Tuesday, January 24, 2012

2012, What to Look Forward To (Part 2)


It's a bit late, but after scouring some of the other blogs, and new resources for seeing what could be coming, here is my list of books I'm most looking forward to. Now whether I read them right when they come out is still undetermined, but all of these books rank high on my list of "That looks interesting!"

** Novel description provided by the publishing houses **




Redshirts - John Scalzi (June)

Ensign Andrew Dahl has just been assigned to the Universal Union Capital Ship Intrepid, flagship of the Universal Union since the year 2456. It’s a prestige posting, and Andrew is thrilled all the more to be assigned to the ship’s Xenobiology laboratory.
 

Life couldn’t be better... until Andrew begins to pick up on the fact that (1) every Away Mission involves some kind of lethal confrontation with alien forces, (2) the ship’s captain, its chief science officer, and the handsome Lieutenant Kerensky always survive these confrontations, and (3) at least one low-ranked crew member is, sadly, always killed.
 

Not surprisingly, a great deal of energy belowdecks is expended on avoiding, at all costs, being assigned to an Away Mission. Then Andrew stumbles on information that completely transforms his and his colleagues’ understanding of what the starship Intrepid really is... and offers them a crazy, high-risk chance to save their own lives.


The Apocalypse Codex - Charles Stross (Laundry #4) (July)

When Ray Schiller — an American televangelist with the uncanny ability to miraculously heal — becomes uncomfortably close to the Prime Minister, The Laundry dispatches the brilliant, beautiful, and entirely unpredictable Persephone Hazard to infiltrate the Golden Promise Ministry and uncover the preacher’s agenda. And it’s Bob Howard’s job to make sure Persephone doesn’t cause an international incident.
 

But it’s a supernatural incident that Bob needs to worry about — a global threat even The Laundry may be unable to clean up.


2312 - Kim Stanley Robinson (May)

The year is 2312. Scientific and technological advances have opened gateways to an extraordinary future. Earth is no longer humanity's only home; new habitats have been created throughout the solar system on moons, planets, and in between. But in this year, 2312, a sequence of events will force humanity to confront its past, its present, and its future.

Arctic Rising - Tobias S Buckell (Feb)

Global warming has transformed the Earth, and it's about to get even hotter. The Arctic Ice Cap has all but melted, and the international community is racing desperately to claim the massive amounts of oil beneath the newly accessible ocean.

Enter the Gaia Corporation. Its two founders have come up with a plan to roll back global warming. Thousands of tiny mirrors floating in the air can create a giant sunshade, capable of redirecting heat and cooling the earth's surface. They plan to terraform Earth to save it from itself—but in doing so, they have created a superweapon the likes of which the world has never seen.

Anika Duncan is an airship pilot for the underfunded United Nations Polar Guard. She’s intent on capturing a smuggled nuclear weapon that has made it into the Polar Circle and bringing the smugglers to justice.

Anika finds herself caught up in a plot by a cabal of military agencies and corporations who want Gaia Corporation stopped. But when Gaia Corp loses control of their superweapon, it will be Anika who has to decide the future of the world. The nuclear weapon she has risked her life to find is the only thing that can stop the floating sunshade after it falls into the wrong hands.


Caliban’s War - James S. A. Corey (The Expanse 2) (June)

We are not alone.
 

The alien protomolecule is clear evidence of an intelligence beyond human reckoning. No one knows what exactly is being built on Venus, but whatever it is, it is vast, powerful, and terrifying.
 

When a creature of unknown origin and seemingly impossible physiology attacks soldiers on Ganymede, the fragile balance of power in the Solar System shatters. Now, the race is on to discover if the protomolecule has escaped Venus, or if someone is building an army of super-soldiers.
 

Jim Holden is the center of it all. In spite of everything, he’s still the best man for the job to find out what happened on Ganymede. Either way, the protomolecule is loose and Holden must find a way to stop it before war engulfs the entire system.

Control Point - Myke Cole [Shadow Ops 01] (Jan)

For a millennium, magic has been Latent in the world. Now, with the Great Reawakening, people are “coming up Latent,” manifesting dangerous magical abilities they often cannot control. In response, the military establishes the Supernatural Operations Corps (SOC), a deadly band of sorcerers dedicated to hunting down “Selfers” who use magic outside government control.
 

When army officer Oscar Britton comes up Latent with a rare and prohibited power, his life turns upside down. Transformed overnight from government agent to public enemy number one, his attempt to stay alive and evade his former friends drives him into a shadow world he never knew lurked just below the surface of the one he’s always lived in. He’s about to learn that magic has changed all the rules he’s ever known, and that his life isn’t the only thing he’s fighting for.

