The Mercy of the Gods Review

January 9, 2025

I loved the Expanse Science Fiction books so I assumed I would also love The Mercy of the Gods by Jame S. A. Corey; Actually there is no James S. A. Cory; the book was written by Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck under the pseudonym James S. A. Corey.

Rating – 4 out of 5 (Don’t give half point scores; if it did this would be a 3.5 out of 5)

Summary: In he The Mercy of Gods humanity is conquered by an alien race called the Carryx, forcing humans to prove their worth through scientific research to avoid extinction; the story follows Dafyd Alkhor, a human research assistant, as he navigates the complexities of survival and resistance under alien rule, grappling with the difficult choices he must make to maintain his humanity and potentially save his species.

Biologists should love this book. The main characters are scientists working on biochemical projects. I did not understand almost anything they discussed concerning the project except they were trying to modify totally incompatible biological entities (not sure if they were plant or animal) for one to be a food source for the other.

While the Expanse was a hard core Space Opera The Mercy of the Gods is a slow moving narrative building the World, and developing the characters while trying to survive under the thumb of the Carryx.

The Mercy of the Gods is the first book in a three book series. It sets the stage for what is to come.


2024 Book Review

December 26, 2024

Over the years

I’ve always been a book reader since I was a young lad. I started reading probably more out of boredom than. For any other reason. I was maybe 4 or 5 when I burnt my leg in a trash fire on the farm. For months I was confined to laying on the sofa. Today I would have been watching TV the entire convalescent period but this was before TV; therefore I read books and listened to the radio.

I’m an eclectic reader. I’ve read everything from History to Gardening to Science Fiction to Productivity to Computer Science.

Now to what I read in 2024

2024

Looking back at this year I read a mixed bag including fantasy, productivity, and history – 28 books in all. I read a mix of physical and digital books this year although most were digital on a Kindle. Near the end of the year I started listening to books. For those of you who like lists I’ve included the list of the 2024 books at the end of this post.

My favorite book this year was a mixture of science and history: American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin. The book served as inspiration for Christopher Nolan’s 2023 biographical film Oppenheimer, starring Cillian Murphy as the theoretical physicist. (Wikipedia). I did not see the movie but hearing about it sparked my interest in the book.

I had wanted to read 12 non-fiction books this year which I did as a form of self-improvement and in the spirit of the mantra “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” – Mahatma Gandhi.

I also read the last part of the Wheel of Time book series – 9 of the 14 book series. I started the series in mid-2023. I’m the caregiver for my wife who has PSP and therefore am mostly homebound. Therefore there are great portions of the day where I can either read, watch TV, play games, or spend time on the computer. It’s a Fantasy series where the journey is the best part, not the goal. I was underwhelmed by the ending. Would I read the 11,898 page series again – Yes!

Lastly, I tried audio books this year. My take away to date is don’t listen to books you need to pay attention to. At least for me my mind wanders sometimes. That’s not a problem if I’m reading a physical book. But not with an audio book. I find my self hitting the 30 second rewind button a few times. Will I continue to listen to audio books? I believe so but not books like Nexus, one of the couple books I listened to instead of reading. AS an aside the reason I chose that book was the title. In my chosen profession the word was often overused and used incorrectly. I will leave it as an exercise for the reader to google the meaning of Nexus. This book’s author used the word in a more correct manner than it’s often used.

Next year (2025)

I intend to read a mixture of pleasure (Science Fiction and Mysteries) and self improvement books – Learn Forever. I don’t have a set number of books in the self improvement category but here’s my draft list which will change as time goes on:

I already have 5 physical books on the list:

  1. GEB – Reread every year. I am going to read it every year at least until I understand it.
  2. Lord of the Rings – Reread -Fantasy but the book in that genre by which all others are measured
  3. The Light Eaters by Zoe Schlanger – Plant Kingdome
  4. Einstein in Kafkaland by Ken Krimstein – Graphic novel – branching out to graphic novels this year – A year in Prague when Einstein became Einstein and Kafka became Kafka
  5. Big Jim and the White Boy by Marcus Kwame Anderson, David F. Walker – Graphic novel – The retelling of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

    Other Candidate books

  • The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley – Science Fiction — Sounds like a winner — something different
  • The Comfort Crisis by Michael Easter — Cal Newport interview. Sounds very interesting
  • The Burning Earth by Sunil Amrith — A New Yorker best book –how we destroyed nature (my words)
  • Every Valley by Charles King– Handel’s messiah and the troubled times that caused it
  • The Cottage Garden by Claus Dalby – lots of photos of cottage gardens
  • Calypso by Oliver K Languid – Space opera I think
  • Slow Productivity by Cal Newport – as the name implies
  • A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking – like GEB I continue to read this book until I understand it. However, I think I’m closer to an understanding than with GEB
  • The Sabbath (FSG Classics) by Abraham Joshua Heschel – an old book a the name implies

Books read in 2024:

