Monday, September 24, 2007 

Cozi is hiring. We have positions for Developers and Web Developers.

We're a small Web 2.0 startup, based in the Smith Tower in downtown Seattle. Our Cozi Central product is groupware for families: it helps parents manage their own and their kids' schedules, shopping lists, and reminders, from computers, PDAs, and mobile phones.

If you're interested, let me know.

Update: we have some non-developer positions too.

posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 8:36:06 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 23, 2007 

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Title: Waxwings
Author: Jonathan Raban
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pantheon
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0375410082
Pages: 282
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 17-23 September, 2007

Tom Janeway lives in Seattle with his wife Beth and their four-year-old son, Finn. Tom is a middle-aged Englishman who teaches writing at the University of Washington; Beth, somewhat younger, is an editor at GetAShack.com. It's 1999 and the DotCom boom is raging. Chick is an illegal immigrant from China, with a raging entrepreneurial streak, who ends up wandering in and out of Tom's life.

Tom is perceptive enough to be an occasional commentator on NPR's All Things Considered, yet oblivious to the problems in his marriage, and he's flabbergasted when Beth leaves him. Worse still, through being in the wrong place at the wrong time, he becomes a person of interest in the abduction of a child, and he becomes a pariah when it's mentioned in a Stranger article.

Raban brings DotCom Seattle to life, against a backdrop of the WTO riots, the cancellation of the millenial New Year's celebration after the arrest of a bomber at Port Angeles, and other events that had slipped my mind.

Surprisingly few novels (to my knowledge) have attempted to capture the computer culture of Seattle. Only Douglas Coupland's Microserfs and Daniel Oran's so-so Ulterior Motive come to mind.

Tom is likeable and decent, yet exasperating in his obliviousness. Beth, Finn, and Chick are all strongly realized characters.

Entertaining and perceptive, and one of the better novels set in Seattle.

posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 3:26:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 16, 2007 

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This year is the 21st anniversary of the Northwest AIDS Walk. A whole generation has passed. Twenty years ago, AIDS was a gay man's disease and a death sentence. The Reagan administration was just beginning to acknowledge the existence of AIDS, half a decade after it had first been recognized and thousands had died.

AIDS is still a serious problem, but the development of antiretroviral drugs a decade ago means that people with HIV are living longer, healthier lives than before. More than 1 million Americans are now living with HIV/AIDS: 9,000 of them in King County. 40,000 people are infected every year, and most new infections are among African-Americans. The U.S. is getting off relatively lightly: about one-quarter of the adults in southern Africa have HIV!

The Lifelong AIDS Alliance provides a variety of services to those living with HIV/AIDS in Washington State. LLAA cooks more than 100,000 fresh meals each year, provides case management for 946 people, assists 800 people with housing resources, packs 30,000 grocery bags, and distributes condoms and safe-sex information to high-risk populations.

I've walked in the AIDS Walk every year since 1992 and I've raised thousands of dollars for AIDS. Please help me raise money again for this year's walk on Saturday, September 29th. I aim to raise at least $1000.

You can sponsor me by going to http://www.georgevreilly.com/aidswalk.

I thank you, the Lifelong AIDS Alliance thanks you, and the people you'll be helping thank you.

Note: Emma and I are having a fundraising barbecue on Sunday 23rd September. Email me for more details.

posted on Monday, September 17, 2007 2:09:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: To the Power of Three
Author: Laura Lippman
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: William Morrow
Copyright: 2005
ISBN: 0060506725
Pages: 434
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 16 September, 2007

Days before graduation, a shooting takes place in the girls' bathroom at a suburban Maryland high school. The popular, pretty Kat is dead; the athletic Josie was shot in the foot; and the drama star and shooter, Perri, is comatose after shooting herself in the head. The three girls had been inseparable since third grade, though Perri and Kat had fallen out the previous summer. What happened? What led Perri to such an act?

Lippman builds a compelling story, weaving together the aftermath and the events leading up to the shooting. She captures the grief and bemusement of the survivors, each with their own selfish perspective, as they struggle to find meaning in the shooting. Her grasp of the mores and currents within a contemporary high school seems pitch perfect to me.

I said in my review of No Good Deeds that I thought Lippman was losing her enthusiasm for her Tess Monaghan series. This book has no such failing.

Highly recommended.

posted on Monday, September 17, 2007 12:04:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Club Dead
Author: Charlaine Harris
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0441010512
Pages: 258
Keywords: mystery, vampire, romance
Reading period: 15 September, 2007

Sequel to Living Dead in Dallas.

Sookie's vampire boyfriend, Bill, has gone missing and seems to have had an affair with another vampire. To get him back -- and she's not sure she wants him back -- she must go undercover among the vampire glitterati of Jackson, Mississippi. She retrieves him eventually, but not without some physical battering, and emotional upheaval as she finds herself attracted to another vampire and a very nice werewolf.

Entertaining, often funny, occasionally touching. Harris offers an amusing and original explanation for why Elvis continues to be sighted.

posted on Sunday, September 16, 2007 10:04:40 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: The Warmasters
Author: David Weber, Eric Flint, David Drake
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2002
ISBN: 0743435346
Pages: 307
Keywords: science fiction, alternate history
Reading period: 15 September, 2007

Three short novels, extracted from longer stories published elsewhere.

