Vanished. Kat Richardson. January 15, 2011
Posted by Cyd in fantasy.Tags: fantasy, ghosts, Greywalker, Harper Blaine, mystery, paranormal, private investigator, Seattle, urban fantasy, vampires
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This is the fourth book in the Greywalker series by Kat Richardson. The first three books were: Greywalker; Poltergeist; and Underground.
In this entry in this great series, we learn a lot more about Harper’s past. She is spurred on to investigate her own history and the mystery of her fate as a greywalker. As she does this, bigger things are happening in England that tie to events of her more recent past, and to events happening in the vampire community in Seattle.
This story is really the first of a two-parter that ends with Labyrinth, although the England-based part of the story is tied up by the end of this book. Between these two books many small things from the earlier stories are brought together into a complex and action-filled plot.
I found the background information on Harper’s life answered a number of questions that were alluded to in earlier books. She’s an interesting character and I’ve been enjoying finding out more and more about her. I raced through this book, finding it hard to put down. This series has been improving steadily from book to book.
Underground. Kat Richardson. January 1, 2011
Posted by Cyd in fantasy.Tags: fantasy, ghosts, Greywalker, Harper Blaine, mystery, paranormal, private investigator, Seattle, urban fantasy, vampires
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This is the third book in the Greywalker series. It follows Greywalker and Poltergeist.
In this book Harper investigates some mysterious disappearances among the homeless people who live in Seattle’s Pioneer Square, near her PI office. At the request of her friend, Quinton, she discovers the world of the old underground city that exists beneath parts of Seattle, where not just the homeless take shelter. She also learns a lot more about Quinton, the somewhat mysterious tech wizard who has helped her out in her previous investigations.
With each of these books Richardson develops the recurring characters further, making them seem more like three-dimensional people. Even Harper is becoming more fully developed, something that was missing for me in the first two books. Richardson also brings in some interesting fact-based information about hidden parts of Seattle (the underground is real), and some fascinating Native American mythology as well. She also makes the homeless people very real and sympathetic – they are not simple stereotypes. The abilities of Harper as a greywalker allow Richardson to insert some history into the story without it feeling forced or awkward.
This is another great entry in a series that I continue to enjoy reading.
Poltergeist. Kat Richardson. December 20, 2010
Posted by Cyd in fantasy.Tags: fantasy, ghosts, Greywalker, Harper Blaine, mystery, paranormal, private investigator, Seattle, urban fantasy, vampires
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This is the second book in the Greywalker series, following Greywalker.
Seattle PI Harper Blaine is hired by a university professor to look into a research project he’s conducting. He has a group of volunteer test subjects who are working together to try to create an artificial poltergeist. It’s supposed to be an investigation into the psychology of a group, but something else seems to be happening. The professor has been referred to Harper as an investigator who is good at figuring out strange things.
I enjoyed this book at least as much as the first one. The plot is interesting and fast paced. I found the concept of the psychological experiment to be fascinating, all the more so because it’s based on some real experiments conducted in the 1970s. I also enjoyed reading about Harper’s growing acceptance of her power as a greywalker.
The only frustration I had with this book was the difficulty I had getting a real feel for Harper herself. I suspect it’s a drawback of writing in the first person. Unless the author finds some way to show us the character through someone else’s eyes, we only really know her from her own perspective. That tells us a lot about her, but something is still missing. Still, that’s a very minor complaint. Overall I loved the book, and went right on to read the next in the series.
Against the Machine. Lee Siegel August 22, 2010
Posted by Cyd in non-fiction.Tags: culture, internet, web
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Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob.
I picked this book up at the library because it looked like it would be an interesting exploration of many of the things that I think about when I ponder the implications of the wide use of the internet on our lives. I’m sad to say that I was very disappointed, and often fairly annoyed with it.
