Monday, August 18, 2008

Rainbows End

Rainbows End / Vernor Vinge. — 1st ed. — New York : Tor, 2006.







364 p. ; 25 cm.

ISBN: 9780312856847

"A Tom Doherty Associates book."

1. Alzheimer's disease—Fiction. 2. Libraries – Fiction. 3. San Diego – Fiction. 4. Science fiction. 5. Spy stories. 6. Virtual reality—Fiction.

813.54

Step a few decades forward in the 21st century and view a world on the brink of dystopia or destruction. The intelligence services of Europe, Japan and India make a horrifying discovery, someone has successfully developed weapon for mind control that can be broadcast electronically. They soon know, or seriously suspect the source for the weapon is a huge biotech complex in San Diego, California. What they don’t know is that one of their own is the man who plans to enforce peace on the world using the weapon.

Meanwhile in San Diego, aged poet Robert Gu gets the latest treatment for Alzheimer's and his failed eyesight. As a poet he wrote great works of art, as a person he’s obnoxious and insulting. Having him once again conscious of his surroundings and able to interact with others is a source of mixed emotions for his family. There’s a lot he doesn’t like about this new world to which he’s been awakened. The automobiles all drive themselves, computers are built into your clothes, and most people walk about in a cross between California and their personal choice of virtual reality. But most of all he misses books printed on paper. He goes over to the University of California at San Diego to visit the library. He discovers that all the paper books are about to be digitized and shredded. But when he joins the protest movement against the book destruction, he unwittingly crosses paths with the foreign intelligence services and the rogue agent they’ve hired to be the cutout man.

This near-future thriller keeps the pace moving as the reader tries to find out what’s real and what isn’t, what’s going on, and will the author need to call in the Marines to save the world before it’s all over? It also throws up a lot of ideas about the interaction between technology and society, ideas that are both morally and politically stimulating. Rainbows End is the winner of the 2007 Hugo Award for best novel.

The Adventures of Super Diaper Baby

The Adventures of Super Diaper Baby : the first graphic novel by George Beard and Harold Hutchins / [Dav Pinkley].— New York : Scholastic, 2002.

125 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.

(Captain Underpants)

ISBN: 0-439-37606-8

1. Infants Comic books, strips, etc. 2. Superhero Comic books, strips, etc.

741.5973

The Adventures of Super Diaper Baby is a book overflowing with potty humor befitting the sensibilities of its supposedly nine-and-a-half and ten-year-old authors and its real target audience. It’s also laugh out loud fun for those of us who can measure our age in multiples of decades – if you’re not offended by the potty humor. If you are, the penultimate page has an offer to send the publisher a self-addressed stamped envelope, “And We’LL send you more offensive stuff.” The Flip-O-Rama animation pages delightfully fulfill the cover’s promise of “Action” and “Laffs.” All in all this a delightfully silly book.

However, the reader should be aware that there are other judgments on this title. According to Pam Santi, the Riverside, California grandmother whose request to ban the book was rejected by Riverside Unified School District in 2003, “There’s just no moral value to that poop character.”

Thursday, August 7, 2008

David Copperfield


David Copperfield / by Charles Dickens; read by Frederick Davidson.— Ashland : Blackstone Audiobooks, 2004.

Downloadable audio file (36 hrs., 17 min.)

ISBN: 0786131063

Title from: Title details screen.

Requires OverDrive Media Console (file size: 521563 KB).

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

1. Autobiographical fiction. 2. Bildungsromans. 3. England – Fiction. 4. Young men – Fiction.

In this semi-autobiographical novel, a successful writer reminisces about his early life and education. What starts as episodic memories soon becomes a vast witty narrative delight of over eight hundred pages with multiple intertwining plots and over thirty distinctly memorable characters from every level of nineteenth century English society. The false humility of the repulsive Uriah Heep and the grandiloquent optimism of the ever impoverished Wilkins Micawber, a character Dickens based on his own father, have become characters that have grown to be cultural touchstones beyond the novel.

Frederick Davidson narration is somewhat dry and detached, but his voicing of characters is brilliant. The whining unctuousness he brings to the voice of Uriah Heep made my skin crawl. His curt way of giving voice to Betsy Trotwood produced an instant mental picture of David’s eccentric and opinionated aunt. The gruff magnanimity of Daniel Peggotty and the self-righteous cruelty of Edward Murdstone and his sister are wonderfully voiced.