"Today the sun has set on airships and ... it is feared that it has set forever."
Buddy Levy's arctic expedition books continue to not disappoint. I've read both Labyrinth of Ice and Empire of Ice and Stone, and rated both of those an enthusiastic 5 stars. This one, with its inclusion of the history of airship travel and the arctic, was no different, to no surprise of mine. There's just something incredibly compelling about these explorers who endure so much in the name of planting a flag.
This book's three parts tell the reader about a different airship attempt in each part. We first are introduced to Walter Wellman and the Chicago Record-Herald Polar Expedition, whose struggles to get airborne set the stage for what comes after. The second part brings in Roald Amundsen (a familiar name for anyone who's read about polar expeditions in the past) and his journey on the Norge, where both him and Umberto Nobile become rivals and enemies at the conclusion. Finally, part three involves the Italia, Nobile's attempt to cross the north pole, funded by Italy and Mussolini, that ends rather poorly. It turns out quite a lot can go wrong with giant bags of gas in a cold environment.
As usual, each part is well researched and well written, with footnotes included, as well as an extensive bibilography at the end. I evidently really need to read Amundsen's biography The Last Viking, because his inclusion (history spoilers(?) here) and conclusion was a huge surprise for me. I wasn't a huge fan of Nobile as a historical figure, but I sort of felt bad for the guy on his return.
Just a fun, informative, tense book all around. The only reason it took me so long to make it through this one is because life happened and I didn't get much time to read until now. I binged the last 50% in two days, it was that good.
"Today the sun has set on airships and ... it is feared that it has set forever."
Buddy Levy's arctic expedition books continue to not disappoint. I've read both Labyrinth of Ice and Empire of Ice and Stone, and rated both of those an enthusiastic 5 stars. This one, with its inclusion of the history of airship travel and the arctic, was no different, to no surprise of mine. There's just something incredibly compelling about these explorers who endure so much in the name of planting a flag.
This book's three parts tell the reader about a different airship attempt in each part. We first are introduced to Walter Wellman and the Chicago Record-Herald Polar Expedition, whose struggles to get airborne set the stage for what comes after. The second part brings in Roald Amundsen (a familiar name for anyone who's read about polar expeditions in the past) and his journey on the Norge, where both him and Umberto Nobile become rivals and enemies at the conclusion. Finally, part three involves the Italia, Nobile's attempt to cross the north pole, funded by Italy and Mussolini, that ends rather poorly. It turns out quite a lot can go wrong with giant bags of gas in a cold environment.
As usual, each part is well researched and well written, with footnotes included, as well as an extensive bibilography at the end. I evidently really need to read Amundsen's biography The Last Viking, because his inclusion (history spoilers(?) here) and conclusion was a huge surprise for me. I wasn't a huge fan of Nobile as a historical figure, but I sort of felt bad for the guy on his return.
Just a fun, informative, tense book all around. The only reason it took me so long to make it through this one is because life happened and I didn't get much time to read until now. I binged the last 50% in two days, it was that good.
Added to listBooks About Bookswith 13 books.
Added to listMemoir Biographywith 47 books.
Added to listAudiobooks Readwith 142 books.
I read Shaun Bythell's The Diary of a Bookseller last year, and found a lot to identify with, being that I work with books as well (as a lender in a library, not a seller). I found his irreverent humor at the crazy situations he ended up in personally identifiable, in that I also have to keep a straight face and a smile whilst fielding personally (or listening to my staff field) questions of all stripes from patrons. One can be ready and willing to help in any manner while also internally wondering how we got to this point, I think.
I found more of that irreverent humor here in this book as well, which follows Oliver as an apprentice bookseller at Sotheran's in London from his first steps into the store, through his career there, and his evolution out the other side at his realization that at some point he was no longer an apprentice. Throughout his time at Sotheran's, he tells us (with some exaggeration rooted in truth) about the bookish atmosphere that at any moment might turn on its inhabitants and cave in on itself, the people who come through their doors looking to buy or looking to look or looking to sing a song or looking to....smell, I guess, the myriad ways people try and get booksellers to buy their moldy books found in a basement/shed/attic somewhere, and many other amusing topics besides. I think my favorite topic was the recurrence of the cryptids throughout the book, leaving me with more questions than answers (as I'm sure the author thinks the same thing).
All in all a fun, short book to keep me just barely on track of my Goodreads goal for the year. I really do love reading these books about people in the book trade.
I read Shaun Bythell's The Diary of a Bookseller last year, and found a lot to identify with, being that I work with books as well (as a lender in a library, not a seller). I found his irreverent humor at the crazy situations he ended up in personally identifiable, in that I also have to keep a straight face and a smile whilst fielding personally (or listening to my staff field) questions of all stripes from patrons. One can be ready and willing to help in any manner while also internally wondering how we got to this point, I think.
