Science Fiction Though the Decades

Friday, January 31, 2025

Lazy Book Reviews of January 2025

When reading 100+ books per year, I tend to forget what the hell I've read, why I liked the book, and why I kept or discarded the book. Been wanting to keep a small blog again to help me remember. So when I've got a quiet day at work, thought I'd bring in my personal laptop and kick start this thing for 2025.

A good pace to start the year, but some terrible books: 5 of 11 under 3 stars; those on-sale books at Kinokuniya are rough. I've got about 190 unread books: half from 2023, half from 2024. I'm working on the 2023 books, but I choose them at random. I often find reading tangents, so I'll pick up a book from my own library to indulge in.


#1: The Mezzanine - Nicholson Baker (4.5/5)

Fiction, Re-read (wanted a quick book at the end of 2024), Keep

A trip up an escalator takes you on a trip through inane, everyday detail of a common man with uncommon observations.


#2 Of Human Bondage – W. Somerset Maugham (3.5/5)

Fiction, New (read on a recommendation), Sell/Donate

When life deals a man a bad childhood, a man deals himself a bad adulthood by repeating mistakes, getting blindsided, being snobby, and blowing his money while waiting for his godfather to kick the bucket so he can live off the inheritence.


#3: Man on Ice – Humphrey Hawksley (2.5/5)

Fiction, New (on sale at Kinokuniya), Sell/Donate

The days between presidents precedes a war between nations as wayward leaders attempt to destabilize America by invading a worthless western Alaskan island under the pretense of humanitarian grounds … all under the unlikely cast with language skills, diplomatic connections, and the luck of foggy weather.


#4: A Town Like Alice – Nevil Shute (3/5)

Fiction, New (liked the author), Sell/Donate

Malaysia draws a young lass not only into a tropical calm, but later a grueling trek during the war, but years later inherits enough money to retrace her footsteps, give back to those who were good to her, search out a man who stirred her loins, and settle down in the land of Oz with a good business sense.


#5: Parasite – Darcy Coates (1/5)

Sci-fi, New (on sale at Kinokuniya), Sell/Donate

Hundreds of peopled outposts in space seem to do nothing more than kill vermin or slime that have fallen from meteors, because we all know that life is bountiful in space, especially on vacuum-faring asteroids, and course one of them is a parasite that mimics anything it touches and starts galivanting around the outposts (handily equipped with grenades and flamethrowers) impersonating humans with no objective in mind.


#6: The Facades – Eric Lundgren (4.5/5)

Fiction, New, Keep

Inspired from Calvino’s Invisible Cities, a midwestern town is composed of unlikely building, people with unusual characters, dotted with quirky meta-fiction, directed by circumstances, and led by an unreliable narrator who is trying to raise a son and track down his missing wife.


#7: Invisible Cities – Italo Calvino (5/5)

Fiction, Re-read (because of The Facades), Keep

A book so richly detailed, ornate, original, and clever that it can only be read a few pages at a time until you need to pull yourself back from the intricately woven tapestry to shudder in the coldness of awe as Marco Polo tells Kublai Khan of city after city of remote fictional wonder than overlaps words of wisdom.


#8: The Azriel Uprising – Allyn Thompson (2/5)

Sci-fi, New (random secondhand find), Sell/Donate

After the Russians invade, a solo albino woman crisscrosses the country sabotaging the enemy, but mainly gathers others to plan an attack that seems like it’s never going to happen as the cross hills, ford rivers, and eat looted food.


#9: Transmission Error – Michael Kurland (1/5)

Sci-fi, New (random secondhand find), Sell/Donate

Convicted by innocent of murder, a man was supposed to be transmitted to a colony planet, but instead was transmitted with a few quirky others to a planet where they face and overcome situation after silly situation in a plot when meanders aimlessly for juvenile fun.


#10: The Great Passage – Shion Mirua (3/5)

Fiction (Japanese), New (random Neilson-Hayes find), Sell/Donate

Five chapters reflect the lives of five people—whose interwoven lives will be shown like dictionary entries—who are in the same department over the period of 15 years to develop a new dictionary, the process of which will be very detailed for the reader.


#11: Snowball – Gregory Bastianelli (1.5/5)

Horror, New (on sale at Kinokuniya), Sell/Donate

When a snowman murders a snowplow driver on the sixth page, you know you’re in for a rough read where some locals—keen on sharing their personal winter horror stories—are stuck in a snowstorm on the highway, yet something sinister is after them for its own game.



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