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The Great Betrayal

by Rindis on December 20, 2019 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Even if the title didn’t clue you in, Bradford wastes no time and pulls no punches letting you know what he thinks of the fall of Constantinople to the Fourth Crusade. He begins with the arrival of the Venetian fleet in the Sea of Mamara, and the initial clashes before going back and laying the groundwork.

Dandolo, Philip of Swabia, and Boniface are considered to have directly and purposefully conspired to divert the Crusade to Constantinople. This is a far from an unpopular view, and Bradford is on solid ground following this track. Personally, the fall of Constantinople is one of those things that would have seemed unlikely enough beforehand that it’s a little hard to believe that it was the planned outcome. My feeling is that it was the outcome of opportunism, and damage control. Dandolo especially was using his political skill to ride the tiger, knowing that getting off would cause such a financial crash in Venice that he would not survive.

But no matter the intentions, the outcome was calamitous for everything besides Venice’s art collections. Bradford does a good job relating events, and impressing upon the reader the horrors associated with the fall of a rich city untouched for hundreds of years. If you want a sympathetic take on Venice’s part, read Crowley’s City of Fortune; but it has a much bigger scope, so Bradford’s gives a fuller account of the Crusade as a whole.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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The Galactic Whirlpool

by Rindis on December 9, 2019 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Gerrold writes an interesting story that feels a bit between a Star Trek story and a regular SF offering of it’s age. I think part of that is that it’s a ‘big dumb object’ story, with humans encountering a large structure traveling at about a third the speed of light. There’s not much in the story that demands it be a Star Trek story. But, the main characters are there, and without them it wouldn’t be quite the same story either.

There are places where it doesn’t quite ring true to the universe as it is known now, but back before any of the movies had been done, much less the later series he was in a position of deciding more things for himself. The most grating part for me was suddenly including a couple of auxiliary shuttle bays in the saucer section (really, drop bays, anticipating Enterprise by about 40 years), which just hadn’t been mentioned anywhere else…. It is actually somewhat logical, and I’d have been happier if these had been for smaller craft for external work than full shuttlecraft, but that idea doesn’t show up until The Motion Picture, so, oh well.

The investigation of the star-faring structure is well-done and interesting, and the problems that result are quite logical. I’m not so happy with a lot of character reactions. Most of the Enterprise crew should react better than they do for most of the novel, as they know what—generally—they’re getting into, but they don’t seem to take that knowledge into account. On the other side of things, the action and consequences are well handled, and really help sell the story.

Structurally the two real weak points are the fact that a lot of background info gets dumped on you in one large expository chapter. It’d be hard to avoid it, and its presented well, so I think Gerrold was trying to avoid the problem. The other problem is that the name of the novel doesn’t come up until about halfway through. A pair of black holes, with orbiting neutron stars, and associated other things falling into certainly qualifies as a ‘galactic whirlpool’, but it gets sprung on you a bit suddenly.

Past that, it is well done, and the second half of the novel, after everything is finally in place, really works well. The build up is a bit slower and piecemeal than I’d like, but it does come together, and is well worth the journey.

└ Tags: books, reading, review, science fiction, Star Trek
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In the Shadow of the Sword

by Rindis on December 3, 2019 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

At first glance, this is just a new history of the start of Islam, and how the Arabs came to dominate such a large area, one of those parts of history that often defies analysis. And Holland loops this book around that subject a couple of times just to show how and why this is traditionally a tough subject to tackle.

There’s a fair amount of myth surrounding the foundation of Islam. And it’s so well presented that even when an outsider looks at it, and starts wondering just how likely some of it is, the weight of evidence comes down on the side of that myth. General Western views of this period aren’t much more critical of the story than Islamic scholars are; that’s an amazing intellectual achievement right there.

At the same time, this also is a marker of the change from late Antiquity, where Middle East is dominated by the superpowers of Rome (/Byzantium) and Sassanid Persia, to the early Medieval period where its the Christian world vs the Islamic one. Looking at AD 500 and AD 800, things look very different, and the source of changes seems invisible in AD 500.

Of course, the Middle East was traditionally a bubbling cauldron of different religious beliefs. Things like the Dead Sea Scrolls are the merest tip of the iceberg of religious debate; a snapshot of one place and time. Other sources talk of various other cults, and groups, that were obviously stealing the better ideas from each other. I really wish Holland had gone into that a bit more, and maybe tried to trace some of the currents of religious thought in the area, the groups that were slowly pushed to the fringes by the state-backed power of Christianity and Zoroastrianism. He goes into some, and lists a few oddities from the 5th and 6th Centuries. Oddities that sound really familiar in a religion that was supposed to spring full-formed from the mouth of a person touched by God.

