My Review of The Red Planet

Red Planet

Red Planet by Robert A. Heinlein

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This book is one of Heinlein’s juveniles, and like a few others in that series it reflects a time when our notions of the other planets were still pretty uneducated. We didn’t have spacecraft orbiting or landing on other planets when this was written, so the idea of a Mars that has actual canals, vegetation, and inhabitants was still within the realm of the possible. And in some ways this book is in the same universe as Stranger In A Strange Land, with the same Martians. It also has themes characteristic of Heinlein, such as sturdy individuals who fight back against evil government officials.

The protagonist, Jim Marlowe, is a student at a boarding school on Mars where the residents have adopted a practice of migrating half-way through the Martian year because of the cold that comes with the change of seasons. But Jim discovers that government agents are planning to cancel the migration because it costs too much money. A revolt ensues, and the Martians get involved helping the rebels.



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My Review of To Ride Pegasus

To Ride Pegasus (The Talent, #1)

To Ride Pegasus by Anne McCaffrey

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Anne McCaffrey has a series I have read and reviewed called The Tower and the Hive, and in this universe people with psychic talents are responsible for providing telepathic communication and shipping services through teleportation. It is an interesting series which I enjoyed, but it leaves open the question of how we get from here-and-now to the universe she created. It is clear that it is supposed to be the same universe in some way, and in her Pegasus books she creates that link.

To Ride Pegasus is book #1 of the prequel series, and begins with someone who is very successful as an astrologer because he is in fact someone with precognition talent. He founds a research center and looks for others to join him. Then a talented telepath becomes his successor, and guides the organization into an accepted role in society. In McCaffrey’s telling, it would seem that all/most people have some kind of psychic ability, only in most people it is weak or suppressed. There is some notion that genetics is involved, and that selected breeding might intensify the abilities people have.

This book is not a novel so much as 4 linked novellas that tell the story.



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My Review of Why Romney Lost

Why Romney Lost

Why Romney Lost by David Frum

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This is not Theodore White level analysis, but I am a politics junkie and I love this stuff. Like a lot of people, I consider Obama to be the best president so far in this century, and possibly being the best in my adult life. Frum’s position in this book is that Romney lost more than Obama winning, which I don’t really agree with, but beyond that he pushes the idea the Republican Party has become out-of-touch. I think this is essentially correct, though lately they seem to have gained some traction from outright racism and nationalism. Frum is a life-long Republican who served in W’s administration, so his views have some relevance here.



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My Review of Whose Body?

Whose Body?  (Lord Peter Wimsey, #1)

Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This is one of the best “first novels” around, and introduces an unforgettable character, Lord Peter Wimsey. The mysteries he gets involved in have become classics of the mystery genre, and this is where it all began.

Lord Peter first learns about an odd occurrence when an architect named Phipps finds a body in his bathtub, naked except for a pince nez (eyeglasses without any ear pieces, they just sit on the bridge of the nose and pinch it). Inspector Sugg thinks it may be the body of a missing financier, Sir Reuben Levy, whose case is being looked at by Charles Parker, a friend of Wimsey’s. But it turns it to be someone else entirely. And yet, there is is something odd about the case, and the bodies may be linked in some way.

One of the side-plots has to do with Wimsey’s experiences in World War I. After World War II and the Cold War, it seems so very distant, but it marked those involved in ways that they generally never got over, which this book shows very well. If you have ever wondered what was wrong with people who appeased Hitler when “obviously” they should have fought back against him earlier, you need to understand this history.



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My Review of The Pinball Effect: Journeys through Knowledge

The Pinball Effect: Journeys through Knowledge

The Pinball Effect: Journeys through Knowledge by James Burke

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


James Burke is someone I regard as one of the treasures of the human race. I first fell in love with him with his series Connections, and then used his series The Day The Universe Changed when I taught a course on the History of Science. If you have any interest at all in science and technology you need to check him out. The pinball effect is what Burke calls the way seemingly unrelated bits of science, engineering, and technology become related. For instance, there is a relationship between Renaissance water gardens and the carburetor, which he explains. Of course, this is very much the theme of Connections, but that is just fine with me.

I listened to the audio book version of this.



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My Review of The Menace From Earth

The Menace from Earth

The Menace from Earth by Robert A. Heinlein

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Robert A. Heinlein is one of the greats of Science Fiction, and this is one his stronger collections of short stories written in the 1940s and 1950s. The title story is a clever bit of word play, since the menace being referenced is an attractive female from Earth who comes to the Moon and may be stealing the boyfriend of the young lady protagonist. Clever enough, but the evocation of how life on the Moon might happen is what really makes this story great. Then there is “By His Bootstraps”, which is one of two awesome time travel paradox stories written by Heinlein (the other is “All You Zombies”), and you feel like there is not much left to say on the subject when he gets done. “Year of the Jackpot” is an atmospheric end-of-the-world fantasy. And “Goldfish Bowl” is a wonderful exploration of the idea that we are being observed by intelligent aliens. The whole collection is great, and deserves a place in your library.



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My Review of Hang on to a Dream: The Story of the Nice

Hang on to a Dream: The Story of the Nice

Hang on to a Dream: The Story of the Nice by Martyn Hanson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Most people know Keith Emerson as the keyboard playing wizard in Emerson, Lake, and Palmer, but before that band came into being he was part of a very innovative group called The Nice. This book tells the story of the earlier group, which in many ways I prefer. The biggest weakness of The Nice was that they never had a good singer, which may be one reason Emerson was keen to hook up with Greg Lake when he created his super-group. But The Nice really started the genre of classical-crossover with things like The Karelia Suite, Five Bridges, and most famously their magnificent rave-up version of America by Leonard Bernstein. I think this is the origin of Progressive Rock, and if you have never heard the group, you should check it out. This book covers the history of The Nice, and a little bit about the formation of ELP.



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My Review of Minstrels in the Gallery: A History of Jethro Tull

Minstrels in the Gallery: A History of Jethro Tull

Minstrels in the Gallery: A History of Jethro Tull by David Rees

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


David Rees is the publisher of the Jethro Tull fanzine A New Day, which takes its name from a song on the album Stand Up, and he wrote this book to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the group. This book is a history of the group, and of interest to fans. If you aren’t a fan of Jethro Tull you should pass this up.



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My Review of The Avengers

The Avengers

The Avengers by Toby Miller

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


If you are like me, when you think of The Avengers you have no thought of Marvel Comics. Instead, it means John Steed and Mrs. Peel, and it always will. This book recounts the history of the show as it aired in England, and is a nice companion piece for the fan. And if The Avengers makes you think of a bunch of comic book heroes, skip this book because you will be disappointed.



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My Review of Lyon’s Pride

Lyon's Pride

Lyon’s Pride by Anne McCaffrey

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This is book #4 in The Tower and The Hive series, and is a pretty direct continuation of Damia’s Children with the same cast of characters. The overall plot point here is going from a defensive war against the Hive to taking to the offence and bringing the war to them. But along the way two other issues get involved. The first is that a significant portion of the Human polity is not sure that they want a war. Maybe there could be a peaceful solution, they think. That faces a couple of big problems since the Hive does not seem to be interested in anything except complete extermination, and in any case there does not seem to be any way to communicate with them. The other big issue is that Mrdini are not Human, and they have a different way of thinking, as becomes very clear in a dramatic incident.

I listened to the Audio Book version of this novel



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