BJ's Updates en-US Fri, 04 Apr 2025 17:19:40 -0700 60 BJ's Updates 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg Friend1419841095 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 17:19:40 -0700 <![CDATA[<Friend user_id=55110868 friend_user_id=78882313 top_friend=true>]]> Comment289119253 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 12:54:56 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ commented on Simon's review of Ancillary Justice]]> /review/show/4494757199 Simon's review of Ancillary Justice (Imperial Radch, #1)
by Ann Leckie

Never made it to the Sprawl sequels, even though I liked Necromancer! It's been so long that I'd have to start from the beginning I think if I wanted to pick them back up. And as for Book of the New Sun, damn, does that look both incredibly good and incredibly intimidating! ]]>
Rating843762036 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 11:35:58 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ Lillis liked a userstatus]]> / Anna Carina
Anna Carina is on page 88 of 1474 of Der stille Don: Inzwischen ziemlich viel Schweißgeruch�
Und ständig bekommt irgendwer was aufs Maul�
Kommt fast zu gut rüber, das erbarmungslose Landleben. Bisschen weniger Sinnlichkeit bei all den säuerlichen Gerüchen wär nicht verkehrt.
Und wie früh man damals alt war.
Zitat im Kommentar
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Comment289115493 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 10:55:23 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ commented on Erik's review of Ancillary Sword]]> /review/show/1692076089 Erik's review of Ancillary Sword (Imperial Radch, #2)
by Ann Leckie

I dunno, I think the social justice thing is a red herring. I thought the whole point of this book was that Breq is trying to atone for being a ruthless colonial administrator by being a *better* ruthless colonial administrator, which fails because duh. She sets up an office so the evil empire can *listen* to people! How lovely. The book ends with the person Breq was trying to help nearly being murdered and the underworld she was trying to improve literally being flooded and evacuated. Whoops! ]]>
Rating843749391 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 10:45:40 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ Lillis liked a review]]> /
Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie
"I'm sure I'm not alone in my judgment, but I'm torn about this book.

The ending was very good. It reversed a lot of my disappointment as I read this novel, but only because it changed my perceptions about what this novel was trying to accomplish.

Don't expect fast pacing or a civil war. Don't expect a return to Breq's heyday as a multiple-body starship AI.

Once I got over my desires to see him/her rise and become the right hand man/woman of his/her leige wielding a large weapon, be it any kind of metaphorical sword, political engine, or at least an army of ancillaries, I started to relax into the tale that Ann Leckie was really telling.

We have a tale about an AI's personal redemption. This is still the same tale that was being told in the first novel, but now we've got a very limited 3rd person perspective that doesn't allow us into Breq's thoughts, either. All we have is the pursuit of social justice on a station he/she once served a thousand years prior, the attempt to draw in his/her ancillary's relatives into her heart as atonement, and, almost as a side note, the ostensible and official reason Breq had for going there in the first place. You know... trying to flush out his/her leige's multiple-personalty antagonist.

The novel was slow. Don't expect more than a deepening of your understanding of Breq.

One thing more: I am both pleased and angry that the jumps in time and location and viewpoint have been squeezed so small as to be a single character. It makes for easier reading, sure, and hides a lot more plot until the right time, but it was what made the other book fantastic, IMHO. Do I want easy reading, or rewarding reading? Answer: Both. I think that's what I liked most about the first novel. The second wasn't nearly as rewarding except if you allow yourself to fall into an introspective contemplation about Breq.

I said I really liked the ending. It was very satisfying, but it reminds me more of a traditional novel with very little sci-fi necessity. In fact, the novel could have cut almost all of the sci-fi aspects out and have a coherent and complete novel. There was none of the special tension that science-fiction is known for. Speculation was missing. Instead, we've got a novel of social justice and personal redemption. It was good, but not what I was expecting.

I don't mean to be harsh in this review. I liked the novel. Even if it didn't follow the promise of big events laid down by the previous novel, it was good on its own. Of course, we were given hints of a full blown revolution in the star system next-door, and this kind of idea never really hit anyone over the head in this novel, but it does leave the door open to huge things later.

I admit, I love the idea of Galaxy-Wide AI's battling it out in a glorious bloodbath including all its fingers, the men and women of the ancillary. We'll see.