Ms. Midshipwoman Harrington by David Weber is a prequel to the Honor Harrington novels. Harrington is a midshipwoman in the Royal Navy of Manticore, on her first tour of duty out in a pirate-infested area. She survives the hazing of a particularly brutal and stupid superior. When half the bridge is blown away by a privateer's attack, she manages to save the day.

Islands by Eric Flint is extracted from one of the later novels in the Belisarius series, which I read only a few weeks ago. A young wife sets off to India after her husband, a junior officer in Belisarius's army. Along the way, she manages to establish a sort of Veteran's Administration for the maimed veterans who are being sent back to sixth-century Constantinople.

Choosing Sides by David Drake is taken from the Hammer's Slammers series, about a regiment of mercenaries. A young officer survives an ambush and is posted back to HQ, where he learns that the ambush was triggered by an influential traitor in the civilian population that hired the Slammers. He deals with it.

Moderately entertaining. I hadn't read any of the Honor Harrington or Hammer's Slammers books before, so it gave me a feel for both series. I might read more of them.

posted on Sunday, September 16, 2007 10:04:04 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Lion's Blood
Author: Steven Barnes
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Aspect
Copyright: 2002
ISBN: 0446612219
Pages: 608
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 9-14 September, 2007

More than two thousand years ago, the balance of power shifted, Africa became the dominant continent, and Europe stayed a barbarian backwater. Muslim Africans sailed west and conquered America, using white slaves as a workforce.

Aidan O'Dere was kidnapped as a boy from an Irish fishing village, and sold to the Wakil, the governor of what would otherwise be Galveston. The Wakil's younger son, Kai, is the same age as Aidan. The Wakil and Kai are sensitive men, warriors with poets' souls, with misgivings about the institution of slavery. Their respective brothers, Malik and Ali, are fierce, unforgiving warriors.

Kai and Aidan form a bond of sorts across the master-slave boundary. Aidan falls in love with Sophia, Kai's cast-off concubine, and marries her. Later, Malik takes Sophia away to his own castle. Aidan takes part in an unsuccessful slave uprising. Eventually, he earns his freedom by fighting alongside Kai against the Aztecs.

Barnes has a little fun, inverting the cliches of slavery. The blacks look down on the white slaves as 'ghosts', deriding their primitive superstitions. On the whole, though, it's a serious examination of slavery, showing how the institution debases the master as well as ruining the lives of the slaves. He also tackles the horrors of war, healthy and frustrated love, religion and mysticism, and guilt.

Recommended.

posted on Sunday, September 16, 2007 10:03:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, September 10, 2007 

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Title: The Polished Hoe
Author: Austin Clarke
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Amistad
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0060557621
Pages: 462
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 6-10 September, 2007

Mary-Mathilda has been the mistress of Bellfeels, a plantation owner in Bimshire (a lightly fictionalized Barbados), since her early teens. One night, she calls the police to confess a crime. Sargeant, who has silently loved her since they were children, takes her Statement over the course of a very long, discursive night. A night in which many ugly secrets bubble to the surface. Secrets about Mary-Mathilda's past, secrets about the English elite who ruled pre-War Bimshire, secrets about the plantation: secrets that Sargeant doesn't really want to hear.

An odd, meandering novel that moves slowly, but nonetheless held my attention.

posted on Tuesday, September 11, 2007 5:29:05 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 09, 2007 

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Title: Something From the Nightside
Author: Simon R. Green
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0441010652
Pages: 230
Keywords: fantasy, noir
Reading period: 9 September, 2007

The Nightside: the dark, mysterious, sleazy place under the city of London, where you can find anything or lose yourself. Monsters lurk there, demons slum there, John Taylor grew up there. Taylor has a gift. He can find anything in Nightside.

Taylor exiled himself five years ago. Now he's making a precarious living as a private eye in London. A distraught businesswoman hires him to find her teenage daughter, who was last seen heading for Nightside. Taylor finds the girl alright, and he finds plenty of trouble along the way.

Entertaining fantasy noir.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:37:02 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: RESTful Web Services
Author: Leonard Richardson, Sam Ruby
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: O'Reilly
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 0596529260
Pages: 419
Keywords: programming, web services, REST
Reading period: 22 August-8 September 2007

Anyone who has attempted to build a Web Service has come away scarred by the complexity of all the WS-* standards. Heavyweight standards that in many ways reinvent earlier distributed object technologies like CORBA and DCOM, providing Remote Procedure Calls over HTTP. The promised interoperability hasn't really happened: a web service built with one stack of tools may or may not be consumable by another stack.

A movement has arisen in the last few years, arguing for RESTful Web Services: lighterweight services built on top of the REST architectural style with simpler tools.

Big Web Services expose algorithms and method calls. ROA (REST-oriented architecture) web services expose data (resources) through the simple, uniform interface of HTTP.

I'm not going to try to explain REST or ROA here. Poke around the book site and the RESTwiki if you want more details.

I think this book is destined to be a minor classic. It explains the REST-oriented architecture very clearly. It works through several plausible examples, building services and clients in a variety of languages (most notably Ruby on Rails). It's not intimately tied to one software stack, which means that the book will still be useful five years from now. In part, that's because the tools support is fairly weak. As far as I can tell, you're reduced to rolling your own ROA web service from scratch in .NET, for example.

