's promised that when the film crew interviews her, she is going to put me and my work forward because I inspired her to write. I have no reason not to believe her, but I know nobody on her team will take even a moment to see what I do.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:41 AM (ufSfZ)
97
Fortunately, book 3 does end strong. It finally picks a single batch of characters to follow, and gives them a really compelling adventure to close out the story. Now it's on the final book...of the original trilogy.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 09:28 AM (Lhaco)
---
As I'm sure you know (but others may not), these books (and others that followed) were based on D&D adventure modules with the characters included, so one could literally quantify exactly what magic properties the various items had. In addition, a strategic wargame of the conflict was also published, with chits for all the main characters so one could track everything on the same map.
At that time TSR also was pushing Battlesystem, a terrible set of miniatures rules, and key battles were available for you to replay. The books are essentially a transcription of the playtesting, and the character traits were developed by the players. That is partly why the writing and pacing (and plot) is so uneven.
98I guess they would if they insisted on hardbacks only.
The biggest change for me brought on by ebooks has been a switch to preferring hardcover editions. Because I no longer prioritize portability over durability and larger cover art.
I repeat, I am drowning in envy and rage. All I want to do is grab a bottle and drink myself into a permanent coma.
Have any of you Horde authors had a problem like this? If so, how did you handle it? Why can't I be unselfishly happy for my friend? Why do I feel like taking all of my notes and writing for the new book and burning them?
Apologies for the length of this stupid, selfish rant. As I said, I have no one else to talk to.
I really need a drink.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:43 AM (ufSfZ)
100
In less serious reading (even less serious than a 'Dragonlance' novel) I started reading "Tomb Raider: Colossal Collection," a re-print of some comic books created in the late 90's. There are criticisms I could make about the story, and the physical book itself, but the most important thing I can say is a compliment; The people who wrote and illustrated this book (Dan Jurgens and Andy Park, in the issues I've read so far) understood why Tomb Raider existed as a franchise, and they understood what fans wanted when they purchased a Tomb Raider comic. And they gave the fans what they wanted! They didn't try to subvert the property for their own purposes, they didn't try to insult the fans of the property...They just went out there and produced another installment that furthered a pre-existing franchise. And that alone put them leaps and bounds ahead of anyone who worked on the franchise for the past decade.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 09:44 AM (Lhaco)
101
Good morning all.
I had stopped reading a lot of paranormal books for mystery novels because I got bored with so,e of the authors. Ran out of things I wanted to read so went back to ome I got for free that had been on my Kindle for awhile. The Wild Hunt by Yasmine Galenorn. The whole series. For free! Finished book one and I liked it. On to book two!
Also got Patricia Briggs new book BlindDate with a Wereworlf and it's fun. If you've read her stuff in the last you will like it.
Have a bunch of other stuff on reserve like new ones from Islington, Sanderson and Lee Child but in the mean time....
Uplift the Savage by Christopher Anvil, collected in Interstellar Patrol II: The Federation of Humanity.
This story, written in 1968, demolishes societal advancement by Credentialization. A very clear morality tale, quickly told.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 09:44 AM (u82oZ)
103
I was an avid D&D player when all of the Dragonlance stuff was published and ended up buying just about all of it, which I sold off about 20 years ago when I realized that the only reason I would go back to it was to marvel at my terrible decision making as a teenager.
104
Poppins, write all your feelings out. It's not pretty, no, but it's completely natural to feel bitter envy. Your better instincts will put it all in perspective. Also, things take forever to actually get made in Hollywood.
Let it out, safely on paper, and don't let it fester inside.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:45 AM (kpS4V)
105
Something I've noticed is pricing. Amazon used to be reliably less expensive than B and N or other outlets. Sometimes they still are. But lately I find that isn't the case. Popular fiction or current events, like a biography of some political hack, has a lower price. But I can often get as good a deal or better from B and N or the actual publisher, such as Rabbit Room Press or Fox Chapel.
Sure, my taste in books is unusual. I'm looking at the Penguin Classics edition of George Herbert's poetry right now. Not exactly a hot seller. The price is about the same at both Amazon and B and N. In this case I'll support the local store.
Increasingly, the advantage of using Amazon for books is the chance at used books and ebooks for my tablet.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 09:45 AM (yTvNw)
106
What's even worse are programs like Grammarly and Otter that pitch themselves as "just cleaning up your language, bro," and essentially trick students into turning in AI-generated essays. I don't care if I'm waging a losing battle against this stuff, I'm waging it anyway.
Posted by: Dr. T
----
Speaking as a ped rather than a pedagogue, this stuff would be acceptable if its output was in the form of red-line editing, which would have the educational value of showing what needs fixed, and forcing the student to actively approve.
I like a spell check program that highlights questionable words, and then make suggestions. I detest autocucumber, which is useful on a device sans keyboard where it offers shortcuts to extended hunt and peck, but often arrogantly assumes its way into making me look stupid. These programs do the same, only with bigger and grander stupid.
The old adage, "To err is human, to really screw up requires a computer," is more true than ever.
And it just tried to convert "err" to "see".
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 09:46 AM (C+UIq)
Family Resemblance in Tiger By the Tail shows why some data says pigs and man have common ancestors. He has a lot of fun with the concept. All before DNA genomes were used for classification, of course. A story to make you smile.
The pun at the end was awesome. He figured it all out using the scientific method. First used by Roger Bacon.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 09:48 AM (u82oZ)
110
Well, I have a writing complaint - or, rather, a certain cri de coeur - this morning. I discussed it with the Perfessor last night, but I don't know if I should burden you all with it. The problem is that I don't have anyone to talk to and I really need to get it off my chest.
Let me make some tea and think.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:09 AM (ufSfZ)
I've been doing some rewrite/editing on a current WIP almost ready to send to an editor, so I haven't kept up with the comments today.
That's what A Literary Horde is for MP4. Post something there if you need to vent or ask for help.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 09:48 AM (uQesX)
111
The Asylum films business model.
Posted by: toby928(c) at November 09, 2025 09:14 AM (jc0TO)
I watched an Asylum film (Atlantic Rim) that was featured on the revived Mystery Science Theater 3000. I kinda pissed me off. Because despite the silliness, there were moments where it was almost cool. But those moments were undermined by lazy writing. Even as schlock, it could have been good shlock, if they had only put in some actual effort...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 09:49 AM (Lhaco)
112
>I usually take several physical books with me when I travel in addition to the books I have on the Kindle app.
For me, that would work only if the trip is less than a day...I can easily finish 3-4 books on one flight to Japan (which is where I'm going when I travel these days). If I'm there for 2 weeks, I'll likely finish another 5-10 books during the course of the trip. And my suitcase has to be small and light enough that I, a 5' 100 lb woman, can carry it down a flight of stairs in a train station. So, physical books are a no go for me when I'm on travel.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 09:50 AM (Y+AMd)
113
I would like to read Blade Runner, it is one of my favorite Sci-fi movies.
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 09:52 AM (+qU29)
However, you have done a great thing. By personal example and your writing, you have ignited the talent of a good friend. Her writings may be more in tune with a decadent society, but you have your own strengths in your stories.
The world will benefit, and you are like a parent of a very bright and in-demand child. Your role was important.
Please bask in any reflected glory.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 09:52 AM (u82oZ)
115The people who wrote and illustrated this book (Dan Jurgens and Andy Park, in the issues I've read so far) understood why Tomb Raider existed as a franchise, and they understood what fans wanted when they purchased a Tomb Raider comic.
Rule 34, I presume.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:53 AM (ufSfZ)
116
I'm rereading Ragman, a DC limited series from 1991. The Ragman is a neighborhood protector in Gotham City. He wears an outfit of stitched rags, which capture souls. This all stems from the Holocaust.
I've started a hardbound collection of the 1950s comics strip "King Aroo," of which I learned only a few months ago through a Facebook group devoted to classic comic strips. The collection was published by New American Library, an IDW imprint, which folded after only two volumes came out. In the first storyline, the Fairy Godmother has a competitor in the wish-granting business: a guy who wishes upon a star.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 09, 2025 09:14 AM (p/isN)
Never heard of either of those...Which gives me hope that there are still hidden gems out there for me to discover!
Like maybe Spelljammer. It looks like another D&D licensed title that DC did in the 80's. Maybe I'll find a cheap run, and maybe it'll be worthwhile...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 09:53 AM (Lhaco)
117
[They]why Tomb Raider existed as a franchise, and they understood what fans wanted when they purchased a Tomb Raider comic. And they gave the fans what they wanted!
Posted by: Castle Guy
-----
Not at all familiar with the comic, but, going by the movies, I have to snark out with "fan service" as what they wanted.
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 09:53 AM (C+UIq)
The envy's natural; don't sweat it. You helped a friend and it worked out better for her than either of you could have hoped. Just keep writing. And who knows, maybe you can use the envy later (well disguised of course) as a killer's motive. As William Goldman once said, "Everything is material."
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 09:53 AM (q3u5l)
119
Have any of you Horde authors had a problem like this? If so, how did you handle it? Why can't I be unselfishly happy for my friend? Why do I feel like taking all of my notes and writing for the new book and burning them?
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:43 AM (ufSfZ)
---
Sort of. I bring it up from time to time, but I went to high school with Larry Page. We weren't besties, but ran with the same crowd, argued politics, he wrote friendly insults in my yearbook, etc. And he became a billionaire while I was driving hand-me-down cars. It happens.
I suspect that this stings a bit more, because it's the same industry, the one you hammered away at, but it is what it is. She hit a seam, whilst you and I write what interests us, not necessarily what is popular. It is a happy circumstance when that happens.
