May all my visitors here have a safe, happy, healthy, wealthy, and, most importantly, holy 2026.
I have a good vibe concerning this upcoming year!
“The proper study of mankind is books.” – Aldous Huxley
May all my visitors here have a safe, happy, healthy, wealthy, and, most importantly, holy 2026.
I have a good vibe concerning this upcoming year!
Shhhh … hear
that? … listen … it’s getting louder … Yes! … I can hear it now! The noise, the
cheering, here it comes … louder … Louder … LOUDER … LOUDER!!! It’s here! It’s
here! Tens and tens and tens of people worldwide – all right, ten people
worldwide … Cheering! Roaring!! Celebrating!!! It’s here! It’s here!!
IT’S
HERE!!!
THE 2025
HOPPER BEST-OFS!
Yes, my
annual tradition of the best and worst of all the literature, movies, TV,
phases, and experiences Hopper has undergone in the past twelve months. All for
your edification. Books and films to experience and enjoy – and those to avoid
at all costs.
Now,
without further ado, here they are –
Best
Book:
Fiction / Re-reads – Moby Dick (1851)
by Herman Melville, Conquerors from the Darkness (1965) by Robert
Silverberg, Space Skimmer (1972) by David Gerrold
Fiction / First-time – The Spy Who Came
in From the Cold (1963) by John Le Carré
Notable Mention – The Seventh Scroll
(1995) by Wilbur Smith. [This was an insane read and deserves its own
blog post … perhaps in early January … trust me on this.]
Worst
Book:
Stephen King’s It (1986) reread was slightly
disappointing
Bucket
Lists:
As mentioned above, I read through Moby Dick for the third time – I dunno, it just gets better and better every time I read it. Also put away Dumas’ The Three Musketeers, Le Carré’s The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, and The Confessions of St. Augustine.
Best
Film:
Horror/Science Fiction/Action – Frankenstein (2025) directed by Guillermo del Toro. What cinematography! What props! Plus an intelligent, human ending to tug at heartstrings.
Comedy
(alleged) – Friendship (2024). Truly and delightfully bizarre … but don’t
watch with the wife.
So many runner-ups – A Man Called Ove
(2015 – the Swedish version, not the Tom Hanks remake), Good Boy (2025
horror flick with a dog as the main character), The Dark Divide (2020,
midlife crisis meets bigfoot), Nobody (2021, old man John Wick), Being
There (1979), Abigail (2024), House (1977 campy Japanese
horror flick seen with Patch)
Most
Disappointing Film:
The Woman in the Yard (2025, where you watch
a premise get wasted after a promising 20 minutes)
Best TV:
Worst
TV:
The Lazarus Project – everything I
hate in modern writing, and I mean everything. Identity politics, wokeism,
vulgarity. Wife made me sit through first episode; you couldn’t pay me
enough to sit through another one.
Personal
Accomplishments:
Losing 18 pounds the first five months of the year (but, unfortunately, gaining 10 pounds back at the time of writing).
Shaking the dust off my electric
guitar and shaving the rust off my fingers with something like 30 hours of serious
practice.
Assembling my daughter’s college bunkbed
with her roommate’s dad, plus assembling two bookcases and an ergonomic chair
on my own.
Six trips to the confessional.
Grew my record collection by 19 to 63 total.
Met not one but two Little One boyfriends
(and behaved myself the whole time).
Phases:
Sugar-Free January 1st to May 20th
UFO literature revisited (read 8 books in
November and December)
The Lindbergh baby kidnapping case – deep
dive for one week middle of October
Return to SF pulp paperbacks (read 9, gave
up on the 10th – Asimov’s Foundation)
Diary of St Faustina six-month reading journey
Hell House LLC quadrilogy watched with Patch
for Movie Nights in September and October
Favorite Phase:
No, don’t make me choose!
Best
Podcast / YouTube channel:
Andrew Wilson debates. Discovered him in
August and probably have watched twenty hours of him debating feminists,
communists, transvestites, islamists, you name it, mostly in 1v1 debates but also Andrew
versus a whole panel of opposition. He’s a little crude and rough around the
edges, doesn’t bar any holds, and may be an acquired taste, but it’s a fun way
to get the adrenaline flowing when your job involves generating reports and
spreadsheets and more reports and more spreadsheets.
Song of
the Year:
Most anything from The Essential Frank
Sinatra with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra. I find it relaxing on the nerves,
especially after all them YouTube debates.
Workout
Tally:
37 weightlifting sessions
68 miles walked
Not nearly as well, physical-health-wise, as
2024, where I lifted 46 times and walked 20 miles more. I am a few pounds
heavier, but what’s more concerning is a worsening lack of flexibility. For
2026 I would love to get in 100 workouts next year – with deep stretching
before and after – plus around 150 miles walked. I recognize that this is
highly optimistic.
