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dare

dare@kirja.casa

Joined 1 year, 7 months ago

Roolipelaaja, seikkailuharrastaja, spefi-kirjailija

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Mary Robinette Kowal: The Relentless Moon (Paperback, 2020, Tor Books) 5 stars

It's 1963, and riots and sabotage plague the space program. The climate change caused by …

Review of 'The Relentless Moon' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Still an excellent hard sci-fi story, but this one had annoyances the previous installments didn't. The viewpoint character for this one spouts way too much macho bullshit for my taste. Also, even though sexism and racism always were right at the front of the Lady Astronaut stories, the gender war here seems relentless and really tiresome. Also one of my least favourite tropes "I'm not going to tell my loved one(s) things to protect them" rears its ugly head; one of the reasons I enjoyed The Calculating Stars was its utter refusal to deploy poor communication as a plot point.

Despite occasionally grinding my teeth at the points mentioned above, this is still a very good, very hard science fiction story about living on the Moon. The plot is effective yet non-convoluted, and when things get nasty, you really feel the blows. Definitely recommended.

Sue Burke: Interference (Hardcover, 2019, Tor Books) 4 stars

Review of 'Interference' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

A very uneven book, and something of a disappointment after the excellent Semiosis. At times I was thrilled, especially when the narrator was one of the smart plants or the characters were exploring the unknown. At other times, the narrators were humans fighting for the Idiot Ball with such gusto that I'd like them all to have died in a fire. Yes, there was a plot point explaining why the human characters were so stupid, and it was brought up right away but still: when you have wondrous things to write about, and obviously the skill to do so, why would you waste your time with characters who are just so petty and annoying? Gaah.

Still, I did love parts of it. So, a compromise between two and four stars.

"Colonists from Earth wanted the perfect home, but they'll have to survive on the one …

Review of 'Semiosis' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

An excellent science fiction novel about an alien world and attempts to understand and adapt to it. I would have sort of hoped a more high tech take on the matter, but the raw, almost primitive approach certainly works too. The alien beings are quite brilliant as well. (I dislike the American common law approach to law and society, but that's a personal thing and will probably not be a problem for most people). A generational tale, but one where you never feel removed from the original characters and their intentions; Semiosis is highly recommended for fans of smart science fiction.

Marshall Ryan Maresca: The Thorn of Dentonhill (Paperback, 2015, DAW) 4 stars

Review of 'The Thorn of Dentonhill' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There's no way I was going to give this book four stars ... but maybe I still should have. Essentially a Daredevil story set in a fantasy city, and the fantasy feels like a flimsy cloth covering very generic superhero tropes. There's vengeance, there's street crime, there's a drug kingpin, there are superhuman powers and secret identites.

But you know what? I'm a superhero fan, and the Thorn of Dentonhill absolutely worked for me. I fully intend to read all the, um, eleven? sequels if they can keep up this level of intensive action. They'd better.

Hell, I'll give it four stars anyway. It's comfort reading, but I think I need it.