I will add that the ultimate story here has not yet been told, and this may be a road to a big break for you. At least you can learn a lot about how things really work (and maybe the name of this wonderful hit-making firm).
120
What's even worse are programs like Grammarly and Otter that pitch themselves as "just cleaning up your language, bro," and essentially trick students into turning in AI-generated essays. I don't care if I'm waging a losing battle against this stuff, I'm waging it anyway.
Posted by: Dr. T at November 09, 2025 09:15 AM (lHPJf)
I use Pro Writing Aid, but only to check grammar. I don't use it to write anything. I believe I'm competent enough to get grammar correct, but you always miss something. Besides, it's also wrong on a few things, and that stands out.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 09:57 AM (uQesX)
121
If any one is interested in scifi ebooks humble bundle currently has bundle with Hugh Howey, Neal Stephenson, Charles Soule, and Joseph Fink - $25.
It has all the wook,shift,dust and some other Howey books like the sand series. Howey went off the global warming deep-end with the sand series a slight bit, but he is a lefty. If you haven't read the wook,shift,dust I'd recommend it and those are explicitly not lefty, I'm sure it pained him.
For Neal it has Seveneves and a few others. I hadn't heard of Fink and the Welcome to Nightvale or the Soule books.
The charity is Room to Read which sounds like the typical woke stuff they do but non as onerous as some of the past ones.
I like the ebooks because I'm out of shelf space and being able to adjust the font size helps.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 09:58 AM (3uBP9)
122
AI use in schools is an interesting thing, to me.
Students telling a machine their "prompt", which is the question on questions the teacher wants them to answer. It regurgitates a nice-sounding answer (the buzzword bingo winner), and they copy-paste it, then go on with their lives.
Nothing is learned. Nothing is gained.
Unless the learning is, during their graduation, 70+% of the diplomas are awarded to "ChatGPT, our most productive member". None for the students who kept using it.
After all, if the computer is doing your job automatically for you... why are you still needed?
...
Another scary thought: How many schools are using AI to generate fake students for fake classes, automating responses to teacher questions and assignments? Since funding is based on reported butts-in-seats, and there has been news reports of these numbers being faked, just how far would school admins go to steal a bit more $$$?
Posted by: Another Anon at November 09, 2025 09:58 AM (4h45B)
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 09:58 AM (3uBP9)
124
MP4, I would feel the same way. I guess that's not much comfort*...it would take a saint not to be jealous, and you're human. If you are religious, prayer is probably your best recourse. If not, I think all you can do is what you're already doing - share with people who care and don't burden your friend. Your instincts are good, and I'm optimistic that continuing to do right by your friend, as you've done all along, will eventually help you feel better.
I'm sorry you're having to deal with this!
*Speaking of retarded AI, autocorrect changed this to "comfortable".
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 09:58 AM (Y+AMd)
125
I use Pro Writing Aid, but only to check grammar. I don't use it to write anything. I believe I'm competent enough to get grammar correct, but you always miss something. Besides, it's also wrong on a few things, and that stands out.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 09:57 AM (uQesX)
---
I'm giving the Amazon audio book thing a try, where you can pick an automated voice, and if nothing else, it's a great way to find minor errors that are more style than grammar. I open the document and whenever something is off, pause, and correct. So whether or not it proves worthwhile in terms of sales, I'm going to run all my books through it for revision.
Thank you again for providing an oasis in the desert of popular culture.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025 10:01 AM (u82oZ)
128I'm giving the Amazon audio book thing a try, where you can pick an automated voice.
I tried that for my short story, Thirteen Moons, but I didn't like the result. Though I say it, I'm a better narrator. i suppose I should try recording one of these days.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 10:02 AM (ufSfZ)
129
Hi. I'm Anonosaurus Wrecks and I am a bookslutaholic. It's been zero days since I bought a book. Most recently I bought Forgive the Bride: A Parody of Kill Bill Volume 3 By: Dr. Stanley Quincy Upjohn. It's the story and psychoanalysis of Nikki Bell who, at age 4, witnessed her mother, Copperhead, being killed by the Bride and her search for vengeance.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 10:03 AM (L/fGl)
130
MP4, I think you know deep down that ripping up your work or drowning yourself in a bottle will only make things worse. I know it's been a bunch of years since I last saw you at a NoVaMoMee, but you still stand out in my memories as not only being the best-dressed person by far, but also for your gentlemanly personality and being a great person to talk to. It's no wonder your friend thinks the world of you.
This may seem trite, but reading what you wrote the phrase "for such as time as this" popped into my head. Yeah, I can't fully grasp the frustration and envy you're feeling, but for sure take pride in the fact that you are exactly what your friend needed and still needs. And I feel pretty strongly that she is going to lean on you quite a bit going forward.
Even though you aren't seeing the material success that she seems to have coming her way, be the pillar of strength and wisdom she needs as she goes through this roller coaster. That's worth more than you'll ever know.
Posted by: Vendette at November 09, 2025 10:03 AM (MR1yy)
131
I am totally ordering the Enterprise D when it drops on Black Friday. What I'm really looking forward to is the eventual aftermarket light kit. The one I got for my Rivendell set is AMAZING.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 10:05 AM (Y+AMd)
132
MP4, the other thing you can do, after finishing the current story, is to develop one in the same mold as your friend's. By which I mean what you said, "a woman overcoming the odds." Maybe you can set it in your 1920s for that matter. But write something on the same theme, and see if that works for you.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:05 AM (wzUl9)
133
What a nice, inspiring story... For ME To POOP ON
Posted by: Kathleen Kennedy at November 09, 2025 10:05 AM (/hq//)
134
Yesterday, my friend called me, and is over the moon. She has spoken with Kathleen Kennedy (yes, that one) as well as a rep from Hallmark Movies, both of whom are interested in picking up the option not only for the first book, but possibly the entire series. A film crew is going to be flying in early next month to put together a pitch film to show to investors.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:34 AM (ufSfZ)
Well, we can look on the bright side; presumably 'Becoming Hazel' isn't some male-skewing action-story that needs to be subverted/given to a new audience, so maybe Kennedy and Halmark will actually respect it for what it is.
Maybe...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 10:07 AM (Lhaco)
135Poppins, write all your feelings out. It's not pretty, no, but it's completely natural to feel bitter envy. Your better instincts will put it all in perspective. Also, things take forever to actually get made in Hollywood.
Let it out, safely on paper, and don't let it fester inside.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 09:45 AM
This sounds like a story idea. Figure out a twist.
Posted by: toby928(c) at November 09, 2025 10:07 AM (jc0TO)
A very good friend of mine, a songwriter for nearly fifty years, is very well-known in the country music scene in Nashville. He, with the help of a previously published author, wrote a book about his life as a songwriter. It dropped on Amazon a couple of weeks ago and I purchased it for my Kindle.
It's awful.
The writing is horrendous with a difficult-to-follow storyline, jumping all over the place, back-and-forth in chronological time.
I don't even want to finish it, but I know he knows I purchased it and has asked me a couple of times now where I am in the book. So, I'm kind of forced to muddle my way through to the end.
At some point, probably when I tell him I've finished it, he's going to ask me what I thought of the book. I really don't want to lie, but I don't want to give him my honest opinion, either, because of potential hurt feelings.
Going to have to figure out how to handle it when the time comes.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:10 AM (Y1sOo)
137He, with the help of a previously published author, wrote a book about his life as a songwriter. It dropped on Amazon a couple of weeks ago and I purchased it for my Kindle.
It's awful.
Yikes. Sounds like your buddy could have done better signing up for an AI service
Posted by: gKWVE at November 09, 2025 10:11 AM (/hq//)
You're like those early explorers who hacked their ways into the jungle to clear the way for civilization to take root. Without you, none of this happened.
And I did not see this plot twist.
I agree that you should pour all your feelings onto paper, then seal that essay in an envelope and lock it away..
As the president, Harry Truman would frequently dictate angry letters to his secretary, then, after she had typed them, tell her to file them. That's how we know of his notable missive to a critic who panned his daughter's performance. It was a threat of aggravated assault.
Posted by: Weak Geek at November 09, 2025 10:11 AM (p/isN)
139
Have any of you Horde authors had a problem like this? If so, how did you handle it? Why can't I be unselfishly happy for my friend? Why do I feel like taking all of my notes and writing for the new book and burning them?
Apologies for the length of this stupid, selfish rant. As I said, I have no one else to talk to.
I really need a drink.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:43 AM (ufSfZ)
There's a great lesson there.
Never share your work nor your writing techniques. Because if it's good, the other person will steal it.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 10:13 AM (g8Ew8)
140 Harry Truman would frequently dictate angry letters to his secretary, then, after she had typed them, tell her to file them. That's how we know of his notable missive to a critic who panned his daughter's performance. It was a threat of aggravated assault.
Posted by: Weak Geek
But he seemed like such a nice guy.
Posted by: Robert Oppenheimer at November 09, 2025 10:13 AM (/hq//)
141
At some point, probably when I tell him I've finished it, he's going to ask me what I thought of the book. I really don't want to lie, but I don't want to give him my honest opinion, either, because of potential hurt feelings.
Going to have to figure out how to handle it when the time comes.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:10 AM (Y1sOo)
Can you pick out a part or two and say, "Well, I learned a lot more about x" or "I always wondered how that came about"? And hope that will satisfy him?
Posted by: Vendette at November 09, 2025 10:13 AM (MR1yy)
142
Thanks, all, for your thoughts. I just needed to vomit it all out and try to release some of the poison.
I have a very bad habit of wearing my heart on my sleeve, so controlling my feelings when I see my friend tomorrow is going to be hard, but it has to be done. I know this is a new thing for her and she is going to need support, so I will try to stand by her as much as I can.
