Monday, November 23, 2009

Owlsight, by Mercedes Lackey

  


Read
In small chunks as breaks between homework.

Bottom Line
As with Owlflight, not her best work.  Worth reading if you've gotten through Owlflight and are curious to find out what happened to Darian.


Full Review
This books picks up about four years after Owlflight ends.  Darian has spend the intervening years with the Hawkbrothers, learning a bit more about controlling his mage gift and growing from a constantly whining teenager into an only sometimes whining adult.  Meanwhile, as Darian's been traipsing about the countryside, Keisha has stepped into the role of village healer.  She's got the healing gift, but without training she's in danger of going nuts.

The main problem with this book is that it doesn't get going until about two-thirds of the way through.  That's right.  Most of this book is exposition - interesting exposition, to be sure, but nothing really happens until the same barbarian tribes that trashed the village the first time around are spotted coming back.  Once Darian, Keisha, and the Hawkbrothers meet the barbarians, the story really starts to pick up.  Unfortunately, all the action takes place in a few chapters at the end of the book.

At the end of the day, I find myself hoping that the last book in the trilogy is going to focus in on the interaction between these two different cultures.  Otherwise, I'm afraid I may be in for another disappointment.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Reach of a Chef: Beyond the Kitchen, by Michael Ruhlman

   

Read
This one took me a few weeks to get through.  It's broken into multiple, easily digestible chunks, but for some reason I found myself waiting several days in between readings.

Bottom Line
A good read for anyone interested in the world of the kitchen.

Full Review
I picked this up because Kitchen Confidential was checked out and the copy on the front flap of the jacket looked interesting.  Ruhlman is a professional food writer who's been to culinary school (the CIA, or Culinary Institute of America) and spends a great deal of time hobnobbing with some of the country's most famous celebrity chefs.  There are a few points in the book where he belabors this point a little (do I really want or need to know about the night he spend drinking with Anthony Bourdain?), but on the whole he uses these connections to research and write what is really a great overview of where the chefs of America are today.

The book is a kind of follow up to his previous works; his goal is to see how the world of the professional chef had expanded since he started writing in the mid '90s.  The book jumps a bit, first giving in depth character profiles of figures the author finds interesting, from the current head of the CIA to a chef in Chicago doing wild experiments with food to a chef in Maine serving more traditional fare straight from her garden.  These profiles are interesting, giving the reader a cross section of what the work of a chef is really like, without any of the glamour or pizzaz that the Food Network specializes in.

Then he gets to the marketing stuff, the way a chef expands his reach.  If you're not a chef interested in producing and marketing a brand, you can skim through this section.  I did.  I also found this to be the most disturbing part of the book, as it accentuates the current state of affairs in the culinary world, that is to say, the divorce of the chef and the kitchen.  Although Ruhlman doesn't lay it out as clearly as he could, the bottom line is obvious: chefs don't make money.  There's a great bit where he talks about profit margins in the restaurant industry, which are about as slim as you can get and still have a viable business.  This is what drives chefs to expand - restaurants in New York, Vegas, Napa - not to mention the sauces, spices, kitchen knives, and dinnerware.

While I found this a bit slow to read - somewhat dense and ponderous at times - it was well worth the time invested.

Monday, November 16, 2009

B is for Burglar, by Sue Grafton


  


Read
Mostly in one night. 

Bottom Line
Light.  Fun.  Good for airplanes and waiting rooms.

Full Review
I started A is for Alibi intending to read through the series.  I moved on to T is for Trespass (out of order, I know, but it was the next one I came across) and have now finished B is for Burglar.  While I certainly wouldn't go out of my way to avoid Grafton's alphabet series, I don't think I'll be seeking them out, either.


She writes your basic mystery novel, a whodunnit filled with red herrings, plot twists and dead bodies.  The book is narrated by Kinsey Millhone, a 30-something PI whose failures as a police officer and an insurance investigator have led her to open shop on her own.  As far as fictional PIs go, she's amusing, narrating the story in a slightly sarcastic tone.  It's good that these books are easy to read, because tone is pretty much all that keeps the novel going until the denouement in the final pages.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Anvil of Stars, by Greg Bear

  
     

Read
On BART, between school and home and back again.

Bottom Line
Hard core sci-fi at its best.  Read it.

Full Review
The brilliance of good sci-fi, of course, is that despite a setting in a galaxy far, far away it manages to be completely and utterly relevant to the here and now, often in a way that most contemporary novels are not.  This one is no exception.  Anvil is in one sense an adventure story - the last citizens of a destroyed earth on a quest to hunt down their planet's killers.  In another sense it is a story about the threads that hold society together, the ways in which we relate to each other, and the ultimately fragility of all human institutions.

The children of the ship have been given a single mission: to enact the Law, which requires that all civilizations which make self aware, planet killing machines be destroyed.  Children, to anyone familiar with Orson Scott Card's Ender series, will conjure up images of ten year olds in space suits.  Bear's children are older, in their early twenties, but no less childlike and unaware than Card's.  This, then, presents one of the central tensions in the novel: whether these children, with such a small experience of actually living, will be the ones to decide the fate of another alien race.

I suspect that I have done this rather backwards in reading Anvil of Stars before Forge of God, which lays out the story of the destruction of the earth and the salvation of humankind by an advanced civilization known as the Benefactors.  On the other hand, there was nothing missing in Anvil, no references to the past work that obscured the text or dropped me from my journey thousands of light years from the earth back into my seat at the BART station.

A brief note on post modernism.  In most situations, I wholeheartedly agree with whomever coined the phrase "No mo' po' mo'."  Quite often, authors use this as a crutch, frantically borrowing ideas and threads and even whole scenes from others in an attempt to disguise their complete inability to spin a world on their own.  Not so in this case.  Bear takes the best of the post-modernist movement - the ability to take allusion and turn it into something else.  The children of the ship become "Wendys" and "Lost Boys", their leader is the "Pan" and the second in command is the "Christopher Robin."  These fragments represent the children's grasping at the now lost culture of earth much in the way the novelist grasps for fragments of meaning in this age of instant and universal culture.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Arrows Fall, by Mercedes Lackey

  


Read
Half-Price.  A late Monday and Tuesday combo kept me in the store until they kicked me out at close.

Bottom Line
Enjoyable, if not intellectually stimulating.

Full Review
This wraps up Talia's adventures, neatly tying up all the loose ends left dangling by the previous two books.  The proverbial gun placed on the table in the first act was duly fired, lingering suspicions were resolved, and the star-crossed lovers finally found happiness in each other's arms.

The YA label, which you will remember I had my doubts about in the first Arrows book, has been removed due to a significant escalation in violence.  I've also skipped a book - look for the middle in the series whenever Half Price gets it back on the shelf.


I won't rehash the previous Arrows review.  Suffice it to say, that Lackey at her earliest gives a frolicking read.