I haven't had to dig very deeply into WS-*, fortunately, but I haven't cared for what I've seen. The authors don't spend a lot of time critiquing what they see as the shortcomings of SOAP and the WS-* standards, but I'm not equipped to find fault in what they say. What they do say, sounds reasonable to me.

Recommended.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:36:05 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: The Merchant of Prato
Author: Iris Origo
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 1957
ISBN: 0140172181
Pages: 389
Keywords: history
Reading period: 1-7 September, 2007

Francesco di Marco Datini was born in Prato in 1335 and died there without an heir in 1410. Prato is a small town in Tuscany, about 10 miles from Florence. Then, as now, Prato was in Florence's shadow. At the age of fifteen with only a few florins to his name, Francesco apprenticed himself to a merchant in Avignon, then home of the Papal court. Thirty-three years later, he returned to Prato, a wealthy man.

Throughout his career, he was an inveterate letter writer, spending hours a day writing to his partners and subordinates throughout the Mediterranean. He left behind 150,000 documents -- letters and other records -- which were rediscovered in 1870 and now comprise the Datini Archives: a treasure trove of documentation for social historians and economists. He also wrote a great deal to his wife, Margherita, and his best friend, Ser Lapo Mazzei. The archives have not only many of the letters written by Francesco himself, but also the responses from his correspondents, as well as ledgers and other business materials.

The archives provide a wealth of raw material on the life and times of a successful merchant of the late Middle Ages. The book brings the personality of Francesco to life, setting him in the context of his times, showing the kind of life he led and the work he did.

Francesco is not a terribly likeable man. He nagged everyone incessantly and worried constantly. For decades, he obsessed about making money. In his old age, he finally took a care for his soul, after decades of entreaties from Ser Lapo, and became religious.

His marriage was rocky, in part because Margherita never gave him any children, though she raised his illegitimate daughter as her own. They married in Avignon when he was forty and she about sixteen. They spent much of their marriage living apart: he working in Florence, while she lived in Prato, a few hours' travel away. He was prickly and overbearing. She was feisty and not inclined to accept his edicts meekly.

All in all, a well-written portrait of daily life in a medieval Italian city.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:34:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: The Lion Returns
Author: John Dalmas
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 1999
ISBN: 0671578243
Pages: 460
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 5-6 September, 2007

Sequel to The Bavarian Gate. Again widowed, Macurdy returns to Yuulith from Earth. He meets up with Vulkan, a bodhisattva in the avatar of a wild boar, who is troubled by portents of trouble coming across the ocean. The voitar are invading the continent of Yuulith and Macurdy must pull together the disparate nations to fight back against the brutal voitar.

The series works better in a swords-and-sorcery milieu than in 20th century Earth, and this book is more enjoyable than its predecessor. Overall, the series is rather clumsily written. Emma said the books tell you stuff rather than showing you.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:32:49 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: The Bavarian Gate
Author: John Dalmas
Rating: 2.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 1997
ISBN: 067187764X
Pages: 342
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 4-5 September, 2007

A loose sequel to The Lion of Farside. The newly widowed Curtis Macurdy has returned to Earth in 1933. He heads west to a lumber town in Oregon where he becomes a sheriff's deputy. After Pearl Harbor, he enlists in the Army and quickly becomes a paratrooper. Despite showing great promise (and having been a general on Yuulith!), Macurdy refuses to be sent to Officer Training School. After some hair-raising adventures in North Africa that he only survives due to his Yuulith-trained magical abilities, he is recruited by the Office of Strategic Services (the forerunner of the CIA). The Nazi's Occult Bureau has established contact with aliens via a dimensional gate in Bavaria. Macurdy is sent in as a spy amongst the Nazis, and later returns to destroy the gate.

A strange, disjointed book. The section in Oregon seems wholly unneccessary. The paratrooper section seems mostly to have been thrown in as the author underwent airborne training later in the war. The alien voitar are from a distant part of Yuulith; otherwise this book has almost no ties to the previous book.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:31:56 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: The Lion of Farside
Author: John Dalmas
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 1995
ISBN: 0671876740
Pages: 441
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 3-4 September, 2007

Curtis Macurdy is a simple, Depression-era farmer married to the beautiful and exotic Varia. Varia is kidnapped and drawn back to her home in the parallel world of Yuulith. Macurdy follows her, but is immediately enslaved. After some training as a shaman, he shows promise as a fighter, and is sent to an elite regiment. He breaks out a few months later with two friends. Soon they fall in with outlaws and Macurdy quickly rises to the top, leading a successful rebellion.

Meanwhile, Varia is back with the Sisterhood, which she forswore long before. The Sisterhood are a sort of cut-rate Bene Gesserit order, with a long-range breeding plan. She escapes and is soon captured by a party of the ylvin and eventually falls in love with the leader.

Moderately entertaining swords-and-sorcery fantasy.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:31:04 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Blood Bound
Author: Patricia Briggs
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 978-0-441-01473-6
Pages: 292
Keywords: mystery, fantasy
Reading period: 31 August-1 September, 2007

Mercy Thompson, heroine of Moon Called, is back. Mercedes the Volkswagen mechanic is a shape-shifter living in the Tri-Cities of Eastern Washington.

A new vampire is in town, one who also happens to be a demon-possessed sorceror, and he's killing indiscriminately. The other vampires and the local werewolf pack need to shut him down before the general public catches on. In the end, Mercy's skills are needed to track him down and put an end to him. Along the way, she has two werewolves and a vampire paying court to her. Mercy is fiercely independent and less than thrilled at this.