I was going to type up the remaining 20-odd pages of my new book, but I really don't feel like doing much of anything now. It's a gloomy day, but perhaps a drive out to Cape Ann with a good satellite radio station playing will settle my bile.
Thank you all for letting me unload. And thank you, Vendette, for your kind advice. You're very sweet and I hope I see you again at some MoMe.
Hope you all have a lovely day.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 10:14 AM (ufSfZ)
143I would like to read Blade Runner, it is one of my favorite Sci-fi movies.
If you want the book of the Blade Runner movie, you want Philip K. Dicks Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. It is a very good book and the movie is surprisingly close to it. Sometimes it is titled Blade Runner: Originally published as due to the movie having used Alan Nourses book title.
144 Maybe in a couple of months I'll be in a position to start writing a proposal to publishers for my book.
It will be on a technical subject that I worked in for 25 years. There have been books on it, but more of edited collections of papers rather than a through-composed treatment.
Considering its industrial significance, I hope to treat the patent literature on the area with the same respect that open-literature papers receive.
In any case, it will be a beast. Maybe 5000 papers and 7000 patents to go through
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025 10:14 AM (/1uiD)
145. . . However, [MP4 has] done a great thing. By personal example and your writing, you have ignited the talent of a good friend. Her writings may be more in tune with a decadent society, but you have your own strengths in your stories.
The world will benefit, and you are like a parent of a very bright and in-demand child. Your role was important.
Please bask in any reflected glory.
Posted by: NaCly Dog at November 09, 2025
***
Like Truman Capote with Harper Lee. Lee's novel became a beloved classic and film, and is still loved today. I'm not sure any of TC's books, except for In Cold Blood, were ever bestsellers (though there have been a few movie adaptations). Truman hoed his own row, and Harper hers. Her crop happened to catch fire at the time.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:15 AM (wzUl9)
146
MP4, I would add that creative engaging people are often surrounded by people that are similarly talented. It's in your nature as an interesting creative person to attract and interact with successful people that are chocked full of ideas that are in demand because that is exactly what you are too.
What I'm getting at is that your friend's success shows, in a way, that you are definitely on the right path in life, given the fact that life is often quite shitty and we're all struggling to swim up the shit stream.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:16 AM (3uBP9)
147
90 ... "New spinning book "Listen to the Wool" by Josefin Waltin is worth the money. She is Swedish so some of the fcus is on Swedish wool breeds. She is both a wheel and spindle spinner and has taught spinning. He focuses on is on preparing raw fleece and, more importantly, enjoying it all. It is really inspirational."
Notsothoreau,
I don't spin but am fascinated by it and textile arts of any kind, historically and as a hand craft. The blurb for the book looks like a combination of technique, knowledge about wool, and the mindset that makes spinning such a beneficial activity. Kind of expensive for a non-spinner but I hope the library will get a copy at some point. Thanks for mentioning it.
BTW, the price at Amazon and B and N is the same. With a B and N membership and any reward points, it would be cheaper at B and N.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 10:16 AM (yTvNw)
148
>>Can you pick out a part or two and say, "Well, I learned a lot more about x" or "I always wondered how that came about"? And hope that will satisfy him?
Yeah, that might work. Thank you.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:17 AM (Y1sOo)
149
I tried that for my short story, Thirteen Moons, but I didn't like the result. Though I say it, I'm a better narrator. i suppose I should try recording one of these days.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 10:02 AM (ufSfZ)
You probably should. Can you offer a recorded version of your books on amazon or audible? I know so many people who love to read, but because they are so busy with work or family life, that they listen to audio books more than they read. You could really tap into a market with audio.
And I totally understand the envy and hurt, and hope the silver lining is that her success and resulting connections can come back to you.
150
115 The people who wrote and illustrated this book (Dan Jurgens and Andy Park, in the issues I've read so far) understood why Tomb Raider existed as a franchise, and they understood what fans wanted when they purchased a Tomb Raider comic.
Rule 34, I presume.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing at November 09, 2025 09:53 AM (ufSfZ)
Issue 1, page 1; Iranian soldiers and some women in black full-body burqas.
Page 2; soldiers begin ripping the burqas off the women.
Page 3; Full page splash panel of Lara Croft wearing a tight tank top, a be-jeweled necklace, and the remains of a ripped burqa. Drawn in glorious 90's cheesecake art-style.
Page 4; Lara is dual-wielding pistols against the soldiers.
Nothing lewd, but exactly what the franchise is known for.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 10:18 AM (Lhaco)
151 I am totally ordering the Enterprise D when it drops on Black Friday. What I'm really looking forward to is the eventual aftermarket light kit. The one I got for my Rivendell set is AMAZING.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025
***
I've never bought a Lego kit. How do they keep track of all those parts? Is each module, say, an engine nacelle, in one little bag or compartment, and the instructions tell you to do steps A and B and C with it until it's done? And at last you put the various modules together to make the finished kit? The plastic models I built as a boy and young man were like that -- but of course with nowhere near as many pieces.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:19 AM (wzUl9)
152
This sounds like a story idea. Figure out a twist.
Make it gay and lame and put a chick in it.
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at November 09, 2025 10:20 AM (ZdTpv)
153
I really need a drink.
Posted by: Mary Poppins' Practically Perfect Piercing
-----
No, you don't. I am only mildly afflicted by the Irish Curse, but I have too many friends and relatives (sometimes even the same people!) who are. Don't take that path.
Physical effort. Hard physical effort. Hard enough that it deflects all of those thoughts and subsumes them. In your case a heavy bag might be good, but even just a run (a jog, whatever pushes to your personal limit) will help.
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 10:20 AM (C+UIq)
154
That's what A Literary Horde is for MP4. Post something there if you need to vent or ask for help.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 09:48 AM (uQesX)
This disadvantage of starting the comments late: the posts are up.
Day late, dollar short, words of no value.
Sounds like my writing.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 10:21 AM (uQesX)
155
I really don't want to lie, but I don't want to give him my honest opinion, either, because of potential hurt feelings.
Going to have to figure out how to handle it when the time comes.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:10 AM (Y1sOo)
You say something like, "you have a great story, and this has the potential to reach a big audience. It needs some rearranging and editing, and it will be even better."
156
Wolfus,
It's probably been ten years since I last helped my son build a lego model, but they do a great job with very detailed instruction books.
We built several fairly complex kits and never experienced any significant problems.
Posted by: InspiredHistoryMike at November 09, 2025 10:24 AM (KaHlS)
157
MP4: If you do decide to go on a bender, make sure you compose and print out some extremely witty epigrams, insults, and remarks to deliver while you're in Drunk Dorothy Parker mode. Nothing's worse than a drunk writer who isn't being entertaining. That's why Charles Bukowski is obscure but everyone knows Truman Capote.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 10:25 AM (78a2H)
158
"Is each module, say, an engine nacelle, in one little bag or compartment, and the instructions tell you to do steps A and B and C with it until it's done?"
I've watched my grandchildren put together many a Lego sets. Instruction books are fairly detailed and each module is bagged to make it easy to complete the project. You start with module A and work your way through to the end.
Posted by: Tuna at November 09, 2025 10:25 AM (lJ0H4)
159
MP4, I'm in a holding pattern myself. The Seattle publisher who is interested, or so they say, in my mystery novel with a young woman narrator/protagonist keeps talking about doing a developmental edit on it with me, supposedly next month. But I sent this ms. to them a year ago. They expressed interest in Jan. '25, the editor and I spoke at length on the phone in Feb., and since then . . . no real forward movement.
It's flattering yet frustrating at the same time.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:26 AM (wzUl9)
160
>>> Issue 1, page 1; Iranian soldiers and some women in black full-body burqas.
Page 2; soldiers begin ripping the burqas off the women.
Page 3; Full page splash panel of Lara Croft wearing a tight tank top, a be-jeweled necklace, and the remains of a ripped burqa. Drawn in glorious 90's cheesecake art-style.
Page 4; Lara is dual-wielding pistols against the soldiers.
Nothing lewd, but exactly what the franchise is known for.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 10:18 AM (Lhaco)
Exactly. I do not want lewd or anything close to sex from Lara, I'm sure the girl has needs but she can handle that off the clock on her own time. I want an athletic stacked Kick Ass Girl blasting giant alligators and shooting the bad guys in the crotch while doing a somersault. Very simple.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:26 AM (3uBP9)
161
I thought about writing some memoirs of my 30 year career in engineering and projects in manufacturing. I'm an OK writer but never developed the concentration for doing anything long form. I think I'd just dictate to the computer, have AI clean it up, with me going over it.
Posted by: MAGA_Ken at November 09, 2025 10:27 AM (lxk2o)
162
I've never bought a Lego kit. How do they keep track of all those parts? Is each module, say, an engine nacelle, in one little bag or compartment, and the instructions tell you to do steps A and B and C with it until it's done? And at last you put the various modules together to make the finished kit? The plastic models I built as a boy and young man were like that -- but of course with nowhere near as many pieces.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:19 AM (wzUl9)
Nowadays, you receive a bunch of numbered bags. (maybe 15 or 20 for the Enterprise). The instruction manual will start with the bag number. Each page will have a box in the corner that shows pieces you need for that step, and then an illustration of where the pieces go.
Some days I miss the old school Lego instruction books, for the castles or big spaceships. Those didn't point out the pieces you needed, you just had to compare the illustrations from one page to the next, and visually pick out what changed. Many a times I looked back in confusion and realized that I had missed a piece or even a whole layer of wall bricks. Ah, those were the days...
