Saturday, March 14, 2009

Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town

Rating: B

(writing this long after reading, hence it will be kinda brief)

Very weird and intense. I enjoyed this much more than EST and is more like what I hoped for from Cory's writing.


Guy moves to town... slightly eccentric, but nothing too weird. Then he starts talking about how his dad is a mountain and his mom is washing machine. Just a weird metaphor, right? Then, he meets a girl who, oh yeah, just happens to have a pair of angel wings. From this point, everything turns in to a kind of acid trip.

It turns out his dad actually *is* a mountain and his mom actually *is* a washing machine. Additionally, of his 4(or 6?) brothers, one is an island, another can see the future, the third is a psychotic beast (who I imagine as something like Gollum), and the fourth... well, he's the weirdest of them all.

He is actually triplets... triplets who swallow each other like a bunch of matryoshka dolls. Oh, and only the inner-most one can eat. And what he eats nourishes the all three triplets. So bizarre.

Anyway, the major plot revolves around the psychotic brother trying to kill the protagonist over many years. Honestly, the details of the plot weren't really all that important... I just loved all the descriptions.

On top of the main plot, there's also a love story between the protagonist and the wing-girl. Of course her ex (who is also a psychotic and has the ability to 'sense' the freaks of the world) teams up with psycho brother. This makes sense and it all ties together nicely. Which is more than I can say for the third plot.

Sadly, Cory has to add his politics and love of technology here as well. There is a completely useless (albeit interesting) side plot of protagonist teaming up with a dumpster-diving computer expert. Together they build and give away a bunch of meshing routers to everyone in the area. That way everyone has free network access... yay! Whatever. I really wish he had left this part out.

Click to Read More (may contain spoilers)

Monday, March 9, 2009

Night of Power by Spider Robinson

Rating: B-

Hooboy. Spider sure has some balls on him. A novel that delves this deep in to the race war so early in his career? Wow. He's also very obviously channeling his inner-Heinlein: fast, witty dialog - check; a cast of (near) perfect geniuses - check; and of course a dash extremely liberal sexual attitudes. All-in-all a fun romp that will definitely leave you thinking 'what if?'


Main characters:
Russell Grant - Retired designer/inventor. Super-genius. White.
Dena Grant - Dancer. Russell's wife. Super-genius. Black.
Jennifer Grant - Russell's daughter. Super-duper-genius. 13 years old.
Michael - black jesus-like figure. Also a super-duper-genius with (black) cherries on top.

The story is set in the near future. The US is in a war in Africa and have reinstated the draft. The blacks who are drafted are very bitter about having to fight in their ancestral homeland, and tensions everywhere are through the roof.

Russell and crew are moving to NYC so Dena can have one last moment in the sun with an old dance crew. As they drive through a Harlem which has become a warzone, they are attacked at a stop. Michael saves them, escorts them to safety and wanders off. Eventually, it comes to light that the 'Night of Power' has arrived; the night when all the minorities in Manhattan are going to take over. Michael, of course, is their leader.

His plan is to declare a new Black Nation settled in the northeast of the US. He has recruited a relatively small crack team to accomplish with minimal violence. Like all good villians (anti-villians?), he makes a strong argument and has only the future's best interest in heart. After a night of running around the city trying to survive, Russell and crew befriend Michael and are offered jobs in the new country. The novel ends before you really know how well Michael's plan worked, but it seems pretty straightforward.

Click to Read More (may contain spoilers)