Showing posts with label anthologies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anthologies. Show all posts

Fundamentals of Bowhunting Review

Fundamentals of Bowhunting
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Since I got my first compound bow this winter I researched at the library for books for beginners. I found this book and have not been willing to return it to the library. It is such a valuable reference I decided I should buy a copy. It covers information on proper stance and release, tuning your bow, what equipment and accessories are best for a certain person or situation, as well as hunting techniques. Dwight Schuh knows his stuff.

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Law of the Gun (Pinnacle Westerns) Review

Law of the Gun (Pinnacle Westerns)
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LAW OF THE GUN, a 2010 Pinnacle Books release, offers up 17 gunfighter-themed stories from the likes of John Jakes, Elmer Kelton, Johnny D. Boggs, Loren Estleman and others. The book's back cover proclaims that LAW OF THE GUN turns the mythical figure of (the gunfighter) upside down, inside out and every way but loose." Well, ok.
I've been reading an awful lot of Les Savage, Max Brand and Will Henry books lately so maybe I've become jaded but...I wasn't all that impressed by most of the stories in LAW OF THE GUN. Most read like stories commissioned for an anthology; spec work. I enjoyed several stories - Ken Hodgson's 'As Good as the Bad,' 'Inferno' by William and J. A. Johnstone, John Duncklee's 'Bounty Hunter' and John Nesbitt's 'Hap' - but most of the others seemed formulaic efforts, entertaining enough but nothing out of the ordinary, nothing very inspiring. Also, I don't know that LAW OF THE GUN upends the gunfighter legend so much as it presents 17 western tales, some of which are marginally connected with the gunfighter theme.
Having said that, I could be way off-base on LAW OF THE GUN. If you're a fan of westerns, pick up a copy. It sells for $6.99. You may find it's a perfectly wonderful collection of shoot-em-up's. I didn't. Your call, folks.
*****
Better 'gunfighter' anthologies include James C. Work's GUNFIGHT! and Robert Randisi's BLACK HATS and BOOT HILL.

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Selected Prose of Heinrich von Kleist Review