Reading
Tally:
43 books / 18 fiction, 25 non-fiction (if
you count 5 UFO books as “non-fiction”)
Re-read the four Gospels, the Acts of the
Apostles, Genesis, and Revelation
Abandoned 8 books anywhere from 30 pages to
431 pages in
Re-read 8 books, not counting the Bible
books above, mostly science fiction from my youth
Proudest
Moments:
Seeing Little One posing in her first class
teacher picture after six months of student teaching. Also watching her grow
independent with her own car, an off-campus apartment (with her two bffs), and
a serious relationship.
Patch with her first retail job managing a
woman’s clothing boutique, getting her permit and taking her out driving a
dozen times on the way to getting that driver’s license, and being accepted
into all four colleges she applied to.
2025 was a
decent year. Had better, had worse. I enjoyed most of it, albeit with a hint of
sadness as the little ones are now young adults and are starting to forge their
way through life, more and more independent of their parents. Next year Patch
will be leaving us for college for extended periods of time (she’ll be way out
of state) and that will bring new challenges. And there may be a new pet in the
near future. We’ll see.
© 1963 by
John Le Carre
This novel
was a bucket list accomplishment for me, and, to be honest, an act of courage.
My mother-in-law,
well-read in the genres of mystery, espionage, and New York Times
best-seller lists, is a huge Le Carré fan and has been recommending him to me
right from day one, almost thirty years ago. I knew Le Carré as an intellectual master builder of intricate
plots, shadowy characterizations, and don’t-look-behind-the-curtain
all-is-not-as-it-seems scenarios. Cat-and-mouse who-can-you-trust and who-can’t-you-trust.
Twists and turns, third act revelations that will drop the jaw agape in wonder.
A parsimonious writer who only deals out to the reader clues that seem senseless
to what is shown unfolding. A storyteller who crafts a tale backwards but tells
it in a deceptively straightforward way.
In lieu of
all this, I was intimidated.
Sometime
fifteen or twenty years ago I decided that the water’d be fine to jump right
in. And being Hopper with an overly large ego and inflated sense of
comprehension, I started with Le Carré’s masterpiece: Tinker Tailor Soldier
Spy. And immediately got lost fifty or sixty pages in. Could be life with a
newborn in a new house; could be the surgeries I had around that time. Or it
could be I was just not ready for it. I put it away, sold it to a used book
store, and vowed I would return at some later point in life; hence, the bucket
list.
My
mother-in-law sent me some money for my birthday back in September and this rekindled
the interest. I decided to start off where the Internet pretty much unanimously
tells Le Carré newbies to start off with – The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.
And I fearfully kept it on my shelf until, quite on a whim and after three
exhausting literary false-starts, read in in a week in mid-December.
My daughter’s kitten Sweet Potato stretching out with my
copy of The Spy Who Came in From the
Cold
If I were
to encapsulate the plot in a short paragraph, it’d be something like this:
world-weary MI-6 intelligence officer Alec Leamas, fresh off losing a
double-agent escaping at the checkpoint at the Berlin Wall, is recruited for
one last mission – one last strike against the red menace before being allowed
to “come in from the cold.” He’s to play a defector, be picked up and brought
into East Germany, where he would lay the groundwork to eliminate London’s
nemesis, a brutal genius named Mundt. Leamas plans to do this by lies and
suggestions in his debriefing. But things escalate and swerve out of control,
as things like these tend to do, and however cautious our hero is, mistakes are
made – or are they? Not everything is as it seems, and third act revelations
abound, culminating in a finale Mundt-like and brutal in its concision.
I was able
to follow the novel, the allegiances, and the surprises, and enjoyed it
immensely. That weekend I went to a local library and found a 1990 Le Carré
book, The Secret Pilgrim, on sale for a dollar. But Le Carre is meant to
be read in some kind of order, if only to stay as spoiler-free as possible as
the author references earlier plots in later books. So I was planning to buy
some prequels to The Spy Who Came in From the Cold with any Christmas
money. But the Mrs. beat me to it and wrapped Le Carré’s first and second
novels, A Call for the Dead (1961) and A Murder of Quality (1962)
and placed them under the tree. I’m currently reading a SF paperback (my last
from my pre-holiday haul a few weeks ago), and will crack Call for the Dead come
January.
And after
that, George Smiley, in Le Carré’s masterpiece, the “Karla” trilogy:
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974)
The Honourable Schoolboy (1977)
Smiley’s People (1979)
“Grade”
for The Spy Who Came in From the Cold – A-plus. Probably the best first-time
fiction I read this year.
Well, our
fifth Christmas down in Texas has come and passed. And to celebrate, Texas
delivered summer for us. Yes, temps hovered around 80, blessing us with a minor
sun’s anvil. I walked my route around the ponds both days, in t-shirt and shorts,
and each time I finished I felt like I had mowed the lawn, ran a 10K, lifted
weights with a young Arnold on Venice Beach and gyrated to the “Flash Dance”
song while welding two metal boards together. It was unseasonably hot.
