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Kyle's Reviews > Academic Exercises

Academic Exercises by K.J. Parker
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Reading Progress

September 13, 2022 – Started Reading
September 13, 2022 – Shelved
September 15, 2022 –
page 53
10.02% "Finished the first novellete "A Small Price to Pay for Birdsong." What a surprisingly surreal and emotional story. Drama over musical composition can be far more intense than I realized; composers can be ruthless. The ending was untexpectedly ruthless, but emotionally loaded. I can see why this novellete between a short story and novella) won the World Fantasy Award, even though calling it "Fantasy" is a big stretch"
September 17, 2022 –
page 80
15.12% ""A Full Rich Week," the second novella/short story in this collection, could be something out of a Horror novel if it wasn't for the dry humourous wit of the main character's internal mental commentary. Perhaps less philosophically profound than the previous story, it instead draws you in as you try and figure out what's even going on. It draws you in and twists your expectations to make you unprepared for the end."
September 18, 2022 –
page 111
20.98% ", the next 30-page short in this collection, is probably one of the most disturbing stories I've ever read, from a purely psychological view. What is the true price of power, or survival; what are the true consequences of our actions? I don't know, and I think I know even less after reading this. This was a confusing story, from start to end, but it's making me sit here and think about it a lot."
September 18, 2022 –
page 111
20.98% "Amor Vincit Omnia, the next 30-page short in this collection, is probably one of the most disturbing stories I've ever read, from a purely psychological view. What is the true price of power, or survival; what are the true consequences of our actions? I don't know, and I think I know even less after reading this. This was a confusing story, from start to end, but it's making me sit here and think about it."
September 23, 2022 –
page 127
24.01% "I never thought I would be so captivated by an academic essay, but On Sieges is a delightful commentary on how important the role of sieges has been to civilization and its development. You can really tell this is a topic KJ Parker feels passionately about. Well researched and eloquently tied into literature, art, technology, housing design, and much much more."
September 24, 2022 –
page 142
26.84% ""he was always a good speaker, and he couldn't resist arguing the toss, even when it was clearly not the smart thing to do. I can imagine (I wasn't there) him arguing with Death, scoring five or six good solid debating points; the last thing he'd have seen before his eyes closed forever was the panoramic view you get from the moral high ground."
September 27, 2022 –
page 199
37.62%
September 27, 2022 –
page 201
38.0% "Let Maps to Others is a puzzling novella in this collection. Probably my least favorite work in this book, though I'm actually wondering if it is so simply because it went over my head. The message or purpose behind the novella isn't actually clear to me, though I suppose one could argue that isn't a prerequisite of "goodness" in a story. About a long-lost island; hope, fortune, and disappointment abound. 3/5"
October 1, 2022 –
page 233
44.05%
October 6, 2022 –
page 234
44.23% "War is a great generator of ironies. My all-time favorites are the patent infringement lawsuits brought against the US government after WW1 by the German arms industry.... ...The German patent holders won the suit, and the US had to pay royalties on every rifle issued to and and every bullet fired by their armed forces during the war. I'd put that in a book, but nobody would believe it."
October 9, 2022 –
page 258
48.77% "She gave me this look, which I confess I found hard to interpret. "What?" I said.
"Oh, nothing."
...There's that bit in the General Collect about how you have broken every law, dishonored every commandment, done every evil, neglected every good. Get a woman to say it and you could compress all that down into 'Oh, nothing' and save twenty minutes.
"
October 13, 2022 –
page 263
49.72% "Think about what you do when you write something down. You take a thought out of your mind, you separate it from yourself, and you fix it in a permanent medium, like a fly in amber. Then you leave it there.
A book can last a very long time. Even if the paper you wrote it on is lost or destroyed, all it takes is for someone else to make a copy. [...]
...Some flies in amber are only sleeping.
"
October 16, 2022 –
page 280
52.93% "The Short Story "Illuminated" is a psychologically wild story, and to me K.J. Parker's most horrific. Reminds me of a blend between Inception and Edgar Allen Poe; like if Poe was writing Inception in an abandoned medieval tower on old parchment. Parker give the reader the least (i.e, references to the world or extras) but forces the reader right along with him into the depths of depravity. 5/5 for this short"
October 25, 2022 –
page 366
69.19% "I re-read the novella Purple and Black, which is reprinted in this collection. The first time I read, years ago, it my impression was that it was the best novella ever written. After re-reading, I maintain my position is still a valid one until I find evidence to the contrary. This novella deserves its own review at some point, but suffice to say it accomplishes more in 90 pages than most books do in 500."
November 6, 2022 –
page 385
72.78% "Another strong non-fiction entry in this compendium, "Rich Men's Skins: A Social History of Armour" is a concise but very content-rich exploration of the role of armor in history. Particularly social history. With plenty of citations and footnotes, Parker goes from the ancient world to the modern and highlights how armor functions in practice, and also interacts with the social status of those who wear it. Too short!"

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