Friday, July 25, 2008 
A Crown of Lights
Title: A Crown of Lights
Author: Phil Rickman
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pan
Copyright: 2001
Pages: 566
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 21-25 July, 2008

The Rev. Merrily Watkins is the "deliverance consultant" -- a euphemism for exorcist -- for a diocese on the Welsh border. A Wiccan couple move into a long-deconsecrated church in a remote village, and the local fundamentalist-style Anglican priest leads a witchhunt.

The viewpoint characters are all entertaining: level-headed Merrily; her smart-alec teenager, Jane; their old codger neighbor, Gomer; and the two Wiccans, Betty and Robin. The plot is both page-turning and unhurriedly developed: the first body takes 250 pages to appear. We learn something about contemporary village life, Wales, Anglicanism, Wicca, and religious intolerance.

Recommended.

posted on Saturday, July 26, 2008 6:51:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, July 21, 2008 
The Hanging Garden
Title: The Hanging Garden
Author: Ian Rankin
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur
Copyright: 1998
Pages: 349
Keywords: crime, fiction
Reading period: 20-21 July, 2008

DI John Rebus is struggling with an incipient gang war in Edinburgh. He's investigating an elderly academic who might be a Nazi war criminal. A Bosnian prostitute has brought out the white knight in him. His personal life is a mess: He's off the booze, but work is the only thing keeping him going. And his daughter has been run down in the street, perhaps as a warning to him.

Rebus somehow struggles with all of this, coming out more or less victorious, but at a cost to his integrity and his loved ones.

Recommended.

posted on Monday, July 21, 2008 7:12:24 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Listen to the Shadows
Title: Listen to the Shadows
Author: Danuta Reah
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper Torch
Copyright: 2001
Pages: 340
Keywords: thriller
Reading period: 16-20 July, 2008

Suzanne Milner is a graduate student researching young offenders in Sheffield. She finds the body of a young woman. Soon another young woman's body is found. There seems to be an unexplained connection between several young people.

Listen to the Shadows works fairly well as a psychological thriller: there are enough twists and misdirection to keep us off-balance and guessing until the end. The protagonist, though, is an exasperating mess. Beset by deep-seated feelings of inadequacy and festered guilt, she spends most of the book being buffeted by events, reacting helplessly, unable to cope.

posted on Monday, July 21, 2008 7:10:33 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, July 17, 2008 
Spider Dance
Title: Spider Dance
Author: Carole Nelson Douglas
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Forge
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 512
Keywords: mystery, historical
Reading period: 6-16 July, 2008

As Dr. Watson famously said of Irene Adler, "To Sherlock Holmes she is always the woman." Carole Nelson Douglas has parlayed Irene Adler into a series of books.

In Spider Dance, Irene and her friend, Nell Huxleigh, are in New York City, trying to find out who Irene's long-lost mother was. The infamous Lola Montez is the most likely contender. Holmes is also in town, investigating a grotesque murder at the Vanderbilt mansion. Inevitably, the two cases become tangled up.

Even by the standards of Sherlockiana, the plot is improbable: rogue Ultramontanes, lost fortunes, mausoleums at midnight. It's entertaining though, and well-told. Irene is a pistol. Lola, whose story is woven through the book, even more so. Nell, the primary narrator, is a parson's daughter and a former governess. Her priggishness is fraying under the assaults of the unconventional lifestyle she now leads with Irene.

posted on Thursday, July 17, 2008 5:43:55 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, July 15, 2008 
MacBook Pro drive

Last week, I gave my 2007 MacBook Pro laptop a makeover before upgrading to Leopard, aka OS X 10.5.

A couple of months ago, I bought 4GB RAM for less than $100, to replace the 2GB that it came with.

I wanted to upgrade the drive too, as I repeatedly came close to filling the original 160GB drive. It was no problem to get a 5400 RPM drive that had more than 300GB, but the 7200 RPM notebook drives were topping out at 200GB. Two weeks, I spotted a Western Digital Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM SATA drive on NewEgg for $180. Sold!

I installed it the night it arrived, and it was quite the ordeal. I followed the iFixit instructions and it took me a solid hour to disassemble the case, replace the drive, and close it all back up. There are eight pages of photos and more than 30 tiny, fiddly screws to deal with. I also needed two special screwdrivers, a really small Phillips head and a Torx T6. The similar ExtremeTech instructions conclude by telling you how to format the new drive with Disk Utility from the OS installer DVD; I also used Disk Utility to partition the drive.

By comparison, I also bought a 250GB IDE drive for my old Compaq laptop at the same time. (That machine's problems turned out to be bad sectors on the original drive.) Only two screws have to be removed to get the drive cage out, and another four to take the drive out of the cage. Five minutes work.

My new Mac drive is very favorably reviewed by Tech Report, which gives it the Editor's Choice award. It seems faster, but I didn't bother to benchmark the old drive. That drive is now sitting in a USB enclosure, and will do very nicely for Time Machine backups.

posted on Wednesday, July 16, 2008 6:01:43 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, July 07, 2008 
Heart of Stone
Title: Heart of Stone
Author: C.E. Murphy
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Luna Books
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 438
Keywords: urban fantasy
Reading period: 5 July, 2008

The Old Races--gargoyles, dragons, vampires, and more--are still around, though few ordinary humans are aware of them, since they can all assume human form.

Margrit Knight, a feisty Legal Aid lawyer in New York City, defends Alban, a gargoyle falsely accused of murdering women in Central Park. She finds herself drawn into murky struggles between different factions and she becomes increasingly attracted to the statuesque Alban, who has long been in self-imposed exile.

Gargoyles are a novel twist in the increasingly popular urban fantasy genre. Entertaining and fast-paced.

posted on Monday, July 07, 2008 7:23:05 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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The New Centurions
Title: The New Centurions
Author: Joseph Wambaugh
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Grand Central
Copyright: 1970
Pages: 528
Keywords: crime
Reading period: 29 June–4 July, 2008

Three very different young men graduate from the Los Angeles Police Academy in 1960. Wambaugh's classic first novel follows them for five years until they meet again under fire in the Watts Riots.

In a series of vignettes, Wambaugh shows how they become hardened and cynical on the streets. Some will absorb the racist attitudes of their fellow officers. All will see horrifying things as they serve as patrol officers, vice cops, or juvenile officers.

Grim but enthralling.

posted on Monday, July 07, 2008 7:21:49 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Our Game
Title: Our Game
Author: John le Carré
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ballantine
Copyright: 1995
Pages: 338
Keywords: spy, thriller
Reading period: 22–29 June, 2008

Timothy Cranmer is a former spy handler, put out to pasture at the end of the Cold War. Larry Pettifer, left-wing academic and Byronic espouser of lost causes, was not only Cranmer's best double agent but a friend and rival since childhood.

Now Larry has gone missing, as has 37 million pounds and Cranmer's young mistress, Emma. Cranmer is thought to be an accomplice. Cranmer must find Larry. The trail will take him deep in the Caucasus.

The book moves slowly through the first half, until Cranmer finally decides to take action and leads British Intelligence on a merry chase. Cranmer, our narrator, reveals himself to be emotionally paralysed until his middle-aged affair with Emma. Larry, never seen directly, is shown to be just as immature in his own quixotic, impulsive way.

Not le Carré's best work, but insightful about his characters and post-Cold War politics.

posted on Monday, July 07, 2008 7:20:27 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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