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 10:27 AM (Lhaco)
163 In academia, students are realizing they can use these tools to pass their classes. I have students in MY class that have used ChatGPT for some of their work. It's pretty obvious when you know what to look for. Again, students using lots of buzzwords without providing any supporting evidence for their claims is one of those signs.
I warned you about this shit 30 years ago. It's not just the students, but the professors as well.
Posted by: Alan Sokal at November 09, 2025 10:28 AM (y9nCu)
Mrs Some Guy likes some of the elaborate Lego kits -- there are separate bags holding the pieces for particular parts of the set, and the instructions are detailed.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 10:28 AM (q3u5l)
165 I really don't want to lie, but I don't want to give him my honest opinion, either, because of potential hurt feelings.
___________
I'm reluctant to buy books by Moron authors because: what if they're just bad? Not as in not to my taste, but as in preposterous in premise and horrible writing.
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025 10:28 AM (/1uiD)
166Wolfus,
It's probably been ten years since I last helped my son build a lego model, but they do a great job with very detailed instruction books.
We built several fairly complex kits and never experienced any significant problems.
Posted by: InspiredHistoryMike at November 09, 2025
***
The pig in the sty is the fact I have two cats. If I could set up the assembly in a separate room with a closed door, so they couldn't get into the project, I'd be okay.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:29 AM (wzUl9)
167
Do NOT buy Michael Connelly's new police procedural "Nightshade!" It's awful. Long ago when he did the first few Bosch-series books, I enjoyed his writing. This one's set in the small harbor town on Catalina island and features Connelly's new character, a detective with the LA county sheriff's department. Connelly has begun a new franchise, but he's definitely lost his mojo. Robert Crais does it far better, and Grisham can be far more engaging.
Posted by: M. Gaga at November 09, 2025 10:29 AM (zeLd4)
168
I'm giving the Amazon audio book thing a try, where you can pick an automated voice, and if nothing else, it's a great way to find minor errors that are more style than grammar. I open the document and whenever something is off, pause, and correct. So whether or not it proves worthwhile in terms of sales, I'm going to run all my books through it for revision.
Posted by: Ace-Endorsed Author A.H. Lloyd at November 09, 2025 09:59 AM (ZOv7s)
One thing I have noticed is the voices are getting better. Sometimes it takes a while to recognize if it's real or not. Weird inflections and pronunciations give the game away.
Of course, there goes the voice actor's marke.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 10:29 AM (uQesX)
169
Well, time to get moving. Thanks again, Perfesser!
170
Hullo.
I've moved on to Barnaby Rudge by Charles Dickens. And it's setting up an interesting, if somewhat melodramatic, mystery. It's also set, not contemporarily or near it to Dickens' Victorian times, but in 1780. And it's interesting to see how differently he depicts English life. Though most housewives, particularly of the middle class, remain spastic.
Barnaby himself is a little, or a lot, crazy. It's an interesting choice to make him the title character, so far he doesn't feel like a protagonist, the Locksmith seems to come closest to that.
171
The spinning book is important because it starts from raw wool and teaches you how to process it. I once did a demo with a local spinning group at the county fair. We were back in the livestock area, with the sheep. Every spinner had commercially prepared roving to spin! I went home, grabbed some fleece and my tools, and came back. I had all the kids that owned the sheep come over to talk about carding wool and spinning. Preparing the wool yourself is a different skillset.
Also the author has a lovely way of explaining why you should just enjoy the process and not expect perfection at once. There are too many people that get frustrated that they aren't pros the first time they try something.
And she's a spindle spinner, which automatically gets my thumbs up! (that's a Bosworth spindle on the cover)
Posted by: Notsothoreau at November 09, 2025 10:31 AM (znHU2)
172
I checked my email between writing posts, and the one message in my inbox told me a book I ordered (The Atlantean, volume 3) is being shipped. Hooray! And what perfect timing for the message!
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 10:31 AM (Lhaco)
173
AI is writing fake books for people who want to cash in on the success of others.
-
I don't know whether Charles River Editors books are AI, I suspect not because they've been around for a while, but they also appear to be quickly written and are not particularly well written. They describe themselves as, "Since 2010, Charles River Editors has published more than 4,000 meticulously researched titles covering the span of human history - from the ancient world to modern times. Every book is crafted by historians and professors dedicated to bringing the past to life with clarity, accuracy, and insight." The unrelated Charles River Press is less generous. "There are no editors or authors. This so-called 'publisher' copies and cobbles Wikipedia articles and images into 50-page 'books', slaps a cover on it, and sells it as 'Charles River Editors'. This 'publisher' purposely chose a company name that insinuates a connection to Charles River Press." The ironic thing is that their books can sometimes be interesting. One I read and enjoyed concerned a Civil War scandal in which documents found on a dead Union officer indicated he had been ordered to assassinate Jefferson Davis.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 10:32 AM (L/fGl)
174
Reading highlight recently has to be Peanuts every Sunday. Library appears to have the complete series on Libby. Currently on 1966 to 70 and Schulz has hit his stride. Almost every week these are classic Charlie Brown and crew.
Posted by: InspiredHistoryMike at November 09, 2025 10:32 AM (KaHlS)
175 I'm giving the Amazon audio book thing a try, where you can pick an automated voice
________
Do they have the "smoky-voiced lady with a posh English accent" option? Asking for a friend.
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025 10:32 AM (/1uiD)
176
I know one academic who has reverted to doing exams which must be handwritten on paper in class by the students -- and she's seriously thinking about going over to oral exams because they can't sneak glances at their phones.
Personally I think that we need to re-think college. It was bad enough when students began to think of it as a continuation of high school, but now it's essentially selling credentials, with some increasingly arbitrary hoops.
I think all the jobs/professions which require "a college degree" should replace that requirement with an entry exam (handwritten or oral) and if you can pass that you're qualified. That would free up colleges to actually educate people who want to learn things.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 10:32 AM (78a2H)
177
25 Comment: I've had the Science Fiction Book Club editions of these books sitting on my shelves for years, if not decades.
--
I miss the SFBC
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 09:10 AM (7gFa4)
Same here. I have a ton (seem like it anyways) of SFBC editions of books in several moving boxes that I haven't unpacked since I moved into my house umpteen years ago. I've read all or almost all of them so I haven't seen a need to pull any out. Maybe one day.
Posted by: Farquad at November 09, 2025 10:33 AM (CFMhl)
178
Harry Truman would frequently dictate angry letters to his secretary, then, after she had typed them, tell her to file them. That's how we know of his notable missive to a critic who panned his daughter's performance. It was a threat of aggravated assault.
Posted by: Weak Geek
But he seemed like such a nice guy.
Posted by: Robert Oppenheimer at November 09, 2025 10:13 AM (/hq//)
He was a nasty partisan D.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 10:34 AM (uQesX)
179
Why do people buy elaborate lego sets for kids that aren't interested in lego nor have the attention span & focus for it? Well the answer is because those people hate me.
So I'm the dad that would put the five billion piece giant disney moana potemkin pleasure palace or whatever it's called together, and after five minutes, all entirely by my self. Then it goes up on a shelf to never be cared about again.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:34 AM (3uBP9)
180
Sorry to intrude on the book thread, but Perfessor I posted an idea about getting students to turn things in at the end of the tech thread.
Posted by: Art Rondelet of Malmsey at November 09, 2025 10:35 AM (FEVMW)
181
At some point, probably when I tell him I've finished it, he's going to ask me what I thought of the book. I really don't want to lie, but I don't want to give him my honest opinion, either, because of potential hurt feelings.
-
I'd go full Gavin Newsom and lie like the wind.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 10:36 AM (L/fGl)
182
And I'm buying Warrior of the Altaii. Am curious.
183
Yeah that's me that got quoted about the Connelly book, and it was when I was just enough into it for the corpse discovery. Things turned boring after that. If you want a good read about murder set on a sailboat, read Joseph O'Connor's "Star of the Sea."
Posted by: M. Gaga at November 09, 2025 10:38 AM (zeLd4)
184
My order of "The Golden Thread: A History of the Western Tradition, Volume II: The Modern and Contemporary West (The Golden Thread, 2)" was delayed a month by amazon. It was supposed to be released before Christmas and now it is slated for January. Not sure what happened. Vol I is very good. I really hope it is just a minor thing.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:39 AM (3uBP9)
185
Found the SFBC some time around 1965 and stayed in for a long time. Bailed out some time in the mid or late 90s. The omnibus volumes were a big draw for me later in the game, but they did fewer and fewer of them as time went on and most of what I was seeing in the newer offerings just didn't appeal.
But jeez Louise -- omnibus volumes of Zelazny, Kuttner/Moore, Bester, Heinlein... For a while, it was just heaven.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 10:39 AM (q3u5l)
186
Can you pick out a part or two and say, "Well, I learned a lot more about x" or "I always wondered how that came about"? And hope that will satisfy him?
Posted by: Vendette at November 09, 2025 10:13 AM (MR1yy)
Just say “Well I thought this character had a really great personality…”
Posted by: Tom Servo at November 09, 2025 10:41 AM (eQmnE)
187 Found the SFBC some time around 1965 and stayed in for a long time. Bailed out some time in the mid or late 90s. The omnibus volumes were a big draw for me later in the game, but they did fewer and fewer of them as time went on and most of what I was seeing in the newer offerings just didn't appeal.
But jeez Louise -- omnibus volumes of Zelazny, Kuttner/Moore, Bester, Heinlein... For a while, it was just heaven.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025
***
They advertised in the SF magazines like Analog and Galaxy. They offered a hardback of the Science Fiction Hall of Fame volume. "Read It Slowly . . . You'll Want To. It's just that good."