Energized - Edward M. Lerner (July)

No one expected the oil to last forever. How right they were…
 

A geopolitical miscalculation tainted the world’s major oil fields with radioactivity and plunged the Middle East into chaos. Any oil that remains usable is more prized than ever. No one can build solar farms, wind farms, and electric cars quickly enough to cope. The few countries still able to export oil and natural gas — Russia chief among them — have a stranglehold on the world economy.
 

And then, from the darkness of space, came Phoebe. Rather than divert the onrushing asteroid, America captured it in Earth orbit.
 

Solar power satellites — cheaply mass-produced in orbit with resources mined from the new moon to beam vast amounts of power to the ground — offer America its last, best hope of avoiding servitude and economic ruin.
 

As though building miles-across structures in space isn’t challenging enough, special interests, from technophobes to eco-extremists to radio astronomers, want to stop the project. And the remaining petro powers will do anything to protect their newfound dominance of world affairs.
 

NASA engineer Marcus Judson is determined to make the powersat demonstration project a success. And he will — even though nothing in his job description mentions combating an international cabal, or going into space to do it.

Existence - David Brin (June)

Telepresence. The neural link world wide web, where a flash crowd can gather in an instant if something interesting is happening. We see it today - one man in Pakistan live-tweets the assault on Osama bin Laden, and the whole world turns to watch. A revolution in Egypt is coordinated online.
 

Into the maelstrom of world-wide shared experience drops a game-changer. An alien artifact is plucked from Earth's orbit; an artifact that wants to communicate. News leaks out fast, and the world reacts as it always does: with fear and hope and selfishness and love and violence.

The Devil’s Nebula - Eric Brown (Weird Space 1) (May)

Best-selling author Eric Brown has created a brand new shared world for Abaddon Books: Weird Space. This thrilling space-opera series will begin with the release of The Devil's Nebula. Brown will introduce readers to the human smugglers, veterans and ne’erdowells who are part of the Expansion – and their uneasy neighbours, the Vetch Empire.
 

When an evil race threatens not only the Expansion, but the Vetch too - an evil from another dimension which infests humans and Vetch alike and bends individuals to do their hideous bidding, only cooperation between them means the difference between a chance of survival and no chance at all.

Triggers - Robert J. Sawyer (April)

On the eve of a secret military operation, an assassin’s bullet strikes U.S. President Seth Jerrison. He is rushed to hospital, where surgeons struggle to save his life. At the same hospital, Canadian researcher Dr. Ranjip Singh is experimenting with a device that can erase traumatic memories. Then a terrorist bomb detonates. In the operating room, the president suffers cardiac arrest. He has a near-death experience — but the memories that flash through Jerrison’s mind are not his memories.
 

It quickly becomes clear that the electromagnetic pulse generated by the bomb amplified and scrambled Dr. Singh’s equipment, allowing a random group of people to access one another’s minds. And now one of those people has access to the president’s memories — including classified information regarding an upcoming military mission, which, if revealed, could cost countless lives. But the task of determining who has switched memories with whom is a daunting one, particularly when some of the people involved have reasons to lie…

Thursday, January 19, 2012

2012, What to Look Forward To (Part 1)

Several friends recently have been pressing that I should be more timely about my book reviews, as well as add more depth to them. I haven't quite slipped back into the writer's mind set just yet, so I'm not sure about how much depth I can add at this point. The longer these get, the more it feels like I'm back in school attempting to justify a book, and less like I'm trying to advise people why and whom should read such and such novel.However this is of course an internal type discussion of less substance to this post.

What I really wanted to post about, was what Novels I'm most looking forward to in the year ahead. I'm still combing through all the possible suggestions and deciding what I'd really read as soon as it comes out, versus what I'll probably add to the pile of when I'm in the mood. Yet till I finalize my list, here are the current canidates:

2312 - Kim Stanley Robinson (May)
Angelmaker - Nick Harkaway (March)
Arctic Rising - Tobias S Buckell (Feb)
A Song Called Youth - John Shirley (April)
Article 5 by Kristen Simmons [Ember 1] (Jan)
Blue Remembered Earth by Alastair Reynolds [Poseidon’s Children Book 1] (June)
Body Inc - Alan Dean Foster (March)
Broken Universe - Paul Melko (June)
Caliban’s War - James S. A. Corey (The Expanse 2) (June)
Cinder - Marissa Meyer
Energized - Edward M. Lerner
Existence - David Brin
Faith - John Love
Giant Thief - David Tallerman
Glamour In Glass - Mary Robinette Kowal
Guardian of Night - Tony Daniel
Intruder - C J Cherryh
Intrusion - Ken MacLeod
Lost Everything - Brian Francis Slattery
RailSea - China Mieville
Range of Ghosts - Elizabeth Bear (The Eternal Sky 1)
Redshirts - John Scalzi
Shadow Blizzard - Alexey Pehov
The Apocalypse Codex - Charles Stross (Laundry #4)
The Devil’s Nebula - Eric Brown (Weird Space 1)
The Games - Ted Kosmatka
The Killing Moon - N K Jemisin
The Night Sessions - Ken Macleod
Tooth and Nail - Jennifer Safrey
Toxicity - Andy Remic
Triggers - Robert J. Sawyer
Wake of the Bloody Angel - Alex Bledsoe
Year Zero by Rob Reid

Of these, the only two so far I can say Yes sir, please!!!! would be those novels by Charles Stross and John Scalzi. As to the rest, I'll let you know as soon as I do.