I found more of that irreverent humor here in this book as well, which follows Oliver as an apprentice bookseller at Sotheran's in London from his first steps into the store, through his career there, and his evolution out the other side at his realization that at some point he was no longer an apprentice. Throughout his time at Sotheran's, he tells us (with some exaggeration rooted in truth) about the bookish atmosphere that at any moment might turn on its inhabitants and cave in on itself, the people who come through their doors looking to buy or looking to look or looking to sing a song or looking to....smell, I guess, the myriad ways people try and get booksellers to buy their moldy books found in a basement/shed/attic somewhere, and many other amusing topics besides. I think my favorite topic was the recurrence of the cryptids throughout the book, leaving me with more questions than answers (as I'm sure the author thinks the same thing).
All in all a fun, short book to keep me just barely on track of my Goodreads goal for the year. I really do love reading these books about people in the book trade.
This book follows Lin Chong, a once-arms instructor for the Emperor, who gets branded a criminal based solely on the untrue word of a government official. She falls in with a group of bandits who have a code of justice to protect those less fortunate, and though they do many good deeds, they're all still criminals, traitors, and cutthroats, so Lin Chong struggles daily with reconciling her old life with her new one. This book also (in the middle stretch, at least) follows Lin Chong's friend li Junyi, who gets voluntold by the Empire to work on harnessing a weapon--manufactured Gods' Teeth. Chapters are dedicated to her viewpoint as she works through creating a small team to meet the demands, researching and testing the weapon, and finding out her best friend is working for the other side.
I very badly wanted to like this book, especially since it starts out really strong in my opinion, but the middle chunk of the book felt too oddly paced, and focused too much on Ii Junyi. The ending was strong, but I mentally struggled to keep my attention in the middle stretch of the book. I also feel like the cast of characters was entirely too large, and while Lu Da's character was necessary to be Lin Chong's other half (so to speak), I personally didn't really care for her personality.
The writing was really strong though, I just had a hard time with the actual story being told.
This book follows Lin Chong, a once-arms instructor for the Emperor, who gets branded a criminal based solely on the untrue word of a government official. She falls in with a group of bandits who have a code of justice to protect those less fortunate, and though they do many good deeds, they're all still criminals, traitors, and cutthroats, so Lin Chong struggles daily with reconciling her old life with her new one. This book also (in the middle stretch, at least) follows Lin Chong's friend li Junyi, who gets voluntold by the Empire to work on harnessing a weapon--manufactured Gods' Teeth. Chapters are dedicated to her viewpoint as she works through creating a small team to meet the demands, researching and testing the weapon, and finding out her best friend is working for the other side.
I very badly wanted to like this book, especially since it starts out really strong in my opinion, but the middle chunk of the book felt too oddly paced, and focused too much on Ii Junyi. The ending was strong, but I mentally struggled to keep my attention in the middle stretch of the book. I also feel like the cast of characters was entirely too large, and while Lu Da's character was necessary to be Lin Chong's other half (so to speak), I personally didn't really care for her personality.
The writing was really strong though, I just had a hard time with the actual story being told.
Added to listRecommended By Friendswith 24 books.
"Lucky for us they don’t know we are that stupid."
Oooooof this was a rough book to read.
This one takes place between movies 5 (Empire Strikes Back) and 6 (Return of the Jedi), and covers Luke, Leia, & co. on a mission to retrieve Han who is at this point in the story frozen in carbonite but not yet turned over to Jabba. Prince Xizor features heavily in the story in this one, and was one of the reasons my husband said I should read it. Xizor and Vadar are butting heads behind the scenes, and in an attempt to out-alpha each other, Vadar is trying to capture Luke alive while Xizor is trying to kill him first.
The writing is clunky in this one, especially during action scenes where the author starts ending his lines in em dashes rather than punctuation, switching to another POV within the same fight, ending that line with an em dash, switching again, and on and on until the author finally lets the sentence (scene?) end. It made things a bit hard to follow and seemed unnecessary. The author also had a tendency to have multiple points of view in each chapter, some only a paragraph or two long, which was kinda grating. Finally, the whole Xizor/Leia section was a whole lot of ick.
Not my favorite of the OG legacy books.
"Lucky for us they don’t know we are that stupid."
Oooooof this was a rough book to read.
This one takes place between movies 5 (Empire Strikes Back) and 6 (Return of the Jedi), and covers Luke, Leia, & co. on a mission to retrieve Han who is at this point in the story frozen in carbonite but not yet turned over to Jabba. Prince Xizor features heavily in the story in this one, and was one of the reasons my husband said I should read it. Xizor and Vadar are butting heads behind the scenes, and in an attempt to out-alpha each other, Vadar is trying to capture Luke alive while Xizor is trying to kill him first.