But it did
not dampen our Christmas. Fortunately, down here AC systems are no joking
matter, and we kept the indoor climate a frosty 68.
That was really
the only negative, though. We went to Christmas Eve’s midnight mass at our
local parish, with Little One’s boyfriend joining us for the first
time. He’s a Christian but not a Catholic, so this was a legit trial by fire
for him, and he handled it well. By the time all was done, however, we didn’t
get to bed by 2 am (or 3 am, in some cases), so Christmas Day didn’t commence
until 11 am the next morning.
It was a
leisurely day of opening gifts, snacking, drinking, and eating leftovers. The
Mrs. made a pot roast for dinner, complimented with Little One’s carrots and
feta cheese dip. Patch was recovering from sickness, so we kept her away from
cooking duties. We watched – and good-heartedly mocked – a Hallmark flick while
Little One visited her bf’s family in the evening. Then I read a bit and went
to bed just after midnight.
So I know
you’re all wondering – what did Santa bring the Hopper?
Well, as
always, Santa did good by me.
The Mrs.
bought me two John Le Carré books. Le Carré is my newest literary obsession, having
read The Spy Who Came in From the Cold last week. Haven’t “reviewed” it yet,
but I’ll get there. The books she bought me were the two that precede TSWCIFTC.
You should read Le Carré in order, as later books reference early ones, and you
want to journey through them as spoiler-free as possible. She also gifted me
some socks and skin care, which my old epidermis is in dire need of, plus a gift
card to my local used book store.
Patch
continued her passion for gifting me records – the 62nd and 63rd in my
collection: Two Schubert albums, Symphony No. 5 in Bb, Symphony No. 8 in Bm (“Unfinished”)
and the Quintet in A, better known as the “Trout.” And Little One bought me …
an ergonomic comfy chair for my desk, having seen the pathetic metal folding
chair – with a small blanket cushion – I’d been using for the past couple of
years. So no more achy back. A practical gift, one of the best types of
presents.
I, whose
love language is definitely NOT gift giving, lucked out. Everyone seemed to
like what I gave them. I bought the wife a hockey puck – with tickets to a
Dallas Stars game on the other side. She’s turned into a manic hockey fan, and
enjoys the games exponentially more than I do. They’re playing the Bruins at
the end of January, and she hates Boston. I got Patch Steven King’s Carrie
(a favorite she’s been looking for forever but Texas doesn’t seem to stock)
and an Ulta gift card; and Little One a flexible jar opener (an inside joke,
useful now that she lives in her own apartment) and a PetCo gift card, to take
care of her new kitten over there.
My boss
got us all squishy blankets, so I regifted that for my dog Charlie; he’s a connoisseur
of anything blanket-y, the softer the better. Candles and gift certificates and
gift cards from parents both north and east of us rounded out the holiday haul.
I’m off
for the next three days – my gift to myself – and then I work Monday and
Tuesday of next week, followed by New Year’s Eve and Day off. I plan a post on
my resolution as well as a post mortem on 2024’s resolution for 2025. Oh, and
the 2025 Best Ofs! Don’t forget that annual festivity!
Hope you
all had a very Merry Christmas!
More to follow!
Going to
midnight mass in a few hours with the Mrs, the girls, and Little One’s boyfriend.
Then, blessed sleep after a hurried busyness of holiday tasks. Tomorrow we’ll
get up when we get up, have some coffee and tea and cake, and leisurely open up
the gifts that somehow popped up under the Christmas tree this afternoon.
May the
peace of Christ be with you all!
Well, I
failed in my third attempt to make it through Isaac Asimov’s Foundation.
Guess it just wasn’t meant to be.
The book
is regarded as a classic; though, to be honest, I am not entirely sure why. But
it isn’t the first “classic” I haven’t been able to read. Heart of Darkness by
Joseph Conrad comes immediately to mind. Read it twice – once way back in high school
and again around 2011 or 2012. Neither time did I “get it”, neither time was I bowled
over in the presence of a masterpiece. It did absolutely nothing to me or for
me, much to my displeasure.
There are
lesser books that I wouldn’t label as “classic” which I tried to read several times
but just couldn’t complete. Books that may not mean anything to you, but at one
point or another (probably when first taking it off a bookstore shelf and
walking to the cashier) I considered it a potentially intriguing or perhaps
life-changing read. Books such as The Illuminatus Trilogy by Robert Anton
Wilson and My Big TOE by Thomas Campbell. By the way, TOE is an acronym
for ‘Theory of Everything,’ and in this book it involves everything from
mediation to reality to physics to transcendence.
