Showing posts with label DNF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DNF. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Review: The Saint of Bright Doors

The Saint of Bright DoorsThe Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a 2-star review which is a reasonable estimate of my experience.

I read this book as part of last year's Hugo Awards. This was nominated for "Best Novel".

This book is a classic example of how badly the ideological capture of the Hugo Awards has damaged the reputation of the awards.

I made it halfway through the book. Nothing really happened to move the plot forward. Lots of angst. Lots of "setup" and not much "pay off". Many unanswered questions that didn't look to have answers forthcoming.

This book came in below "no award" on my ballot, but not at the bottom of my ballot. I wouldn't have made it halfway through except I wanted to give my fellow nominators the respect due their nominations. Give the book a chance to live up to the reputation of the Hugo name.

[edited - grammar, erg.]



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Thursday, August 8, 2024

Review: Mirrored Heavens

Mirrored Heavens (Between Earth and Sky #3)Mirrored Heavens by Rebecca Roanhorse


This is a review without stars. I DNF'd this book.

I dislike extensive chapters based on some character's internal monologue. This book has an early chapter featuring an internal monologue from/with a character that I don't care about. It got in the way of the narrative of the main characters that actually matter to the plot.

Life is too short to have reading be a chore.

I didn't think it was fair to provide a star rating based on a few chapters.

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Monday, December 4, 2023

Review: MARVEL-VERSE: AMERICA CHAVEZ

MARVEL-VERSE: AMERICA CHAVEZMARVEL-VERSE: AMERICA CHAVEZ by Kieron Gillen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is a 3-star DNF review.

I don't recall why I picked up this book. Someone was mentioning America Chavez as an underutilized character. I thought I'd give it a shot.

I enjoyed the artwork. It was pretty standard Marvel art. I enjoy standard Marvel art.

The story was OK. Not great, but enough that I'd usually keep moving on.

America has two moms. Ok.

Then there are two male characters that seem into each other. Ok.

Then America goes into a house flying a rainbow flag - to have a make-out session with her girlfriend.

A couple of those elements and I'd have continued on. Everyone has to make room for everyone else. But the book was turning into an identitarian screed bent on excluding non-gay characters while hiding behind the tatters of a superhero story.

Moving onto something better as quickly as possible. Dorothy Parker can have her fun.

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Thursday, February 16, 2023

Review: Shadow & Claw

Shadow & Claw (The Book of the New Sun, #1-2)Shadow & Claw by Gene Wolfe
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a 2-star review that is a good estimate of my experience.

I managed to get roughly 1/3 through this book before giving up. Fortunately, I found this review that does an outstanding job of breaking down the significant flaws in this book. They have saved me a ton of time.

I've been told by many people that this is a classic of the fantasy genre and an excellent example of the grimdark subgenre.

It isn't.

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Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Review: The Flock

The FlockThe Flock by J. Todd Scott
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a 2-star review which adequately describes my experience.

There weren't any characters of interest. I made it 1/4 way through and still don’t know if the cult’s beliefs are mythical or if there is something supernatural. I was waiting for a cliff of character/plot engagement that never arrives.  I put it down and moved on to something better.



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Sunday, May 15, 2022

Review: Bystander 27

Bystander 27Bystander 27 by Rik Hoskin
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

This book is populated by cliches and cardboard characters. The protagonist is some sort of high-speed special forces guy with an apartment in New York City. There aren't any SF bases in NYC. It goes downhill from there.

The ghost of Dorothy Parker rose in a manner adroit and definitive.

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Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Review: Always Coming Home

Always Coming HomeAlways Coming Home by Ursula K. Le Guin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is a 3-star, DNF review.

The setting for the book is the American west coast after intelligent computers have surpassed humanity. The AI are barely present as a potential source of information via computer terminals.

Humanity has devolved back into tribes that seem heavily influenced by North American First Nations peoples. Many of the circumstances in the story evoke those cultural and religious traditions.

The circumstances that cause most of the dominant American culture to disappear never become clear.

I picked up this book because some fellow genre fans recommended it. While I didn't think it was bad, it just didn't hold my attention - hence the DNF. There were characters that might have been interesting but just weren't.

The presence of serious consideration of First Nations religious beliefs was odd. There wasn't anything to suggest that those beliefs were anything more important than beliefs.

Also odd was the potential for consulting the AI computers for information and solutions to human problems was not more widely utilized. Instead, the entire culture had devolved back into near subsistance survival. The cultural avoidance of seeking improvement and progress was inhuman. Every human culture seeks some sort of improvement.

