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Path: ...!3.eu.feeder.erje.net!2.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: ted@loft.tnolan.com (Ted Nolan <tednolan>) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: RI January 2025 Date: 23 Feb 2025 06:00:17 GMT Organization: loft Lines: 176 Message-ID: <m1vrrgFnf3uU1@mid.individual.net> X-Trace: individual.net lPqTqzMGZbeU9T7rXR3g9wJZltyZoKNmhL+v6PT7VlnHLLjkx7 X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:Tu0uQl8ANqDGbeJCYNe7NuyiJX8= sha256:tG6hhFX/nZyOGOpD7z1UFwXz4i/LDj8wkeksjV/aIoM= X-Newsreader: trn 4.0-test76 (Apr 2, 2001) Bytes: 9658 A pretty good month. Godsworn was the weakest book, but not bad, and I had some qubbiles with the Stirling, but I enjoyed it nonetheless. As usual, the links are Amazon affiliate ones that could, in theory, earn me something should you enter the store through one. === To Turn the Tide by S.M. Stirling https://amzn.to/3CyPIn0 Here Stirling returns to the sort of _Lest Darkness Fall_ story he told in his "Island In The Sea Of Time" series twenty years ago, and though this is not a bad story, he did it a bit better there. In a time-line which seems to have diverged from ours in 2020, a group of five American historians, all experts on the Roman era, are lured to Vienna under false pretenses. In fact their Austrian physicist host has invented a working time machine, and (apparently) wants to do a Mr. Atoz to Principate Rome to escape the (pretty much clearly coming) nuclear holocaust. We don't know much about him aside from his being a manipulative jerk because just as the American team arrives, the balloon goes up, and he activates the machine just as the fireball is knocking out the windows, killing him and stranding our heroes (still physically in the same place) in Provincia Pannonia Superior in June 165 A.D.. Our party, stunned unconscious, and not fully understanding what has happened is a mixed group: An older (but not old) Army veteran professor, and four graduate students including two men and two women. As is necessary in this type of story (if it is not to be short & depressing) they have incredible luck: They meet an honest man -- A middling prosperous & ambitious Jewish trader, educated and knowledgeable about Roman society, but enough apart from it to not feel any special compulsion to take them to the authorities. With his backing (abetted by the wealth & supplies provided by the dead physicist), the group sets up shop on a Pannonian plantation and begins to work to try and change the future they just escaped. Complicating matters no little bit is that they have arrived on site just before the start of the Marcomannic wars and that anything significant they do is bound eventually to bring the attention of Marcus Aurelius, who is no dummy. I enjoyed this book, and will read the follow-on. It was nice to have a lot of hats tipped towards Martin Padway, as the group has all naturally read LDF, and I enjoyed the explication (and examples) of the two types of possible technological developments: A) The stuff the Romans could do if they thought of it (wheel-barrows, stirrups, chimneys) and B) The stuff that would take a lot more working up to, like steam engines. That said, as I intimated above, I believe _Island In The Sea Of Time_ is a better book, as the characters were more strongly drawn there, or at least that's how I remember it. Here they are a bit stereotyped, and subordinate to the bootstrapping tech. The professor has a bit of a character arc, the others less so. There is also not a lot of establishment as to why the group should all stay together, and why the "change the future" project should be their common goal. Yes, they are all fish out of water, but three of them, at least, do find love on the local economy and could easily take their wealth and "go native". To be fair, Stirling does make the point several times that Rome is just the best thing going, not that it is "good" by uptime standards, but I think some more debate before everyone falls in line would be welcome. Godsworn: An Epic Fantasy Harem Adventure (The Dragon Sovereign Book 3) by Sarah Hawke https://amzn.to/3WSSLgq This volume finishes (apparently) Hawke's prodigal return story of the Dragon Prince Alamir's mostly triumphant return after being left for dead by his (supposed) best friend and his consequent amnesiac wanderings. While reuniting with (and completing) his harem is welcome, his problems are hardly over as his capital city has been razed, the whole basis of the Empire turns out to be completely false, and the old gods are back, and everybody had which were the good ones and which the "bad" exactly backwards. We