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Other blogs:

RSS Inside GMT

  • Foxes and Lions (Part 3): Military Matters, Captains, and Condottieri June 12, 2026

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  • Playing at the World 2E V2 Arrives May 5, 2025

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RSS A Room Without a LOS

  • [Crossing the Moro CG] T=0902 -- Rough start July 18, 2015
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RSS The Collaborative Gamer

  • Thoughts on a Town Adventures System January 18, 2022

RSS Don’t Forget Your Boots

  • GURPS Supers Newport Academy #6: “Old Friends, New Again” June 7, 2026

RSS Orbs and Balrogs

  • Bretwalda - Daggers of Oxenaforda pt.4 - Fallen King May 27, 2017

The Wars of the Roses: Graham Turner

by Rindis on February 26, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

This book is two things in one.

First, it is an art book showcasing Graham Turner’s art on the Wars of the Roses.

Second, it is a light history of those wars, illustrated with Turner’s paintings, and a number of photos of artifacts and locations that have survived.

The shortcomings are that the book is physically big enough and heavy enough, that just reading it can be painful to arrange. Also, most of the photos are a bit small to make things out.

This is a shame because the history is good enough to be worth a read, starting with an overview of the end of the Hundred Years War, and a good section on the rise of factions in the English court, which lead to small armed fights between the nobility (like Heworth Moor) even before First St Albans. The main course of the wars is well presented, which is a proverbial problem with the subject.

And Graham Turner’s art is indeed well worth the expansive presentation. I especially appreciate the foreword where he talks about how he got into the subject, and a lot of little discussions on the details of various pieces. There’s also a nice half page set aside discussing the painting of Richard III he was working on when his body was found in 2012.

There’s a Kindle version of the book as well, but considering the size of most electronic devices, I’d probably stick to the physical book despite the inconvenience, because the real star is the art, and it deserves a larger presentation.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Martyr

by Rindis on February 18, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

So, the New Frontiers series settles down into a series at this point.

There’s some rough patches. It’s still a shorter novel, and feels more like an expanded episode than a novel. Part of that… I think is that it feels like some sub-plots are there because an hour-long TNG episode has subplots, and not because the story organically generated them.

Now, the subplots do all actually flow into the main story, but it does feel like we have a completely unneeded sex-comedy C plot for most of the novel.

With Thallon gone, so is the Thallonian Empire, but word is just getting out, and the inevitable rumors start making what really happened to USS Excalibur in book four seem tame. First crisis is a world that’s been fighting a nasty internal war for literal ages, held back recently by the Thallonians. Along with the lid no longer being kept on the planet, Calhoun and Excalibur have been named as the coming of a prophesy.

This is more than a big enough headache to be going on with, especially with Calhoun taking a very unorthodox method of navigating these troubled waters. Then we get a second problem intruding on the first, and giving us the Recommended Book Allowance of starship combat. Personally, this part also feels a bit tacked on, despite proper development, though its obvious that it’s also setting up a continuing problem for the series.

Overall, it’s good, but not great. I do feel like some of the problem is the transition from the big story in four parts to more self-contained books in the 300-page region. Also, the characters need some work. Selar is generally good, and I like David’s portrayal of Shelby, but it’s hard for me to get a proper read on Calhoun, and the rest feel a bit cardboard yet.

└ Tags: books, reading, review, science fiction, Star Trek
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The Albegensian Crusade

by Rindis on February 10, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Written about two decades before starting his epic five-volume history of the Hundred Years War, Sumption’s history of the fall of southern France follows along the same general lines.

In this case, the second chapter goes into a general long-term history of dualist theology. Like so many religious theories, it has a start in the Middle East, echoes elsewhere, and raised questions for Christianity. There’s no one definitive theory, but it does tend to resolve around the idea of the material and the spiritual being two separate spheres, with only the latter being the creation of God. These ideas slowly spread west (especially after having been encountered in the Crusades), with communities growing up in northern Europe. Suppression and persecution followed, with many people fleeing to more hospitable lands, largely southern France.

The third chapter goes on talk about the Cathar Church as it existed there (from what little can be pieced together). From there, the book pretty much entirely drops down to the affairs of men, and the Languedoc of the first chapter. This is presented as a rich area, yet without real central authority. The Viking raids and other troubles of the past few centuries had largely bypassed the area. While northern Europe had, for the day, fairly centralized states forged in military necessity, southern France invested little real power in the higher rungs of what was really just the trappings of a feudal system.

Raymond V of Toulouse spent nearly half a century fighting the centrifugal actions of his domain, but to little avail. His son Raymond VI takes over in 1194 with ongoing crises in a slow boil. The Catholic Church, and especially Pope Innocent III who was concerned with matters there. Legates were sent to deal with the problem, but were of course viewed with suspicion by most of the inhabitants of the region, and one was killed at the start of 1208.

Just who decided to kill Pierre de Castlenau, how much official sanction, and from who, is impossible to say. But, the death set in motion a crusade aimed at stamping out heresy in the region. Since there was little help to be had on hand, an army was assembled at Lyon and swept, well, much before them. The immediate aftermath of the first campaign’s success was to appoint someone to administer the lands seized from heretics, and Simon de Montfort (father of the—in English history—more famous leader in the Second Barons’ War) steps in. As might be expected of the Montfort family, his concerns are military, secular, and involve maintaining and extending his power.

