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Other blogs:

RSS Inside GMT

  • Meet The Northern Wei: A Civilization of GMT’s Ancient Civilizations of East Asia  June 19, 2026

RSS Playing at the World

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

RSS Dyson’s Dodecahedron

  • Blog Updates June 20, 2026

RSS Quest for Fun!

  • The Expense Post May 24, 2026

RSS Bruce Heard and New Stories

  • Pain, Exhaustion, and Morale in D&D BECMI June 7, 2026

RSS Chicago Wargamer

  • The 2 Half-Squads - Episode 310: Cruising Through Crucible of Steel January 27, 2023

RSS CRRPG Addict

  • The Search for Freedom: Our Repeated Petitions June 20, 2026
SF&F blogs:

RSS Fantasy Cafe

  • The Leaning Pile of Books May 24, 2026

RSS Lynn’s Book Blog

  • Summer of Horror: Can’t Wait Wednesday: Sleepers in the Snow by Joanne Harris June 17, 2026
ASL blogs:

RSS Sitrep

  • Cardinal ASL Sins March 18, 2026

RSS Hong Kong Wargamer

  • FT114 Yellow Extract After Action Report (AAR) Advanced Squad Leader scenario April 16, 2025

RSS Hex and Violence

  • This still exists? March 25, 2025

RSS Grumble Jones

  • YouTube AAR for Critical Hit's Gettysburg Turning Point 1863 - ID4 At Will Fire June 16, 2026

RSS Desperation Morale

  • How to Learn ASL March 16, 2025

RSS Banzai!!

  • October North Texas Gameday October 21, 2019

RSS A Room Without a LOS

  • [Crossing the Moro CG] T=0902 -- Rough start July 18, 2015
GURPS blogs:

RSS Dungeon Fantastic

  • GMing Shortcuts in Felltower June 17, 2026

RSS Gaming Ballistic

  • B-Scale: Damage That Scales from Tardigrades to Kaiju June 5, 2026

RSS Ravens N’ Pennies

RSS Let’s GURPS

  • Review: GURPS Realm Management March 29, 2021

RSS No School Grognard

  • It came from the GURPS forums: Low-Tech armor and fire damage January 29, 2018

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

Virginia: The New Dominion

by Rindis on March 18, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

I picked up this history of the state of Virginia mostly because of curiosity about the Colonial era. There’s lots of political cross-currents going on as the Colonies move towards rebellion and independence, and providing true scope to these just isn’t something histories of the Revolution can have space for. (I would really like to see this on Pennsylvania, the politics there are extra-special.)

It was written in 1970 and shows. There is no sympathy for slavery and direct racism as such, but often feels apologetic for some of the further offshoots in Virginia politics. This is largely just trying to keep some distance and evenhandedness, ‘these are the people, and this is what they did’, leaving moralizing for in extremis. But it’s really more the author’s love for his state, and wanting to show how it did better/different than the rest of the south, and it’s obvious enough to cast doubt on what he’s saying on occasion.

Its a large book, covering a bit over three-and-a-half centuries, and while it spends a lot of time on politics, it also covers everything else you’d expect in an overview. The establishment and growth of the major cities, overall economic and population trends (that last might have stood some more attention). However, this all purely from a modern and Western view. Which is to say, even when talking about the original charters, establishing Virginia as having authority over a wide swath of land, all the talk is pretty much limited to Virginia’s current, or at least pre-Civil War borders. There is some nice attention paid to the increasingly separated politics of the future West Virginia, which helps explain that split.

The big missing part is not a lot is said about Native Americans. They’re there, various conflicts, and problems on both sides are there. But you don’t really see them outside of direct dealings with the colony. No discussion of the original tribes, how broad a cultural spectrum there was, how they dealt with each other, and so on. If it’s not dealing directly with a political entity called “Virginia”, it doesn’t exist in this book.

Overall, it’s decently written, a little dated, and covers the subject about as well as anything so broad can. It’s been printed three times, with the last in the early ’90s. It’s not going to be a common find on used shelves, and I wouldn’t recommend specifically hunting it down, but if a cheap copy crosses your path, consider picking it up.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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The Relics of Thiala

by Rindis on March 10, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Okay, this was interesting. It’s the far-future, the galaxy is well-settled, though there’s no sign of aliens. But there’s not just humans. There are genetically-modified animals, given human thought, near-human shapes, and powers beyond normal humans.

The Bestiae are rare, the leftovers of a war to take over the galaxy a generation ago. And given what little we get to know of the society of the core systems of the galaxy, a coup might be well deserved. The novel follows a small group bound together though bonding, a psychic link to form a pack. They seek answers, as what happened twenty years ago has been largely made to disappear, leaving little to no knowledge of that the Bestiae really are.

So, it’s mystery, and adventure, and found family. This first book is complete on its own, but there is certainly more that these characters need to do. I don’t rate it as great, but it is quite good, the action and characters well-done, and just the plot being a little more predictable than I’d like.

└ Tags: books, reading, review, science fiction
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The Story of the Stone

by Rindis on March 2, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The real problem with any truly special story is that doing it again is difficult. Especially if you take the same characters and find a new story for them to fit into as well as they did the first. This a large part of the heart of “sequelitis”. I’d been warned that The Story of the Stone suffered from it.

