Books read March

Lots of science fiction this month, because I bought a lot of it this month.

The Hacker Crackdown — Bruce Sterling
Nostalgia. During the eighties the personal computer, followed slightly later by the first computer networks came of age and with it came the hackers and crackers. Then came Operation Sundevil, the first big nationwide hacker crackdown in the States, which inspired Sterling to write about how this came about, who the players were and what was happening. Cyberpunk had become reality.

To Your Scattered Bodies Go — Philip José Farmer
Read this to honour Farmer’s death. I’ve attempted to read this before but never finished it, but this time tore through it.

AK-47 — Larry Kahaner
A slight and flawed cultural history of the Kalashnikov; parts of it were excellent.

Inventing Ruritania — Vesna Goldsworthy
A study which examines the influence popular fiction and its stereotypical images of the Balkans over the centuries have influenced our views of the region and not just our views, but our politics.

Fugue for a Darkening Island — Christopher Priest
One of Priest’s first novels. Published in 1972, it’s a very uncomfortable echo of the racial fears of white Britain of the early seventies. After a localised nuclear war that devestated most of Africa, refugee laden ships land in Britain. What follows is civil war. Well written and disturbing.

Sweet Silver Blues — Glen Cook
The first Garret P.I. novel. Garret’s a private dick in fantasyland but despite the elves his adventures are just as hardboiled of that of any thirties detective. Great stuff.

The Man Who Japed — Philip K. Dick
Typical early Dick, fun, not too outrageous and slight.

Or All the Seas with Oysters — Avram Davidson
A brilliant short storyteller who deserves a larger audience, Avram Davidson is at his best in this collection. Classic American fantasy, which takes the familiar elements and fairytales from Europe but just can’t take them too seriously anymore. The title story is the origin for that old gag of where all your paperclips disappear to.

Flandry of Terra — Poul Anderson
Three stories starring Dominic Flandry, secret agent of the Terran Empire trying to hold back the long night when inevitably the empire collapses. Despite the gloomy background these are still fun adventure stories, much better than they have to be.

The Universe Against Her — James H. Schmitz
A fixup novel introducing Telzey Amberdon, a fifteen-year-old genius and first-year law student whose psychic powers are triggered during an encounter with big cat-like telepathic aliens; now I know where David Weber got the idea for treecats from… Good fun, like Anderson Schmitz’s stories are much better than they’d need to be.

Time for the Stars — Robert A. Heinlein
Another Heinlein juvenile, about a twin, one of whom went to the stars while the others stayed home. Yes, it’s the classic time dilation thought experiment made into a story, though I still don’t think Heinlein ever really understood relativity…

The Falling Torch — Algis Budrys
Twenty years after Earth was conquered by the Invaders, the son of the president in exile returns from Centaurus to help mount the resistance. As seems to be typical of Budrys, the emphasis lies firmly with the psychological development of the protagonist rather than on the action.

Millennium — John Varley
Once upon a time Varley wrote a great short story, “Air Raid” that was turned into a mediocre movie and a much better novel. This is this novel. Far future humans are traveling back in time to snatch people doomed to die in aircrashes with no survivors. Then something goes wrong and an air crash investigator slowly learns the truth. A very seventies sort of story, even if it was written in 1983.