Selected Prose of Heinrich von Kleist
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The Dark Side of Enlightenment
A short life, an anguished soul, a strange and compelling writer.
by Ian Brunskill
The Wall Street Journal, 12/21/2009
A century ago, a distinguished Austrian scholar observed that Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811) was "the most difficult problem in literary history" and that the more we learned about him, the more of a problem he became. That state of affairs has not changed.
Kleist's short and mostly unhappy life was a muddle of contradictions. His small dramatic oeuvre ranges disconcertingly wide, from comedy of manners to domestic tragedy, from social realism to gothic fantasy. His prose, of which Peter Wortsman has here collected and translated a welcome new selection, is stranger and more unsettling still. Romantics, Expressionists and Existentialists have all claimed him as an inspiration. Kafka called him a "blood-brother." But Kleist belongs to no literary school and remains, as Thomas Mann observed, in a class uniquely his own. Outside the German-speaking lands, he is all too little read.
Kleist was born in the market town of Frankfurt on the Oder into an aristocratic Prussian family that had produced a long line of distinguished military men. Following tradition, he joined a regiment of the royal foot guards when he was not yet 15. He saw action against the French, but he was quite unsuited to the discipline and monotony of military life. "So many officers, so many drill masters, so many soldiers, so many slaves," he wrote.
After a few years of service, he left the army and returned to his home town to study philosophy, physics and mathematics at the university. He acquired a reputation as a serious young man, a bit of a loner. Determined to pursue his intellectual development to the full, and guided by some firm though unspecified plan, in his early 20s Kleist embarked on a decade--his last--of anxious, unsettled life: endless travel; civil service; much reading; much ill health; a flaring of Prussian nationalist zeal; a rash attempt to join the French army; brief imprisonment as a suspected spy.
He also founded a short-lived literary journal and a daily paper. He got to know, and managed to alienate, the grand old men of German letters, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Christoph Martin Wieland. The literary Romantics--including Achim von Arnim, Clemens Brentano and the brothers Grimm--liked him, even revered him. An awkward, anguished soul, he might have stepped from the pages of one of their works.
Through it all Kleist wrote, though to no very wide acclaim: essays, anecdotes, shorts stories, plays. Then, on Nov. 21, 1811, at around four in the afternoon, on a small hill by the shore of the Wannsee lake just outside Berlin, having first shot dead a woman called Henrietta Vogel, who was the wife of an acquaintance and who in the subsequent autopsy would be found to have been suffering from incurable cancer, he placed a pistol in his mouth and killed himself. He was 34.
Kleist in his youth had espoused with enthusiasm all the optimism of the Enlightenment. Reason would conquer all; happiness would come with experience and understanding. In March 1801, however, by his own account, he seems to have encountered the thought of Immanuel Kant (it is not clear what precisely he read), and his world fell apart. By testing the nature and limits of human knowledge, Kant had sought primarily to establish the possibility of a meaningful metaphysics. To Kleist, however, it was much grimmer than that: Kant had shown, he believed, that empirical knowledge was unreliable, reason illusory, truth unattainable and life quite meaningless. "My sole and highest goal has vanished," he wrote. "Now I have none."
It was an extreme overreaction, not to mention a misreading of Kant's philosophy, but Kleist was like that. The universe inhabited by the characters in his works is bleak and bizarre--as "Selected Prose of Heinrich von Kleist" reminds us. In his essay "On the Theater of Marionettes," an ironic, fictionalized dialogue, Kleist consider's Man's fall from Eden and asks whether human self-consciousness is less a blessing than a curse. The characters in his works, particularly in his extraordinary short stories, try to make sense of a senseless world, to behave rationally in the face of madness, to act with purpose while at the mercy of cruel chance.
In "Michael Kohlhaas," the eponymous protagonist is a wronged horse dealer who pursues justice to the point of death. In "The Marquise of O," a virtuous widow who finds herself inexplicably pregnant seeks the truth quite heedless of her own disgrace. (In the mid-1970s, Eric Rohmer made this story into a compelling film.) Fate, for the lovers in "The Earthquake in Chile," is utterly malign. Religious faith, for the iconoclasts in "Saint Cecilia or the Power of Music," amounts to murderous bigotry. Political principle, amid the racial strife of the Haitian revolution in "The Betrothal in Santo Domingo," is a cloak for primal violence. Recounting these horrors, Kleist does not moralize or philosophize. He does not even try to explain.
What makes these dark narratives not just bearable but readable--compelling sometimes, at the unlikeliest moments even funny--is Kleist's extraordinary prose. Exploiting to the full the rigors of German syntax, he uses language to impose order and meaning on a profoundly disordered world. Clause follows clause in a stately, dispassionate procession of appalling events, commas marking time, paragraphs and even single sentences stretching on inexorably for line after line. Catastrophes unfold in a subclause. Idiosyncrasies of word order defer full, terrible understanding to the last possible moment.
English does not lend itself readily to Kleist's syntactical effects. Mr. Wortsman rises to the challenge with relish. He achieves readability while preserving something of the structure and even the rhythm of Kleist's dense yet lucid sentences: no easy task. This curious author's contemporaries must have found his prose almost as odd and involving as it seems to us. Even in his own day, no one wrote quite like Kleist.
Mr. Brunskill is a senior editor at the London Times.

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Knights of the Chosen (Spirit of Empire, Book Two) Review