Since Raymond VI is not the technical target of the crusade, but much of his lands and rights are, there are endless petitions to the Pope about what is going on, and a slow but steady stream of legates are sent to oversee the situation, and try to balance the competing claims, which often fall afoul of Arnaud Amalric, who is bitterly opposed to Raymond VI. Meanwhile, more heretical areas fall to the crusade, until a series of revolts puts everything into doubt in 1216. Part of this is from changes in the cast of characters, with Innocent III dying in 1216, Simon in 1218, and Philip II of France in 1223. His son, Louis VIII steps in to finally bring the power of the northern monarchy to bear, with a final treaty protecting Raymond VII’s position, but with his titles passing into the French royal family.

While technically a religious matter, and Innocent III had meant for a more scholarly approach to the matter, the threat of force rapidly turned into the use of force, and the religious problems became little more than a backdrop as messages take their time on the roads. This makes it well suited to Sumption’s general style, which is not so well developed here as two decades later. Still, I found it good and informative, and it certainly one of the best volumes you’re going to find in English. (I was surprised to see my new book was a 1999 edition before I realized it was the 30th printing.)

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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The Incredible Tide

by Rindis on February 2, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Alexander Key definitely has a ‘type’, and this book is straight in his favored genre. Boy’s adventure with a super-powered (generally psionic) protagonist.

Here we have a post-apocalyptic setting, where destructive weapons have reshaped the earth, drowning almost all the land, and causing new, dangerous, weather patterns. All that’s left are a handful of islands; former mountain tops….

Only a small population of humanity is left, and simple survival is the first order of business. This is an action novel, so we don’t get a lot of time with that, but lots of incidental bits are brought up in the course of other things, which is very good for structure and pacing.

Instead, we get an action-focused novel with the New Order threatening the entire cast of characters with a totalitarian regime. Key goes for a very stark and unkind representation here, no pulled punches on the cost of unfeeling conformity and the urge to make everything fit into your boxes without room for freedom of expression. Even so, in the middle of the book Briac does point out the necessity of much of what they did, making sure a partial manufacturing center (part of it, too, is under the waves) stays operating to feed a decent population.

So… it’s often a bit heavy handed, for instance the West being a stand in for, well… and The Peace Union for the communist bloc. There’s lots of, effectively, psionics on the good side of the cast. But, its a good YA adventure novel, and while not Key’s best, it did inspire Hayao Miyazaki, which is great right there.

└ Tags: books, reading, review, science fiction
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Imbalance

by Rindis on January 25, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The C plot of an early TNG episode has Picard practicing a formal greeting for the Jarada. They’re very touchy about protocol, very insular, and this is the first chance in a while for the Federation to try negotiating with them. Of course, the main plot of the episode intervenes, and there are shenanigans getting Picard back to the bridge to do his ceremonial duty. It’s disconnected enough from the rest of the episode that while I could remember that, I couldn’t place what episode it belongs to (“The Big Goodbye”, one of the better first season episodes).

This novel is set in late fourth season, and revisits the Jarada. They had been entirely a throwaway plot device, so I’m happy to see someone doing something with them. Setup is good; the Jarada ask to open negotiations, and ask for the Enterprise specifically. This is actually at one of their colony planets, and they seem… happy, eager, to discuss a treaty with the Federation. There are suspicions, but you don’t just walk away when someone is making overtures like this when all you know is ‘this is strange’.

After a reception, an away team is invited on individual tours of the colony, reflecting various specialties and hobbies. In fact, the Jarada seem to know an awful lot about the crew. (This is a plot point, which is used to explain some of the original episode; nice touch.) So we then get five chapters, all dealing with one of the crew being shown around and ending with things going south. Okay, actually a good structure, and from there you can build upon the various threads, and interweave them, and as they come together again build your climax.

Now, for problems. Let’s start with one that’s not the author’s fault: The top front-cover blurb reads, “A mysterious alien race holds a secret that could destroy the U.S.S. Enterprise.” Wow, you could put that on any TOS or TNG novel and it would be no more or less accurate, nor less attention-getting. Ugh.

The first problem between the covers is that one of the five away team stranded on the planet (yes, they get stranded, and no the communicators aren’t working; but it is nicely explained—if only that explanation worked its way back to the central plot) is Keiko O’Brian (being married to Miles for about half a season at this point), and we have a side-plot of marital troubles stemming from a cultural clash. As a concept, not a bad idea, as done here, a horrible one. Of course, both characters get filled out a lot in the future of this novel, so we get a very different take here, and frankly not very good ones. Both are filled out with fairly 20th-century stereotypes, and Miles especially comes out the worse for it.

The bigger problem is that the plot never regains the cohesion it needs after the split up of characters. Of the six threads (five on the planet, and on board the Enterprise), you only get minimal on-screen crossover and collaboration. Given some of what goes on in the novel, really hitting up the theme of collaboration, and everyone sharing their piece of the puzzle would help the climax a lot. But instead, that only happens piecemeal, and a lot is off-screen. The ending works, but needed a good rewrite. Overall, it’s still better than the very early (season 1) TNG novels, but still not on the recommend list.

└ Tags: books, reading, review, science fiction, Star Trek
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