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:42 AM (wzUl9)
188
We're honest with each other, sometimes brutally
I suppose you could do a little constructive criticism
There had to be aspects of the memoir you liked?
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 10:42 AM (bXbFr)
189
I'm reluctant to buy books by Moron authors because: what if they're just bad? Not as in not to my taste, but as in preposterous in premise and horrible writing.
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025 10:28 AM (/1uiD)
Oh, so you know some of my work?
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 10:42 AM (uQesX)
190
>>"It needs some rearranging and editing, and it will be even better."
The whole book is going to need a re-do.
It really is a great story. He left home at 16-years-old and moved to Nashville to be a singer. When he realized how difficult it was to break through in Nashville as a recording artist, he switched to songwriting.
George Jones and Tammy Wynette cut one of his songs written when he was only seventeen-years-old. It was his first song to be recorded and released.
Over his career, he estimates he's written or co-written over 3,000 songs, some of which anyone who has been a fan of country music since the 70s probably knows word-for-word. Blake Shelton has said one of my friend's songs is his most-requested song by fans.
Too bad his book blows.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:42 AM (Y1sOo)
191
At some point, probably when I tell him I've finished it, he's going to ask me what I thought of the book. I really don't want to lie, but I don't want to give him my honest opinion, either, because of potential hurt feelings.
Going to have to figure out how to handle it when the time comes.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:10 AM (Y1sOo)
It's always hard to critique friends.
I'd say keep the feedback brief, include something good for every negative thing.
If you can't find anything positive to say, just say it didn't work for you and leave it at that.
192
I've always believed that the old SF Book Club was what glued fandom together. We all had at least the same six membership premium books on our shelves: Hugo Winners, Barlowe's Guide to Extraterrestrials, Amber omnibus, and a few others. SF fans had a common canon and heritage.
Now? Younger fans don't read anything written before 2000, maybe 1990 for the Millennials. Meanwhile people like myself find fewer and fewer contemporary authors worth bothering with. I've had to resort to starting a career as an SF writer and cranking out novels just so I'll have something to read.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 10:45 AM (78a2H)
It really is a great story. He left home at 16-years-old and moved to Nashville to be a singer. When he realized how difficult it was to break through in Nashville as a recording artist, he switched to songwriting.
George Jones and Tammy Wynette cut one of his songs written when he was only seventeen-years-old. It was his first song to be recorded and released.
Over his career, he estimates he's written or co-written over 3,000 songs, some of which anyone who has been a fan of country music since the 70s probably knows word-for-word. Blake Shelton has said one of my friend's songs is his most-requested song by fans.
Too bad his book blows.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025
***
The material sounds fascinating. I'd guess he's someone who really needed a good ghostwriter.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:46 AM (wzUl9)
194
One of the joys this week was getting a used book about the Lindisfarne Gospels. Written by the curator of the British Library, where it is stored, it describes the times and people who created it, the techniques used (more involved than expected), and how it fits into the world of illuminated manuscripts. The pictures show the incredible complexity and colors in detail. The workmanship and talent that goes into illuminated manuscripts is mind boggling. One thing is it tells where the materials came from for making the inks/paints used. For example, the deep blues were made from lapis lazuli which at that time came from the Himalaya area. A huge distance to travel in the seventh century.
This will go on the shelf with the Book of Kells volume.
Can't get away from Tolkien. When describing how the materials were made, there are playful riddles from the ninth century or earlier that are part of other manuscripts. Such riddles were popular in Anglo Saxon times and were taken seriously. I immediately flashed back to the 'Riddles in the Dark' chapter of The Hobbit. Tolkien would certainly have been aware of such matters and made it part of Middle-Earth culture. Made me smile.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 10:46 AM (yTvNw)
1959 I'm reluctant to buy books by Moron authors because: what if they're just bad? Not as in not to my taste, but as in preposterous in premise and horrible writing.
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025
***
I woudn't mind a preposterous premise if the writing is good.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:47 AM (wzUl9)
196
I sold all my SFBC editions, also Harlon Ellison multibook anthologies, Clark and Asimov anthologies. I freak out sometimes when I move in regards to the massive amount of stuff I have and start trying to get rid of things. And I move too much.
I've lived in dozens of places and I hated moving each time. I figure if I've read a book I can sell it but then I always regret it later. I don't even know where most of the books I haven't sold are, some box somewhere and I think the last move lost a good bit of our stuff.
I hate moving so much. I want to find a place and just die there. That would would be nice. Maybe a little time to rest and read before the dying, but otherwise, yeah.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:48 AM (3uBP9)
197
I'm reading THE FAR LAND by Brandon Presser. It's an account of Pitcairn Island from the days of the Bounty mutineers to their current descendants. His writing style is a little choppy but the content is pretty interesting.
Posted by: Cosda at November 09, 2025 10:48 AM (FXRLM)
198
Personally I think that we need to re-think college. It was bad enough when students began to think of it as a continuation of high school, but now it's essentially selling credentials, with some increasingly arbitrary hoops.
I think all the jobs/professions which require "a college degree" should replace that requirement with an entry exam (handwritten or oral) and if you can pass that you're qualified. That would free up colleges to actually educate people who want to learn things.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 10:32 AM (78a2H)
If I'm not mistaken, higher education was for the scions of wealthy families. Harvard, despite its reputation, wasn't hard grading, except maybe for the divinity school. Most graduates just cruised through as if it was a finishing school. They never expected to learn anything.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 10:48 AM (uQesX)
199
My order of "The Golden Thread: A History of the Western Tradition, Volume II: The Modern and Contemporary West (The Golden Thread, 2)" was delayed a month by amazon. It was supposed to be released before Christmas and now it is slated for January. Not sure what happened. Vol I is very good. I really hope it is just a minor thing.
Posted by: banana Dream
Received my copy of Vol.1 this week. Just a beautiful book. Worth every penny I paid for it. Also received David Wilson's Bayeux Tapestry book. I'm getting lost in the narrative.
Posted by: Tuna at November 09, 2025 10:49 AM (lJ0H4)
I wish I liked it more than I do because it's not a bad book. It's an okay book with one big major failure in it for me.
The story concerns a small group composed of an octopus specialist, a woman warrior, and a super-intelligent android, who are isolated in an island area to make first contact and understand this species of apparently intelligent octopi before Eeeeeevil humanity and Eeeeeviler corporations destroy them. So, "Avatar" light essentially.
I skip everything else about the book except the One Big Failure. And that is that we never feel because it's never demonstrated just how alien that earthbound alien species is.
We're told often, incessantly how alien they must be because of their environment, and soft bodies, and radially distributed nervous system. But we're never given any kind of peek into that alienness. In fact, the octopi, more or less in their interactions with humans and by themselves behave exactly as humans would. A big failure of a supposedly First Contact story.
*sigh* I would like to read a new book I can whole-heartedly endorse.
Posted by: naturalfake at November 09, 2025 10:49 AM (iJfKG)
201
Last week, MP4 recommended "The Gales of November: the Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by John U. Bacon. I ordered it, Mr. Dmlw! started reading it and couldn't put it down until he was done.
-
I've begun it but very early the author how much better it is today with diverse crews unlike the horrible racist, sexist days of 1975. It just struck me wrong having Jack shit to do with his subject matter. I put it down but will finish it eventually.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 10:49 AM (L/fGl)
202I'm reluctant to buy books by Moron authors because: what if they're just bad? Not as in not to my taste, but as in preposterous in premise and horrible writing.
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025
Easy, if the book's on Amazon Kindle there's always a sample available to decide if the book is for you or not.
F'rinstance, my novel, "Wearing the Cat" has a very generous sample to help convince you of it's merits.
Posted by: naturalfake at November 09, 2025 10:51 AM (iJfKG)
Here's a question for the fantasy readers. Trying to get busy with Christmas shopping and someone suggested a trilogy for girls, Daevabad Trilogy, by SA Shakraborty, largely as a main character is a girl. I looked into it and it seems like the main characters are thieves, liars and kill with little to no remorse. Not what I'm looking for, but it gets worse. It seems the author who put out these stories of Islamic fantasy (Djinns) is American and she converted to Islam as a teen, and this takes us to the aftermath of 9/11. Why would a girls who lived near NYC decided to follow in the path of Islam and then write books about evil people? Any way, hard pass, I'll look elsewhere.
Posted by: night lifted at November 09, 2025 10:52 AM (/YboP)
205
MP4, I see it a different way. You've given someone a leg up in life, played a part in their big score. (At least they're grateful to you.)
As a result, many people involved with the book project you helped launch will gain employment, make industry connections, hone their business skills and improve their lot(s) in the world.
Maybe your part is exhorting a 'student' to discover their natural gifting. Then, teaching completed, you stand in the class doorway bravely waving farewell as the student starts out on the foundation you helped provide.
These things eventually go full circle. Be patient.
Posted by: Ju at November 09, 2025 10:52 AM (EgpoY)
206
It's always hard to critique friends.
I'd say keep the feedback brief, include something good for every negative thing.
If you can't find anything positive to say, just say it didn't work for you and leave it at that.
Posted by: Mark Andrew Edwards, Buy ammo at November 09, 2025 10:45 AM (xcxpd)
Sometimes it's more helpful to tell them, "It sucks".
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 10:52 AM (g8Ew8)
207
Too bad his book blows.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 10:42 AM (Y1sOo)
I'd read it and leave a frank review on amazon, so you don't have to. Just drop the name of the book and the author in here, or link it, or email it to me (email in nic).
208
SFBC used to have ads bound into paperbacks as well if memory serves. I think my intro offer was Asimov's Foundation Trilogy. Or maybe the Boucher 2-volume Treasury of Science Fiction. There was something terrific every freakin' month for years. The Dangerous Visions anthologies, tons of Silverberg, Bradbury, Zelazny's Lord of Light. Wonderful times.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 10:54 AM (q3u5l)
209
But for one letter, books would be boobs.