Knights of the Chosen (Spirit of Empire, Book Two)
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A massive Empire, consisting of many races on thousands of planets. A Senate, Governors, and a coup from within. Space faring military fleets, battling against newly discovered capabilities in a increasingly recognized two-front conflict. Mysticism in the forms of mental weapons, limited mind reading, at least one "Seer" with precognition, and a strange group mind with prophecies of galaxies going dark.
Enter the protagonists: a Wyoming ranch-raised engineer from an Earth unaware of any of this; a princess of the Empire, skilled through years of service in balancing the needs of worlds, sorting issues, rendering decisions and ably defending Empire; a Protector of the Princess - a sentient great cat armed with both natural and modern weapons; and a pair of twins from a forbidden relationship hidden for years in an orphanage, protected by a Knight, each coming of age with extraordinary talents. Oh - and hot Reba! (also from Earth). New and interesting characters are added: a Special Forces Colonel and a Naval Admiral both from Earth and an Empire "Guide" in mysticism.
In the opening book of the new space opera, the characters were each well developed by the author and the multiple plot lines were introduced amidst a rich background of cultures, planets and moral issues. In this one, the military conflicts emerge, technology is explored and slightly enhanced, and personal relationships are challenged.
The military of the Empire is as huge as the Empire, but has not seen the type of conflict that is emerging: a two-front war: one against an external race with mind weapons not previously seen, another against the forces of the coup - their own Empire ships and crews but taken over by those who overthrew the Empire ruling establishment.
The science involved is standard SF stuff: AIs controlling major subsystems of the ships; superluminal drives which only operate away from gravity wells; handheld and ship-based energy weapons; advances in healthcare that can stimulate re-growth of organs and limbs; and translators that quickly deal with language issues. In this book, the technology is being innovated: new means to "jump" within the influence of gravity wells, instantaneous interstellar communications, self-aware AIs, and ships going "stealth." The sources of innovation are interesting: the alien race that developed along completely different technological lines, a smuggler's planet that tweaked technology driven by need; and the Earth people who had never seen the technology and therefore didn't know what could and could not be done. None of the improvements came from the Empire's creators or somewhat stagnated users.
The Empire military supplements their forces with a limited draw of volunteers from yet unaware Earth. Special Forces, Air and Naval officers get brutally quick training and fill key weaknesses in the Empire. Military tactics and strategies are cobbled together, forced by the nature of the conflict, the unusual weapons, and the limited resources - mostly in the wrong place. Two planetary battles, two fleet-based space battles, and several ship to ship battles - this one brings in fighting!
Personal interactions are explored, specifically in command interactions - captains reporting to lieutenants, Admirals from different command structures, governors with illegitimate appointments. The interactions are plausible in the professional Empire and Earth recruited forces - the smuggler forces bring a bit more color and conflict.
A good addition to the series, but it would be difficult for a reader to pick up the series here. The story line(s) are continuing to develop in interesting directions. This might be more than a three book series!


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The Empire has collapsed. Aided by the Chessori, who wield an unbeatable mind weapon, Rebel domination of the sectors strengthens daily. Against such formidable opponents, hope for the future of Empire dims.The people of Earth are the only ones in the galaxy immune to the terrible mind weapon. The Chessori have been studying Earth for many years, trying to discover the reason for this immunity.The Empire asks for help, but if Earth agrees, the Chessori will surely retaliate. Yet failure to act is just as risky in the long run. Earth must save the Empire, and it must learn to save itself, as well. The process cannot be forced. It must be led, and time is short. Join the Queen and her Knights as they struggle to pull the remnants of a once great civilization from the ashes of defeat. Like the Phoenix, they will rise up, giving all that they are, and the galaxy will hear their call.

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The Works of Andre Norton (12 books) Review

The Works of Andre Norton (12 books)
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I was pretty far into the first book before it became clear that it was not the first in its series. I checked online and found this collection pulls from three different series (and some stand alone works). Most of the series works are out or order.
If you want to follow the correct order, try this:
Ross Murdock/Time War Series:
The Time Traders (1st in series)
The Defiant Agents (3rd)
Key out of Time (4th)
(series is 7 books long)
Solar Queen Series:
Plague Ship (2nd)
Voodoo Planet (3rd)
(series is 7 books long)
Drew Rennie Series:
Ride Proud Rebel (1st)
Rebel Spurs (2nd)
The other books are either the only entry from their series, or are stand alone works.

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Illustrated with 10 unique illustrations.The Defiant AgentsThe Gifts of AstiKey Out of TimePlague ShipRalestone LuckRebel SpursRide Proud, Rebel!Star BornStar HunterStorm Over WarlockThe Time TradersVoodoo Planet

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Works of Andre Norton. The Time Traders, Rebel Spurs, Voodoo Planet, Plague Ship and more (mobi) Review

Works of Andre Norton. The Time Traders, Rebel Spurs, Voodoo Planet, Plague Ship and more (mobi)
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Just a quick comment. I love Andre Norton. I have almost all of her books in my physical library. 5 stars for the content of this collection. However, all of these titles are available for free download at gutenberg.org. Project Gutenberg has thousands of free ebooks available. Check it out.


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Table of Contents All Cats Are Gray (1953)The Defiant Agents (1962)The Gifts of Asti (1948)Key Out of Time (1963)Plague Ship (1978)Ralestone Luck (1938)- IllustratedRebel Spurs (1962)Ride Proud, Rebel! (1961)Star Born (1957)Star Hunter (1959)Storm Over Warlock (1960)The Time Traders (1958)Voodoo Planet (1959) Appendix:Andre Norton Biography

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