Speaking
of physics, I’ve tried Roger Penrose’s Fashion, Faith and Fantasy in the New
Physics a couple of times. Despite an intuition that Penrose might hold the
key to what everything is made of (in light of the relative failure of string
theory), I have never made it more than 80 or so pages in until brain ache
occurs. This silly topic of the building blocks of matter fascinated me to no
end since a young lad. I went so far as three semesters in Seton Hall in a quest
to find such answers for myself many, many years ago. Ergo, the book still sits
on my bookshelf (actually, in my closet for some reason, along with that marked-up
Einstein biography). It will be cracked open again at some point.
Surprisingly,
Dickens has given me a hard time with, well, er, Hard Times. Also, The
Mystery of Edwin Drood. Both books I’ve tried and both books I’ve failed.
Dunno. Like the Penrose physics books, I will conquer them in the near future.
So why did
my third go-round with Foundation fall through? It wasn’t the old “everyone
in the future talks like a 1940s Brooklyn Jew” that nagged me in my other
Asimovian re-reads. I think it was simply that I found the story … forgive me …
dull and boring. There were no stakes. There were no compelling characters. The
futuristic science of “psycho-history” was not adequately explained, even with Star
Trek: The Next Generation mumbo jumbo. And while I am by no means a literary
feminist, the fact that the only female character in the first 120 pages was a
secretary with no lines just didn’t sit well.
It’s sad
to me that a great hero of my youth did not translate to my later adulthood. I loved
Asimov as a kid. That Christmas gift five-paperback pack I write about
often – The Bicentennial Man, Nine Tomorrows, The Caves of Steel, Pebble in
the Sky, and The Gods Themselves – along with I, Robot to
help sooth a young boy with a broken arm, and Fantastic Voyage the same
young boy bought in the Bookmobile, these books formed me and gave me hours of
reading pleasure, moreso than any author in my youth. Will I read any more
Asimov in this lifetime? Probably not. But I will enjoy those fond, nostalgic
memories.
So I am
finally getting to Asimov’s classic 1951 Foundation paperback that I picked
up a few weeks ago. Throughout my early childhood I read at least seven of his
works.* He was easily my main introduction to science fiction. Didn’t get to Foundation
until sometime in the late 80s, and got about a quarter of the way through
it before more pressing concerns took my attention (my band, night school,
girlfriend, alcohol, etc.). I tried it again during the Wu Flu but only made it
a few chapters. Not sure why; but again, more pressing concerns were on my mind
at that time.
Anyway, I opened
the book and this fell out:
A receipt from November 15, 1975! Half a century old!
It appears
to have originated from a place called the Sierra Book Shop in South Lake Tahoe,
California. I googled for a few minutes and the place (or a place with the
exact same name) could still be in business. I also found that someone who possibly
owned it retired in 1980 (maybe sold the business?) so perhaps it since exists
under new management. My purpose of the all this was to find a picture of the
place to post here, but couldn’t find anything definitive online.
The forever
mysterious customer bought four books – one for $7.00 and three for $1.25. The Foundation
novel has a price on the front cover of $1.25 – which converts to $7.55 in
2025 dollars. Sounds about right. I also see that the tax on the $10.75 purchase
was $0.65, or six percent. Now google tells me the sales tax in Lake Tahoe is
8.75 percent, a 46 percent increase over 50 years. Honestly, I thought it’d be
more.
I truly wonder
what the other three books bought were, especially that $7.00 one. That bad boy
would sell for $42 today.
* Those
seven Asimov paperbacks were: The Bicentennial Man, Nine Tomorrows,
The Gods Themselves, Pebble in the Sky, The Caves of Steel,
I Robot, and the novelization of the movie Fantastic Voyage. I
read them all several times between 10 and 12 and loved every minute of it.
© 1934 by Edgar Rice Burroughs
This was a
completely random find perusing a new semi-local bookstore two weeks back. More
importantly, this book has a little history with me. I vividly remember
reading this in paperback form in the late 70s. My father was a high school football
defensive coordinator, and young nerd me was devouring this olden-time story one
fall in the late 70s on the practice field, on the sidelines, in the school
weight room, under the bleachers. Fond memories from long ago.
Now, I did
not remember the plot at all. Being an Edgar Rice Burroughs story (1875-1950, author
of numerous series of novels starring Tarzan, John Carter of Mars, hollow-earth
Pellucidar, among others), the story is a basic rags-to-riches jungle adventure
that could take place anywhere in the Solar System of Burrough’s mind (and
time). This one featured an Earthling hero named Carson Napier and unfolds on
Venus, with warring tribes, naval battles, piracy, giant monsters, princesses, and
swashbuckling swordplay taking center stage.
But this
is not why I remembered Pirates of Venus. This must have been the first
story – having read it way before Tolkien – where a new language is a prominent feature.
