In His Own Words

In his own words

  • My Mortal Enemy by Willa Cather

    My Mortal Enemy

    Review: Another excellent novel from Willa Cather! The ending kind of left me hanging. Like, no real resolution, none of the ends tied up. All Jews in Cather novels are bad guys. She has a lot in common with all 1900 and on novelists. See Edith Wharton for the correct usage of Hebe in a…

    READ MORE →

  • The Alchemist’s Dream

    Review: Grabbed this one at random from the shelf. You never know what great things you will pick up by chance. This was not one of the great things. Schlocky “Can-con dude with a grant” fiction. A hidden code in an old manuscript, a mysterious map showing mysterious things. Yawn. Characters were cutouts, no depth,…

    READ MORE →

  • The Drowned World

    Review: A very good book. Very good. Short, dark, nervous, sweltering. Reminiscent of Conrad. Think Heart of Darkness or Almayer’s Folly. The atmosphere is oppressive, like in a swamp on the hottest of days. The real joy in this book comes from the feelings and mood, rather than the action. The action is quite attenuated,…

    READ MORE →

  • The Song of the Lark

    Review: “Here were the sand hills, the grasshoppers and locusts, all the things that wakened and chirped in the early morning, the reaching and reaching of high plains, the immeasurable yearnings of all flat lands.” I cannot express how magnificent this book is so I’m not going to even try. This book made me want…

    READ MORE →

  • The Rest is Noise

    Review: 591 pages, but as the Byzantine Emperor (Constantin’s illustrious successor Justinian) declared “Solomon I have bested thee!” Meaning I thought Life of Johnson was the most odious tome I had ever struggled through, but then this. I learned a lot: Strauss, Mahler, Bartok, and lots of history illuminated for me that I never learned…

    READ MORE →

  • Death in Venice

    Review: A literary triumph. I nearly said tour de force but I’m gay enough already without adding fuel to the fire. A dark, brooding tale of homosexual obsession. Kind of like a gay Lolita. The prose is magnificent without being overly wordy and pedantic. Leitmotifs abound, so many that Wagner would be jealous. And speaking…

    READ MORE →

  • The White People and Other Weird Stories

    Review: I really wanted to love this. But, I liked a few of the stories and some were just way too wordy, way too long, and at the end nothing happens. Like lesbian porn, there’s something missing and it leaves one unsatisfied. Machen is pronounced to rhyme with blacken. Not knowing this, I was pronouncing…

    READ MORE →

  • The Adventures of Tom Bombadil

    Review: What a neat little volume! A book of verse. Published in 1962 at the request of his publisher (Allen & Unwin). The poems were almost all adapted from Tolkien’s much earlier poems published in university journals, most having nothing to do with Tom Bombadil or even the LOTR franchise. Thanks to an editorial conceit…

    READ MORE →

  • Mars Rover Curiosity: An Inside Account from Curiosity's Chief Engineer by Rob Manning and William L. Simon

    Mars Rover Curiosity: An Inside Account

    Review: If you want an adventure in anxiety, do the job these people did to land a rover on Mars! Good grief! Sooo much that could (and nearly did) go wrong. Even reading it was a little nail-biting. OMG. But they did land and operate Curiosity on Mars. And it is still doing science 10…

    READ MORE →

  • Mash Up: Stories Inspired by Famous First Lines

    Mash Up: Stories Inspired by Famous First Lines

    Review: What a great, unique concept. Take a famous first line from a classic novel and base an SF story on it. Some great authors and some great submissions. Some. Not all. Gardner Dozois is one of the finest editors of anthologies ever, but in any collection you’re going to get a range of material.…

    READ MORE →