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    Wednesday, September 24, 2008

    Annals of the Western Shore

    I have been reading this Urula K. Le Guin series and I mostly liked it. Here are my comments from GoodReads

    Powers Powers by Ursula K. Le Guin


    My review


    rating: 4 of 5 stars
    So, I finished the trilogy and it makes me wonder if there is going to be more. The end of this wasn't as satisfying as I had hoped. The resolution of Gav's conflict with Hoby didn't resolve it for me. I like the deep connection I felt to Gav and the unique experiences he went through, but I keep waiting for the final conflict and resolution for the series.


    View all my reviews.

    Fire and Damnation!!!

    Sorry, for the strong language... but since I am reading a book about the "Hell" scenario I thought it appropriate. Actually, I need to say was reading. I left my book on the bus yesterday morning after my rather verbose post. It may go to the lost and found, but a book with a nude blue woman on the cover just may not make it. Dang, it's a great book too.

    I also chose the title because I just started Brisingr, Christopher Paolini's final installment of the Inheritance Trilogy....what.... Oh, sorry his latest installment in the Inheritance Cycle. So how many books in a cycle? 4, 5, 6, more? Is a cycle larger than a series? If it is 4 does that make it a Quad, Quadology or a tetraology.

    Link to Amazon.com: BrisingrAnyway, when I first started Paolini's Trilogy (excuse me, cycle) I kind of thought it stunk even for a 15 year old genius. I thought I could see who he was copying and who he had read. I even remember thinking, "Cheez, I could have written this" I liked it, but more as a curiosity rather than good literature. When I got to his descriptions of how Eragon learns magic in Eldest, I was much more impressed. Now, picking up Brisingr I feel like I am back with old friends. Kudos, Mr. Paolini, I guess I was just envious to begin with.

    P.S. If you follow the link on the picture above you can see Christopher Paolini's explanation of the change from trilogy to cycle.

    Tuesday, September 23, 2008

    More Radical Evolution

    Ok, I am back to the book Radical Evolution after a hiatus. My hiatus was actually more of a sight-seeing trip. I have also been reading the Annals of Western Shore by Ursula K. Le Guin, but I was at the Library two weeks ago and walked by a novel that caught my eye. Fire-us. I misread it as Fire-ups and thought it was one thing but it turned out to be a book about a virus wiping out the world. It didn't kill children because it targeted part of the metabolism related to sex hormones. This left children struggling to survive in a world that had no adults. It was a pretty good book. The first volume was very good and I don't exactly agree with a lot of the reviews I read about it which said they were disappointed with the ending. I was more surprised at the "who" of the ending than the actual result. It also left the final status of the kids who had formed a family a little unresolved.

    What struck me as interesting as I started back into Radical Evolution is that this book is an example of a "Hell" scenario as described by Garreau. The book describes what might happen if any of the major technologies gets out of control. Technologies he describes as the GRIN technologies:
    • Genetics
    • Robotics
    • Information/Intelligence
    • Nanotechnology
    But what I also found interesting today was the gentleman Garreau is quoting and discussing: Francis Fukuyama. He asks the very pointed question what happens when we can breed some people with saddles on their backs and others with spurs and boots? (paraphrased but closely paraphrased) He goes on to pose other sticky problems. He points out an idea that resonates with my personal beliefs. We want to build a more empathic world, a world where people care more for each other, but how can that be if we therapuetically remove all pain and suffering? How can I empathize with the suffering of children in sweatshops with no point of reference. If I have never suffered long dibilitating and difficult work how do I see those children as fundamentally like me with the same fullness of emotion, hope, longing and capacity for suffering if I am so far removed from those things as to have no common understanding. Fukuyama seems to see this as a potential problem with technology. We could literally breed children that don't view their parents as the same race. I have often thought about this in terms of evolution or even animal husbandry. The Great Dane and the Chihuahua are the same breed, and I could begin breeding Great Danes back down to the size of chihuahuas. If I started only with Great Dane stock it would take a fair bit of time, but at what point does the dog I am breeding stop recognizing its offspring as Great Danes and start recognizing them as Mini-Danes. Or stated in reverse, at what point does the offspring look back at it's parents (or more likely it's grandparents) and say, "You are not me"