Well, not exactly prominent per se as one finds it in The Lord of the Rings,
but Napier drops some Venusian vocabulary and grammar rules here and there, and
it’s these that stuck with me over 45 years:
As we
battled futilely to disengage ourselves, the klangan settled to the ground, each
pair upon opposite sides of the victim they had snared. Thus they held us so
that we were helpless, as two cowboys hold a roped steer, while the fifth angan approached us with drawn
sword and disarmed us. (Perhaps I should explain that angan is singular,
klangan plural, plurals of Amtorian words being formed by prefixing kloo
to words commencing with a consonant and kl to those commencing with a
vowel.)
(page 92 of my Ace science fiction paperback
There
is so much in a name. I had liked the name of the Sofal from the first. Perhaps it
was the psychology of that name that suggested the career upon which I was now
launched. It means killer. The verb meaning kill is fal. The prefix so
has the same value of the suffix er in English; so sofal means
killer. Vong is the Amtorian word for defend; therefore, Sovong, the
name of our first prize, means defender; but the Sovong had not lived up
to her name.
(page 135 of my Ace science fiction
paperback)
And tidbits
such as these are what called out to me over half a century; this tree trunk
appendage of neurons and neurolinguistic programming remained in place all that
time for me to recall it and overwhelm me with a cascade of sublime nostalgia.
Overall, I
‘grade’ Pirates of Venus a B-minus. Probably thought it was an A back
when I was a young’n, but time is too short to spend on such tales as an adult.
A smorgasbord of ERB should definitely be fed to tween boys in perpetuity; and
a whole rash of newly-hatched science fiction authors will emerge …
Notes:
1) “Amtor”
is the name the Venusian give to Venus. Napier fights for the nation of “Vepajan”
in the novel.
2) I found a different Amtor novel about 13 or 14 years ago and started to read it, but the damn thing disappeared on me, vanished without a trace, and thus permanently remained unread. To this day, I still think a toddler living in the house with me named Patch had something to do with the theft.
© 1972 / 1987 by Gregory Benford
Here’s a
little short reaction to the Gregory Benford science fiction novel In the
Ocean of Night. Benford is a legitimate PhD’d astrophysicist who’s been putting
out science fiction novels and short stories for over a half a century. He’s
been nominated for a couple of Hugo Awards and won a Nebula (the Oscars of
science fiction literature). He specializes in speculative hard science
fiction. Science fiction that one could plausibly consider reality in a couple
of decades.
Now you
might think this author would be a gold mine for a passionate reader with a
physics background like me. But, truth is, I only read one other of his novels,
If the Stars are Gods, a collaboration with Gordon Eklund, and that was
nearly a quarter-century ago. Benford has written or collaborated on something
like 30 or 35 novels and has produced something like twice that in terms of
short stories and novellas. Why I haven’t explored his works in depth I will
get to in a moment.
I picked
up In the Ocean of Night during my Halloween haul specifically because
it was written by Benford. The summary on the back cover is quite vague. It
describes the futuristic world of 2018 in shades of triumph and tragedy: technological
wonders such as lunar colonies and cybernetic advancements and despair in the
forms of pollution and famine. Then – “far beyond the shores of space, there
comes a mystery as vast as the limitless sea of stars, as beckoning as the unending
depths of space.” You need to buy the book if you want to find out more, which I
did on both counts.
It was a
good read. Didn’t like the main character, a rock-the-boat English astronaut,
but enjoyed the reveal: not one, not two, but three alien space probes which
enter the solar system and which our protagonist makes contact with. Some
involved, some haphazard, some monumental, some hushed up by the government.
The science was quite intriguing and well done and made up for any shortcomings
in the characterizations and the liberal authorial bias that crept through here
and there. Oh, and best of all, an infamous north American cryptid makes a
cameo at the end.
There’s
stuff in the book I really liked. The ingredients were all there, and the dish I
wound up eating was satisfactory, but I’m not sure if I’d leave a 5-star Yelp review.
I don’t regret reading it; I savored my journey through its 321 pages. I fact,
I plan on exploring more of Benford’s work. I kinda remember similar feelings
after reading If the Stars are Gods back in 2001. Perhaps I’ll check out
his award-winning novel or, better yet, another of his collaborations.
Grade:
Solid B.
© 1982 by Harry Harrison
Minor spoilers for this 43-year-old SF thriller …
This is
the second of my four-book haul this Halloween, a haul designed for some quick,
distractionary reading as a counterpoint to The Three Musketeers and
other epics I put away this year. It clocked in at 283 pages, a bit long but
the typeface was slightly larger than normal. It was probably of a similar
wordcount to my prior read, The Other Side of Time.
I picked
it up more for the author than for the story (though the story did intrigue me)
– Harry Harrison, a science fiction master whose pedigree stretches from 1951
to 2010. And like the author of my prior read, Keith Laumer, the centennial of
his birth passed too earlier this year.