Siegel, who at one time was a staff writer at the New Republic, and an art critic for Slate.com, touches on a fairly wide range of topics, among them: the effect of using the internet as a means of communicating with others, on individuals and society; the conversion of leisure time into “work” (by which he seems to mean using leisure time to produce rather than consume or simply rest); the effect of anonymity on what people will write in comments, blogs, etc.; and the effect on culture of things like youtube.com. He spends quite a while commenting on ideas and passages from books by such people as Malcolm Gladwell (The Tipping Point), Alvin Toffler (Future Shock), Bill Gates, and Christopher Lasch (The Culture of Narcissism). While he gives a nod of the head to some of the positive aspects of the internet in the early part of the book, he then goes on to focus on negatives (real or perceived). His tone in these discussions is often quite defensive.
My problems with the book are mainly with what’s missing. Siegel makes a lot of generalizations without providing facts to back them up. He makes causal connections without providing data or references to support them. At times he strays into hyperbole to make his points. He hasn’t set out to provide a balanced overview of the effects internet use as a whole so that the reader can come to his or her own conclusions. He has a point to make and he has set out to make it. In many ways this book reads like the sort of extended opinion piece that one often comes across in the very blogs that he criticizes.
Because of these weaknesses, I found myself having trouble believing him. For example, when he discusses blogging he claims that all blogs are written by people aching for popularity and attention, and using their blogs to put forth their opinions on the popular subjects of the day (the more controversial or contentious the better). Now, of course this holds for a certain percentage of people who write blogs, but it certainly doesn’t hold for all of them. Of the total number of registered blogs (he supplies a figure he says was accurate at time of writing) you would surely find that some have been abandoned or were never used, some are private, some are used by people to keep family and friends updated on their activities, some are used to share information on hobbies and interests with others who pursue the same, some are used to publish web comics, shop updates, local community news, and so on and on and on. Knowing this from my own experiences in blog reading, I found myself unable to take his discussion about the downside of blogging very seriously. I had similar problems with other discussions in which he generalizes all internet users into a single type with identical motives and values. In fact, he writes about “the internet” as if it is one single, somewhat malevolent thing, rather than a vast network of computers that is used for many different things.
I also wish he’d provided a broader context for a lot of his claims. Is the internet actually causing the things that he suggests, or is it simply magnifying things that already exist? Are the ways that people use the internet changing them, or are the ways that people (and society) are changing simply being reflected in the ways that they use the internet? Or is the truth a little more complex than an either/or situation?
After reading the book, I came away without any real sense of where we should be going from here. Siegel doesn’t suggest any solutions or make recommendations for change (unless the implied solution is for us to back away from our computers). This is a shame, because we are in a stage of transition now, with the internet still in relative infancy. People, particularly young people, are making decisions about what they do online that might have effects on their later lives that they can’t imagine now. Things like cyber-bullying, stalking and identity theft are serious issues, and it’s hard to know how much our innocent online activities are making us vulnerable. Is having respect and empathy for an unseen person at the other end of an electronic communication a new skill we need to be learning (and teaching our kids)? Are the decisions being made now by legislators, businesses and news organizations good ones? While Siegel raises some questions that I think are important ones, it’s my opinion that he fails to make a valuable contribution to this discussion.
Looking for Group. Ryan Sohmer August 3, 2010
Posted by Cyd in fantasy, graphic novel.Tags: fantasy, graphic novel, Looking for Group, parody, Ryan Sohmer
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Looking for Group, Volumes 1 and 2. Written by Ryan Sohmer, Art by Lar deSouza. Originally, and still, published online at Looking for Group.
Looking for Group is a humorous sort of hero quest that often slips right into direct parody. Our Hero is Cale’anon, an elf who seems to be the the only one of his race who isn’t evil. He’s on a quest to do good. From page one he is joined by Richard, an evil warlock who decides to follow Cale around just for the entertainment value. Cale gets them caught up in all manner of adventure, while Richard gets all the good lines.
Along the way they keep picking up more fellow travellers, and each task seems to lead them into yet another and another, until it’s hard to remember just what started it all. And that’s half the fun.
In addition to the fine and funny writing, the artwork is great. The characters change and grow as the story goes on, and the world is developed and expanded and becomes more interesting as the group continues on each quest. All in all a great read, and an antidote to far more common serious and dark fare.


