• Happy belated 90th, Jack McDevitt!

    From Lenona@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 17 16:54:14 2025
    He turned 90 on the 14th. But I can't find any tributes.

    https://www.fantasticfiction.com/m/jack-mcdevitt/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_McDevitt

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  • From Default User@21:1/5 to Lenona on Sun Apr 20 03:52:38 2025
    Lenona wrote:

    He turned 90 on the 14th. But I can't find any tributes.

    I have read quite a bit of his work, the Alex/Chase and the Acadamy
    (Hutch) books especially.


    Brian

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  • From Scott Lurndal@21:1/5 to Lynn McGuire on Mon Apr 21 23:50:46 2025
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> writes:
    On 4/21/2025 6:24 PM, Scott Lurndal wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> writes:
    On 4/19/2025 10:52 PM, Default User wrote:
    Lenona wrote:

    He turned 90 on the 14th. But I can't find any tributes.

    I have read quite a bit of his work, the Alex/Chase and the Acadamy
    (Hutch) books especially.


    Brian

    Me too. Good stuff. I had no idea that he was that old. He has a new
    book coming out soon.

    Does he? His farcebuch fan club page says he's retired.

    And the book is out already in 2023: "Village in the Sky (9) (An Alex >Benedict Novel)":
    https://www.amazon.com/Village-Sky-Alex-Benedict-Novel/dp/1668004305

    Yes, I read that one a couple year ago.

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  • From Scott Lurndal@21:1/5 to Lynn McGuire on Mon Apr 21 23:24:32 2025
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> writes:
    On 4/19/2025 10:52 PM, Default User wrote:
    Lenona wrote:

    He turned 90 on the 14th. But I can't find any tributes.

    I have read quite a bit of his work, the Alex/Chase and the Acadamy
    (Hutch) books especially.


    Brian

    Me too. Good stuff. I had no idea that he was that old. He has a new
    book coming out soon.

    Does he? His farcebuch fan club page says he's retired.

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  • From Default User@21:1/5 to Lynn McGuire on Fri Apr 25 01:34:55 2025
    Lynn McGuire wrote:


    And the book is out already in 2023: "Village in the Sky (9) (An Alex Benedict Novel)":

    That wasn't a strong one in my estimation. He needed to split that
    apart, and either be about running across an alien civilization, or
    about the (different) aliens coming to visit. As it was, both were
    really rushed at the end. Especially the latter, which was kind of,
    "Well, this was fun, Bye-ee!"


    Brain

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  • From Default User@21:1/5 to Default User on Fri Apr 25 01:56:44 2025
    Default User wrote:

    Lynn McGuire wrote:


    And the book is out already in 2023: "Village in the Sky (9) (An
    Alex Benedict Novel)":

    That wasn't a strong one in my estimation. He needed to split that
    apart, and either be about running across an alien civilization, or
    about the (different) aliens coming to visit. As it was, both were
    really rushed at the end. Especially the latter, which was kind of,
    "Well, this was fun, Bye-ee!"

    I located my old review, and rather than a GG link, I will just paste
    it again for everyone edification and amusement:



    Recently read: Village in the Sky by Jack McDevitt
    May 9, 2023, 2:15:32 AM


    This is the latest in the Alex Benedict/Chase Kolpath adventures taking
    place in America in Space. I was a bit surprised when this popped up in
    the library's ebooks, as I wasn't sure there ever be any more.

    Anyway, the "Visitation Project" has been scouting for alien
    civilizations, because we're kind of lonely with just billions of
    humans on a bunch of planets. Oh, and the Ashiyyur AKA The Mutes, that
    we almost went to war with. But those guys are pretty weird, what with
    the telepathy instead of talking and us not being able to lie to them
    and all, so nobody likes them much.

    Then huzzah, the VP has found a world with aliens! Well, a few. Like
    one little town. But hey, green-skinned aliens hanging out on the
    porches. They head on back home, in spite of several of the crew
    wanting to immediately violate the no-contact mandate law and go try to
    talk to them. Not to worry, they'd planned to bring weapons!

    So a new bigger expedition is formed, along with a news guy, and they
    head back for a better look. Except, there's no town! Hmmm. Well,
    that's a bummer. They do find a satellite in orbit now, so they snag
    that. They poke around a bit on the planet, but don't find anything but
    a creepy feeling like someone's looking at them.

    Meanwhile, the folks back on Rimway get a message. "Hey there, we're
    some aliens, coming for a visit!" Huh. Do they have anything to do with
    the other aliens? Nope, just a coinky-dink. In fact, these aliens kind
    of look like spiders. But they're bringing some books, and they'd like
    to get some in return.

    So interest in the green alien expedition plummets and the project crew
    mopes back, bringing the satellite.

    After the new aliens arrive, swap books, get some tee-shirts at the
    gift show, and high-five all around, they head back home. "We'll
    probably be back!" Everybody decides that the first alien business is
    of no interest, so let's all just drop that investigation. And in fact
    nobody is allowed to go there or even know where the place is.

    However, Alex decides they might find some artifacts that they can
    sell, because that what he does. Eventually the pilot from the first expedition, Robbie Jo, decides to show them where it is anyway, so off
    they go to investigate. What will they find? Were there really aliens
    there? If so, where did they go?


    In general, I have enjoyed this series. It's always had some troubling
    aspects, and this book seems to have doubled-down on some of them.

    1. The setting has the problem that any of us could be scooped up and
    dumped on Rimway 9000 years or whatever in the future, and need about a
    30 minute orientation to feel right at home. I wasn't kidding about
    America in Space. Like Chase finishes up her volleyball game and heads
    over to her boyfriend's classic bookstore. Go to a restaurant and have spaghetti and meatballs, or chicken strips with honey-mustard.

    2. This book was almost ridiculously padded. There were so many
    pointless scenes, especially in the early going. That includes, on the
    way to investigate, Alex and crew deciding to stop off for a beach
    vacation.

    3. The pacing was not great. It took over half the book for Alex and
    Chase to launch their journey. By the time the real events get going,
    all that has to be packed into the last third or so, with some lucky
    events to make it even plausible that they accomplished anything.

    4. What was the point of the spider aliens? Other than eating up a
    bunch of book space. I guess it was supposed to make the decision to
    drop the other investigation plausible, but it didn't make sense to me.

    I assume there's supposed to a follow-up book, otherwise we have quite
    a few hanging chads here. Still, if you like the series, you'll
    probably want to read it. If you aren't familiar with it, don't start
    here.


    Brian

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