And looking into the history of the Quran and the haddith, things don’t look so clear. Despite the claims made, the earliest known examples, and the first biography of Mohammad, which codifies a lot of this story, date to nearly two centuries after his life. Now, these are based on earlier versions, but there’s a fair amount of drift possible in that time, and the early history of the Quran is not looking any clearer that the early history of the Gospels. Holland doesn’t go into it, but the later parts shows that there is something about the birth of a religion, possibly something forever unknowable. The codified institutions come later; events swept people along, caused a passionate belief… that doesn’t get written down in all the excitement.

After that, a closer look at what was actually going on with Rome and the Sassanians helps bring things into focus. The Islamic irruption into the world stage happened at the end of a long conflict between Rome and Persia, and Holland not only points out how this had drained available manpower on both sides, but he goes into a plague that swept through the region just recently, and like the better known Black Death, it was devastating to world population as a whole. He then goes into the current generation of Arab mercenaries, whose sources of money are drying up….

And from there, the rest of the book is a familiar story, but with the emphases changed. He posits, from what is in the Quran, and a few other places, that Mohamed, and his closest companions, were far more aware of the Roman world than is generally understood, and move on to the struggle to define just what had happened over the next few generations, as events of the 630s slipped out of memory, and into history.

Its a well-written book all the way through, and really shakes up the normal perception of this period. I’d say this is among the top ‘must reads’ for anyone interested in this part of history. Parts of it are a bit vague, and pro tem, but it does reference much more current research than you normally get to hear about.

└ Tags: books, gaming, history, reading, review
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Tai-Pan

by Rindis on November 26, 2019 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

This is the second of Clavell’s ‘Asian Saga’, but doesn’t have any immediately obvious relation to Shogun (that comes in book three, apparently), other than being in that no-man’s land of historical novels that has characters based off of actual people without actually meaning to be them. This isn’t nearly as grating to me here, as I don’t really know anything about the founding of Hong Kong, and the people involved, while I was very aware of several of the not-quite principles of Shogun.

As before, Clavell’s writing style is quite good, but I think the structure suffers a bit. Straun has certain specific goals, that are repeatedly challenged through the book. These are generally taken care of one after another without them really piling on, or adding to, one another, making the plot a bit more of a series of connected incidents where targets are knocked down one after another in a shooting gallery. Worse, the one that generally feels the most intractable, immediate, and generates the main action scenes of the book is very early, leaving the rest feeling a little more limp.

While the broad strokes of history are certainly accurate (opium trade, and all the reasons why), are well presented at the beginning, he doesn’t spend a lot of time in a detailed delve into Chinese culture, so you don’t get the travelogue feel of Shogun. What you do get is a large cast of characters all with their own quirks and motivations moving across a somewhat compressed landscape. This is his main strength, and it pays off well, even if the desire to introduce them all at the start does give the book a slow start. The end… has it’s own brand of action, and brings things to good closing point, but feels a bit arbitrary, and hand of god author. It’s meant to be an epic, and so is mostly a slow burn all the way through, but is a very consistent and satisfying one. If the general subject is of interest, or you’ve liked his other books, certainly read this one.

└ Tags: books, reading, review
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Sword-Bound

by Rindis on November 20, 2019 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Roberson’s latest Tiger & Del novel keeps up the high quality of the series. The pair are finally settled down and going off into ever-after land, when Neesha decides he wants more adventure. This doesn’t turn it into Neesha’s story. The viewpoint is still very solidly Tiger’s, and he is still the center that events move around.

Tiger is getting older, and certainly the tone is a lot different than where it began, but he truly has things he wants past his own ego now. It doesn’t seem like Tiger is slowing down, but the story itself is a bit slower than previous books, perhaps showing through plot that he is, just a bit mind you, past his prime.

The plot itself rambles a bit more than normal, with it going through several important bits that don’t necessarily tie directly to each other. But the beginning and end tie together very directly, and the middle does tie the various threads together.

Of course, this has always been a character-driven series, and the characters, as ever, make the book. I recommend the entire series, and while it actually wouldn’t too bad to start here, the other books are well worth reading, so go and read them.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
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