Not so much. It is not as good as the original Bridge of Birds, but it is close, and a lot of what makes the original work is here. Overall, I’d say the plot here is more of a mess, which is where the book tends to fall short. But what makes Hugart’s writing work is his simultaneously a sympathetic deep-dive into Chinese myth, folklore, and history, and a satire of the same. There’s little details scattered all over, and I have to wonder how much is made up whole-cloth, and how much traces at least the seed of the idea to some actual folklore. Some of it is obviously based on real myths and tales, which makes me wonder about parts that seem to be there because of story demands.

But what makes all that work, and is carried over from the first book is an honest sense of wonder and joy in telling a tale. In Hugart’s hands even some thoroughly nasty people contribute to some very fun scenes. Really, that’s what these books are about, a bit of fun, a bit of whimsy. Anyone to takes Master Li seriously deserves to.

As would be expected from the first book, we go on the road again, and make quick visits to several locales. But the Valley of Sorrows dominates the book, as this time Li and Number Ten Ox are off to solve a mystery. As with anything Master Li touches, it turns out to be more than it first appears, and like any good classic mystery it is obvious from the start that something truly odd is going on, even if it does have a perfectly reasonable explanation.

In short, I’m sorry have taken so long to get around to continuing to read about these two mis-matched partners. It stands alone perfectly well, and you can easily start here. I recommend starting with Bridge of Birds anyway, because I found the conclusion to that book to really get into the sense of wonder I mentioned, and this one nearly matches it in several points, but never quite gets there.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
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Behind Distant Stars

by Rindis on February 22, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The second book about the notorious Dr. Fid picks up a little while after the first.

Fid has had a good thing going: Super-smart, extremely genre-savvy, he has a host of technological toys that have made him one of, if not the, top supervillains of the world. And he has a driving passion to punish all the heroes that don’t measure up to his standards of heroism to push him into the villain side of things.

That last also caused him to deliberately send himself insane, something he has long since drawn back from, so that he can properly live his double-life as the CEO of a cutting edge tech firm that he uses to introduce some truly useful technologies. And that, you know, sort of led him into saving the world.

Public opinion is, naturally, mixed on this development. As is Fid. This is a deeply character-driven story, as Fid insists to himself, and everyone else, that he doesn’t deserve to be seen as anything but a monster, the monster he was quite happy to be a decade or so before. But there are people who, looking at his current actions, see someone deserving of a good measure of trust—and in spite of his internal protests, he lives up to these expectations.

Of course, there is plenty of purely external conflict to go around too, which forms the main skeleton of the story, while the character side provides the muscle. We get some more world building; its not as fundamental as in the first book, but certainly interesting, and plot-relevant. The stakes seem lower than the first book (where do you go after saving the world?), but—spoiler—not so much. As a needed warning, the last part changes tone noticeably, and gets… extremely violent. I’m glad it was in text, I don’t know if I could take much of it in a visual medium. But, again, it’s plot-relevant.

So, an extremely successful second book, that does not fall into sequelitis, and is just a bit better than the original. It does end on something of a cliffhanger however!

└ Tags: books, reading, review, supers
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The Captain’s Oath

by Rindis on February 14, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Many Star Trek novels are basically ‘just another episode’. An adventure happening alongside all the normal ones of the TV series. Some of them go after bigger subjects, like this one which presents Kirk’s evolution as a command officer into who we see during the first season of TOS. And it does it very well.

There’s a few problems. The novel is really two stories (with some connections) told in a jumbled-up fashion. This is generally well done, but the switching between various portions of five years can get dizzying, and while I was fine with it (at least once each section of plot got itself going, and I could orient myself), I wouldn’t blame anyone who found it too much to follow.

We get to see Kirk’s first encounter with Bones, how he gave him that nickname, and his first command of a smaller ship (USS Sacajawea), as well as his initial mission on the Enterprise.

This last is trouble, since we already have novel about that, Enterprise: The First Adventure. This novel doesn’t even give a nod to that one. Overwriting portions of it would be one thing (like the background of Kirk’s previous mission to getting promoted to starship command), it wouldn’t have taken much to step around the time frame of that novel and leave interested readers to do whatever they must to reconcile the bits around them. Instead we get completely conflicting versions. Its more of a shame since the two books have very different aims. TFA features the entire main cast, most of which have their own troubles at the start of the famous five-year mission. That is, it’s focused on the crew coming together as a whole, while Bennett’s book is focused on Kirk and how he became the commander we see on screen. This is well done, and he points out that the Kirk we get in first season is more driven and less relaxed than what we see later, and what we generally think of with the character, and the novel even points up that arc.

USS Sacajawea is from the listing of scouts in the old Star Fleet Technical Manual. It doesn’t really indicate what a “scout” is; the class is externally identical to a destroyer, but with only a fraction of its armament. Star Fleet Battles decided it was packed with extra electronics so it could detect things like fleet movements at a greater range. That would have been handy in the course of the novel, as unknown alien vessels are managing to get through the Federation’s outer sensor net undetected. I can’t blame Bennett for not going with that idea, but on the other hand, he never really gives an idea what a scout’s role is as a ship. The best guess from what’s given is that it’s simply a cheaper, lighter-duty version of a destroyer, meant for use along the unknown reaches of the frontier.

Those “gripes” aside (that’s dignifying these comments with more force than I really intend), the plot is well done. We have some truly alien aliens, with some interestingly different technology, that makes for a good sense of mystery and suspense. We have some action, we have some very good characterization, and the overall plot (once you sort it out) is good. In a way, my real complaint is that it’s better than The First Adventure, which is an old favorite of mine, which it sort of replaces.

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