• RI May & June 2024

    From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to All on Fri Jul 5 04:05:07 2024
    This covers both May & June, I think.

    As usual the links are Amazon affiliate ones which could make
    me a pittance should you end up buying something through one.
    ==

    Shareholder: A LitRPG Adventure (Tower of Somnus Book 4)
    by Cale Plamann
    https://amzn.to/4byM1ZP

    When we last saw Kat Debs, she had just foiled a plot by one of the
    gamier alien species to infiltrate Earth, in the process gaining access
    to a trove of alien technology, and becoming a full Shareholder in her corporate home. She also finally realized that she, unexpectedly,
    had a girlfriend, and responsibilities beyond her own family and staying
    alive.

    In this installment, she must assert her will on the Board working
    against the entrenched legacy Shareholders who resent the scrappy
    upstart with every fiber of their beings, find time to actually go
    on a date (preferably one not ending in some sort of cataclysm) and
    continue to level-up with her alien friends in the galaxy spanning
    sleep-time RPG, the Tower of Somnus, which has its own set of
    problems with intersect unexpectedly with her "real world" issues.

    It's still a somewhat goofy premise (all alien species have a human
    compatible sleep cycle?), but the author commits to it, and Kats adventures
    in both realms are entertaining. I like as well that although Kat lives
    in what we would consider a corporate dystopia, to her it's just the world,
    and she has no real urge to reform it as she accepts its premises
    and fights to get ahead. There's also some genuine humor as when a new addition to Kat's RPG war party dissects all the character tropes the
    group exhibits:

    "There's no shame in that, Kat," Jaalin replied, her voice
    gentling slightly. "The lokkel clans used to engage in such
    practices before we became civilized. It is the way of
    things. That said, I do not find 'seizing power as a warlord'
    to be a credible counter argument to my accusation that you
    are some manner of barbarian princess."

    Kat changed tactics, wheeling around to address Kaleek. The
    desoph was covered head to toe in blood, his greatsword
    slung casually over one of his shoulders.

    "Are you going to stand for this? Jaalin called you comic
    relief."

    Kaleek just shrugged, his armor clanking and sloshing in
    time with the motion.

    "I don't know, Kat, that seems to be a pretty fair assessment."

    Demon's Mark (Legion of Angels Book 11)
    by Ella Summers
    https://amzn.to/3VQyaIv

    Angel of Chaos Leda Pandora has come a long way since she joined the
    Legion of Angels to survive and level-up enough that she had the power
    to rescue her kidnapped brother. That finally done, and having birthed
    and protected the daughter who may be the Savior of prophecy, she is kind
    of taking it easy, governing a large segment of Earth recently reclaimed
    from the wilderness after the most recent victory removed the monster
    menace. It's actually rather boring and her most recent task is actually investigating a problem with her capital city's sewer system. When
    giant rats unexpectedly ensue, events kick into high gear again leading
    to her involvement with her father's problem (he's the chief god)
    of planetary revolts, a sister whose mind seems to have been taken over by inimical forces, in-law & mother (the chief demon) complications, and
    hints that an adversary who fled the field is nonetheless still active.

    These are popcorn books, adding and resolving complications in a continuing fashion. I believe we are near the endpoint regardless, and found this
    one much more entertaining than the last which needed a whole "let me
    explain to you what just happened" section to make any sense of the events.

    How to Become the Dark Lord and Die Trying
    (Dark Lord Davi Book 1)
    by Django Wexler
    https://amzn.to/3VRC7fZ

    I first encountered Django Wexler with his Flintlock-Punk series
    The Thousand Names. Well, this is completely different, but just as
    good.

    Davi (if she has a last name, she has apparently forgotten it) thinks
    she is from Earth, and was probably a nerd, but now, after over a thousand years of lives, she has trouble remembering anything about her first life.

    All she knows is that her troubles started when she regained consciousness
    in a scummy pond in the woods where a wizard pulled her out and announced
    that she was the chosen one prophesied to save the human kingdom from
    the marauding "Wilders".

    She could just never figure out *how*. Every path she took led her to death (often prolonged & painful) at the hands of "The Dark Lord", exiting life
    with the Kingdom falling and reawakening in that damn pond.