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at November 09, 2025 10:52 AM (6vGHy)
I like boobs.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 10:54 AM (g8Ew8)
210
OT, but today is the 60th anniversary of the big 1965 NYC Blackout. Only five instances of looting were reported during the power outage. Not so in 1977. Wonder what changed . . .?
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:55 AM (wzUl9)
211
200 Okay, so I read a newish SF book- "The Mountain in the Sea" by Ray Nayler
The story concerns a small group composed of an octopus specialist, a woman warrior, and a super-intelligent android, who are isolated in an island area to make first contact and understand this species of apparently intelligent octopi before Eeeeeevil humanity and Eeeeeviler corporations destroy them. So, "Avatar" light essentially.
Posted by: naturalfake at November 09, 20
The joys of talking about sci-fi novels; I had to read your full comment before I knew if 'an octopus specialist' referred to a person who specialized in octopuses, or a sentient octopus/octopus-like-alien who had some specialized roll in the mission.
Posted by: Castle Guy at November 09, 2025 10:55 AM (Lhaco)
212
>>> Received my copy of Vol.1 this week. Just a beautiful book. Worth every penny I paid for it. Also received David Wilson's Bayeux Tapestry book. I'm getting lost in the narrative.
Posted by: Tuna at November 09, 2025 10:49 AM (lJ0H4)
It is very good. I was wondering if the amazon delay of Vol II was because the publishing house prioritized their direct sales but Encounter Books shows the same date. I got it for my child but I'm going to have to borrow it a lot. I've already dug into it, looking up things here and there and realized I'm just going to have to start from the beginning and read through because I can't stop.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:56 AM (3uBP9)
213 Max Bruch proudly showed Brahms the manuscript for his new oratorio. Brahms went through it with interest and exclaimed, "Where did you get this music paper? It's first rate!"
Posted by: Hadrian the Seventh at November 09, 2025 10:57 AM (dXrys)
214
What's the thing hanging down at the front of the JGG pants?
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:57 AM (3uBP9)
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 10:58 AM (bXbFr)
216
6 “The Anti-Communist Manifestos” by John V Fleming. This is a compendium of four essays reviewing four books, and I’ll just list the reviewed books, so you can read those books first, then decide if you even want to bother to read this here Fleming book at all:
“Witness,” by Whittaker Chambers.
Posted by: gp at November 09, 2025 09:03 AM (7imtn)
I am currently reading "Witness". It's harrowing to read how covert networks of deluded communist spies freely operated in many areas of the federal govt. in the late 1930's.
I wonder how much FDR knew about this but looked the other way.
Posted by: Joemarine at November 09, 2025 11:02 AM (y171U)
217
No interest about daevabad trilogy? Can't blame you.
Posted by: night lifted at November 09, 2025 11:03 AM (/YboP)
218
I've begun it but very early the author how much better it is today with diverse crews unlike the horrible racist, sexist days of 1975. It just struck me wrong having Jack shit to do with his subject matter. I put it down but will finish it eventually.
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 10:49 AM (L/fGl)
Hm. Mr. Dmlw! didn't mention that, and he's pretty tuned in to that kind of thing. He did tell me that the author was pretty frank about, hey--there weren't women on the ship, and these were men, and they acted like men acted, and dudes in their early 20's often had girlfriends in their late teens, and that's just the way it was, then. He implied that the author wanted you to know that you can't judge them by today's standards.
219
I despise AI. It can have uses as a clearinghouse tool but must not be allowed to replace human judgement and creativity. This was brought home to me this week when two of my hobby magazines arrived: Fly Tyer and Woodcarving Illustrated. Yeah, the articles could have been written with AI but the subject doesn't lend itself and the authors are usually known in the hobby. These are hand crafts and need the materials to do them, not just virtual screen crap.
I worry about the prevalence of AI throughout the society but my interests don't lend themselves to such things. I do worry about our great nephews, 6, 3 and one on the way. They are growing up in this shit.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 11:05 AM (yTvNw)
220
Scott Bessent goes full werewolf of Stephanopoulos to his face including noting that he had only one book sold on Amazon this week.
https://is.gd/9XxgD4
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 11:05 AM (L/fGl)
221
What's the thing hanging down at the front of the JGG pants?
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 10:57 AM (3uBP9)
---
Hippie sporran for his dime bag. Although I bet his hemp pants are also smokable in an emergency.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 11:07 AM (kpS4V)
222
It's getting a little fresher outside here. The wind has backed around to the north -- 97% of the time, it's south or southeast -- and the air feels a fraction cooler. Maybe this "cold" front will actually arrive by tonight.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:08 AM (wzUl9)
223
I'm so impressed with The Golden Thread, we are considering giving copies to our niece and nephew and their families. The adults are interested in these Western Civilization foundation matters and it could be a generational resource for their kids and later.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 11:08 AM (yTvNw)
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at November 09, 2025 11:08 AM (6vGHy)
225 Scott Bessent goes full werewolf of Stephanopoulos to his face including noting that he had only one book sold on Amazon this week.
https://is.gd/9XxgD4
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025
***
More people should go full werewolf on Snuffleupagus and his ilk.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:09 AM (wzUl9)
226
Some thought i had too much exposition not enough character development
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 11:10 AM (bXbFr)
227
The guy who made Axe Cop, also wrote for Babylon Bee before they had some weird falling out, has put together a monthly reader for kids called This Book Might Explode.
A lot of other comic, cartoon writers have joined in Eric Branscum - veggie tales, animaniacs, Michael Nelson - MST3K, Jack Handey - SNL, Doug Tennapel - Earthworm Jim, Frank Fleming - BB but also his Superego books, Brian Shearer - Transformers, GI Joe, Rich Werner Plants-vs-Zombies, a bunch of other people.
It's for 4-12, but I got one year for my girl even though she's 13. I want to make sure she suffers terribly from an overdeveloped sense of humor and unseriousness like me.
You might look up This Book Might Explode if you have kids.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:10 AM (3uBP9)
228
It's getting a little fresher outside here. The wind has backed around to the north -- 97% of the time, it's south or southeast -- and the air feels a fraction cooler. Maybe this "cold" front will actually arrive by tonight.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:08 AM (wzUl9)
The front came through yesterday evening here in OKC. 41 degrees right now. Down to 27 tonight.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:11 AM (g8Ew8)
229
The first one of daevabad was good but it wasnt as exciting as they presented it
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 11:12 AM (bXbFr)
230
I have two more books on my TBR pile: a thriller called Leather Maiden from Joe R. Lansdale; and one of the four Virgil and Hitch Westerns written by Robert B. Parker himself, Resolution. I think this is the second, with Brimstone and Blue-Eyed Devil to follow.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:13 AM (wzUl9)
231
>>> Hippie sporran for his dime bag. Although I bet his hemp pants are also smokable in an emergency.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 11:07 AM (kpS4V)
I thought might just be a crocheted penis gourd cozy.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:14 AM (3uBP9)
232
I'll have to see a copy of The Golden Thread in a library before I take the plunge on that one. The hands don't do well with big volumes these days, and if the type size isn't pretty decent, I wouldn't be able to make use of the book at all. No Kindle edition, I see, and from the sound of the descriptions there probably won't be. Darn.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 11:15 AM (q3u5l)
233
229 The first one of daevabad was good but it wasnt as exciting as they presented it
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 11:12 AM (bXbFr)
Thanks. I was probably most concerned about turning the writer into a role model. What kind of person converted to Islam after 9/11?
Posted by: night lifted at November 09, 2025 11:15 AM (/YboP)
234
It's for 4-12, but I got one year for my girl even though she's 13. I want to make sure she suffers terribly from an overdeveloped sense of humor and unseriousness like me.
You might look up This Book Might Explode if you have kids.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:10 AM (3uBP9)
You need to acquaint her with The Far Side too.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:15 AM (g8Ew8)
235 21 degrees here in Wyoming. Thank goodness for the invention of furnaces, lol.
Posted by: fourseasons at November 09, 2025 11:17 AM (3ek7K)
Oh, he's told me some great stories, for sure. Not only the behind-the-scenes stuff in writing, recording and publishing, but also some real funny stuff in his interactions with some of the legendary recording artists in country music...and also some stuff about them that is better left unsaid.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 11:18 AM (Y1sOo)
237
Friday played a Napoleonic era game with Lego men, worked same as if other miniatures but got a kick from it, first because had no idea that is what I signed up for but two, of course as a kid loved my simple Lego sets.
Other companies now sell the knock offs of them
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 11:18 AM (+qU29)
238
You might look up This Book Might Explode if you have kids.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:10 AM (3uBP9)
You need to acquaint her with The Far Side too.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:15 AM
I have several Calvin and Hobbes books.
That should be a movie.
Posted by: Posted by: Stateless - VERY GRATEFUL, BLESSED, LOVED AND HAPPY! -- - New Life Creation - 18.1% at November 09, 2025 11:19 AM (Sco7b)
239
Reading adjacent. We keep the house pretty cool in winter. (One reason our first furnace lasted over fifty years.) Anyhow, I found a lambs wool sweater at Duluth Trading that is ideal. Roomy, soft and warm, pockets to hold my reading glasses, etc., and with a shawl neck collar thick enough to cushion my neck while in the recliner. The perfect reading sweater.
In case you couldn't tell, I take comfort in long reading sessions seriously.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 11:19 AM (yTvNw)
240
It's harrowing to read how covert networks of deluded communist spies freely operated in many areas of the federal govt. in the late 1930's.