Another enthralling urban fantasy from Patricia Briggs. Recommended.

posted on Sunday, September 09, 2007 8:29:20 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, September 01, 2007 

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Title: Giraffe
Author: J.M. Ledgard
Rating: 1.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 978-0-14-303896-2
Pages: 298
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 29-31 August, 2007

This is a very strange novel, which I abandoned half way through. The last book that I abandoned was simply wretched in every way, but this one is beautifully written.

Giraffe is also utterly, maddeningly pointless. It tells the (apparently) true story of the slaughter of a large herd of captive giraffes at a Czechoslovakian zoo in 1973. The main narrator is a hemodynamicist escorting a newly captured herd of giraffes as they are transported by barge from Hamburg to the Czech zoo. He is a depressed-sounding young man with little liking for the Communist regime, mired in an existential ennui. The entire book reads like a dream sequence, based on the half that I read and the half that I flicked through, hoping against hope that it would finally repay the time that I had spent on it. Some reviewers clearly loved it, but it did nothing for me. Altogether a very odd book for a Scot born in 1968 to have written.

posted on Saturday, September 01, 2007 7:29:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 29, 2007 

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Title: Death by Chick Lit
Author: Lynn Harris
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Berkley
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 0425215245
Pages: 242
Keywords: humor, mystery, chick lit
Reading period: 29 August, 2007

Lola Somerville, Brooklyn author, recently married to geek-hottie Doug (now there's a demographic I can relate to), and best friend of hipster Annabel, starts tripping over bodies of chick lit writers. Someone is winnowing the chick lit bestsellers list and Lola feels compelled to find the killer.

This gentle parody is a cross between chick lit and Nancy Drew. Although happily married, Lola is as insecure and neurotic as ever. No longer worried about getting Mr. Perfect, she's more concerned about whether she's ready for a baby and whether her book will ever do well.

Light-hearted and mildly amusing.

posted on Thursday, August 30, 2007 6:20:54 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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I'm traveling in Europe at present (Ireland last week, Italy this week and next), so I have little opportunity to keep up with U.S. news, but the Larry Craig case leapt out at me. Craig is the second U.S. Senator to be exposed in the last few months as a major sexual hypocrite who espouses 'family values' but can't keep his pecker in his pants. Schadenfreude is just the right term for the pleasure I take in seeing these dickwads hoist on their own petards.

David Vitter (brother of one of my professors at Brown, Jeff Vitter) repeatedly consorted with prostitutes. Larry Craig has pled guilty to soliciting sex in a men's restroom, joining the long line of homophobic Republican closet cases, such as Mark Foley, Ted Haggard, Mayor Jim West of Spokane, and Florida State Representative Bob Allen. The homosexual homophobes particularly irk me. I don't know what particular pathology drives them to be so homophobic. All of the names that I just mentioned repeatedly went out of their way to attack gay people, to deny them equality, to whip up fear around gay marriage. Is it self-loathing, a hatred of their own forbidden sexuality? Is it a cynical act of misdirection: to be so virulently homophobic that no-one could possibly think that they're secretly sucking dick. In the end, I don't really care: I'm just glad to see them taken down, while enjoying the irony of the manner of their political demise.

I do feel sorry for those like Gov. Jim McGreevey of New Jersey, who sublimated their sexuality and hid in the closet for years, but who did not hypocritically attack fellow gay people. (Though McGreevey apparently abused his office and sent sweet deals his boyfriend's way.)

I have some experience of the closet myself, as I hid my bisexuality for a decade before coming out. It's an ugly, fearful place to be, and no-one should ever have to hide such a fundamental part of their makeup, but that's no excuse for virulent homophobia.

Alan asks a good question: Why were the police staking out an airport bathroom in the first place? Sex stings for acts between consenting adults are a waste of taxpayer money, and a way to punish closeted gay men by ruining their reputations. I must say, however, that an airport bathroom doesn't seem like a smart place to get your rocks off.

Good riddance, Larry Craig.

posted on Thursday, August 30, 2007 6:19:33 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Blown Away
Author: G.M. Ford
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper Collins
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0060874414
Pages: 315
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 28 August, 2007

Blown Away is the latest in Ford's series about Frank Corso, investigative reporter, bestselling author, and abrasive jerk. Corso is pressed by his publisher to look into a year-old case in Pennsylvania where a victim was sent into a bank with a bomb chained around his neck, then blown up in the parking lot when he was pinned down by the police. Corso's questions provoke a couple of assaults upon himself, and then the FBI drag him to Los Angeles, where a series of identical bank robberies is taking place.

This is a fast-paced, well-written thriller, with a somewhat improbable plot, culminating in a harrowing finale.

Recommended.

posted on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 12:58:53 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: A Dirty Job
Author: Christopher Moore
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper Collins
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0060590289
Pages: 387
Keywords: humor, fantasy
Reading period: 26-27 August, 2007

Charlie Asher is the pluperfect Beta Male: nerdy, neurotic, and possessed of too much imagination. But he is not imagining things when people start dropping dead around him, after his wife Rachel dies giving birth to Sophie. Gradually, he comes to realize that he has somehow been appointed a Death Merchant, a sort of Santa's Helper to Death. His role is to facilitate the ascendance of souls.

