Rindis.com

All my hobbies, all the time
  • Home
  • My Blog
  • Games
  • History

Categories

  • Books (503)
  • Comics (10)
  • Gaming (917)
    • Boardgaming (673)
      • ASL (154)
      • CC:Ancients (83)
      • F&E (78)
        • BvR – The Wind (26)
        • Four Vassal War (9)
        • Konya wa Hurricane (17)
        • Second Wind (5)
      • SFB (78)
    • Computer games (162)
      • MMO (77)
    • Design and Effect (6)
    • RPGs (66)
      • D&D (25)
        • O2 Blade of Vengeance (3)
      • GURPS (32)
  • History (10)
  • Life (82)
    • Conventions (9)
  • News (29)
  • Technology (6)
  • Video (49)
    • Anime (47)
  • Writing (1)

Patreon

Support Rindis.com on Patreon!
Become a patron at Patreon!

Other blogs:

RSS Inside GMT

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

RSS Playing at the World

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

RSS Dyson’s Dodecahedron

  • Cyberstyle 8.5 June 13, 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: Undistinguished Destruction June 13, 2026
SF&F blogs:

RSS Fantasy Cafe

  • The Leaning Pile of Books May 24, 2026

RSS Lynn’s Book Blog

  • Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up June 14, 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

  • AAR Slides for Schwerpunkt SP96 Husum Hotfoot June 5, 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

  • GURPS DF Session 224, Felltower 141 - Second GFS exploration June 15, 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

The Cartoonists Club

by Rindis on December 13, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

I’ve been aware of this graphic novel for the last few months, and picked up a copy recently. Not having gotten a lot of graphic novels lately, it is still surprising to see good color printing, and good white paper as a matter of course, and of course a Scholastic logo.

The opening of the book is familiar. Makayla is a deeply creative person, with stories and ideas floating through her head all the time. What she doesn’t have is a good way to start expressing all this. This wasn’t me, but I certainly knew people like this.

She has another creative friend, more involved in drawing, but with trouble finding anything beyond single, spur-of-the-moment, illustrations to do.

So, they team up, start a school club, attract a few more creative types, and start learning how to make comics under the light tutelage of a friendly library media specialist (good school!).

The focus of the book changes as it goes. We start out with a character focus, where we get to know the characters, and deal with various struggles on both an artistic front and on a personal front. As we go, this largely drops by the wayside, and we get more involved in how comics work, and how to effectively communicate through them, to the point of the last sections being fourth-wall breaking to show off some of the hidden assumptions of the medium. This latter thread is present all the way from the beginning, as the characters try to wrestle with just what they’re doing, and how you’re “supposed” to do it.

In all, this book is not merely a collaboration of Raina Telgemeier and Scott McCloud, it is a collaboration of their own stories.

If you want more stories of the struggles of middle-school kids in graphic novel form, there’s plenty to choose from, including Telgemeier’s own books. If you want a discussion of how comics work as a medium, the atmosphere is much more rarefied, but the outstanding work is McCloud’s Understanding Comics, which is a book that will really make you think.

It is also the pair of them explicitly handing advice on to the next (and future) generation. You want to do art, make comics? Start a club, gather other people together and start pooling your individual talents! There’s a nice section on expressing emotion and body language which is more involved than Understanding Comics. And there’s very practical advice on how to put together mini-comics and start getting out there on an extremely local level. In other words the book is about how to get your enthusiasm up, start creating, and take your first steps into getting your ideas out there.

└ Tags: books, graphic novel, reading, review
 Comment 

A Short History of the Civil War

by Rindis on December 9, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Fletcher Pratt is known to the SF&F community as the coauthor of the “Harold Shea” series (he did others, both with L. Sprague deCamp and alone, but those left a lasting impression). He is also known to wargamers as running a wargaming club in the 1930s, and publishing his naval miniatures rules in 1940.

He also did some historical writing, including a 320-page history of the ACW. It was originally titled Ordeal By Fire in 1935, and then the present title was given to the second edition in 1948. My dad was given a copy by his older brother around ’51, and it set him on the path of being a Civil War nut, and later a wargamer, and an author of books on the ACW. That particular copy has not survived, but he still has a 1963 9th printing of the Cardinal Edition he originally read. I have a 1968 Bantam edition.

In 320 pages Pratt isn’t going to, and doesn’t, say anything I don’t already know, but he does cover the subject well and energetically in that length.

He cycles through subjects, giving the broad movements, the battles, the leaders. Occasionally, there’s a chapter labeled as “Interludes” away from the war itself. Britain’s non-intervention, the draft riots, Gettysburg Address, the Second Inaugural. Everything is handled quickly, but never breathlessly, and passion in the writing carries things forward.

Overall, it’s a good book to develop a basic understanding of the ACW, and likely an interest in seeing more. Very good for all this is the maps. Unlike a lot of books that have a bare handful of maps, if that, and desperately need more, the list of maps here runs two pages.

└ Tags: ACW, books, reading, review
 Comment 

Dr Bactrian and the Cursed Collar

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

Okay, first, this is a bit of pulp fun, and I shouldn’t try to get too serious with it.

But, I would like to know a little more about the world. It’s not Earth, nor even furry-Earth, as we have novel place names and geography. We have ancient civilizations and the archaeology thereof. This seems to exist in university sponsored digs and rough-and-tumble treasure hunting at the same time. More surprising, we have nomadic tribes in the desert. And we have cell phones.

