Tag archives for Fiction - Page 24
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New Model Army by Adam Roberts
It has a Fab Concept. However it doesn't quite work. Some of it is too heavy handed and not well enough researched to be credible. I bought this book because I liked the premise, a change in the nature of warfare brought about by better information available to the whole army through a wiki style network. It has promise for some very interesting stories, but the author instead wrote a political polemic based on very old fashioned stereotypes and without bothering to do his research. Accepting that our narrator is probably unreliable, given he is definitely going insane, and the twist that happens at the end (no spoilers) it is clear that we cannot rely on him. However there are bits of his prior experience with the British Army that just don't work for me (having been in the TA…
Book Review – Grimoire of the Lamb by Kevin Hearne
The Grimoire of the Lamb by Kevin Hearne My rating: 4 of 5 stars A nice easy to read short story that kept me going in between a couple of other books when I should have been studying for my MST121 maths exam next week. View all my reviews Related articles Tricked by Kevin Hearne Hounded, Hexed and Hammered by Kevin Hearne Week 38: The Hunted Week 8: Trapped Audiobook Review: Hunted(Iron Druid Chronicles #6) by Kevin Hearne
The Old Terra Vitae by Paddy Green
The Old Terra Vitae is one of the best stories I've read this year. The story revolves around what happens to a troubled soul in the afterlife, and it contains some shades of Neil Gaiman in the approach. Well crafted as a story, and with plenty of clues scattered to the unexpected twist that give you a lightbulb moment when it happens. (more…)
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Book Review – Tintin and the Black Island
The Black Island (Photo credit: Wikipedia) Somehow Tintin passed me by as a kid. The books were there in my local library alongside the Asterix ones, but I never wanted to check them out and read them. No idea why that was. However, my seven year old son did want to read them, probably because he saw the movie first. So having devoured The Secret of the Unicorn and Red Rackham's Treasure he wanted to read the rest of Tintin. So I took him to the library and we borrowed Tintin and the Black Island. It is an entertaining and engaging story. Tintin is an action hero and despite the setbacks he saves the day. It isn't all action though, there's loads of humour all through the book, almost every page has at least one gag, many of which are…
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Exodus: Perfects by James Kemp
book cover for Exodus 2: Perfects by James Kemp Exodus: Perfects, Part 2 of my NaNoWriMo 2012 novel, has been released on amazon for kindle. It takes a different tack from Exodus part 1, which followed a US Space Command Colonel and his part on the trigger event that will lead to (some) people leaving the Earth because either they personally aren't welcome there any more (as is the case for the 'Perfects' in part 2) or what they want to do isn't tolerated. Who are the Perfects? So the 'Perfects' of the title are a group of people that are the result of some unauthorised, and unethical, experiments conducted by a genetic therapy company in the 2030s. The embryos were supposed to have been destroyed, but Haephestus Genetics had them implanted into surrogate mothers instead. In the meantime the…