Erabiltzailearen profila

Eric Wagoner 📚

eric@books.kestrelsnest.social

duela 7 hilabete, 3 aste(e)an batu zen

Eclectic and (sometimes aspirationally) avid reader. Currently on a sci-fi kick. Tolkien is my first literary love.

I'm a software developer and whimsical costume maker in Athens, GA. he/him

Esteka hau laster-leiho batean zabalduko da

Eric Wagoner 📚(r)en liburuak

Ikusi liburu guztiak

Erabiltzailearen aktibitatea

Legends & Lattes (Paperback, 2022, Tor Books) 5 izar

Worn out after decades of packing steel and raising hell, Viv the orc barbarian cashes …

Low Stakes Sword & Sorcery? Yes, Please

5 izar

The tagline is "A Novel of High Fantasy and Low Stakes" and then sneakily spends the entire novel showing that when you focus on individuals (including yourself) the little things really do matter.

This was just a fun read. I loved all the main characters, the bits of backstory, the interactions, the bending of coffeehouse stereotypes, and the bits of mystery here and there that never get resolved.

I instantly pre-ordered the next book, and hope this setting spawns many more books. I think this would many an excellent multi-author world, each telling low stakes stories, and would love to see that happen.

Antimatter Blues (2023, St. Martin's Press) 4 izar

Edward Ashton's Antimatter Blues is the thrilling follow up to Mickey7 in which an expendable …

Well-done sequel for Mickey7

4 izar

This sequel could easily have gone sideways -- the first book came close to overstaying its welcome and more of the same would not have been welcome.

So, where the first one focused on Mickey finding his place in the world, the second was more about the world with Mickey in it. Mickey is still the main character, but we see more of the world and personalities around him. We learn a great deal more about the greater human society that created expendables, we learn more about the history of galactic colonization, and we learn bits about times humanity found other sentient life. None of this is dry world-building, as it's fed to us in bits as it relates directly to the events at hand.

I enjoyed reading this as much as I did the first, and it was in many ways more satisfying. There is still plenty of story …

Rosebud (Paperback, 2022, Tordotcom) 4 izar

A multilayered, locked-room science fiction novella from Paul Cornell in which five digital beings unravel …

A Short, Weird, Slow Read I'll Definitely Read Again

4 izar

"The crew of the Rosebud are, currently, and by force of law, a balloon, a goth with a swagger stick, some sort of science aristocrat possibly, a ball of hands, and a swarm of insects."

This sentence got me to add this novella to my to-read pile. Nothing in the story is less weird than that, so buckle up!

There's a lot packed into this little story. Tiny spaceships, time travel, parallel universes, corporate overreach, and a fierce defense of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness -- even if the person pursuing their happiness happens to be trans.

It was a slow read for me, partly because it took my brain a while to process all the weirdness, and partly because I wanted to savor it. I've not read anything quite like it before, and I'm going to hold onto it and read it again. Maybe even soon.

If …

(e)k David Lee Summers(r)en Owl Dance kritika egin du

Owl Dance (Paperback, 2021, Hadrosaur Press) 4 izar

Owl Dance is a Weird Western steampunk novel. The year is 1876. Sheriff Ramon Morales …

A Fun Pulpy Romp

4 izar

I had a hard time rating this one. It's at its heart a pulp western, and I don't have much experience in that genre. The writing style was simple (lots of short declarative sentences) and in the third person, and that contrasts greatly with the more complex first person sci-fi I've read a lot of lately. It's probably not something I would have picked up, except for two things...

One, it's got a lot of steampunky alt-history elements to it. It's set in the late 1800s in the US Southwest (mostly), and it's nice to see steampunk stories that aren't set in Victorian England. Apart from an alien intelligence with mind control, it's a plausible alt-history. The alien influence affects why this history diverges from ours, but it does it through affecting people's motivations, not through introducing future tech. I liked that idea.

Second, it's largely set in a very …

Mickey7 (Hardcover, 2022, St. Martin's Press) 4 izar

Good Enough I Preordered the Sequel

4 izar

I figured going in I'd either love or hate this. The notion of being a disposable person with cloned versions of yourself waiting in tanks is familiar enough to me (such as the "troubleshooters", the player characters in the RPG Paranoia) that I've seen the possibilities for how surprisingly dull it can get.

Mickey7 did not fall into those traps. Through cleverly timed breaks for exposition and world building, mixed with just the right amount of gallows humor, I was never caught wishing the story would just move on already or felt the need to take breaks to escape the darkness.

In an interesting science fiction setting of humans trying to establish a beachhead colony on an inhospitable world, Mickey7 shows us how we can process trauma, how our past selves shape but do not define who we presently are. I see a movie is being made from it, and …

(e)k Adrian Tchaikovsky(r)en Elder Race kritika egin du

Elder Race (EBook, 2021, Tom Doherty Associates) 5 izar

Lynesse is the lowly Fourth Daughter of the queen, and always getting in the way. …

Started with an interesting premise, ended deeply satisfying

5 izar

She is a fourth daughter of royalty with no hope of advancement in station, determined to invoke the promise of aid given to her ancestor generations ago by a powerful wizard when her mother refuses to engage a demon threatening the kingdom.

He is a long-lived exo-socialogist, sent to observe these people but not interfere. He broke that directive once before, many years ago, and now another of them has shown up at his outpost door...

I've never seen a story play with Clarke's Third Law ("Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.") like this before. Each chapter alternates POV between the two main characters, so it is half science fiction and half fantasy. Sometimes the same events are told both ways. The story is interesting on its own, but told this way it also becomes a lesson on empathy and understanding.

It surprisingly also became a story about …

Nova Incident (2022, Watkins Media Limited) 5 izar

The best of the bunch

5 izar

If there’s better Space Cloak and Dagger, I haven’t found it.

@dmoren@mastodon.social has assembled his cast of compelling characters (and some new ones) and brought them back to the home world for what could have been a been a grande finale were it not for a cliffhanging ending that tied everything up and still kicks off what is hopefully more story to come.

This book is the best of an already stellar bunch, weaving together old fashioned dead drop spy craft with outer space adventure. I’m excited to see what the future brings, even as I’m sad to have run out of story to read now.

Aleph Extraction (2020, Watkins Media Limited) 5 izar

The fastest I've read a book this size in years!

5 izar

Competing teams of spies on a luxury interstellar cruise ship owned by a mob boss, all trying to possess what might be the first discovered alien artifact. Action, intrigue, believable science fiction elements, and characters I care about. I'm already sad I have only one more book to read in this series!

The Caledonian Gambit (Paperback, 2017, Talos Press/Skyhorse Publishing) 4 izar

The galaxy is mired in a cold war between two superpowers, the Illyrican Empire and …

Review of 'The Caledonian Gambit' on 'Goodreads'

4 izar

For a first book by Dan, I can’t find any faults. Maybe, if anything, some of the conversation and setting descriptions are a bit cheesy but not distractingly so. The characters are literal world building are compelling and I’m diving right into the next one. I’m only giving this one four stars to give me room for five stars for the rest of the series.