Never read
much of Harrison. I do recall as a youngster seeing his name adorn many a hardcover
spine whilst perusing the library’s science fiction shelves. The “Stainless Steel
Rat” and “Bill the Galactic Hero” were names I did not know then but now know
them as the typical Harrisonian protagonist – unlikely, anti-traditional, satirical,
a middle-finger to Joseph Campbell and all those heroes on their heroic
journeys – but most of all, comedic. Before I leave physical existence on this
sphere I’d like to read the origin novels of the Rat and Bill; they go on my
bucket list immediately.
However, I
did read a trio of his works 10-15 years ago: Planet of the Damned, Deathworld,
and its numerical sequel, Deathworld 2. Good reads but overall unremarkable;
I think I ‘graded’ them all B’s, which – spoiler alert – I also ‘graded’ The
Jupiter Plague.
But what
of this Plague? I hear your exclamatory inquiries. That’s the word that tickled
my ear. Since we’re all victims to a greater or lesser extent of a recent – ahem
– plague, I wondered if it was too soon to read a science fiction tale about
a deadly contagion. Truth be told, it wasn’t, for this one descends upon
mankind not from the laboratory of a foreign competitor but from another world:
Jupiter.
Published
in 1982 but based on an earlier 1965 story, the setting appears to be the New
York tri-state area around the year 2000. A weird blend of the area I grew up
with rockets and spacepads thrown in. A lot of action takes place in my old stomping
grounds – just across the Hudson River in New Jersey along Route 9. Most of the
story, though, is centered in New York City, between the two poles of Kennedy
Airport and Bellevue Hospital.
A mission
to Jupiter returns after a long absence crashing into a runway at JFK. Our
hero, Dr. Sam Bertolli, is the first on scene and helps the sole survivor out
the hatch before the man seals the metal door behind him and dies. Sam is an
ex-soldier turned medic, still technically an intern despite his age. The man
he rescues, however temporarily, was the commander of the mission and his face
is covered with bursting read pustules.
Sam, along
with a beautiful bacteriologist who arrives shortly after, are placed in
quarantine, but the disease – named Rand-alpha – soon escapes. It’s a
fast-acting bug, killing victims within twelve hours of contact. Sam and the beautiful
doctor, Nita, remain uninfected due to medical precaution, but the disease
spreads through the population. In fact, it soon mutates into Rand-beta, affecting
birds, and Rand-gamma, affecting canines. The army shows up to enforce a
containment perimeter, and as society trapped within the 100-mile circle breaks
down the race is on for Sam and Nita to find a cure before the tri-state area is nuked.
All this
was by-the-book for me, but I didn’t see where the novel was heading. Ask yourself:
why did the commander seal the ship shut? Hmm. Answer: because the cure is
inside the ship, along with something that could make the plague a hundred
times worse. And what this is … is, a real, live, breathing Jupiterian. How
they found it, where they found it, and why the plague is unleashed is the
subject of the final quarter of the novel, and made it worthwhile. In a
sentence, the Jupiterians live on a giant ice rock in the planet’s upper atmosphere
and harness energy like moray eels – bioelectric – but a failure in the
communication of the two species leads to the unleashing of the plague as a
sort of defense mechanism.
Bottom
line, it was a quick, neat read. Like my prior read, no earths were shattered
of paradigms shifted. But it beat watching a four-hour TV series on Netflix.
Grade: solid
B.
N.B. Two
other fun facts regarding Harry Harrison: 1) his 1966 novel Make Room! Make
Room! supplied the general plot for the Charlton Heston 1973 SF movie Soylent
Green, and 2) the man taught himself Esperanto while bored by his duties as
an Army Air Force officer in World War II and often incorporated it in his
novels.
© 1965 by
Keith Laumer
Minor
spoilers for a sixty-year-old pulpy SF paperback …
Bought
this at Halloween mostly for its short page length – 171 pages. And true to
this objective, I did finish it in four hours, albeit over the course of five
days. Anyway, a blessed relief from the long slogs I’ve been doing this reading
year. The quick and fun distraction. I likened it to watching a two-part made-for-TV
show.
Though I
never read Laumer before, the experience hearkened back to my golden age SF
reading (that is, the devotion I showed the field as a tween). The gnarled yellowed
pages, the campy 70s cover, the pleasant finely-aged aroma of the binding. All
that was missing was a library check-out card on the inside of the back cover.
Best of all, though not earth-shattering or life-changing, it took my mind off
my troubles for a few hours. Oh the joy of reading a 60-year-old SF paperback!
First, who
was Keith Laumer? We just passed the centennial of his birth back in June. Part
of the Greatest Generation, he served his country in the Army Air Force in
World War II, went to college, and re-enlisted and later worked in the diplomatic
corps. In fact, his enduring character Retief, his “James Bond” character, was
a galactic diplomat and the protagonist of more than a handful of short story
collections and stand-alone novels. Back in the day when I fancied myself an
up-and-coming SF author, I did pickup his 1963 Envoy to New Worlds and
may have read a short story or two; unfortunately they have slipped the bonds
of my memory.
