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ajft@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 4 months ago

he/him scruffy monkeyhanger sysadmin cyclist Melbourne, Boonwurrung land, Aus

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Signal to Noise New Edition (Hardcover, 2007, Dark Horse) No rating

Not really a review, just my ramblings about it. I've had the ebook for years but never got around to reading it, graphic novels aren't really my thing, and when I read them I much prefer a paper copy, the electronic version just doesn't grab me as much

Writing this a month later and I can't remember much of the story, just vague impressions of the art. Maybe I'll reread a paper copy one day

Pirate Cinema (2013, TOR) 4 stars

In a dystopian, near-future Britain, sixteen-year-old Trent, obsessed with making movies on his computer, joins …

Enjoyable enough, I've read it a few years ago and it was one of the few things on my ereader when I needed something and couldn't connect online

Seems a bit simplistic, aimed at a young adult audience. Enjoyable enough for a quick read

Flood Tide (1998, Pocket Star) No rating

Following the runaway success of his first nonfiction book, The Sea Hunters, Clive Cussler returns …

I'd read a few of these about thirty years ago. Ok, its an unbelievable page-turner adventure, but wow, incredibly cardboard, racist, sexist and unbelievable. Were they all as bad as this when I first read them or is this one just worse then usual?

finished reading In search of Ireland by H. V. Morton

In search of Ireland (1930, Methuen) No rating

I stumbled on another of H.V. Morton's books a few years ago and enjoyed his style, so picked this up in a second-hand shop when I saw it. Although written almost a hundred years ago the language is very readable, not noticeably "old", while the places and people that he described are clearly from another age - and he is often remaking that he's seeing the last of "an old way of life" as modern transport and communications comes more strongly into play, mixing and changing society

The dragon at noonday (1987, Headline) No rating

I guess I deserve this for jumping in at book two of a four book series - I picked up no. 2 and 4 from a box of freebies because I recognised the author's name and I'd enjoyed the Brother Cadfael novels years ago. Thrown in the deep end, English & Welsh history, lots of characters, lots of places in the landscape, I think you'll need a map and a family tree to follow what's going on. Mostly just went with the flow and enjoyed it as it went, letting the bigger picture lose itself in the background