Over the years, he tries to get on with his life, raising Sophie, running his second-hand store, grieving for Rachel, and collecting soul vessels. Strange, horrible voices whisper to him from the sewers of San Francisco. The voices belong to the Morrigan, a once-powerful three part goddess of death, trying to reincarnate and wreak havoc upon the world above. Eventually, Charlie and his friends must take the battle to the Morrigan.

Moore is very funny with a distinctly off-kilter sense of humor. Charlie is both endearing and exasperating as he struggles to come to terms with his destiny.

Recommended for Beta Males everywhere. (Alpha Males lead the world; Beta Males take care of running it.)

posted on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 12:56:17 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: The Art of Detection
Author: Laurie R. King
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Bantam
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0553588338
Pages: 495
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 23-25 August, 2007

Laurie R. King is best known for two series of detective novels. One stars Kate Martinelli, an SFPD inspector living in present-day San Francisco with her lesbian partner, Lee, and their young daughter, Nora. The other is set in the 1920s and is written in the voice of Mary Russell, the young wife of the still-active sexagenarian, Sherlock Holmes.

Here, King ties both series together. Martinelli investigates the murder of Philip Gilbert, the doyen of the local Sherlockians, who recently came across a manuscript that seems to have been written by Holmes himself, describing his investigation of the murder of a gay soldier in San Francisco in 1924. (The last Mary Russell novel, Locked Rooms, left Russell and Holmes in Russell's native San Francisco in 1924.) Even in Russell's time, most people believe that Holmes is fictional; in fact, Conan Doyle was Dr. Watson's literary agent. Martinelli and her contemporaries all believe that Holmes was fictional, while King's readers suspend their disbelief and "know" otherwise. Gilbert's body is found in the same military bunker in the Marin Hills as the gay soldier in the story-within-the-story. This can hardly be a coincidence and Martinelli's attention focuses upon the local Sherlockians.

King deftly ties together her two series, while poking some gentle fun at the weirdness of the more obsessive fans. Martinelli is a strong, believable, no-nonsense character, with a time-tested loving relationship with Lee and a long-time working relationship with her fellow detective, Al Hawkin. Holmes is his usual brilliant yet annoying self in the inner story, as he penetrates into the demimonde of transvestite chanteuses and male prostitutes. Martinelli is bright, but she's no Holmes, and the outer story is closer to a standard police procedural.

Recommended.

posted on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 12:55:19 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Empire Falls
Author: Richard Russo
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Vintage
Copyright: 2001
ISBN: 0307275132
Pages: 496
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 22-23 August, 2007

Miles Roby is the manager of the Empire Grill on the main street of Empire Falls, a small Maine factory town whose time has passed. A quintessential nice guy (i.e., congenitally unable to say 'no'), his life is about to undergo huge changes as his wife, Janine, is divorcing him. Janine has already taken up with an obnoxious gym owner, known as the Silver Fox. The diner is owned by Mrs. Francine Whiting, whose husband's family owned the mills that once brought prosperity to Empire Falls. Most of the town still dances to Mrs. Whiting's tune. She shows a curious interest in Miles, which Miles eventually realizes masks a degree of malice occasioned by a secret affair between Miles's mother, Grace, and Francine's late husband, Charlie.

Russo's characters are sharply and lovingly drawn. Miles himself; his family, including the sexually frustrated Janine, now blossoming under the attentions of the Silver Fox; his brother, David, maimed in a drunken accident; his adored daughter, Tick, all but friendless in high school; his reprobate father, Max, a shameless conman; his late mother, Grace, selfless and defeated; Francine, brilliant, cold, and autocratic; and a host of minor characters.

By turns, it is funny, bittersweet, and occasionally harrowing.

Highly recommended.

posted on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 12:50:03 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, August 19, 2007 

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Title: Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders
Author: John Mortimer
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 2004
ISBN: 0143036114
Pages: 224
Keywords: humor, mystery
Reading period: 18-19 August, 2007

Rumpole of the Bailey is familiar to us from his later years as an old warhorse, a Falstaffian character living a life of crime (defending criminals), drinking Chateau Thames Embankment at Pommeroy's wine bar, and sparring with recalcitrant judges, fellow members of his Chambers, and She Who Must Be Obeyed: his long-suffering wife, Hilda. He has often alluded to his first great case, the Penge Bungalow Murders, when alone and without a leader, he successfully saved a young man from hanging for a double murder.

At last, Rumpole has seen fit to write this volume of his memoirs. Some of the book takes place in the present day, as Rumpole is harassed by Hilda and some of his less likeable colleagues. Most of the book brings us back to the early 1950s, when the Second World War was still fresh in everyone's minds. Two former bomber pilots are found dead. The circumstantial evidence all points to the 21-year-old son of one of the pilots. He is to be defended by C.H. Wystan, the head of Chambers, and his junior, young Rumpole. Wystan thinks the case hopeless and mounts an anemic defense. Rumpole eventually gets himself appointed as the sole brief for the defendant and wins the day. Along the way, we learn how Hilda (Wystan's daughter) set her sights upon the unwitting Rumpole and see Rumpole's first encounter with the numerous Timson clan of minor villains, who will provide Rumpole with so much future work.