The writing is clunky in this one, especially during action scenes where the author starts ending his lines in em dashes rather than punctuation, switching to another POV within the same fight, ending that line with an em dash, switching again, and on and on until the author finally lets the sentence (scene?) end. It made things a bit hard to follow and seemed unnecessary. The author also had a tendency to have multiple points of view in each chapter, some only a paragraph or two long, which was kinda grating. Finally, the whole Xizor/Leia section was a whole lot of ick.
Not my favorite of the OG legacy books.
Added to listMysterywith 35 books.
Added to listAudiobooks Readwith 141 books.
Added to listSci Fiwith 61 books.
I'm starting to really like these ship-in-a-bottle mysteries that Turton pops out. I really enjoyed The Devil and the Dark Water (aside from some thematic quibbles near the end of the book), and this was (kind of) more of the same, just with an island instead of a ship. Island-in-a-bottle just doesn't sound as good though.
We have a small colony of people, marooned on an island and unable to leave due to a mysterious fog that's swept the world and killed everyone else on it. This island was the last refuge for scientists, who constructed a barrier that managed to keep the fog at bay and the people safe, but the lab that housed most of their technology and kept most of the people asleep in suspended animation had to be sealed up. Time passed. Survivors rebuilt their society as best they could. The three surviving scientists, enhanced to live long lives, shepherd their small colony of 122 villagers through their lives and their little society coexists together in a fragile balance of just enough villagers for just enough food. There's enough little oddities told about this village to keep you reading and make you wonder at what's actually beneath this little idyllic existence -- and then one of the scientists, beloved and revered, turns up dead. Suddenly there's a clock ticking where the murder must be solved before everyone is killed.
I really mostly enjoyed this book! There's enough strange things going on that's hinted at or glossed over by the POV characters as being something that just is to keep me wondering what actually was going on here. In fact, if the whole book was told with this as the framework, I'd probably be looking at a 5-star review here. My hangup is when things turn into murder investigation mode, because everything starts feeling a bit disconnected and frantic. The "detective" (in quotes, because she's not actually a detective with training) seems like she bounces from random location to random location in rapid succession with no real idea what she's doing. (ending spoilers here) Despite this, she manages to stumble on enough of the clues to lead her to a conclusion that was far-fetched at best. I certainly had a hard time following her train of thought, despite already arriving at the 'these people aren't people' conclusion before we got there. It feels like a book that begs for a re-read to really understand the ending.
Still, really interesting thoughts here, spun in a way that kept me reading to see how things wound up. I can't say I necessarily agree with the motive and the ending, but the journey was fun enough for me.
I'm starting to really like these ship-in-a-bottle mysteries that Turton pops out. I really enjoyed The Devil and the Dark Water (aside from some thematic quibbles near the end of the book), and this was (kind of) more of the same, just with an island instead of a ship. Island-in-a-bottle just doesn't sound as good though.
We have a small colony of people, marooned on an island and unable to leave due to a mysterious fog that's swept the world and killed everyone else on it. This island was the last refuge for scientists, who constructed a barrier that managed to keep the fog at bay and the people safe, but the lab that housed most of their technology and kept most of the people asleep in suspended animation had to be sealed up. Time passed. Survivors rebuilt their society as best they could. The three surviving scientists, enhanced to live long lives, shepherd their small colony of 122 villagers through their lives and their little society coexists together in a fragile balance of just enough villagers for just enough food. There's enough little oddities told about this village to keep you reading and make you wonder at what's actually beneath this little idyllic existence -- and then one of the scientists, beloved and revered, turns up dead. Suddenly there's a clock ticking where the murder must be solved before everyone is killed.
I really mostly enjoyed this book! There's enough strange things going on that's hinted at or glossed over by the POV characters as being something that just is to keep me wondering what actually was going on here. In fact, if the whole book was told with this as the framework, I'd probably be looking at a 5-star review here. My hangup is when things turn into murder investigation mode, because everything starts feeling a bit disconnected and frantic. The "detective" (in quotes, because she's not actually a detective with training) seems like she bounces from random location to random location in rapid succession with no real idea what she's doing. (ending spoilers here) Despite this, she manages to stumble on enough of the clues to lead her to a conclusion that was far-fetched at best. I certainly had a hard time following her train of thought, despite already arriving at the 'these people aren't people' conclusion before we got there. It feels like a book that begs for a re-read to really understand the ending.
Still, really interesting thoughts here, spun in a way that kept me reading to see how things wound up. I can't say I necessarily agree with the motive and the ending, but the journey was fun enough for me.