Spook Country by William GibsonMy review
rating: 3 of 5 starsLike every other Gibson novel I have read, the ideas in the novel are fascinating, but ultimately the plot flutters and sputters along.
Spook Country by William Gibson
When I was out sick I read a favorable review of the book, "The Adventures of Johnny Bunko: The Last Career Guide You'll Ever Need". I dropped it into an Amazon order. If you feel some angst about your career and you don't have a good mentor or have only been in the workplace for a couple of years this is a great read. It might make a good gift for someone who is headed out to their first real job after college. I found the advice pretty basic. On the other hand it was still a fun read thanks to the format and the illustrations by Rob Ten Pas.
There wasn't anything special I learned but I loved the reminder that "it's not about you" and "leave an imprint". You can check out some illustrations on the Johnny Bunko web site.
This is a book that is about right now. It plays out the tension and intersection of privacy versus safety in the after math of a terrorist incident in the SF Bay Area. The book will probably seem dated pretty quick since the technology and lingo are so current, but the story is still great. This book marks a turning point in Cory Doctorows writing. This book is a real turning point for the author, Cory Doctorow. Previous works like "Eastern Standard Tribe" or "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom", or even a novella I truly loved "When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth" were good reads but it wasn't something I would try and get friends who weren't sci-fi/cyberpunk fans to check out and read. This book changes all that - I know I'll probably mail my copy off to my nephew to read. If you are too cheap to get the book, the txt download will be posted soon I'm sure.
I picked up a few books in a little bookstore in Darjeeling. One of the winners was a slim volume titled "Delhi is not far" by Ruskin Bond. I don't see it available on Amazon, but his "Best Of" collection has the story.
Like many short stories it has a tremendous sense of place including the brooding last two paragraphs.
"This is the real land, the land I should write about. My Mohalla [neighborhood] is but a sickness, a wasting disease, and I should turn aside from it to sing instead of the splendors of tomorrow. But only yesterdays are splendid ... There are other singers, sweeter than I, to sing of tomorrow. I can only sing of today, of Pipalnagar; where I have lived and loved. Yesterday I was sad, and tomorrow I may be sad again, but today I know that I am happy. I want to live on and on delighting like a pagan in all that is physical; and I know that this one lifetime, however long, cannot satisfy my heart."
---Ruskin Bind, "Delhi is not far"
A few years ago I ran into the web site "Big Dead Place" and it reignited my fascination with Antarctica. I have read a lot of the first hand accounts of early explorers. Reading how people cope with the challenges given current technology and resources makes for an interesting contrast.
I ran into a mention of the book "Life on the Ice" on the O'Reilly Radar. Since I was Christmas shopping at the time, I decided I needed a copy of the book.
The book is a collection of fairly personal essays about Antarctica. The writing was unusually good. I suppose you really get a chance to compose your thoughts during six months of darkness. There were essays focused on the natural beauty, the human relationships and covered some aspects of the science projects that go on. The comparisons between penguin and human behavior made me laugh out loud at least once.
I would sure like to get a chance to visit there someday. I'm not sure if I have what it takes to winter over, but I would love a nice long visit.
Given my next big trip will be to India, maybe I should pick up "Travelers' Tales India: True Stories" by the same publisher.
Last month I went to a reading Frank Warren gave at BirchBark Books in Minneapolis. He is the collector of the postcards at postsecret.blogspot.com. He had a lot of amazing and funny stories. I love the new book, although the first one is still my favorite.