#3

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just linux things

$ diff -u a/file b/file > file.diff
$ cd a
$ patch -p1 < ../file.diff
Hunk FAILED at 73.
Hunk FAILED at 99.
$

definitely a real operating system that adult professionals should be using for importat work

Roger Zelazny: The Doors of His Face, The Lamps of His Mouth (Paperback, 2004, I Books)

The rhythms of profanity or prayer.

Zelazny was exploring the topic of divinity and the rights of gods for his whole career. He investigated shifting surrealist events and landscapes in his short stories as well as his other works.

It is apt that one of his short story collections is called "the road to Amber", but I think that most of his works can be roughly divided into "the road to Amber" and "the road to Lord of Light".

It is uncanny how good his language is too. He is a true American classic. American because he was as good at filigree details of landscapes and environments as he was at writing action scenes.

Absolute highlights of this collection for me, in order:

  1. The Keys to December (just love it! Sentient cats, arctic cold, the rights of small nations to exist)
  2. The Mortal Mountain (please treat it as a mystery …
John Scalzi: The Ghost Brigades (2007, Tor)

Where's John Perry?

Found as EN "boxed set" and read the trilogy (with Old Man's War & The Last Colony) in less than a week (nights mainly). Less entertaining than #1 IMHO, but "needed" to jump into #3

T.S. Falk: The Calypso Mystery: A SciFi Adventure (EBook, 2023)

For those who love James Rollins, Michael Crichton, and Indiana Jones!

What was meant …

Another interesting book in the series

This was also a good book that merges a bit of scifi with archeology, and it played out well. I found the story predictable but interesting nevertheless. It was a little weird reading this as #5 while it's actually a story that takes place between book #3 and #4, but it's fine if you remember its place.

Marion G. Harmon: Small Town Heroes (Paperback)

Astra has become one of the most popular Sentinels in Chicago, past scandals notwithstanding, and …

Not really part #4

This is book #4 in the series, but it's not the fourth part. Apparently there's a short story, "Omega Night", and it contained both plot and character developments that significantly impact this book. However, even on the official author's website it's not listed between books 3 and 4. It's listed after the final book, among other "related works".

And the author doesn't really do a good job of recapping what happened, it's just an abrupt jump, and now Hope/Astra's angsting over a new crush that started during that book, freaking out over a danger to one of her friends that's due to events in that book, and a number of other sudden changes.

And these changes continue to casually come up over the course of the entire book, so that put a serious damper on my enjoyment of it.

Beyond that, the premise/setting was unique and somewhat …