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Movember

Sep14
by berry on September 14, 2011 at 10:57 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

Heads up: I will take part in Movember this year. Should be fun! I have a nice cozy cavemanly beard going on now, so biking will get a bit cold. I might have to use a scarf or something this winter! Yeesh! Second thoughts!   I actually don’t think Owen (my 21 month old) has seen my face before, so it’s worth doing it just for that.

There’s a page you can pledge some cash towards Prostate Cancer Canada, if you like. Click here to get all philanthropic. I will post photo updates too, just because the InterTubes need more pics of balding, stubbly thirtysomethings.

PS: I write this now, so I don’t forget in a month. Someone remind me, please? Oh, OK, gCal, thanks!

 

 

└ Tags: movember
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Book Review: Destiny’s Blood

Sep13
by berry on September 13, 2011 at 11:07 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

Can*Con, The Conference on Canadian Content in Speculative Arts and Literature happened last weekend, and I went! Woo! I had a lot of fun. I met some interesting writers, got some books signed, listened to some great talks, got to see behind the sock during the taping of Ed and Red’s Podcast, saw Heather Dale in concert (highly recommended, btw! and she does house concerts if you want to listen in a more intimate setting), ate chocolate bacon (or bacon chocolate?) and generally had an altogether genial time. Embarrassingly enough, I hadn’t read anything by the Guest of Honour (Julie Czerneda)  nor any of the special guests, so I tried to remedy this. I only got through one before the Con, as I got distracted by the Killer book that I reviewed last week. Ironically, I never actually ran into this author. She swapped places with Derek Künsken for the “Keeping your readers on the edge of their seats” talk, one that I think she’d have had a lot to say about, given the novel I just read. So without further ado, I present a brief review of Destiny’s Blood, by Marie Bilodeau.


The book is a space opera, starting on the planet Collar, a bit of a backwater desert planet ruled by the Solarians. Layela and her twin sister Yoma, simple flower merchants, try to make a life for themselves after a misspent childhood thieving. One day Yoma disappears abruptly, and Layela, sensesthat something larger is afoot. When her old friend Josmere, an ether-based humanoid, arrives the same day, she leaves the flower shop in Josmere’s care and heads out to find her sister. This simple excursion sets off a roller coaster of action and calamity. I won’t say too much, so as not to ruin it, but guns go off, flower shops fall apart in hails of bullets, space cruisers do battle, worlds change, escapes occur in the nick of time. The book does not relent. Layela and Josmere find themselves in increasingly perilous scrapes throughout the book, aided by Ardin and Avienne, the privateer children of the deceased captain of the titular ship Destiny. With them, they have to discover their destiny, linked by their blood (see that? I understand the title, go me!)

I had a couple of minor quibbles, but nothing too big. There are, for instance, several malapropisms in the text, e.g: “They were followed by the stylized gentleman…”. Also, there’s a scene where some of the characters return to a crippled ship, even though they don’t really have any reason to, and get into a scrape because of it. I found that scene hard to swallow, as with the sheer number of escapes and near misses in the middle of the book. I found myself thinking: “Sprinkler system set up in the back! Can you *fucking* believe it?”. Ten points if you can place the quote without looking it up.

All in all it’s a good read, with a satisfying ending. The author executed the action scenes with style. I particularly like when there’s so much going on that the viewpoint character gets overwhelmed, and Bilodeau pulled this off nicely. Layela’s arc worked for me, I believed her self-realizations and the strength that she gains throughout the story. I found the mystery of the twins, and why they warranted so much attention compelling as well.

This book is up for an Aurora Prize for best novel this year. I have the other books on the shortlist as well, so I shall try to get through them in time to vote on Oct 15th!

 

 

 

└ Tags: aurora_award, bookreview, can_con
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Book Review: The Apothecary Rose by Candace Robb

Sep04
by berry on September 4, 2011 at 8:43 am
Posted In: Uncategorized

NB: This review I originally posted in 2005, but it got flushed when I rebooted the blog. Someone searched for it today from a LibraryThing link, so I figured I’d put it back up! Let’s give it up for younger me!