Update.

This is also a contender for the 2015 Hugo for best novel.
I'm still reading the rest of the nominations, including the novel by Kloos that he respectfully rescinded because he didn't want to be associated with the puppygate pall. I respect his decision, ethically, but I cannot accept it in my heart. So therefore, I will continue to balance the scales before I cast my vote.

Is Ms. Leckie's novel good enough to be on the nomination? Absolutely. Do I honestly think it is the best of the ballot for this year? We'll see. There's an awful lot to appreciate about it, with or without my personal desires getting in the way. The same thing goes for her previous novel which did win the Hugo last year, although I personally think that this one isn't up to quite the same glory.

I'm keeping my eyes wide open.


"
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Rating843748236 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 10:41:03 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ Lillis liked a review]]> /
The Terraformers by Annalee Newitz
"I enjoyed the first half but my interest waned rapidly and continuously throughout the second half.

In the first half we're learning about a society some 60,000 years into our future built around the idea of commercially terraformed planets. Genetically or by cybernetic implantation, some animals are given various features of intelligence. Even homo species are genetically adapted and selected for various environmental purposes.

Homo archaens (or something like that) are left to begin terraforming on uninhabitable planets and then when the planet is nearing readiness for "life as we know it" they are supposed to die out and start incubating homo sapiens who will take over from them.

It's an interesting set up and the inevitable conflict that follows on the planet Sask-E is quite engaging. I liked the use of terraforming tools as weapons. The idea of a planet without plate tectonics was novel and central to the plot in this first half.

In the second half we rejoin the story on Sask-E I think about 100 years after the conflict in the first half. This time the central argument focuses on public transportation; whether it should be trains, whether they should be living organisms, which cities should be connected... it's a drag. These futuristic monkeys fly around on magical talking camels with wings and they're prepared to go to war over a train track? It doesn't seem plausible.

The other thing I really didn't care for in the second half bordered on bestiality - way too much uninteresting and unecessary description of interspecial mating routines. Here's a quote we can all disagree with:

"They had to plan carefully and use specially designed instruments, as if they were about to do a laboratory investigation. Which was, once Sulfur thought about it, actually kind of hot."

It's not kind of hot at all, actually. And Frankly I didn't care for the "hot" details of interspecial stamen penetration either.

I also didn't like the asinine language used in this story which often included many terrible ways for the characters to insult each other.

And I thought that for 60,000 years into the future the technology wasn't quite imaginative enough. Maybe for 6,000 years ahead. But I guess that's a bit of a quibble, because the author did try to imagine many genetic and social adaptations.

I would have rated this story higher had it ended after part one. It's not that I didn't like it at all, but I found it less than fully engaging.

One final note. I didn't read the acknowledgements section at the end but I did catch the first line or two before closing the book. The author claims to have had the intention of writing about a hopeful future and to be honest I didn't see that in this story. That's just my view, but the society seemed as selfish as ever to me."
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Comment289114695 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 10:29:40 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ commented on Simon's review of Women in Love]]> /review/show/4477540502 Simon's review of Women in Love
by D.H. Lawrence

Great review. My feeling, reading this novel, I think, was basically something like "wow, this is so much better than it has any right to be." ]]>
Comment289114429 Fri, 04 Apr 2025 10:21:53 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ commented on BJ's review of Ancillary Sword]]> /review/show/7420227680 BJ's review of Ancillary Sword (Imperial Radch, #2)
by Ann Leckie

Angelo F wrote: "Ancillary Justice is great.
I also liked Ancillary Sword, but not as much as the first book.
Ancillary Mercy is better than the 2nd, but not on the same level as the first book."


I just grabbed Ancillary Mercy from the library! Read the first couple of pages and was delighted to see that it picks right up where Sword left off... Looks like this is going to be one of those "actually it's all one big book" sort of trilogies :) ]]>
Comment289094784 Thu, 03 Apr 2025 19:36:09 -0700 <![CDATA[BJ made a comment on Jonathan’s status]]> /user_status/show/1039299539 BJ made a comment on Jonathan’s status

I feel like the new version completely misses the point of the last line, (that you too will see your youth in your child)? ]]>