Quite enjoyable.

posted on Monday, August 20, 2007 3:38:05 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Sandworms of Dune
Author: Brian Herbert, Kevin J. Anderson
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Tor
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 076531293X
Pages: 493
Keywords: science fiction
Reading period: 13-17 August, 2007

Dune is Frank Herbert's classic SF novel, dealing with such themes as a galactic messiah, ecology, politics, treachery, and space opera.

The teenaged Paul Atreides, the product of thousands of years of selective breeding by the Bene Gesserit sisters, arrives on the desert planet Dune, home of the drug melange (or 'spice'). Spice is fundamental to the galactic economy: the Guild navigators use it to 'fold' space and transport huge ships between star systems, and it confers longevity and health upon those who can afford it. Spice is a byproduct of the huge, dangerous sandworms, who can be found only on Dune. Paul overdoses on spice and after a near-death experience, emerges as a prescient superman who overthrows the old empire and sets up an Atreides dynasty lasting thousands of years.

Herbert wrote six novels in all, between 1965 and 1985, spanning five thousands years. Over the last decade, his son Brian and Kevin J. Anderson have picked up the mantle, writing two prequel trilogies, The House trilogy describes the forty years leading up to the events of Frank's first novel. The Butlerian Jihad is set 10,000 years before, telling of the events that set humanity on its path, as they overthrew their machine masters. Their latest two books, Hunters of Dune and Sandworms of Dune are sequels to Frank's last two books, Heretics of Dune and Chapterhouse: Dune, based on notes discovered after Frank's death.

Frank's original Dune novels are (largely) brilliant. (I refer to God Emperor of Dune as "God-Awful of Dune" because I found it wretchedly tedious.) Frank built a complex society, fascinating characters, and subtle plots.

Brian and Kevin are not in the same league. Some hold that their work is little better than fanfic. I find their work pedestrian, lacking in Frank's subtlety.

Sandworms ends the Dune saga, in the final battle between men and machines. Many of the characters from the original book have been reborn as gholas (clones with their original memories restored by great trauma), and it's pleasing to see them get another chance. The book is reasonably satisfactory, but does not stand alone. It ties up many of the loose ends of the preceding books.

posted on Monday, August 20, 2007 3:36:43 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, August 14, 2007 

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My first project at Cozi is to build a simple REST-style Web Service. Nobody here has done that before.

The first thing that I'm trying to get going is a simple URL rewriter, using an ASP.NET HttpModule.

I'm running Vista as my development desktop for the first time. So far, not bad, but there are lots of new quirks to get used to. I've been a good boy so far and I've left the User Access Control stuff enabled, so that I'm not running with administrative privileges by default.

It's my first exposure to IIS 7. I must say that the IIS UI is much improved (a low bar to surmount).

My first problem was that Skype was squatting on port 80, preventing browser requests going to localhost. This happens to me about once a year on a new dev machine, and I always forget.

To get the HttpModule going, I had to follow Mark Rasmussen's detailed instructions on making URL rewriting on IIS 7 work like IIS 6. The code will be deployed on Windows Server 2003, so IIS 6 compatibility is more important to me than IIS 7 purity.

I was trying to get some debug output appearing in DebugView, but my Trace.WriteLines were not showing up. Some Googling eventually showed me that I had to enable Capture Global Win32, which I never had to do before. Presumably because ASP.NET is executing in a different desktop session.

posted on Wednesday, August 15, 2007 2:58:21 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, August 12, 2007 

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Cozi is the PC Mag Site of the Week.

This is the collaboration application to have for organizing your family life. It has simple, intuitive functionality that suits its family target audience perfectly.

posted on Monday, August 13, 2007 6:51:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Thraxas
Author: Martin Scott
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0743471520
Pages: 442
Keywords: fantasy, detective, humor
Reading period: 12 August, 2007

Thraxas is an middle-aged minor sorceror and retired warrior, who is entirely too fond of the bottle, his grub, and the racetrack. He long ago fell from grace at the palace in the city of Turai and now makes ends meet by discreet private investigations. He is occasionally aided by Makri, a gladiator-turned-barmaid and would-be university student, who happens to be part Orc, part Elf, and half human.

This book was published as two separate novels in Britain, Thraxas and Thraxas and the Warrior Monks. The plots are fairly forgettable, but fun while you read them and move along at a good clip with jokes thrown in.

posted on Monday, August 13, 2007 6:50:26 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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The Honourable Schoolboy
Title: The Honourable Schoolboy
Author: John le Carré
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Scribner
Copyright: 1977
Pages: 608
Keywords: spy, thriller
Reading period: 12 July–11 August, 2007

The second novel of le Carré's Karla Trilogy, following Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and preceding Smiley's People.

The "Circus" (MI6) is in sorry shape after the mole "Gerald" was unmasked. George Smiley, now head of the Circus, must go on the offense. They find a trail of money leading to a Hong Kong businessman, Drake Ko. Jerry Westerby, a newspaper reporter and occasional agent, is sent out to Hong Kong to shake Ko's tree.

Smiley is a secondary character here. Jerry is the honourable schoolboy of the title, a big, bluff, middle-aged aristocrat and second-rate newspaper hack. Jerry travels all over South-East Asia, against the backdrop of the fall of Saigon, in his efforts to track down leads. The half-crazy pilots that he encounters in the jungle evoke the world of Joseph Conrad.

Jerry himself becomes increasingly unhinged as he becomes obsessed with Ko's roundeye mistress, Lizzie Worthington, to the great alarm of his Circus minders, with ultimately tragic results.