    After several hundred lifetimes, she has had her belly-full of it and decides that *this* time things will be different. To start with, while she always dies at the hands of the Dark Lord, it's not always the *same* Dark Lord,
    so there's obviously some kind of choice point out there somewhere: Why not Dark Lord Davi? She kills and robs the wizard and sets off into Wilder territory. It takes her a half dozen quick & painful trips back to the
    pond before she figures out how to make a Wilder band accept her (it helps
    that unlike most humans, she can eat the magical Thaumite stones as Wilders
    do) and set out on her path to Dark Lordship. In the beginning she is
    helped by her general knowledge of the shape of coming events, but past
    that, she must depend on her ability to wing it (aided by the fact that
    despite her odd and devil-may-care aspect, she is smart and vastly experienced) and judge character.

    Not that she's perfect at that, the knowledge that she's probably heading
    for an early and protractedly painful death have made her prone to take pleasure where she can find it, and while she knows that she probably shouldn't sleep with the help, the understanding that she will be around to face the consequences this time comes a bit late to her.

    Still she has, against all the odds, increased the size of her little
    band and made it to the Conclave. Well, every now and then, a dog
    catches the car -- now what?

    This book is one of the most fun I have read this year. Davi's story
    is told in snarky first person, with the most footnotes(*) I have encountered since _Happy Hour of the Damned_ (more than Vance, for sure). She is
    shielded somewhat from the full realization of all her betrayals by her conviction that everything will "reset" with no-harm-no-foul, and when
    she comes to see that might not be the case this time, it does give her
    pause, but fortunately does not dampen her narrative for more than a few
    pages.

    We are promised that Davi's story is a duology, and I am quite looking
    forward to the conclusion.

    (*) Actually this is one of the first (fiction)cases I have found where
    reading in hardcopy would clearly be superior to reading on Kindle.
    I often found that by the time I got to the actual footnote page, I had
    forgotten what the reference was to.

    Against All Odds: A Military Sci-Fi Series (Grimm's War Book 1) Kindle Edition by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/3xOejBJ

    With Grimm Resolve: A Military Sci-Fi Series (Grimm's War Book 2) Kindle Edition
    by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/45QiB8k

    One Decisive Victory: A Military Sci-Fi Series (Grimm's War Book 3) Kindle Edition
    by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/3zvxjW6

    A Grimm Sacrifice: A Military Sci-Fi Series (Grimm's War Book 4) Kindle Edition by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/45UfSe2

    Know Thy Enemy: A Military Sci-Fi Series (Grimm's War Book 5) Kindle Edition
    by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/4eNYQSS

    A Grimm Decision (Grimm's War Book 6) Kindle Edition
    by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/45QLUaS

    Traditions of Courage (Grimm's War Book 7) Kindle Edition
    by Jeffery H. Haskell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
    https://amzn.to/4cNbMXh

    I only read the last of these during the May or June, but as the
    previous ones fell into one of my review lacunae, I thought I would
    list the whole series above. If you have been missing early Honor Harrington, Jacob Grimm may be your MilSF guy.

    Years ago there was a promising young Alliance Lieutenant on his first
    serious deployment. His attention to detail and exceptional vigilance
    deduced a Caliphate ambush from barely perceptible sensor readings and
    allowed his patrol to get the jump on the ambushing ships instead.
    "Ambushing" ships that turned out to be full of... children. The ensuing scandal was a publicity disaster and propaganda victory for the Caliphate
    (as intended), and dropped support for the Alliance Navy to an all time
    low, which given that the Fleet was already in something equivalent to our "between the wars" years, was down from "not high". War was still
    coming, and now the Fleet would be even less prepared than it had been.
    And the unlucky Lt. Grimm? Well, he didn't give the order to fire, and technically hadn't even done anything chargeable, but his career was done.
    Or so it might seem.

    Assigned to the stereotypical "Worst Ship In The Navy", Grimm must make
    peace with his demons and see if he can do any good during his remaining enlistment. As you may guess, the Universe is not finished with
    Jacob T. Grimm...

    In this installment, Grimm commanding a small task force in charge of
    defending an impromptu new Alliance member, must deal with the fact that
    that defense has already failed, and the planet has been invaded by one
    of the series two big-bads, the Terraforming Guild, something about which
    he can do nothing. However, he can harry their resupply lines and
    locate the bases they run supplies from. Whether it will be enough to
    help the situation on the ground with only a rump force of Alliance
    Marines in place and the locals largely defeated, and anyway riven with
    civil strife remains to be seen. In the meantime, Grimm's girlfriend,
    whom he fondly imagines to be on his home planet, getting acquainted with Grimm's father, is actually on a desperate deep-cover mission of her own
    into the heart of the Guild...

