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4thace

4thace@books.theunseen.city

Joined 1 year, 5 months ago

I try to review every book I finish. On Mastodon: noc.social/@Zerofactorial

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Roger Zelazny: A Night in the Lonesome October (1994, Avon) 4 stars

Think you know the good guys from the bad? Think you understand the strange energy …

The perfect October read for Zelazny fans

4 stars

This is a light entertainment told in 31 chapters, one for each day of October. The author plays with characters from a number of stories and legends setting them and their animal companions in a game that decides whether ruin comes to the Earth every few decades or so. Much of the story is told in dialogue as experienced by the hound Snuff who can speak with his sorcerous master Jack the after midnight only. The talk is about magic artifacts, about closers and openers, leading up to a climax on Halloween night according to how the players have conducted themselves up to this point. In the course of the novel, there are attacks and killings shifting the balance, but also friendships and enmity. The author's style is to suggest things without spelling them out openly, to keep the reader's interest. Deceptions keep the story lively too, along with the …

Sally Rooney: Intermezzo (Hardcover, english language, 2024, Farrar, Straus & Giroux) 4 stars

Aside from the fact that they are brothers, Peter and Ivan Koubek seem to have …

Men working through issues about loss and love

4 stars

I pre-ordered this book when I heard it was coming out. It's a little bit different from this author's previous three books in that it focuses mainly on the relationship between two male characters, the brothers Peter and Ivan. The two of them are working through the grief caused by recent death of their father, along with their issues concerning dominance along with a little streak of violence. The main secondary relationships are between the two brothers and their romantic partners. Peter had a long-term relationship end unexpectedly after his girlfriend Sylvia suffered injuries in an accident and current girlfriend Naomi who is about 10 years younger than he. Between the confusion with the two girlfriends and his work stresses and his recent grief he's taken to taking pills and drinking to excess. Younger brother Ivan is a high-ranking chess player who meets a woman during a an exhibition game …

Valerie Valdes: Fault Tolerance (2022, HarperCollins Publishers) 3 stars

Mid-tier space opera trilogy comes to a conclusion

3 stars

I read the first book in the series three years ago and unfortunately forgot most of the backstory of the main antagonists and secondary characters. I think I must have skipped the second book entirely which probably contained some plot points I could have used. There are a lot of characters whose stories did not hit with the right impact with me as a result.

This space opera trilogy about the captain and crew of an interstellar cargo ship tasked with saving all the civilizations in the universe sets the reader on a treadmill early on. It felt like a series of difficulties which eventually all point in the same direction, without confusing branches. There is one excursion along the way in the form of an unforced error, but by that time I was already certain they would find a way out of their jam eventually, with no chance of …

Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Of the Social Contract and Other Political Writings (2012, Penguin Books) 4 stars

Man was born free, and everywhere he is in chains.' These are the famous opening …

Surprises in a theory of government 250 years old

4 stars

This was a challenging book to consume in audiobook form. It demands the listener to understand concepts in political philosophy and political sociology, to construct an awareness of 18th century European history, and put aside preconceptions of the intent of the author, all in an aural format. some words such as "sovereign" and "magistrate" turn out to have a meaning different from what I thought at first. Also, some of the writings here come down to us in a fragmentary form so things are not as orderly as one would like. The author is building on and replying to earlier political science and economics works by Montesquieu, Hobbes, Machiavelli, and others on specific points so some of the intent is probably lost when those other works aren't at hand. Despite all the difficulties, it was an engaging piece of scholarship.

As suggested by the title there are a number of …

Grady Hendrix: The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires (Hardcover, 2020, Quirk Books) 3 stars

Steel Magnolias meets Dracula in this '90s-set horror novel about a women's book club that …

Starts satiric, ends graphic

2 stars

It's been a long time since I've picked up a horror book so I grabbed this one when I saw it at the library. I knew about this author from back when he used to make appearances on podcasts before his writing career really took off. I would say that the title gives the summary of the book only if one applies a couple of adjustments. It isn't really much of a 'guide' except perhaps by example. The book club ladies' scheme nearly fails at several points, however. But more importantly, there's only one character that might be classified as a vampire, not multiple 'vampires.' The first 60% of the book was a fairly easy non-strenuous read where you're introduced to the major characters and it drills into the societal values of Charleston. Then it takes a hard turn where the viewpoint character, Patricia Campbell, gets into trouble, landing in …

F. Scott Fitzgerald: The Great Gatsby (Paperback, 1995, Scribner Paperback Fiction) 4 stars

This is the definitive, textually accurate edition of a classic of twentieth-century literature, The Great …

A quick reread to get a feeling of his style

4 stars

I am pretty sure I read this long ago but this time I remembered virtually nothing about it. I picked this up as a second-hand paperback heavily highlighted by its previous owner(s), probably for a school assignment. All I really recalled was how the story was told from the point of view of a secondary character, Nick Carraway, who knows as little about the title character initially as we do and has to work out his attitude to all the principals as he meets them. What I was mainly interested in was the reputation it has had since its publication in 1925. The writing shows its age but I did notice the care the author took with each of the characters to establish a clear voice, and with the settings to help the reader imagine what it felt like to experience along with the characters. There are a few flourishes …

Mary L. Trump Ph.D.: Too Much and Never Enough (Hardcover, 2020, Simon & Schuster) 4 stars

How not to parent

4 stars

I have let this book sit on my shelf for years since it came out, but now that the author's social media activity has ticked up it seems like this moment of peril is the right point to read it through. It is part memoir and part biography written without the cooperation of its subject, but viewed at close quarters. I decided the author is able to put forth an honest portrayal of Donald Trump despite her personal stakes in calling out his actions that deprived her of a large inheritance. I think there is enough detail here to back up the claims when combined with other stories of the rise of businessman Trump and other objective of his character. Behind it all is the author's grandfather who built the real estate empire in Brooklyn and who was responsible for Trump's strange psychology by encouraging his lying, applauding the flamboyance, …