The Other Side of Time takes place in an alternate reality universe where technology exists to move between differing worldlines forward or back through the threadstream of time. Our hero is also a diplomat (and possibly a secret agent) but is not Retief; this character is a man name of Colonel Brion Bayard of similar aristocratic bent. Our protagonist narrates the tale of being taken in to HQ for a possible mission and – after an explosion of sorts and spotting a fiery man coming toward him – awakens to find his city of Stockholm completely devoid of inhabitants.
Thus into
the timestream to unravel the mystery. He encounters invading cannibalistic ape
creatures, is captured, befriends and escapes with a more intelligent ape name
of Dzok who is also, coincidentally, a diplomat and possibly a secret agent.
The two form an uneasy alliance to discover and later trick the nefarious genocidal
baddies behind Earth’s potential demise and set things right.
The best
thing about the novel, though, the one that will probably keep it from fading into
obscurity for me, is the ending. I love a Big Reveal at an ending. And it is
simply this: the final word of the novel reveals the identity of these
cannibalistic ape-like creatures, called the Hagroon, who are bent on eliminating
mankind. They are tricked in the final chapter and are exiled unwittingly,
without their technology, dozens of thousands of years deep back into Earth’s
prehistory. Speculating whatever became of these lost-to-history villains, the
scientist tells our hero that “they were safely marooned there in the age of
mammoths and ice. And there they left their bones, which our modern archaeologists
have found and called Neanderthal …”
Grade:
Solid B.
© 1955 by Commander Edward L. Beach
Contains
spoilers for a 70-year-old novel …
I bought
this on a whim a half-dozen years ago – and it spent a half-dozen long unearned
years in the On-Deck Circle, surviving the Great Book Triage of 2021 before the
move down to Texas. And good thing, too, because I finally got around to
reading it – also on a whim – and must say I enjoyed it thoroughly.
During the
early phases of the Wu Flu, when uncertainty was running rampant and the grocery
store shelves lay in a state of depletion I never experienced in my fifty
years, when fear descended upon the land and it felt like the worst might come
true, during that period I needed to take my mind off it all. I wanted to dive headfirst
into something completely unrelated to Daily Life in March 2020. Something
meaty, something that could consume me, something challenging but also
something that ultimately had a good ending. I needed a good ending in March of
2020. Since I enjoyed my previous dives into military history, I decided a deep
dive into World War II could take my mind off the current End of the World. After
all, WW2 was a legitimate end of the world for large swaths of the globe,
especially Europe. And most survived, because the human spirit rose to the
occasion.
So in
addition to buying all sort of “bird’s-eye” and “ground level” books on World War
II, I also bought fiction written about the time period. Over time I picked up The
Winds of War, The Thin Red Line, and The Naked and the Dead.
I also purchased Run Silent, Run Deep. But, for some reason I can’t
pinpoint, I never did read World War II fiction during this time period.
Regardless,
that’s how it came into my possession, and just now I read and enjoyed it. The
cover boasts a quote line from the Dallas News: “THE BEST SUBMARINE YARN EVER
WRITTEN.” I admit this intrigued me. Having just re-read Tom Clancy, and all
his “submarine yarns” a year ago, I wanted to see how it added up. So much of
Clancy’s books contain scenes in and about submarines I felt like a vicarious brevet
submariner. I opened this book and couldn’t put it down; I read its 337 dense
pages in eight days … maybe six hours of reading spread out around Halloween.
The main
characters are Rich, a sub captain, and Jim, his executive officer. In the days
just before Pearl Harbor Jim is on a test mission to earn his captain stripes,
but overreacts and Rich has to flunk him, causing quite a bit of friction. Then
the Japanese sneak attack, then missions right up to the waters off the coast
of Tokyo. There’s a Japanese destroyer nicknamed “Bungo Pete” that sunk Rich’s
prior boat and nearly sends our heroes to their doom. Some more action and Rich
gets his leg broken and must recuperate back at Hawaii, while Jim – facing a
shortage of sub commanders, is promoted and actually does a fine job hunting
and sinking Japanese ships.
Rich is
put to work on solving a realistic problem early in the war: the ineffectiveness
of American torpedoes. Then, Jim’s sub – Rich’s old command – goes missing and
is presumed sunk. Rich gets a new command and sets out to end “Bungo Pete” and
get vengeance for his old friend and his old crew.
The
summary does not do the novel justice. There are many mini-vignettes that show life
about a sub in both normal and stress situations. It’s very Clancy-like in conveying
how blind subs are and the need to rely on sonar, timing, mathematical
equations to get the torpedo to the enemy before he gets one to you, and the
imperative to get into your opponent’s mind. How “Bungo Pete” knows the names
of the vessels he sinks (bags of garbage the subs release when surfacing are later
retrieved by Japanese fishing boats who bring them to the destroyer where the
trash is sifted through for intelligence), how he knows what a US sub captain
will do with uncanny perception (Pete’s an ex-Japanese sub commander himself,
too old to command but old enough to serve Imperial Japan’s defense), how Jim
will finally get his vengeance; all factor into this well-told tale.
