RichardAbbott
About
- Username
- RichardAbbott
- Joined
- Visits
- 6,180
- Last Active
- Roles
- Member, Administrator, Moderator
- Games I like
- Sundry, mostly board
- Books I like
- Science fiction, fantasy, some historical fiction
Comments
-
Agree with both of you: it seems to invert the standard love story pattern of encounter-affection-love, seeing as how Jevick does not begin to love Jissavet until well after she has died and given him all kinds of grief. It has to necessarily remain…
-
My own associations were with ancient Egypt or India, but I suspect that Sofia Samatar has amalgamated lots of diverse influences.
-
(Quote) That's seems to me to be a very good way of explaining it
-
(Quote) That's really interesting. I don't detect or consciously respond to most literary devices when listening to a book (eg through Audible) but enjoy and appreciate them in written form. There's an open question in reader reception theory as to …
-
(Quote) I first encountered The Worm Ourobouros and (somewhat to my parents' frustration) painted a map of Demonland on my bedroom wall - insofar as I could work it out from the slightly inconsistent clues in the book. I then managed to track down E…
-
Discussion starters are now posted in the appropriate monthly category!
-
Hi all, quick check... are we all OK for me to post discussion starters this weekend?
-
(Quote) That's probably true... it just makes it really hard when someone asks "what's that book about?" :)
-
(Quote) Yes, I think you're right, and this is (I suspect) part of the difficulties we are having as a group with the book - it is as though CP's main interest in writing shifts multiple times through a single novel. So we did originally have Sandro…
-
(Quote) It occurred to me that this might be another of his inversions - the hand-wavium intuition of the adepts may be incommunicable, but it's genuine (though only relevant to a minority of people). But the formalised bureaucracy of the insurance …
-
(Quote) Well, lots of folk throughout history would say no, music reflects something fundamental about the universe itself, which it so happens humans can tap into. Music of the spheres and all that. Tolkien tapped into this with his own creation my…
-
Another open question that just occurred to me... if the time gradual stuff only affects a handful of people, then why are their formalised processes such as insurance policies and tour operator licences? Also, I wonder what it signifies that the b…
-
Yay! The adepts are not scamming the tourists! I suppose one could see all the payments that Sandro had to make as being basically the cost of tuition fees :) And in any case he never seems to have got totally on his beam ends, though he did, natura…
-
@NeilNjae I (finally, after several months) followed your advice and gave it a go, and very much enjoyed it. Thanks for the recommendation!
-
It's an interesting and often disturbing exercise, rereading something you liked years ago. A few books really survive the passage of personal time but many don't - I can't ever decide if that's changes in me, changes in social assumptions and accep…
-
(Quote) Oddly enough we've just rewatched the Matrix trilogy (in anticipation of #4 later this year) and it doesn't sound too unlike that...
-
(Quote) I kind of like it when we don't all agree on a book, and it would be good even if you didn't finish it to contribute what you thought and felt.
-
I'll query again in a week or so and see where everyone is
-
(Quote) Fair enough
-
Let's go for another week then: I'll post discussion starters on the w/e 5/6/7 November
-
Hi all, this coming weekend is the last weekend in October (and coincidentally the last weekend of most UK autumn half term holidays). Would people like a bit more time to finish A Stranger in Olondria or shall I post some discussion starters this w…
-
Well, I was disappointed by the "it's a scam" revelation - unless the next twist is that regular island folks like Cea think it's a scam, but actually it's legit... we shall see. I find it hard to believe that Sandro would not have heard s…
-
With the gaming, would you want to stay on the political level of the various factions (Great Houses, Bene Gesserit, Tleilaxu and so on)? Or the individual struggles on a planet (Paul, Duncan, the Mentats, Ireland etc)? Or the personal development l…
-
(Quote) I had completely forgotten Nightfall :)
-
I enjoyed The Gods Themselves many years ago (again, I haven't revisited it) and it has the distinction of being pretty much the only Asimov story where aliens are a central part - to be strictly fair, they appear briefly by mention in The End of Et…
-
What an interesting theory. We read one of Herbert's books in the club a while back - I can't remember the title, and can't find it listed in the Monthly Book Selections, but it was about a hive culture establishing itself in Oregon somewhere. I rem…
-
Call me out of line, but I'd be up for reading The Adjacent together when we've done The Gradual (but maybe as a group we've had enough of CP just now). I reread some Anne McCaffrey recently and was mildly disappointed compared to my reaction sever…
-
(Quote) Also interesting that on one occasion Kan appears not to know him, yet his detriment is only a matter of hours still, not weeks or months. Maybe instead of going up and down the timeline at a non-standard rate, the gradual shifts you into an…
-
Still enjoying the twists in the tale. I'm sure most of us are contemplating how one would game the system on Hakerline - at least, I certainly am! If I go the right way over the plaza, can I regenerate a meal I have already eaten? If I then eat it …
-
I've been thinking about the comments suggesting that Sandro is not changing here, and I'm not convinced they're quite fair! He has disposed of many of his possessions, which he tells us is difficult for him because in Glaundian society that's al…

Help offset server costs by donating. This is totally optional. Any overages will go to library fines or new books.