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World In My Claws

by Rindis on May 15, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Part two of Mating Flight picks up slightly after the first book ended. Trest was conquered at the end of the previous book, and there’s plenty of problems as they don’t realize it yet.

Related problems are actually something of the central pillar of book two, even though its peripheral to the central conflicts of it. It’s a neat trick, and done well here.

This book handles the bulk of the twelve-year period of the flight, and the time scale stretches out as there is less immediate excitement and more long-term projects take over. This also happens as the various dragons settle down with a better idea of who they are and how they want to relate to other people.

And this very unconventional mating flight comes up with unconventional answers. It is something of a celebration of found families, among other things.

The mating flight itself provides a nice mechanism for coming full circle, as it comes to an end, and the members of the flight arrange their official positions as adults in draconic society. This helps round out the novel in a very satisfying way, and hold things together for the conclusion. Overall, this is a great duology to get.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
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Radetzky’s Marches

by Rindis on May 5, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Despite the title, this isn’t focused on Radetzky. (But it is a great take off of Johann Strauss’ celebration of the campaign.)

At the start of 1848, revolution swept through Paris—again. And this time, much of the rest of Europe caught revolutionary fever as well. In particular, much of northern Italy went into a ferment that became the First War for Independence, and this book is focused on the military aspects of this.

It really helps if you have some grounding in the period and the Austrian army. There is a small glossary in the back that explains, for instance, that “FML” is “Feldmarshall-Lieutenant”, or Lieutenant General, but in the text it’s never explained, while the abbreviation shows up many times there, and again, the glossary is buried in the back (and there’s a lot for it to be buried beneath). Thankfully, I’ve read enough Napoleonic materials to know this already.

The main part of the book looks as if it should be a detailed, but readable, history of the campaigns of 1848 and 1849, but that’s not really the purpose. There are a decent number of maps, but not enough for some detailed movements over terrain thoroughly unfamiliar to most English-speaking readers. But, this is really a detailed analysis of the campaigns. Not only do we get detailed descriptions of many of the battles and skirmishes (quoting eyewitness accounts where possible), but constant referrals to losses as recorded in unit histories and returns.

So, this is actually a very detailed resource, and if someone wanted to, say, design a wargame on the subject, this would be an excellent one-stop starting point for a design. Added to this detail-oriented history is the fact that there are twenty-one appendixes, mostly giving orders of battle and numbers of troops of various armies at various points.

As a readable history of the First Italian War of Independence, it is lackluster. The writing is not up to helping you juggle all the details that get thrown at you. As an advanced study of a subject already somewhat familiar, I imagine it would do much better. But a more casual reader needs to at least be cautious.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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The Long Pursuit

by Rindis on May 1, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Stephen Douglas was a very able speaker and politician on what turned out to be the losing side of history, is mostly remembered for being Abraham Lincoln’s foil (or more properly, the other way around). Enough so, that basic history textbooks will go into the Lincoln-Douglas debates, even though they don’t have time to mention much else about him.

This book goes all in on this, tracing both careers from their initial arrival in Illinois, to Douglas’ death in 1861.

It’s a good idea, and you certainly learn a lot, but their careers are not quite as tightly coupled as needed to make it the best format.

So, it’s a pair of parallel biographies at the general history level. There’s not a bunch of detailed analysis of their lives and speeches, but all the basics are there. Morris seems fairly evenhanded in his treatment, though he shows Lincoln coming off far worse in the main Lincoln-Douglas debates than you generally hear in less detailed books. Certainly, Lincoln is shown with many of his problems here, though I think some more attention to the change in tone of Lincoln’s politics going into the 1850s would have been very useful.

Of course, part of the lack of digging into detail is that everything leading up to the Kansas-Nebraska Act is about a third of the book, while the remaining two thirds concentrates on the fallout over the next six years. This keeps it from being the extensive background book you might expect, and undermines the “thirty year struggle” idea given in the subtitle.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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California Missions

by Rindis on April 27, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

I picked this book up mostly for the reproductions of a series of sketches of the California Missions. In 1856 they were already largely abandoned, and would soon decay into a ruined state (and by the text, this had already stared), but it’s a great resource so show what they had been like.

These were all done by Henry Miller, who did them as part of his journal of a trip from San Francisco to San Diego. He had arrived in California in 1850 (from Germany, by way of New York), and started a butchery business, and ended up as a powerful cattle rancher, eventually controlling some 22,000 square miles of land.

At this point, his fortunes are not so grand, and he made his solitary way down the state with a single mule. According to Belleorphon Books’ introduction, the text has been cut down (generally keeping just the part dealing with his travels), and there were previous editions of the sketches produced in very rare editions, so this is now the main accessible account of his journey.

The text itself is interesting, especially for someone that knows the names of places that would not grow up into large urban centers for quite a while yet. The illos are the main point though, and are great reference. It’s not produced to be a big expensive volume, and is a great value for what it is.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Mating Flight

by Rindis on April 23, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Okay, with the title and subtitle, my original thought that this would be a look at draconic culture where power politics flows around and through the aspects of mating, and you know, not getting killed in the world.

I was a bit off. The titular mating flight is supposed to be more about picking a good mate, and hopefully love will come later. But it’s not supposed to all power and practicality either. There’s twelve years for the dragons to figure out where their lives are going. Since there’s always more males than females, a flight is normally three females and six males who have recently hit sexual maturity, and they go off away from parents to find who the females will choose, and have a bit of debauchery along the way, as fertilizing eggs is actually an involved process. So… nine very large and powerful adolescents on spring break for twelve years.

And in this case, nothing typical happens

There’s a large multiverse of worlds out there, some of which are ruled by dragons, some of which they haven’t gotten to. And nowhere, apparently, has been able to stand up to dragons who decide they want a place. The plan is to go to Hove, a “basic torroid” world (i.e., in the interior of a donut-shaped space), hang out for a duo-decade to figure things out, but not actually take over or anything inconvenient like that. That doesn’t go well.

Our viewpoint character is Jyothky, who hits sexual maturity a bit late at the start of the book, setting all this in motion, and keeps a diary of what’s going on. She is in a technical sense, disabled; she has no sense of touch. There are spells that let her monitor if anything has happened to her body, but it’s not the same thing. This also means that while she’s on a mating flight, she’s basically ace, there’s no feedback from the act, no endorphins, or any other positive feedback from the act, just the general sense/duty of wanting to have kids at some point.

By the end of the book, we’ve seen just how misfit all the dragons are even as they cause mayhem for the poor world that has ended up playing host to them, and trouble spreads in their wake over the course of a mere hundred days.

This is really just part one of two, so be ready to dive right into the second book if you read this. It is quite enjoyable, with Jyothky being a great sympathetic narrator, even with the amount of devastation that happens in Hove as it was struggling with it’s own version uni-polar politics.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
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