The Apothecary Rose : An Owen Archer Mystery by Candace Robb

I also decided that I should be doing nanoremo as well as nanowrimo, so I’ve been juggling a few, this one, Post Captain by Patrick O’Brien and the Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde. I’ll post those up when I’m done with them.

The Apothecary Rose is a mystery set in 1300s England, York to be exact. It follows our hero, a half blind ex-archer who is employed by the Archbishop of Canterbury to discover why and how one of his wards had died. There was foul play afoot, and Archer has to discover it, as well as gain the trust of the female apothecary that he is using as a front.

This book was interesting enough. It was a bit light of substance, for instance I did not really get the feeling that the action was taking place in medieval times from the interactions of the characters, and I felt that most of the characters were one dimensional, and used only as plot devices.

That being said, I read the book in one sitting. The scenery was very well done, and did give a sense of place and time, and the pacing as the end of the book approached picked up nicely. The climax came a bit early, though, leaving a bit of an awkward denouement. This was probably to help set up the next book (which I have beside me, The Lady Chapel), but still, Ms. Robb could have saved it for then.

└ Tags: bookreview
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Book Review: They Call Me Killer

Sep02
by berry on September 2, 2011 at 10:48 pm
Posted In: Uncategorized

Very Cool Mighty Phoques Logo

Hockey Season (yes, capital H, capital S) approaches! My eldest asks every morning if it snowed outside (humidex read 35°C today) and if the city put up the boards yet! We have tickets to see the Ottawa 67s take on the Remparts de Quebec on Labour Daybour! My own season starts next Friday (We are the Mighty Phoques. Phoque, for the unaware, is the French word for seal, and we (will, by the start of the season, hopefully…MIKE) have old school Mighty Ducks uniforms (NB: link leads to Ten Worst Sports Uniforms list, oops) with a seal mask instead of a duck mask. Pretty nerdy, but cool)! This in mind, I opted this week to retrain my brain into hockey mode. I borrowed Score: A Hockey Musical from the library, and finally got around to reading They Call Me Killer, a memoir of sorts from Brian Kilrea, the celebrated coach of the 67s .

I call it a memoir of sorts because it really amounts to a series of stories told to James Duthie, TSN all-round awesome hockey dude, compiled and cross-referenced with supporting anecdotes from his teammates in Springfield and LA, his players on the 67s and the Islanders, and his family. It chronicles his life in hockey, from his own time in the juniors, to Springfield with Eddie Shore, to scoring the first ever goal of the LA Kings, to meeting his wife due to injury, to coaching the 67s. The stories are funny for the most part, but show what he wanted his kids (how he called the players he coached on the 67s) to learn from him. From their testimonials peppered throughout the book, they got the message. I never met the guy, but from his post-game interviews, he always gave the impression that he loved every minute that he could involve himself with the game; teaching his players, everything. On the bench, he looked like thunder. I had a coach like him for two years, Mr. Carette. He thundered. He’d punish a really lazy outing with a practice of nothing but suicide drills; but he always tried to make us better players, and better people.  Killer has the same attitude, and it comes through in his stories.

I recommend this book to people who like hockey, as it presents a spin-free look into the mind of one of the greats, and gives a feel of the locker room and the lives led by young hopefuls. I also recommend it to people who aren’t fans because, hey, I write fiction, and people who don’t like hockey are fictional, right?


I mentioned at the top of the post that I also watched Score. I watched it for completeness (still need to see Miracle and Mystery, Alaska. Pretty sure I’ve seen all the other hockey-based movies available). It had some laugh-out-loud funny moments, and the hockey proved kind of believable, if you assumed Major Junior goalies could be that bad. I found the music hit and miss, however. I thought it detracted from the story at critical points, and made me not care when I should.  Oh well. Strombo made me laugh every time he showed up with a “huh?” expression on his face. He didn’t even need to talk.

 

PS: Very parenthetical tonight. I guess I’m just practicing getting things between the pipes.

 

└ Tags: bookreview, Ottawa67s
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Quick Joke

Aug31
by berry on August 31, 2011 at 11:54 am
Posted In: Uncategorized

Why do Vampire avoid crucifixes?

To prevent cross contamination.

Boo-ya.

As you were, InterWebberTubes.

└ Tags: owwww groan
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