I put it down about 60% of the way through and just couldn't justify picking it back up.

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Review: Storm Between the Stars: Book 1 in the Fall of the Censor

Storm Between the Stars: Book 1 in the Fall of the CensorStorm Between the Stars: Book 1 in the Fall of the Censor by Karl K. Gallagher
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a 2-star DNF review. The only reason it gets 2-stars is because the English spelling/grammar editing is quite good.

Made it 15% into the book and found that I really didn't care about any of the characters. They were cardboard cut-outs that were moving around on the author's whim.

And the digital equivalent of the Dorothy Parker treatment ensued.

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Saturday, September 5, 2020

Review: The Light Brigade

The Light Brigade The Light Brigade by Kameron Hurley
My rating: 2 of 5 stars


I read this book as part of voting for the Hugo Awards this year. This book was in the last place on my ballot, three after "No Award". A 2.5-star DNF review reflects my experience with this book.

Dietz is a soldier in a future army. She enters the service in part to obtain citizenship; with all of the rights that go along with citizenship. There are three levels of existence; citizenship, legal resident, and just living. Where you sit in that pecking order determines the resources available to you.

The army she serves is fighting an enemy on Mars. But it is expensive to move soldiers into space and then to another planet. It's also hard to launch a surprise attack.

The scientists have discovered a way to convert soldiers into electromagnetic energy (i.e. light) so that the soldiers can be transmitted to the battlefield at the speed of light. There are a couple of problems with that theory presented in the book. The first is that being converted from matter to light and back tends to cause a sort of mental psychosis and physical deformities (think of the worst Star Trek transporter accident). Numerous trips increase the odds of something weird (and probably lethal) happening in transit. For Dietz, the problem is that she has stopped experiencing linear time. Her unit launches with a brief for one mission and she ends up on a different one; one she should remember, but doesn't, or one from the future that she also doesn't remember but is definitely out of linear order.

The second problem is that she never seems to land on Mars; the battlefields are always on Earth. The Martians that she and her unit fight are actually descendants of the humans that emigrated to Mars who have returned to restore the (nuclear?) wasteland of Canada. They are communists.

On the positive side, the book presents the interpersonal relationships of military service almost perfectly. Those characters and there relationships with one another were very believable. Coupled with the mystery of experiencing the non-linear passage of time, this book is a fine read as long as you aren't willing to take any of the rest of it seriously.

The author's lack of familiarity with actual military service is revealed early on. The characters take part in "marksmanship" training during boot camp that involves using bayonets on dummies. Marksmanship training involves shooting bullets. Bayonet training falls under "close combat training". There is also a boot camp sequence where the recruits go on an extended survival march after only 2 weeks worth of physical training and no survival or combat training.

The author uses the word "corps". In a military sense, the "s" is silent and describes a defined unit within the military. The author intends the word to be short for corporations; sounds like "corpse". That is a confusing use of the term within a MilSF context.

At one point, the author is describing "fire teams" and "squads". There are references to a commanding officer. What is never clear is how units break down (i.e. how many fire teams to a squad, squads in a platoon, etc.) nor is it ever clear how many soldiers report to a given CO. It is inferred that a platoon commander is a commanding officer. Nope.

One of the soldiers ends up being wounded. Another soldier opens up their own med-kit and begins rendering aid. It is the standard doctrine that you always, always, always use the wounded soldier's med-kit before touching your own.

One character, Major General Stakely, is referred to as Major Stakely. Nope. That should be either "General Stakely" or "Major General Stakely". Otherwise, you are demoting the character by four levels.

There are more examples, but the point is made. The author's familiarity with military structures and traditions is nearly non-existent.

[Please permit a brief pause. I hate the idea of "sensitivity readers". I think authors should be free to explore cultures and experiences that may beyond their remit. I do think that authors should pursue sufficient information to lend accuracy to their work. "Accuracy readers" are a great idea as they help the author understand where they are bending reality and where they are breaking reality. Sometimes a purposeful breaking of reality is justified. This book could have used an accuracy reader so that the author would know what they were breaking.]

This book seems to be an attempt at a conversation with Robert Heinlein and his book Starship Troopers, among others. It is woefully inadequate for that task.

In Heinlein's books, the people leaving earth are always described as seeking relief from an ever intrusive amount of government. They always use their newfound freedom to innovate in ways that the legally sclerotic Earth governments always regulated against. In Heinlein's works, success was always presented as the first fruit of individual liberty.

