Tritcheon Hash by Sue Lange

Tritcheon Hash by Sue Langethree-stars
Tritcheon Hash by Sue Lange
Genres: Comedic Science Fiction, Science Fiction
Published by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform on 2017 June 27
Format: eBook
Pages: 340

Tritcheon Hash isn’t actually my kind of book. I’m certain this is a case where what I think is cool and what the author, Sue Lange, thinks is cool, doesn’t match up. We have different tastes in humor or I don’t actually know the right cultural references to get some of the humor. There is a well-executed and subtle pun I particularly enjoyed. Be careful–it is liable to sneak past you!
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three-stars

The Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years by Chingiz Aitmatov

four-stars
Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years by Chingiz Aitmatov
Translated by: John French
Genres: Science Fiction, Space Race Fiction
Published by Indiana University Press on 1983 October 1
Format: Hardcover

I like sampling fiction, particularly science fiction or fantasy, from other cultures than my own. However, I rarely have any idea how to identify or select works that would interest me. So when a Hungarian acquaintance recommended the Russian author, Chingiz Aitmatov, and his book The Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years, I wasted no time tracking down a copy I could read. My thanks to the Inter-Library Loan system and Pickler Memorial Library for loan of the book. An enjoyable read but not at all what I expected. Continue reading

four-stars

Harry Harrison’s West of Eden


Playing “what if” with the fate of the “dinosaurs” is certainly not new, Harry Harrison is in good company with the likes of Verne, Burroughs, Doyle, and many others. Each have done their own spin on “What if the fate of the dinosaurs was different?” Harry Harrison’s answer to the question, West of Eden, is excellent. Continue reading

Clock King and the Queen of the Hourglass by Vera Nazarian


I recently received a review copy of the Kindle edition of Vera Nazarian’s The Clock King and the Queen of the Hourglass. I’m cross-posting this review here, on Library Thing, and Amazon. Continue reading

Native Tongue by Suzette Haden Elgin

Native Tongue by Suzette Haden Elginfour-stars
Native Tongue by Suzette Haden Elgin
Series: Native Tongue #1
Genres: Science Fiction, Feminist Fiction, Feminist Science Fiction, Linguistic Fiction, Dystopia Fiction
Published by The Feminist Press at CUNY on 2000 November 1
Format: Mass-Market Paperback
Pages: 327

Native Tongue is a fascinating treatment of what role linguistics might play in alien contact. Language issues are oft-neglected (not always, just often) in science fiction with good reason: the reader would get impatient with the delays in the “main story”. But in this novel, the linguists play a central role, and the issues and impacts of coping with the task of communicating with aliens are addressed.

Another significantly interesting aspect of this story is the setting itself. In this setting, laws were passed which set the civil rights of women back hundreds of years. The book examines aspects of the society that comes out of those laws about a hundred years later. It does so without being aggressively feminist and still keeps the concerns of the characters immediate rather than dramatic.

The characters, while interesting, do not feel fully developed to me…I like to have fairly extensive depth to characters, and these don’t meet that standard. Otherwise, the book is an excellent science fiction read.

four-stars