I wonder how much FDR knew about this but looked the other way.
Posted by: Joemarine
-----
I've given up.trying for a clever witticism involving feet of clay and wheelchairs and just say -
A lot.
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 11:20 AM (C+UIq)
241
>>> I'll have to see a copy of The Golden Thread in a library before I take the plunge on that one. The hands don't do well with big volumes these days, and if the type size isn't pretty decent, I wouldn't be able to make use of the book at all. No Kindle edition, I see, and from the sound of the descriptions there probably won't be. Darn.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 11:15 AM (q3u5l)
It is way too large to hold. It is definitely a desk book, unless you are working reading into some kind of strength training regimen. Also there are so many images that good lighting helps to appreciate it. Not a bedside book. I like the font size and have significant presbyopia. I do use reading glasses.
I agree with getting a library copy first just to make sure it works for you.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:22 AM (3uBP9)
242
Has anyone read The Philosopher's Stone by Colin Wilson? That is a very strange book and time travel is involved. But time travel of a very peculiar nature....
Posted by: Beverly at November 09, 2025 11:23 AM (Epeb0)
243
OT, but today is the 60th anniversary of the big 1965 NYC Blackout. Only five instances of looting were reported during the power outage. Not so in 1977. Wonder what changed . . .?
Those folks who looted in 1977 were the product of a poor environment. There's was nothing wrong with them, I can prove it.
Posted by: Randolph Duke at November 09, 2025 11:25 AM (R/m4+)
244
might look up This Book Might Explode if you have kids.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:10 AM (3uBP9)
You need to acquaint her with The Far Side too.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:15 AM
I have several Calvin and Hobbes books.
That should be a movie.
Maybe too niche, but that big two-volume collection of Don Martin's cartoons can elasticize the brain too.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 11:28 AM (kpS4V)
245
>>> 21 degrees here in Wyoming. Thank goodness for the invention of furnaces, lol.
Posted by: fourseasons at November 09, 2025 11:17 AM (3ek7K)
It's going to be in the mid 20s here in GA tomorrow. I'll make chili this afternoon.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:29 AM (3uBP9)
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 11:29 AM (kpS4V)
247 I need a plinth for my library. And a globe.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025
***
Plinthy of choices for those!
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:30 AM (wzUl9)
248
"I need a plinth for my library. And a globe."
Eris, don't feel like the Lone Ranger.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 11:31 AM (q3u5l)
249
I might consider re-reading Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, having just finished watching Guillermo del Lawnmower's movie.
The movie was pretty good. I won't call it a masterpiece, but compared to most of the schlock Hollywood produces, it is far better, and should get loaded down with awards next year.
I believe it mostly adheres to the book, but that's why I need to re-read it. I assume much of the Mia Goth character is altered. I don't even know if the Elizabeth character is IN the book.
At first I thought she was doing a poor job with the English accent, but for all I know she IS English. After a while I didn't notice, and decided she was one of the best things in the film. Everyone is top notch. Oscar Isaac as usual nails it as the doktor. Christopher Waltz is great, as usual of course. The guy who played the creature, Jacob Elordi, I never heard of before, but he's fantastic too.
Everyone should see this film.
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:32 AM (nb4Tz)
250
Once I'm done with my current TBR pile, it might be time for me to revisit some of the books on my shelves. I reread a lot of them during the Sniffle Scare, since I couldn't go into libraries. But there are some that either I didn't get to, or are solid enough for another time around. Possibly some of Poul Anderson's stuff; and there's Youngblood Hawke by Herman Wouk.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:32 AM (wzUl9)
251
It's going to be in the mid 20s here in GA tomorrow. I'll make chili this afternoon.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:29 AM (3uBP9)
With or without carrots?
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:32 AM (g8Ew8)
252
>>> I need a plinth for my library. And a globe.
Posted by: All Hail Eris,, coming to you live from the Roller Disco of Discord! at November 09, 2025 11:29 AM (kpS4V)
I've always wanted one of those big floor model globes that you store booze in. That's always been my ambition because they look classy. I'll know when I have my mahogany earth globe with booze in it and crystal glasses I have arrived at my station in life. A little dream of mine.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:34 AM (3uBP9)
253
Friday played a Napoleonic era game with Lego men, worked same as if other miniatures but got a kick from it, first because had no idea that is what I signed up for but two, of course as a kid loved my simple Lego sets.
Other companies now sell the knock offs of them
Posted by: Skip
There is a video game that let's you play as green army men.
https://is.gd/qz3Qe5
Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Why Do the Heathen Rage? at November 09, 2025 11:34 AM (L/fGl)
But you can't borrow them from a library.
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at November 09, 2025 11:08 AM (6vGHy)
Can they be rented?
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:34 AM (nb4Tz)
255
That traveling library is pretty cool. A 1617 era laptop.
Posted by: Berserker-Dragonheads Division at November 09, 2025 11:35 AM (snZF9)
256
Agree that Del Toro's Frankenstein is pretty good. My biggest gripe is that he's leaning very heavily into the "sympathetic monster" interpretation. The monster only kills in self-defense.
Book Monster straight-up murders people, including Victor's little brother who is only a child.
This is why I'm not fond of the "Victor is the _real_ monster" interpretation. The Creature _is_ a monster, and Victor's sin is creating it.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 11:35 AM (78a2H)
257
On one of my shelves, I have a globe from about 1984. But I'd really like one from even earlier, with all the old names for the African countries. "Rhodesia" and "Tanganyika," anyone?
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:35 AM (wzUl9)
258
Everyone should see this film.
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:32 AM (nb4Tz)
Not disputing that. BUT:
1) It needs wider release. Badly.
2) Must EVERYTHING go to VOD immediately?
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 11:36 AM (vwL3N)
259
>>> With or without carrots?
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:32 AM (g8Ew
Carrots do not take part in my chili activities. But, being from the midwest, we do have to buy copious amounts of cheese and frito chips to make frito pie.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:36 AM (3uBP9)
But you can't borrow them from a library.
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at November 09, 2025 11:08 AM (6vGHy)
*
Can they be rented?
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025
***
Sure, but they're not cheap . . . and some law enforcement authorities frown on that sort of thing.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:36 AM (wzUl9)
261
257 On one of my shelves, I have a globe from about 1984. But I'd really like one from even earlier, with all the old names for the African countries. "Rhodesia" and "Tanganyika," anyone?
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:35 AM (wzUl9)
In elementary school in Germany the classrooms had globes with place names like "Dutch East Indies".
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 11:37 AM (vwL3N)
262
Errands beckon, so outta here a bit early today.
Thanks for the thread, Perfessor.
Have a good one, gang.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 11:37 AM (q3u5l)
263
232 ... "I'll have to see a copy of The Golden Thread in a library before I take the plunge on that one. The hands don't do well with big volumes these days, and if the type size isn't pretty decent, I wouldn't be able to make use of the book at all."
The library is a good idea to check if the book size and print works for you before putting out that much moolah. I took a chance and it worked for me. But definitely a table book and decent lighting makes a big difference. Each topic is only a few pages long so it's not a book I would cuddle up with for long periods. I do keep a pad handy to note areas I want to follow more closely or to refer to books I already have.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 11:39 AM (yTvNw)
264
About the only chores I have to take care of today are the assembly of my salad for the week -- a Food Thread topic, I know -- and making sure the Buick's tires are properly aired, so when the temps fall tonight, they will still be at 34 psi tomorrow.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:39 AM (wzUl9)
1) It needs wider release. Badly.
2) Must EVERYTHING go to VOD immediately?
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 11:36 AM (vwL3N)
Agreed, but since I don't go to theaters I'm glad it came to me.
Still, I don't get the business model.
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:39 AM (nb4Tz)
266
210 OT, but today is the 60th anniversary of the big 1965 NYC Blackout. Only five instances of looting were reported during the power outage. Not so in 1977. Wonder what changed . . .?
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 10:55 AM (wzUl9)
Cultural change due to class grievance ideology.
Posted by: Joemarine at November 09, 2025 11:39 AM (y171U)
267
In elementary school in Germany the classrooms had globes with place names like "Dutch East Indies".
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 11:37 AM (vwL3N)
And it probably had Palestine instead of Israel.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:39 AM (g8Ew8)
268
I have found that cats will not tolerate reading and most all activities that I enjoy. The Cat especially does not like volbeat
Posted by: TheCatAttackedMyFoot at November 09, 2025 11:40 AM (jrgJz)
269
I remember that. Our neighborhood had parties in 1965.
Posted by: Archer at November 09, 2025 11:41 AM (YGRGv)
270
My youngest (9) assembles the Lego set following the instructions, plays with it for a day or two, then disassembles it and builds something else entirely. After he read about Hannibal's war elephants in English class, he built a war elephant of his own, complete with chains for reins and a big howdah on the back (with, of course, Minecraft skeletons armed with crossbows). Most recently, he built a bone golem that he's been gradually improving the features on. It started basic, then he added ranged weapons (it already had a hand with fingers and thumb grasping a sword) and decorations. He's pretty creative.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 11:41 AM (Y+AMd)
271
252 ... "I've always wanted one of those big floor model globes that you store booze in. That's always been my ambition because they look classy. I'll know when I have my mahogany earth globe with booze in it and crystal glasses I have arrived at my station in life. A little dream of mine."
This made me smile. We got one of those decades ago. It looks so classy. I keep my best booze and some glencairn glasses in it.
Posted by: JTB at November 09, 2025 11:41 AM (yTvNw)
272
Book Monster straight-up murders people, including Victor's little brother who is only a child.