    I find these books quite enjoyable despite some "indie" editing flaws
    (for instance in this book a crucial action of an enemy ship in orbit is
    called out, and then apparently forgotten) and the occasional deployment
    of "Captain, you have to come see this!" suspense. No, the Captain
    doesn't need to come see "this" -- he's in a damage control meeting. He
    needs a concise description of "this" & why it's important. Also, when
    the focus of a book is on one big-bad (say the Caliphate) the other one
    (the Guild) seems to be forgotten. Given the level Grimm's command operates at, it makes sense that he would only be dealing with one or the other, but
    we have big picture characters who by all rights ought to be dual worriers.
    I do dock this particular installment a little bit for the deployment of a
    good old Space Opera genocide, and the fact that Grimm seems in line to be fitted with a Halo at times, but it still comes out well on the plus side.

    Hell For Hire: Urban Fantasy Action with Witches and Demons
    (Tear Down Heaven Book 1)
    by Rachel Aaron
    https://amzn.to/3zDevEk

    Remember Gilgamesh? Turns out he was a real guy, and the saga we have was
    only the half of it. In the end he defeated the gods of Sumer, occupied
    their paradise, and put scales on the eyes of most of humanity so that
    they could never see magic nor be any threat to him.

    As part of his conquest, he enslaved all the demons of paradise and established cabals of sorcerers & warlocks (dependent on him for their magic) to
    enforce his will. The only independent magical force left in the world
    are the Witches of Blackwood, and they live at Gilgamesh's sufferance
    only because they are useful.

    It's obviously not something the Witches are happy about, especially since
    the bargain that keeps them sort-of free involves rendering their sons
    to become warlocks.

    In point of fact, its something that one of those said sons is unhappy
    about unto the point of rebellion. Adrian Blackwood figures that if
    he is to make a move, he must establish his own Blackwood on the west
    coast, well away from the witches of New England in order to try and
    minimize the fallout on them. It's a move more likely to fail than not.
    He's a young witch, and he has to start a forest in secret and try to
    bring it to magical maturity before its noticed, something he has
    no experience in doing, and while he can afford to hire some security,
    he only has enough actual cash for one month pay.

    Bex is a demon, and the head of said security. Reincarnated many times
    over the ages, she has been leading a futile rebellion against Gilgamesh,
    and freeing the odd demon whenever she could until she was grievously
    wounded in a battle with one of Gilgamesh's sons. Now she runs her team
    as mercenaries, trying to keep them fed as her dreams of doing anything
    better have crashed around her. Taking a contract with a Blackwood witch
    was a welcome surprise (as was the fact that the "witch" was [good looking] guy) as to the limited extent that any rebellion exists anymore, the Blackwood would be on her side. Soon it's clear though that Bex doesn't know all of Adrian's secrets, and he has no idea about the deepest of hers...

    To my mind Aaron continues to get better with each series. Early on she
    had a tendency to over-explain her magical systems, but she has that well
    under control here, and doing something with Gilgamesh and Sumerian demons
    is a bit of a nice switch up from usual UF tropes. She also has a knack for writing complementary heroes & heroines who each bring something to the
    table that the other does not. Her romances tend to be rather slow-burn,
    but I don't think there's any doubt where this relationship is headed.
    There's still plenty to do after the partial victory in the final battle
    here, so I would expect probably two more books, which I will follow.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to tnusenet17@gmail.com on Mon Jul 8 20:55:48 2024
    In article <v6hfbh$10bmh$2@dont-email.me>,
    Tony Nance <tnusenet17@gmail.com> wrote:
    Hell For Hire: Urban Fantasy Action with Witches and Demons
    (Tear Down Heaven Book 1)
    by Rachel Aaron
    https://amzn.to/3zDevEk

    <some snipping>

    To my mind Aaron continues to get better with each series. Early on she
    had a tendency to over-explain her magical systems, but she has that well
    under control here, and doing something with Gilgamesh and Sumerian demons >> is a bit of a nice switch up from usual UF tropes. She also has a knack for >> writing complementary heroes & heroines who each bring something to the
    table that the other does not. Her romances tend to be rather slow-burn, >> but I don't think there's any doubt where this relationship is headed.
    There's still plenty to do after the partial victory in the final battle
    here, so I would expect probably two more books, which I will follow.

    Aaron has been on my "try something some day" list - given the paragraph >above, is this one of hers that you'd recommend starting with?


    Tony


    It's starting well, but we'll have to see how it progresses. Right
    now I would recommend the DFZ Changeling trilogy starting with _By
    a Silver Thread_.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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