that may be because I think of the survey as the Domesday Book, which, while pronounced the same way, is different in my head.
Is there a 14th century reference to Domesday that I'm not getting? To me, it's like she's conflating, when she's really all about the detail. That's what bugs. Doomsday/Domesday -- same thing. 14th C, black plague/11th C, norman invasion -- not same thing. Irrational, perhaps, but irky for me. Irk, irk.
ETA: indulge me as I flog this plague-ridden horse a touch more. It's like she's making a fannish pun out of the title. Plague = doom, je comprends, but Domesday was referring to the "doom of man", ie. our mortal lifespan. It may be the first riff on death and taxes in English.
The subject matters are too close, like when someone says "they were using dogs for guinea pigs!" The brain stumbles over the reference and goes back. Well, mine does anyway.
I have been possessed by a sudden need to read more steampunk. I've read
Anubis Gates
(tho' it's been a while), and I'm re-reading
The Difference Engine.
Does anyone have any recommendations for other steampunk literature?
Perdido Street Station
is kinda steampunk.
Perdido Street Station is kinda steampunk.
The gay stunt husband keeps agitating at me to read it. I glanced at a couple of pages a few years ago and it didn't grab me, but I probably should give it another try.
It took a hundred pages for me to feel comfortable in the world and another hundred for it to finally hook me, but once the plot kicks into gear, it's pretty much a rip-roaring ride till the end. I had issues with it overall, but it was good.
Ooh, Neil Stevenson's The Diamond Age. And Michael Swanwick's The Iron Dragon's Daughter.
I find Mieville hard slogging, in the same way as I gave up on Gene Wolfe. I know people love their stuff but their purposefully obscurantist prose just doesn't work for me.
Kurt Vonnegut, Writer of Classics of the American Counterculture, Dies at 84 [link]
Kurt Vonnegut, whose dark comic talent and urgent moral
vision in novels like "Slaughterhouse-Five," "Cat's Cradle"
and "God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater" caught the temper of his
times and the imagination of a generation, died last night
when in Manhattan. He was 84.
Holy shit.
I've only ever read
Slaughterhouse-Five,
but I've been meaning to read more.
So it goes.
sorry - that was inevitable
I'm not surprised. He looked pretty frail on TDS.
Dammit, Hec, I came to edit that in. Heh.
When was he on TDS? Recently?