Posted by: Trimegistus at November 09, 2025 11:35 AM (78a2H)
Yeah, I guess that's true. I'm not sure I object to the alteration though. Mary Shelley was adhering to a standard morality of her time, and if I do recall, she more or less glossed over the whole question in the first place, as to why he was driven to create the thing in the first place.
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:42 AM (nb4Tz)
273
AW that's another of my kid memories, had a Battalion worth of Green Army Men as a kid
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 11:43 AM (+qU29)
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 11:45 AM (vwL3N)
278
Yeah, I guess that's true. I'm not sure I object to the alteration though. Mary Shelley was adhering to a standard morality of her time, and if I do recall, she more or less glossed over the whole question in the first place, as to why he was driven to create the thing in the first place.
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:42 AM (nb4Tz)
Victor Frankenstein was the Elon Musk of his day.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:45 AM (g8Ew8)
279
The decorations are things like spikes, additional bones, a scorpion-style tail that apparently shoots spikes, etc. He's a boy, after all. None of that lame Lego Friends shit in this house.
(Lego Friends viscerally pisses me off. Yes I have a vagina. No I don't want to build a fucking coffee shop. I'll build a medieval castle or a spaceship, TYVM and go fuck yourself Lego.)
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 11:46 AM (Y+AMd)
280
And it probably had Palestine instead of Israel.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:39 AM (g8Ew
Or British territory.
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 11:46 AM (vwL3N)
281My youngest (9) assembles the Lego set following the instructions, plays with it for a day or two, then disassembles it and builds something else entirely. After he read about Hannibal's war elephants in English class, he built a war elephant of his own, complete with chains for reins and a big howdah on the back (with, of course, Minecraft skeletons armed with crossbows). Most recently, he built a bone golem that he's been gradually improving the features on. It started basic, then he added ranged weapons (it already had a hand with fingers and thumb grasping a sword) and decorations. He's pretty creative.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025
***
In the '60s we used to customize our car models, turning a '32 Ford roadster into a fenderless hot rod, a Willys coupe into a track car, or a '40 Ford into a custom show car. Various companies sold aftermarket parts, including model engines, that you could swap into some engine compartments, so you could have a '41 Willys with a '60s Chrysler mill. Much as many of us did in real life with real cars and engines in the decade to come.
But I never heard of anybody turning a car model into an airplane, for example.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:47 AM (wzUl9)
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:48 AM (nb4Tz)
284
Mary Poppins, some thoughts:
1. Congratulations in inspiring this lady
2. Envy mixed with self-belittlement then consequently guilt - yes yes, btdt
3. Eris has a great suggestion- write this alll
4. This is a very trying circumstance, you are going through valid suffering a and a big challenge -please PRAY. Cry out to God. Join your suffering with Christ's on the cross, and offer it as a sacrifice to God.
5. Continue to be this lady's friend as much as you can.
7. Success for writers is like lightning, or winning the powerball - it is enviable but we are grateful when it happens to nice people ( vs tge aholes like Stephen King frex)
Hugs
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 11:49 AM (GDrd7)
285
Victor Frankenstein was the Elon Musk of his day.
Posted by: Dr. Pork Chops & Bacons at November 09, 2025 11:45 AM (g8Ew
Or Tony Fauci?
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:50 AM (nb4Tz)
286
>>> My youngest (9) assembles the Lego set following the instructions, plays with it for a day or two, then disassembles it and builds something else entirely.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 11:41 AM (Y+AMd)
That was me as a kid, I played with legos, all the building block toys, all the time when I was a kid. My daughter, not so much.
Back when Dilbert was a short run tv series there was one episode where he was talking about "The Knack" where someone diagnosed a kid as having it. And it's so true. I was doomed to become an engineer from the beginning.
youtu.be/Dx6HojLBsnw
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:52 AM (3uBP9)
Millie Bobby Brown received some red carpet attention recently for her revealing halter-gown.
See Daily Mail U.S. for pics.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 11:54 AM (Y1sOo)
288
My youngest (9) assembles the Lego set following the instructions, plays with it for a day or two, then disassembles it and builds something else entirely.
Posted by: Mrs. Peel at November 09, 2025 11:41 AM (Y+AMd)
That was KTY
She created a lot of house interiors
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 11:54 AM (7gFa4)
289
>>> Millie Bobby Brown received some red carpet attention recently for her revealing halter-gown.
See Daily Mail U.S. for pics.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 11:54 AM (Y1sOo)
She looks a lot like the kid in the Godzilla movie. Yep, she's the kid in the Godzilla movie. She's cute, I wanna pat her on the head and give her a cookie.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:57 AM (3uBP9)
290
Off to handle those piddling chores I mentioned. Thanks to the Perfessor and all of you for a fascinating Book Thread!
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at November 09, 2025 11:57 AM (wzUl9)
291
Millie Bobby Brown received some red carpet attention recently for her revealing halter-gown.
See Daily Mail U.S. for pics.
Posted by: one hour sober at November 09, 2025 11:54 AM (Y1sOo)
She sure has grown up. You could almost say these days, she's an 11!
Posted by: BurtTC at November 09, 2025 11:58 AM (nb4Tz)
292
Light snow falling at casa dude. Ground mostly white, but won't last past Monday... probably
Posted by: A dude in MI at November 09, 2025 11:59 AM (/6GbT)
Posted by: nurse ratched at November 09, 2025 12:00 PM (ZzUF8)
295
Rereading frankenstein much of it is interior dialogue letters that slow illuminate the story until the monster emerges in the second third of the book
The talent of james whale and later hammer studios
Posted by: Miguel cervantes at November 09, 2025 12:00 PM (bXbFr)
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 12:01 PM (+qU29)
297
That was me as a kid, I played with legos, all the building block toys, all the time when I was a kid. My daughter, not so much.
Back when Dilbert was a short run tv series there was one episode where he was talking about "The Knack" where someone diagnosed a kid as having it. And it's so true. I was doomed to become an engineer from the beginning.
youtu.be/Dx6HojLBsnw
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 11:52 AM (3uBP9
I played with Legos constantly as a kid. My parents got an Erector set for me in my early childhood. And...I majored in history. Go figure. : )
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 12:03 PM (vwL3N)
298
WE HAZ A NOOD
Posted by: Skip at November 09, 2025 12:01 PM (+qU29)
Rats. And I just got back. Eh, probably had nothing to contribute anyway.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 12:03 PM (uQesX)
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 12:06 PM (WL2lA)
300
>>> I played with Legos constantly as a kid. My parents got an Erector set for me in my early childhood. And...I majored in history. Go figure. : )
Posted by: Cow Demon at November 09, 2025 12:03 PM (vwL3N)
I didn't find out until I was well out of every type of school that I really did enjoy history. Remembering things trips me up, and knowing I'd be tested on it just made me hate it.
Posted by: banana Dream at November 09, 2025 12:09 PM (3uBP9)
301
Book thread runs all day.
It is known.
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at November 09, 2025 12:06 PM (WL2lA)
There are plenty of late readers. Just not as much interaction.
Posted by: OrangeEnt at November 09, 2025 12:10 PM (uQesX)
302
It does? Well, I did not know that. It's usually nooded before I drag my hindquarters from yon hayloft where I sleep.
I have NO idea what happened at the end of that sentence.
Starting my project to read and review all the Based Con books. Gonna start with Hans Schanz but haven't decided whether it's going to be "Wise of Heart" or "The Secret Wisdom".
303
"7. Success for writers is like lightning, or winning the powerball - it is enviable but we are grateful when it happens to nice people ( vs tge aholes like Stephen King frex)"
And that kinda makes me wonder about Tabitha King. Her own novels are pretty good (though her first didn't really do it for me), and last I heard she still writes but stopped publishing. I think she's got at least two unpublished books sitting around. Her stuff never hit the lists, of course. But she's the one who got SK to continue with Carrie when he thought it was a complete misfire and was about to give up on it.
Posted by: Just Some Guy at November 09, 2025 12:46 PM (q3u5l)
304
The Great monologue at the end of bladerunner by Rutger Hauer would have impressed Poe
Posted by: TheCatAttackedMyFoot at November 09, 2025 12:48 PM (jrgJz)
305
Book thread runs all day.
It is known.
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport
----
For me, definitely. Retired. (Well over) 29. Sunday.= sleep in. Add 2 or 3 hour time difference and I rarely look before nood.
Today is probably the first time I've been contemporaneous in 6 months..
Thank goodness.
Posted by: buddhaha at November 09, 2025 12:48 PM (C+UIq)
306
"Book thread runs all day." Well, then, an hour and 300+ comments late:
About AI "slop" — I commented back in March that I asked Grok to review my (so far one and only) short story, Invulnerable, published on my website fifteen years ago. (Linked in nic.)
I never had a plan to advertise it. Once or twice a year, I'd make a promo comment, but I've always been shy about advertising my meager effort before the smart and classy Book Thread authors and readers. Years ago, one Moron commented something like, "I liked it," otherwise, no one has ever left a comment or critique, nor sent an email (nor hit PayPal). So, I don't have much perspective on how it reads.
It's SF in an eclectic mixed-media format, various narrators, an odd subject. I was amused to find that Grok was complimentary about the format and style. I was impressed that Grok seemed to grasp the basic story idea and author's intent, almost as if it were plagiarizing some human source. It was a nice review!
Funny thing, Grok only read part 1, never got to to the main story in part 2, and the conclusions. I've sometimes wondered if some reader might make that mistake in following the web-based story.
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Continue to enjoy 'Six Frigates'. And continue to be grateful to the Moron who recommended it. It is a fascinating compendium of the early history of the country. We've heard it said of some non-fiction, 'Reads like a novel', well this does.
Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at November 09, 2025 01:29 PM (XeU6L)
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