This has been the story of humanity throughout recorded history. Heinlein wasn't making something up. He was echoing human experience.

In contrast, the author has the Communists leaving earth for Mars where they develop the technology needed to restore a North American continent that has been ravaged by war. I believe nuclear weapons are implied, but the devastation is on that scale nonetheless.

The problem is that human history relative to Communism documents that it causes oppression and poverty. It slows technological advancements and stifles human knowledge. That which the party disapproves is simply a topic that will never be explored regardless of the potential benefits. That which the party approves is enacted regardless of the demonstrable harm.

Any author suggesting that Communism has (finally!) worked is automatically obligated to demonstrate how it worked. In light of the unbroken series of failures that have led to mass poverty (at the very least) and mass graves (over 100,000,000 killed), the suggestion that Communism is a functioning political and economic model places a heavy burden on the author to demonstrate how it works. Within the context of the first 2/3s of the book, this is just hand-waved away. How an intellectually backward political and economic system of governance with a demonstrable history of creating poverty and oppression is able to develop a new technology that is unavailable on Earth stretches the suspension of disbelief well beyond the breaking point.

There is also the sub-text of a limited set of corporations running the world. Anyone familiar with the 1970s vintage movie "Rollerball" will have already experienced a far more effective treatment of that unlikely outcome. Within the course of human histories, corporate monopolies rarely last without a government mandate.

This is a decent book if you aren't going to think about the themes and the details too much. The characters are quite engaging. The plot involving a non-linear procession of time is intriguing.

But after reading ~2/3s of the book, I knew that it was going well below No Award on my Hugo ballot. I knew that the author was just splashing militarium (well-crafted militarium, but a splashing of it nonetheless) around without really understanding anything about military training and operations. And I knew that the political/economic theme was going to be a hot mess. This was a DNF read for me.

Reading this book put me in the mind of a quote by author Jim Butcher: "Never preach harder than you can entertain." When the sub-text supersedes the text, an author has shifted from story-telling to preaching. Butcher's aphorism applies in spades.

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My reviews of all of the 2020 Hugo finalists for best novel are here.

Monday, February 17, 2020

Review: Heroes Wanted: A Fantasy Anthology

Heroes Wanted: A Fantasy Anthology Heroes Wanted: A Fantasy Anthology by Ben Galley
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The introduction of this anthology is about a short story about how the hero isn't who you expect it to be. In that story, a guy goes from nothing to being the ruler of the world by using his brains to overcome all of the evil people in the world. Evil is gone...good thing, right?

So no one will challenge this ruler of the world because, in his quest to overcome evil, he developed a machine that will end the world with the push of a button. As ruler of the world, this guy is pretty oppressive.

The real hero? Some other person that has a set of wire cutters and access to the button.

Now that is the bones of a pretty good story and a pretty good premise around which to build an anthology.

Sadly, the anthology doesn't deliver. Most of the "heroes" are just looking out for their own interests when the opportunity to act comes along.

The stories were well written, but a bit pedestrian. I was a little over halfway through when I set it aside for something else. I don't plan on going back.

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Friday, November 29, 2019

Review: Blood Heir

Blood Heir Blood Heir by Amélie Wen Zhao
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is a 3-star "did not finish" review. My experience with this book is a huge mixed bag.

ARCs of this book led to a social media firestorm that bullied the author into withdrawing the book so that it could be fixed. Apparently, her expression of slavery as viewed through her inherited cultural traditions/narrative did not support a US-centric view of slavery. I'm not sure if the book was changed/edited from the ARC version.

The general hook for the book was good enough for me to want to read it even though YA oriented works aren't my primary (or even secondary) interest. Bought the book. Made it roughly halfway through.

The author did a fantastic job of creating a unique fantasy world with reasonably consistent rules for the fantasy elements. She also did a good job of developing characters that are compelling and interesting. I hung in there for a while just based on the main characters.

Unfortunately, the story was devolving into "wish fulfillment" territory. The final straw for me was when the one protagonist began to adjust his behaviors simply because the other protagonist was....something. Strong? Moral? Pretty? There certainly isn't a justification for the apparent change in his behavior other than "isn't she special".

A backward look at the narrative revealed several things that happened just because it served the narrative rather than because the characters had skillfully/cleverly managed an obstacle.

I think there is a lot in this book that make it worth reading....if all the reader is looking for is a light read that doesn't require a lot of deep thought.

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