It’s far from impossible for all this to exist together, but it is unlikely. Notably, you have some modern attitudes competing with the very ’30s pulp atmosphere.

The good news is that if you don’t think about it too hard, the atmosphere works, and the characters fit it just fine.

On the pacing end, I’ll point out that we have lots of very short chapters, and the ebook doesn’t have chapters broken out in a table of contents. This helps with a serial/pulp feel, and keeps the excitement level high with plenty of twists and turns.

Plot-wise, things are quite good. The cast of characters is a little large for the length of story, and I got a little confused on a couple occasions. The action comes up to speed nicely, we get a good amount of rise-and-fall of tension, and a good climax. Sprinkled in are character interactions that do help drive the plot, and of course the return of old lovers to complicate things.

A note at the end points out there are more stories on a WordPress blog, but at the moment, I just see Cursed Collar. Hopefully, there will be more, and hopefully, they’ll be published.

└ Tags: books, furry, pulp, reading, review
 Comment 

The Devil’s Wind

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

This, or especially, the first half, feels like a dissertation paper on the origins of the Indian Mutiny. It is full of close arguing, and written out facts, figures, and references on the subject. Some of this feels repetitious, not only in itself, but in reference to the introduction, which has an extensive description of the recent historiography of the subject, describing the various positions taken and when.

It is so closely argued, that it can be hard to discern just what David’s position on it all is.

While the introduction and the first half can by dizzying enough to make out the point, it is stated enough to get a grasp, and the second half is much smoother while he demonstrates his conclusions with an account of the opening stages of the Mutiny.

The main position he does have is that “professional” concerns dominated all the others in causing the mutiny. Not religion, or caste, but more prosaic problems such as the fact that the cost of living had about doubled in India over the previous half-century, but military pay had stayed flat. In fact, it had recently gone down a bit, as some forms of supplemental pay had been cut as there were no more parts of India proper to pacify.

David also shows how problems of discipline were endemic to the British forces there. Officers generally had punishments of men taken out of their hands, and the far away courts were likely to nullify most complaints on appeal. Most British officers did not see maintaining their units as their primary duty, and were off elsewhere, socializing, and never fostering any respect with their men. It is the picture of a dysfunctional organization, and he points out repeated warnings from various parties about all this, but reform never comes.

He also characterizes the overall goals in a mercenary light. Mutinying units generally stayed together, and he supposes that this is a reflection of the class’ historical occupation as soldiers, and looking for a better paymaster to graft themselves onto.

I have deep suspicions about this conclusion. His account shows there was some form of coordinated plot with various people in some contact with each other trying to coordinate the timing of what became a large mutiny. He also points towards some of the leaders (or their direct descendants) recently disenfranchised by the British, were more than just who the mutinying leaders attached themselves to. Instead, the initial seeds came from their courts, and this was overall a political move to kick the British out of India by using the dissatisfaction brewing in the units managed by the East India Company to suborn the entire structure, and use it themselves. The entire cartridge controversy falls on top of this already-existing plot, and immediately seized on to rile up the rank-and-file into actual mutiny.

Overall, it’s a disappointing book, but one with a lot of good information. As he gives all the background figures, you get never organized enough discussions of previous mutinies in India. While they are used for some compare and contrast, you don’t get a sense of what any of the events were like. The description of the actual Mutiny is also combined with a lot of motion of various units prepared to revolt, but various factors, including random chance, keep it from getting out of hand until August at Rajput.

I read the Endeavour Press Kindle edition, and it has the same problems as their version of Saul David’s The Homicidal Earl. The problems are not as pronounced here, but certainly OCR conversion problems exist. The biggest one is that N.I. (Native Infantry) is variously rendered N.I., N.1., and occasionally N.J. Instead of words breaking where they were probably hyphenated in the original, they are joined together when they should be hyphenated (‘fortyfive’). But the overall incidence is lower, but there’s one place where the text breaks up into odd characters for half a word. Like with the previous book, I don’t know if the later Sharpe Books edition is improved, or exactly the same.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
 Comment 

The Changing Land

by Rindis on November 19, 2025 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Basically the last in the line of Dilvish stories, this is the biggest (the others being short stories), and the most Zelazny.

Not to say you can’t tell who wrote the others, but this one has the space to spread its psychedelic wings.

The other difference is that the cast is much larger, and you spend a fair amount of time away from him. In fact, the first few chapters are spent setting things up by visiting a few different viewpoints in turn. Only after mood and initial actions are set up does Dilvish ride into the story.

It certainly helps to read the stories of Dilvish the Damned first, as you never get into his head, even as he dominate the rest of the action, nor get any explanation of any number of things. He’s powerful, extremely competent, and extremely driven here. And that’s about all you get.

Meanwhile, you get fragments of several other people as this is the only story to feature them. But the main focus here is a strange place (a timeless castle, and the ever-changing area around it), and plenty of sword-and-sorcery style action.

Past that, well, there is a lot to talk about, as there are several different plots going on, with various people maneuvering around the power a leftover from the days of the Old Ones represents. But, all these separate plots end up fraying and merging into the climatic action, and not even Dilvish gets to carry his story to his wanted conclusion under the force of other events. Really, the psychedelics take over here, and its a great ride, but somewhat lacking in character agency.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
 Comment 
  • Page 6 of 96
  • « First
  • «
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • »
  • Last »

©2005-2026 Rindis.com | Powered by WordPress with ComicPress | Hosted on Rindis Hobby Den | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