The novel
has all the other requisites this old dog likes. Written in the 1950s, there is
no post-modern claptrap, no deconstruction, no multiculturalism, no kumbaya.
The Japanese are referred to on a handle of occasions with slurs common at the
time. This was an existential crises, and the Imperial Japanese forces were
just as cruel as the Nazis. Though Commander Beach writes interpersonal
dialogue well enough (about just as good as Clancy did), the woman do seem a
little shallow and stereotypical, but one does not pick up Run Silent, Run
Deep for the romantic shore leave episodes.
A random piece
of trivia I learned is this:
This geologic formation is known as Lot’s Wife. It stands 325 feet above the surface of the northwest Pacific waters and was discovered in 1788 by an English merchant vessel. In World War II the giant crag was used to indicate the start of Japanese waters and to calibrate instrumentation. For if you follow Lot’s Wife directly north (slightly off by a degree or two) for 5,700 miles you wind up in Tokyo Bay.
Anyway,
how does Rich resolve the “Bungo Pete” challenge? Knowing he’s up against an
old sub vet, he tricks and gets the drop on him, resulting in the destroyer’s
sinking. But that’s a temporary solution. He sees three lifeboats, each with
two dozen men, and … war being hell, realizes he has no choice but to ride down
each lifeboat, for the old sub vet could be in any one of them, and if the old
man lives, more American lives will be lost down the road. It was brutal, and
it takes it’s toll on Rich. However, our hero gets some redemption in a fourth
act rescue of some downed US pilots, and is able to live with himself and his
actions.
Overall, I
give it a solid A. Good book for historical aficionados, good book for Tom
Clancy fans. Jack Ryan would’ve read this book in high school.
At the
beginning of the month I still had seven days of PTO left. These are of a “use
or lose” variety, so I requested some random Wednesdays and Fridays. Today was
the first. And since I was all by myself (well, the dog shadowed me all morning
while I did my laundry), I decided to jump in the car and drive the 40 minutes
northwest to Denton, Texas. We’d been there last four years ago touring the University
of North Texas with Little One, and while there, after a late lunch, we spotted
a huge used bookstore where I was able to browse and pick up a few things of
interest.
It was
time to return.
So I motored
on out and spent an hour in the store. A vast quantity and quality of used
books, CDs, DVDs, records, games, video games, and other collectible memorabilia.
Heaven, in other words. Here’s what I scored:
Three records –
Florida
Suite / Dance
Rhapsody No. 2 / Over the Hills and Far Away – composed by Frederick
Delius and conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham.
Holiday
Symphony –
composed by Charles Ives and conducted by Leonard Bernstein.
Der
Freischutz – an opera
composed by Carl Maria von Weber and conducted by Rudolf Kempe.
Florida
Suite is a lovely piece
of melody sublime in its beauty, its conciseness, its power to evoke nature
untouched by man. Loved it for over two decades and have possibly a different version
of it on CD somewhere. Holiday Symphony features the discordant work of
Charles Ives (I did a short post on this highly eccentric composer in the early
days of this blog). My favorite piece is “Thanksgiving.” Finally, I bought the
opera Der Freischutz due to having fond memories listening to it as a
newlywed when we first returned to New Jersey after our 18-month stint in
Maryland. Good stuff, all.
Then I
spotted stacked double against a long wall an uncountable amount of science fiction
paperbacks – must’ve been about 750 I would guess – and all priced for $1.00
each! How can you go wrong with a bargain like that? Unfortunately, they were
not organized alphabetically, so I spent a good twenty minutes with my head tilted
reading spine after spine. I picked out three, each one for a specific reason.
Space Skimmer is a book I read in Binghamton, NY, visiting my paternal grandparents right after my parents divorced, probably in the winter of 1981. It was a comforting read. Pirates of Venus was a book I may have read even earlier. But I do remember picking it up again in early 2009 and starting a re-read, when my toddler Patch disappeared the book for me. Never found it again. So I have unfinished business with this one. Finally, Asimov’s Foundation. Ah, Asimov’s Foundation! If ever a book was an Achille’s heel to my reading life, it was this one. Universally lauded as one of the all-time SF greats, I never read it as a kid, and the two or three times I tried as an adult it just never gained traction. Maybe this time will be the charm.
I got some
Italian food on the way back, brought it home and ate while the dog tracked
every piece going from my plate to my mouth, drool pooling around his anxious
paws. And now he’s staring at me typing this. Will work on my two current reads
later this afternoon and tonight will throw one of the new discs on the
turntable.
All in
all, a great PTO day.
PS – I have
outlined reviews of three books recently read. Just need to compose them into
some medium-length posts. Hopefully I can get one out every three days going in
to Thanksgiving.