    Well, we are reaching, or have possibly reached when within just a generation we could alter our future evolution so much as to make my own Grandchildren unrecognizable to me. Not only physically, but potentially, emotionally and psychologically as well. Another great Novel that speaks to this is Scott Westerfelds series: Uglies. In the books the heroine gets physically altered by surgery, gene therapy and technological implants, but as the concern usually is, the evil scientists, the ones with the power, they want to keep that power, they want the Utopia of their vision to come to pass, and in this case have the power to bring it to pass, the mess with the brains and psychology of people too.

    This potential for intentionally or unitentionally, altering the fundamental nature of humans is what lots of people see as a risk. Radical Evolution highlights some of the best thinking on this.

    Friday, September 5, 2008

    Good Reads

    Good reads is a great site to track your books and offer reviews of your favorite books.  I am really loving this site so far.  See my widget to get an idea.  It also offers a social networking aspect which is pretty fun.

    Thursday, September 4, 2008

    Ursula K LeGuinn

    I have always loved her Earthsea trilogy from way back when... But a couple of years ago she wrote another novel called Tehanu as the fourth in the Earthsea cycle and subtitled as the last of the Earthse books. Then she wrote two more. Tehanu was a very good book and brought Ged and Tenar back together. Book 5 is called Tales of Earthsea and the final book is called The Other Wind. Tales of Earthsea was a series of short stories that among other things gave some background on how magic evolved in Earthsea and who Ogion the Silent is.

    But what I am really writing about is her series calledAnnals of the Western Shore.  I checked her site, but I didn't find out whether this is the same world as Earthsea just a different part of the globe.  (I have always wondered if there is more to Earthsea than the isles)  Anyway this newer series has been very good so far.  She managed to pull me in as completely as she did with A Wizard of Earthsea. 

    Tuesday, September 2, 2008

    Literacy- Old School???

    Jared suggested that I am pretty animated about the literature resources on the web and that I ought to blog about them here. So if you like this I need to thank Jared for the suggestion, if you don't then it's Jared's fault and blame him. But, seriously. There are some really phenomenal web resources for bibliophiles out there. I want to highlight just one. It is multi-media in the way we usually think of it, but it does use multiple mediums. Many books that are no longer covered by copyright, ie: public domain, are now being digitized by multiple entities and in mutliple ways. One of those is Project Gutenburg, named after the famous inventor of the printing press. You can look up literally thousands and thousands of books and read them on your computer or with just a small learning curve and a portable device you can take them with you to read anywhere you go. Visit Project Gutenburg here: http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page

    Monday, September 1, 2008

    Radical Evolution

    After having just finished a book pooh poohing the notion of exponential growth lasting forever and our world hurtling forward in an ever increasing technologically enhanced society, I started Radical Evolution by Joel Garreau which so far reads like a manual for hurtling towards a technologically enhanced future with exponential growth lasting forever.  Specifically he talks about biomedical and genetic enhancements.  It really is a great book and gives some of the actual science and technology behind books like: Uglies, Pretties, Specials and Extras by Scott Westerfeld. 

    more to come

    FutureHype

    Well, I finished this book.  It was great really.  I particularly liked his refreshing viewpoint.  No,  we are not hurtling on to a neverending techno-future without hope.  In fact his basic premise of the entire book was that exponential growth only happens for a short time in any particular field.  I would actually argue that while this is a fair view of things we actually see that technology advancement actually matches the type of change that is used to describe evolutionary change.  Punctuated equilibrium (and if I have the term wrong be sure and tell me what is correct)  This idea is that you have eras of vast change in a species during a short time period alternated with long periods of relatively small and slow change.  Agriculture has followed this pattern for thousands of years.  Periods of rapid advancement followed by years of relatively small change. 

    His spotlight metaphor was also very refreshing.  The spotlight is on computer change and growth right now, but it will shift to something else as exponential growth in computers becomes unsustainable.  As soon as we have a major innovation in another field you will see a shift in emphasis to that field (probably transportation or genetic/biomedical engineering)

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