  • Lord of Chaos by Robert Jordon – One of the Wheel of Time series
  • Six Easy Pieces by Richard Feynman – Six easy science concepts written for the layman by Nobel Prize winner and one of the Atomic Bomb creators along with Robert Oppenheimer
  • Discipline is Destiny by Ryan Holiday – Book on one of the from Stoic Principles – Discipline
  • *A Crown of Sword * by Robert Jordan
  • Winter Storm by Robert Jordan
  • The Path of Daggers by Robert Jordan
  • Budapest by Victor Sebestyen – History of Budapest by a native
  • The History of Almost Everything by Bill Bryson – Not as good as I thought – would not recommend
  • Where Good Ideas Come From by Steve Johnson – took a 10 page explanation and turned it into a boring book
  • Tao te Ching by Stephen Mitchell – central to Taoism
  • American Prometheus by Kai Bird – Book of the year for me
  • The Gathering Storm by Robert Jordan
  • Killing Moon by Jo Nesbo – Norwegian Thriller – the latest in the series of Detective Harry Hole
  • Towers of Midnight by Robert Jordan
  • Lords of Uncreation by Adiran Tchaikovsky – Space Opera – very good – last book in the three book series
  • Knife of Dreams Robert Jordan
  • A World Lit Only By Fire by William Manchester – coming out of the dark ages – section on Martin Luther is the best I’ve read on him
  • Eight Bears by Gloria Dickie – Eight bear species in the World
  • The Bhagavad Gita by Eknath Easwaran – One of the tenets of Hinduism
  • Overboard by Sara Paretsky – Latest book in female Chicago detective series – loved the series in part because it’s based in Chicago where I lived for three years
  • Meditations by Marcus Aurelius – the high lord of stoicism
  • Memory of Light by Robert Jordan
  • New Spring by Robert Jordan
  • The Obstacle is the Way by Ryan Holiday – Productivity book about overcoming obstacles
  • In a Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson – traveling around Australia – good book
  • To Overthrow the World: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Communism by Sean McMeekin – mostly summary of all his previous books. Read them instead
  • Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer – Came in 2nd as my book of the year – combination Indian lore, environmentalism, nature book
  • On Basilisk Station by David Weber – Space Opera – the kind of Science Fiction I enjoy
  • Nexus by Yuval Noah Harari – Could have been subtitled the History of Information – Audio book

The Three Body Problem

January 18, 2017

img_0088

Shhhhh! The Universe is watching and It’s Dark Out There. That’s The Three Body Problem’s message; a book written by Cixin Liu.

For most Nerds The Three Body Problem is a classical Physics problem: Given masses, current position, and velocity of three bodies (a special case of the n-body problem) there is no way to analytically calculate the motion of these bodies.

The author takes this problem and crafts a spell-binding trilogy (The Three Body Problem is book one) starting with three Suns in erratic orbits causing chaos on the planet Trisolaris. Meanwhile a Chinese Scientist discovers a technique to broadcast RF throughout the Universe using the Sun as an amplifier, and of course Trisolarians receive the signal and respond or the story would be short and boring. They rejoice for they have found another inhabitable planet within 4 Light Years without the disastrous climate swings experienced by a planet in an erratic orbit around 3 Suns. What luck! Of course the Solarians set off to make the Earth their new home. However, since 4 Light Years is a long way off unless you can travel at the speed of light the Earthlings have several centuries to prepare for their coming. Well, the story marches on for seemingly eons of time with both adversaries gaining the advantage from time to time. And just to make the saga a little more interesting the Dark Universe weighs in from time to time.

When the tale has been told and all is said and done (Ecc.) the triology is about the fate of the Universe, not just Trisolaris and Eath.

The books provide the reader with many interesting hypotheses to ponder. For example, Einstein’s two Theories of Relativity declare the Speed of Light constant, but Time is not. Time slows down as gravity increases or relative velocity increases. That’s why clocks tick slower on GPS satellites and a theoretical Space Traveler would age less than their twin on the Earth. Does time slow down as the speed of light decreases? It does in Cixin Liu’s trilogy.

I wrote this review a couple of week’s ago and never did publish it — 70 year old memory? Yesterday I read an interview with President Obama in the NYT times. The subject of the interview was reading. In the article the President mentioned The Three Body Problem was one of his favorite books. How cool is that? Me and the President have something in common. Click Here to read the interview. Also, the review jogged my memory. Hey, I ought to publish my The Three Body Problemreview.

Remember, the Universe is watching and it’s Dark out there …


The Doomsday Book

April 29, 2014

There are many science fiction genres: space opera, steampunk, cyberpunk, etc…  The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis belongs in the near-future and time travel genres I suppose.  The main theme of the book is time travel back to the 1300s  to record life during  the Middle Ages.  The heroine calls her record The Doomsday Book.

The Doomsday Book published in 1992 won both the highly prestigious Nebula, Hugo, and Locus awards.

This is the first Connie Willis book I have read and on a scale of 1-5 stars  I would give this book 4 stars.  

The book is set in Oxford England where the hero (Kirvin) is a female student. This alone makes the book unusual. There are not many heroines in science fiction novels. The setting is at the University in a near future (2054) where time travel is possible. A few pages into the book Kirvin travels back to the Middle Ages. Meanwhile life goes on in the near-future with Kirvin’s Professor James Dunworthy as the main protagonist. The book flips back and forth between Kirvin in the Middle Ages and near future Oxford.  

Life both in the Middle Ages for Kirvin and the near future Oxford for Professor Dunworthy is chocked full of trials and tribulations.  They battle tremendous problems in their respective times as the narrative switched back and forth.   

Wikipedia contains a good summary of the book but I don’t recommend reading it if you plan to read the book. It will spoil the surprises.