Highly recommended.

posted on Monday, August 13, 2007 6:49:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 08, 2007 

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Pidgin (formerly known as GAIM) talks multiple protocols, including MSN and Google Talk. To configure, follow the instructions.

For Google Talk (XMPP), you may also need to set some advanced settings. At least, I have needed this at my last two jobs.

posted on Thursday, August 09, 2007 1:33:11 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, August 06, 2007 

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Title: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Author: J.K. Rowling
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Scholastic
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 0545010225
Pages: 759
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 2-3 August, 2007

SPOILERS

In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Rowling demonstrates that she really has been building up to this finale across all seven books, laying down material in earlier books to be picked up here.

After a brief, happy interlude at the wedding of Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour, Harry goes on the run with Ron and Hermione. A coup has taken place in the Ministry of Magic. A puppet minister has been installed, with Voldemort reigning behind the scenes. Mudbloods are being rounded up. Snape is the new headmaster of Hogwarts.

They spend months on the run trying to track down the horcruxes, with little success. They do manage to break into both the Ministry of Magic and Gringotts Bank. Eventually, they learn of the Deathly Hallows, three legendary objects that can conquer death. Harry becomes obsessed with them, to the despair of Ron and Hermione.

Eventually, they make their way back to Hogwarts for the climactic battle with Voldemort. They witness Voldemort killing Snape to take possession of the Elder Wand, one of the Hallows. Harry retrieves Snape's final thoughts and views them in the Pensieve, and learns that Snape had been Dumbledore's spy all along and had killed Dumbledore at his behest.

Harry battles Voldemort, coming to the very brink of death, but finally triumphs. Several of his allies die in the Battle of Hogwarts. An epilogue set nineteen years later, shows many of the surviving students congregating at King's Cross station to send their own children off to Hogwarts.

I found this to be a very satisfying climax to the series, darker and weightier than the earlier books, but without the padding of The Goblet of Fire or The Order of the Phoenix. We learn a great deal more about the backstory of the series. In particular, we learn about the young, flawed Albus Dumbledore and his manipulative ways. Not only Harry, but also his brother Aberforth and Snape were pawns in Dumbledore's plans.

Highly recommended, if you read the entire series.

(See the Wikipedia article for more details.)

posted on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 6:32:57 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Author: J.K. Rowling
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Scholastic
Copyright: 2005
ISBN: 0439784549
Pages: 652
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 1-2 August, 2007

SPOILERS

At the end of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the reborn Voldemort finally revealed himself to the world. Harry is no longer being dogged by ill-founded claims that he is lying, making his sixth year at Hogwarts easier. Elsewhere in the magical world, Voldemort and the Death Eaters are wreaking havoc.

Dumbledore belatedly takes Harry somewhat into his confidence and reveals that Voldemort has split his soul into several pieces to assure his immortality. Only if these fragments, which are hidden in horcruxes, are all destroyed, can Voldemort be killed.

Dumbledore and Harry travel to a distant cave to retrieve one of the horcruxes. They return to Hogwarts to find it under attack by the Death Eaters. Dumbledore is killed by Snape. After the funeral, Harry vows not to return to Hogwarts, but instead to track down and destroy the remaining horcruxes.

Harry matures in this book from the whiny, angst-ridden adolescent of the previous book. His public recognition, the confidences of Dumbledore, and his developing relationship with Ginny Weasley certainly help. Dumbledore's death after Sirius Black's death are traumatizing events that scar Harry but leave him more determined than ever to bring down the killer of his parents.

(See the Wikipedia article for more details.)

posted on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 6:32:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, August 05, 2007 

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I worked at Atlas Solutions, a subsidiary of aQuantive, from October 2005 to July 2007.

Google bought our largest competitor, DoubleClick, for $3 Billion in April 2006. In the following five weeks, all the other major web advertising companies were bought up, culminating in Microsoft paying the stupendous sum of $6 billion for aQuantive. The Microsoft-aQuantive deal closes in mid-August.

To put it mildly, I was not excited at the thought of becoming a Microsoft employee yet again. Cumulatively, between 1992 and 2005, I spent 10 years at Microsoft as an employee or contractor, including a year and a half on Cairo, seven years on IIS, and a year on FlexGo.

Nevertheless, I had absolutely no desire to go back to being a Microserf. I don't like Microsoft's business practices, I'm sick of the evil empire vibe, I'm tired of the hostility to Open Source, I don't want to work for asshats like Steve Ballmer, and I have old scars from my earlier tours of duty that trigger my fight-or-flight response. I've done my time in the Redmond saltmines and I just want to be a productive member of society now. Microsoft is like a gravitational black hole: it warps everything in its vicinity. Life is too short to work at a company whose values are fundamentally different to my own.

Your mileage may vary. I know many decent people at Microsoft who are doing good work. I applaud them, but I do not wish to rejoin them.

That's not to say that I think everyone should flee Atlas. Having Microsoft on your resume is a definite plus, and it's the right choice for many people. I think everyone should make their own cost-benefit analysis and decide if they want to work for Microsoft or not. I've written code that literally runs on hundreds of millions of machines: http.sys, available on all Windows XP SP2 machines, Windows Server 2003, and Vista. There are few other companies where you can have that kind of reach.