Tuesday, January 03, 2012

Reading Log, December 2011

Hold all your comments till the end please! As predicted, December ended up being a rather fiddley month when it came to reading. Normally I would have posted a mid-month review, but when I had barely finished two books it wasn't worth it. In the future, I'll at least post an note to say, yes yes I'm still here.

On the positive side the last two weeks of month showed an up tick in that I was able to successfully read seven more novels to bring this month's total back up to Nine. They were also all over the map genre wise with Cluthu, Steampunk, Superhero, Crime-Mystery, Romance, and some old fashioned sci-fi.

Jonathan Wood - No Hero - Oxford police detective Arthur Wallace is a no nonsense officer who investigates sometimes gruesome murders. Action is rare, and that suites Arthur just fine, for he isn't a hero, he's just a good cop who loves Kurt Russell. However when he discovers the serial killing he's been tracking, surrounds a secret government agency and horrors from another dimension, he is roped into a struggle to save the planet and hopefully his mind in the process.

Delightfully good read, it reminded the most of Seamus Cooper's The Mall of Cthulhu and Charles Stross's Laundry files. Point, as the novel takes place in England the accents and mannerisms help fill the time between Charles Stross novels. So no complaints, and a strong recommendation for a paperback novel. [cost 4.00 / rated 5.00]

Lev AC Rosen - All Men of Genius - Violet Adams, genius, inventor, and young lady of Victorian England, wants to attend Illyria College, the most prestigous school for the most brilliant scientific minds. The only problem is, this is Victorian England, and women just don't go to College, especially to Illyria. However Violet has a plan. With the aid of her Fraternal twin she disguises herself and enrolls at Illyria, where the gear is king, and the walls flow with them. But when she meets the young Duke of Illyria, she is drawn into one madcamp adventure after the next, testing her resolve to be who she is, while living a most Dickinson life.

Excellent novel, reminding me most of Gail Carriger's Parasol Protectorate series. Both novels feature strong Women, inventors or scientists, in a victorian England in the Golden Age of Steampunk. And in both the writing proves that flash isn't king, instead it's the personality and interplay that is Queen. Highly recommend. [cost 12.00 / rated 9.00]

Janette Rallison - Just One Wish - Seventeen year old Annika has a problem, her very young brother Jeremy is terminally ill with cancer. About to under go major surgery she makes him believe she has a genie that will grant him two wishes, and she wants him to wish for a remission in cancer. Yet Jeremy skews it all when he wishes for his favorite TV character, Teen Robin Hood to meet him. Now before the surgery Annika must make it to Hollywood, find TV-star Steve Raleigh, somehow persuade him to meet her brother, and do it before her parents find out where she went.

Good young adult chick lit novel, it was at times screwball comedy and at times heartfelt drama. More serious then the last book I read by Janette Rallison the ending was kind of bitter sweet. However, the start to finish was still satisfying. Good paperback read for the young adult crowd. [8.00 / 5.00]

Drew Blank - Memoirs of an Antihero - There are no superheroes or super villains, but what if a single father, who is fearless and desperate to keep his cancer stricken daughter alive at any cost, decides he can do so by ripping off the real criminals? What comes out is a violent, emotional & darkly comedic tale of man who doesn't want to be hero, and his friends who make him one just by being what he is, a bad-ass Antihero and defender of the city, just one in it also for the money.

Decent penny novel, it's also fairly obvious a Mary Sue type character that the author is putting himself into. The Novel also promises more installments which might be interesting, although the actual climax of this first book was a little anti-climatic. Some more to it would have made it that much sweeter. Still, a decent recommend for the price. [1.00 / 2.50]

Janet Evanovich - One For The Money - Stephanie Plum #1 - Stephanie Plum is a smart unemployed discount lingerie buyer and New Jersey girl, who is just one beer can away from being broke. So when she is reluctantly forced to go see her cousin Vinnine for a job as a secretary only to find the job not there, she jumps at the only other work available, bounty hunter for his bail-bond business. Her first job being to capture an ex-cop accused of murder, who also happens to be someone from her past that charmed her pants off her behind a pastry case in Trenton. So now she's hitting the town she knows best, learning to be tougher then she's ever had to be before, and sticking a tongue in the cheek of this murder mystery.