know enough of the future of Alamir's world (see the High Wind books) to question exactly what his long-term accomplishments will be, but at least for the nonce, he, his harem, family and subjects have secured a peace and the stability necessary to raise their (rapidly oncoming, or already here) children. I enjoyed these books well enough, but they share the problem of many prequels: They can't change the future we know, and I would have rather have had sequels developing the multiple unresolved story-lines of that future. Sanctuary (Roman's Chronicles Book 1) by Ilona Andrews https://amzn.to/4hP6Bsn Roman is a Russian Black Volhv, part of the improbably large Atlanta area Russian magical community in Andrews' "Kate Daniel" setting. As you would expect, being the servant of a dark god (not the same thing, exactly, as an evil god) is no bed of roses, and thus Roman finds himself, unsurprisingly, alone in his remote cottage for the holidays once more. Furthermore, said god is on the outs with his wife and Roman finds himself (literally) roped into his efforts to make amends, something that is making his sleep as restive as his holidays are less than festive... To some extent Roman is used to all that and it's his status quo. What is *not* usual is a teenaged boy showing up on his doorstep and asking for "Sanctuary", a Christian concept that is not exactly part of Roman's Volhv tradition. Nearly dead when Roman takes him in, the kid is unwilling to say more than his sister is coming for him. Who she is, exactly, is a (another) mystery, as is the identity of the powerful magical posse who come to take the boy. However, if Sanctuary is not part of Roman's tradition, it is something that, as he notes, he is very good at, and they aren't getting the kid without a fight. Do I need to say that an Ilona Andrews book is good? OK, this book (or novella really) is very good. We have seen Roman before (he officiated Kate's wedding), but this is the first really in-depth look at him we have had, and how he stays a good person in the complicated life he leads. And the sister? That's as mortifying as anything we could have hoped for. At least in the ebook there is also a very short sequel story developing the same themes as Roman's story, and that is also good. Accepting the Lance (Liaden Universe Book 23) by Sharon Lee & Steve Miller https://amzn.to/3WTWfzk As mentioned by, I believe, Tony, some months ago, this volume brings to an end, or at least to satisfying inflection points, a number of story-lines which have been brewing for years. If you will recall, Clan Korval was forced to implement "Plan B" and abandon Liad in response to an attack from the mysterious Department of The Interior. Their long-term response included the (unfortunately necessary) bombardment of Liad itself, making them even less popular there, so there is no going back. Moving hard & ruthlessly, the seemingly-useless Korval, Pat Rin was forced to take over the remote and frigid planet of Surebleak in a kind of "A Piece Of The Action" set-piece. Now with the whole clan actually settled there, the time has come to legitimize that expedient action. Through an odd sequence of events, this comes down to something almost unknown in Liaden tradition, and apparently almost forgotten in Terran tradition: An election. Complicating this story-line is the fact that the DOI has (apparently) put their backing behind a shadowy alternate candidate, and that the independent commission investigating whether Surebleak's space-port should be recommended or de-listed is on-planet and casting a jaundiced eye at the political unrest. In the meantime, Val Con has assembled a team of 6 ex DOI "Agents Of Change" to take down the Department itself, something that seems unlikely to succeed except that pureness of heart is rewarded in the Laiden Universe (and that Val Con has a kick-ass psionic sister...). Of course if the DOI's in-bound armada of Old Tech destroys Surebleak first it won't really matter what six people do on the other side of the galaxy. And if all *that* is stopped, Surebleak is still fated to collapse in a few thousand years unless the Clutch Turtles can successfully intervene (and by-the-by finally get involved with human civilization...) And I haven't even mentioned the end of the Bedel's long wait, or how Daav, Aelliana & Kamele (sort of their wife) all get along after Aelliana returns to embodiment, what happened to the explorers from the Old Universe or the story behind the vague menace of General Support. If you have been following the Liaden Universe for years, there's a lot of payoff here. If you haven't, why not? -- columbiaclosings.com What's not in Columbia anymore..