However, Microsoft and Atlas have very different corporate cultures. Microsoft is a hard-assed, hard-driving culture. Atlas has a far more reasonable pro-work-life-balance culture. I've seen several alpha-male types being rejected by the team-fit interviews at Atlas who would have fit in just fine at Microsoft.

Microsoft claim that they will make few changes to aQuantive and Atlas. Certainly, they would be incredibly foolish to kill the golden goose after spending such an enormous amount. I really hope they have the sense to leave well enough alone.

Anyway, I'm not going to find out first hand. I spent a few weeks looking around in June, and I found a new position at Cozi.com. My last day at Atlas was Friday, July 27th. I'll miss my old team in Emerging Media. They were the best team that I ever worked on, and I'm proud of the Video-on-Demand and In-Stream web video products that we built.

My criteria for a new job were that it should be a small company, somewhere in downtown Seattle or Fremont, within an easy bus ride of my home in Beacon Hill, doing something reasonably interesting. From 1992 to 2005, all my jobs were on the Eastside, while I lived in Seattle proper. I never, ever want to commute across Lake Washington again. Atlas has 300 or 400 employees, aQuantive has 2600, and Microsoft has 78,000. I wanted a small company, where it's really possible to make a difference.

On Monday, August 6th, I'll be starting work at Cozi.com, building groupware products for families: shared calendars, lists, messages, photos, Outlook integration, and so on. Cozi is in the Smith Tower, three blocks from Atlas's Pioneer Square location. Cozi is a two-year-old startup with 18 people when I signed on, and they flattered me by aggressively pursuing me. I have high hopes that it's going to work out.

Cozi recently raised $4 million in a second round of angel financing. We consider our biggest competitor to be pencil and paper and we like to consider ourselves as a digital refrigerator magnet. The Wall Street Journal's Mossberg Solution and Lifehacker have favorable reviews of the released product. PodVentureZone has a multipart interview (mostly transcribed) with Robbie Cape, Cozi's CEO and co-founder.

Cozi's vacation policy is 2+2. Everyone gets two weeks off when they choose, and the company closes for a week at Christmas and a week in August (this week). I've spent the last week doing a lot of cycling around the Seattle area. We're going to Ireland and Italy at the end of August, and Emma couldn't take any more time off.

Back to work next week. Wish me luck.

posted on Sunday, August 05, 2007 7:04:16 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, August 04, 2007 

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Last night, I unwittingly bought some habenero peppers when I was shopping for ingredients for Afghan Chicken. They tasted hot, but not too hot, when I nibbled a couple of small pieces. I cut them up with my bare hands. By the time that I was finished, my fingers felt as if they had been burned! As if I had burned them with steam or something. It took several hours for the pain to go away. Fortunately, I didn't rub my eyes or more delicate mucous membranes, while I still had the habenero oils on my skin.

The chicken itself was fine: not too spicy. The cooked-up onion marinade had a definite burn, but adding fresh yogurt kept it manageable for the spice wimps.

I'll pay more attention to what I'm buying in future.

posted on Sunday, August 05, 2007 4:29:07 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: An Oblique Approach
Author: Eric Flint & David Drake
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 1998
ISBN: 0671878654
Pages: 480
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 18-21 July, 2007

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Title: In the Heart of Darkness
Author: Eric Flint & David Drake
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 1998
ISBN: 0671878859
Pages: 480
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 22-24 July, 2007

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Title: Destiny's Shield
Author: Eric Flint & David Drake
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2000
ISBN: 0671578723
Pages: 576
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 25-27 July, 2007

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Title: Fortune's Stroke
Author: Eric Flint & David Drake
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2001
ISBN: 0671319981
Pages: 512
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 28 July, 2007

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Title: The Tide of Victory
Author: Eric Flint & David Drake
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2002
ISBN: 0743435656
Pages: 576
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 29-30 July, 2007

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Title: The Dance of Victory
Author: Eric Flint & David Drake
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 1416521372
Pages: 512
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 31 July, 2007

Contrary to my usual practice, I read the entire Belisarius Series back to back. Blame Emma: she keeps getting Eric Flint books out of the library and slinging them my way.

Belisarius was a real-life sixth-century Roman general based in Constantinople, the capital of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.

In the far, far future, two races descended from mankind fight a proxy war to change the past. The 'New Gods', repulsed by the mongrel offshoots of the human race, bet on the Malwa empire of India, with its rigid caste system. At ruinous expense, they send a cyborg named Link back to the sixth century. With gunpowder technology, the Malwas quickly conquer the rest of India and start eyeing the Persian and Roman empires.

A crystalline race send one of their number, Aide, back in time to help Rome's greatest general, Belisarius, fight the Malwa, and keep Earth's history, as much as possible, on its previous trajectory. Aide's vast knowledge of our history and technology augment Belisarius's native cunning and immense grasp of strategy and tactics, and eventually overcome Link and the Malwa.

The books juggle multiple viewpoint characters, weaving together a complex tapestry of plots, spread over six books. The action flows from Constantinople to Persia, Alexandria, the Axumite (Ethiopian) empire, Arabia, and most of all, to India. The characters are for the most part likeable and larger than life. Most, but by no means all, of the Malwa and their allies are repellent. The battles are many and the carnage vast, as the authors get to cherrypick the tactics of Earth's greatest generals.

In the end, Link's fatal flaw is its lack of understanding of humanity, that only the soul matters, of the importance of love and redemption.

posted on Saturday, August 04, 2007 7:28:32 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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