For her debut mystery of a 18x book series, Janet Evanovich pulls off are rather good romp. From a rather authentic Trenton, to a character that would make Nancy drew blush, and then fall down laughing with her hilarious first person narrative, this is one book that has it. A strong recommend for anyone who can like mystery, real characters and definitely likes a wise-cracking New Jersey girl. [9.00 / 7.00]

Blake M Petit - Other People's Heroes (The Heroes of Siegel City) - In Siegel City there have always been Superheroes, none greater then Lionheart. But Lionheart has been long gone when ace reporter Josh Corwood, discovers that he two is a Superhero, and that all Superheroes now have been long gone. For now all the heroes are but Super powered actors, fighting for a public that doesn't know any better. Yet beneath even this, Josh begins to suspect something sinister, something that may need real heroes to wake up and defend the city one more.

Another Superhero novel, another smash hit. Reminiscent of Wearing the cape, Blake M Petit paints a colorful picture of a city with actual heroes and actual personal interplay. Although not as good as Wearing the Cape, it's still a very good novel to add to the Superhero genre. strong recommend. [3.00 / 4.50]

Linnea Sinclair - An Accidental Goddess - Gillaine Davré, Raheiran Special Forces, Captain, has just woken up from a very long nap on her damaged starship. Only to find out over three hundred years have gone and the natives she was helping have for some reason made her a goddess. The only good news? They don't exactly have a good picture of her, and so she's able to make it look like's just a freighter captain. Unfortunately things on the station are starting to heat up, and an old enemy apparently has set their eyes on conquering the station. Now she must walk the fine line between being herself, falling for the seductive Admiral Mack Makarian whose in charge of the station, and Lady Kiasidira, holy icon to countless believers, including Mack.

Romance? sci-fi? It reminded me the most of Star Trek Deep Space Nine. It's like the author watched the series, and took a lot of inspiration from it to create their own novel about gods, space stations, and war. Not that there is anything wrong with it, as all the details are sufficiently different to create a new universe with new characters and a new story. Which is the way most writing is about, finding inspiration from one story for another unique tale. I'll give it a recommend to any Romance reader who likes Sci-Fi. [7.00 / 5.00]

Beth Revis - Across the Universe - Amy is a frozen settler from earth on board the Generation Ship Godspeed, destined to be awoken with her parents after 300 years. Yet 60 years before planetfall she is thawed in possibly a murder attempt. She then meets Elder, Godspeed's lone teen and future leader in a highly regimented society of crew. She's now an individual, the ultimate outsider in a dangerous play, where her every move and action makes waves, and death lies possibly at every corner. How will she survive without her parents, marooned to life among people not her own?

Sometimes even the best of novels just seems to reach you the wrong way. Across the Universe is one such, widely recommended but a lot of good writers and readers. Yet when I read it, I just kept thinking, I've read this before. Having read a lot of novellas and short stories in Analog from the 60's and 70's I can say the theme is very familiar. Generation ship on a voyage to another star. Some of the crew are frozen for when they get there, some live all there lives in the ship, then one day someone is accidentally unfrozen. Throw in the fact that the people of the ship have devolved into a tryanny, with very regimented lives and the novel becomes a little two predictable in it's twists and turns. Admittedly the novel is a good read, decent late Young Adult, and is able to assemble previously used ideas in an nicely updated fashion. [10.00 / 7.00]

Dana Stabenow - Second Star - Star Svensdotter #1 - In an alternate universe an alien message was detected in the late 80's, changing everything. Now that we knew we weren't along any more every nation on Earth began to look seriously outward, pushing space stations into orbit, and putting colonies on the moon and mars. Esther “Star” Svensdotter’s job in this new universe is to oversee the completion of the first O’Neill cylinder — a massive space habitat capable of supporting a million people. But all is not rosy in this new frontier, with Luddite terrorists, squabbling bureaucrats, military takeovers or rogue AIs mucking up things. Yet Star Svensdotter doesn't roll over easily, not for anything.

Obviously the first part of a small series, Second Star introduces us to a new future world where people didn't withdraw from space, but instead are colonizing it. Most of the novel is intriguing in the picture it draws of a full working O'Neill cylinder. The down side is some of the soap opera-ish depiction of the politics surrounding everything. Where what could be an intriguing story of independence, just becomes an un-ordinarily violent ending to a colorful tale. Maybe it if wasn't broken from the second novel it might have been better, but still for a Penny Novel, it's a good buy. [1.00 / 2.50]

I'm already ringing in the New Year with John Scalzi's Fuzzy Nations, so stay tuned for more.