Tag Archives: Alastair Reynolds

Book Review: “Machine Vendetta” by Alastair Reynolds

Machine Vendetta by Alastair Reynolds

This is the third story of Panoply Prefect Dreyfus following the events in Elysium Fire (2018).

The stories are set in the sense-of-wonder future, when a large portion of humanity now lives in space.  Specifically, there is a large settlement on the toxic planet Yellowstone (they live inside Chasm City) and in 10,000 orbital habitats, known as The Glitter Band. 

The Glitter Band is loosely organized:  each habitat has its own rules, customs, ecosystem, and, in some cases, unique genetic modifications.  Peace and commerce are kept by a bare bones voting system (implemented by a hyper secure automated system) and by prefects of the Panoply, who police the basic rules (with more or less consent from the habitats). 

There are also interstellar travelers, whose genetic modifications and technology are vastly superior to the locals (and to the Panoply). For better or for worse, the Ultras are only interested in their own, mostly inscrutable, affairs.

In short, this is a breathtaking future, that would take more than a lifetime to even survey! 

Prefect Dreyfus and the Panoply deal with problems small and large.  In this story, there are some pretty large problems, including mass murder and assassination, both apparently involving Prefects of Panoply.  This is not good.

The big problem, though, is that there are not one but two super AI’s running rampant in the networks.  In the past, Dreyfus bent the rules to try to assure that there would be no winner in this AI-vs-AI competition.  Either of these Ais will probably exterminate humans, likely in a very unpleasant way.  But two of them balance out, fighting each other in a stalemate.

What could possibly go wrong?

Things go really wrong, really seriously wrong. 

Dreyfus and company must unravel multiple mysteries and conspiracies.  But both the networks and the Panoply organization itself are infiltrated by agents of one or more AI, so they must rely on unaugmented humans and hope to catch some breaks. 

It’s a great story, with cool tech, and gloriously weird worlds. (I loved the “lemur world” habitat!). And not everyone dies in the end, so that’s good.


  1. Alastair Reynolds, Machine Vendetta, New York, Orbit Books, 2024.

Sunday Book Reviews

First Quarter Roundup 2023

This was the beginning of the tenth year of daily blogging.  Excitement builds, as we count down to the tenth anniversary….

The blog continues as usual. Robots. Dinosaurs. Cryptocurrencies. Quite a bit of coverage of Earth’s Cryosphere.  “Hot topics.”  (Get it?)

Inevitably, there has been a burst of interest in ChatGPT and its competitors.

Which reminds me:  a friend asked ChatGPT about me.  I hit the jackpot!  According to ChatGPT, I won the Gordon Bell Prize!

(emphasis added)

What do you know about Bob McGrath at NCSA?


Bob McGrath is a researcher at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is currently the Technical Program Director for the National Research Platform (NRP), which is a project aimed at creating a national cyberinfrastructure platform to support collaborative research across a wide range of domains. McGrath has been involved in the development of many important computing systems, cyberinfrastructure projects, and scientific applications, and he is particularly interested in the intersection of computing, data analysis, and scientific research. He has also been a key contributor to national and international initiatives that focus on cyberinfrastructure and advanced computing, including the US National Science Foundation’s Information and Intelligent Systems Division’s Advisory Committee and the Global Grid Forum. McGrath has received numerous awards for his work, including the Gordon Bell Prize for Supercomputing in 2001.

(Please note:  Before you get all riled up, almost nothing in the above information is correct.  Please don’t get mad at me because ChatGPT tells lies about me.)

(And no, I have nothing to do with the National Research Program. They’ve never heard of me, and I’ve never heard of them.)

Comment:  All this chatter about “will ChatGPT take my job” seems kind of premature.  I mean, unless your job requires confidently producing wrong answers, what do you have to worry about?


Band Names

As always, I have noted some Dave Barry Tribute “Great Names for a Band”.  These phrases were all found in real, I-am-not-making-this-up, science and technical articles.

“Fayetteville Lacewing”
“Nonflaking percussive activities”
The Swarmalators”
“Non-uniform chiral”
“Non-chiral”
“Bosonic Code”
“Decoherence”
“Bit-flip code”

Books

This quarter I discussed 15 books.

Non-Fiction

American Inheritance by Edward J. Larson
Inventing the World by Meredith F. Small
Meade at Gettysburg by Kent Masterson Brown

Fiction

Murder Your Employer by Rupert Holmes
Eversion by Alastair Reynolds
Stone Blind by Natalie Haynes
The Last Voice You Hear by Mick Herron
Standing By The Wall by Mick Herron
Down Cemetery Road by Mick Herron
Blitz by Daniel O’Malley
Dr. No by Percival Everett
Before Your Memory Fades by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
Babel by R. F Kuang
The Maltese Iguana by Tim Dorsey
After Sappho by Selby Wynn Schwartz

Book Review: “Eversion” by Alastair Reynolds

Eversion by Alastair Reynolds

A new story from perennial favorite Alastair Reynolds has a lot of what we expect.  Space ships!  AIs!  A weird planet!  First contact!  A mystery!  And topology (see title).

The story is told from the point of view of the doctor on a probe to the interior of Europa. 

I have to say that this is not what I imagine the exploration of Europa will be like. But, who knows?

From the beginning, we can tell that something is grievously wrong.  And soon enough we realize that the doctor is probably an AI, because “he” keeps dying and respawning.  (Also, he is known as “Dr. Coade” and his sidekick is “Ada”.  Get it?)

Like respawning in a video game, it’s kind of a groundhog day thing.  Over and over.

Underlying this AI psychosis is a traumatic first contact that has endangered the expedition and, by the way, strikes me as a threat to the whole solar system.  If Silas (the AI) can get a grip, he must then extract his crew, recontact the orbiter, and report to Earth what they have learned about the alien. 

And then what will happen?

The story isn’t over by a long shot.


  1. Alastair Reynolds, Eversion, New York, Orbit, 2022.

Sunday Book Reviews

Wrapping Up 2022

It’s the end of the year, time to look back. 

This year marked the ninth year of daily blogging!  That’s crazy, not to mention pointless.  Literally no one asked for it. : – (

But you got it anyway.

Coverage continues about the same.  Dinosaurs and Robots.  Cryptocurrency and Quantum Computing.  Bugs (i.e., software bugs). 

And weekly book reviews.

In other news…

I’ll note that this year I shutdown my never really used twitter account—I was a trend leader in not using twitter!

I also shutdown and cleaned out all of my NFTs and crypto stuff.  These were basically experiments, intended to see how stuff works.  Again, I’m leading the trend, walking away from NFTs and crypto. Be smart. Walk away now.

And, after wanting to do it all my life, I installed solar panels!  Hey, look at me!  I’m a power company!  There is an app, natch, which tells me that I have generated 1.3MWhr of pure, clean, yummy solar electricity since June 21.  A-a-a-h!  Refreshing!


Best Robot of the Year

I haven’t really been rating robots, but I realized that mostly I blog about robots that capture my childish sense of wonder.  Cool robots.  Weird robots.  Outstanding robots.

So, looking over the posts this year, what is the best robot of 2022 in this blog?

Obviously, the Ingenuity Mars Copter is in a category of its own! 

I mean it’s (a) real and (b) flying on Mars!!!!  Flying! On Mars!  This is what robots are supposed to be!

Down here on Earth, there are lots and lots and lots of robots and robot projects.  I’ll call attention to a few that stand out by not following the herd:

  • Ibex – I want a robot I can ride.  With horns!
  • Wheelbot – how does this even work?  It’s magical.
  • Volodrone – one of the winners in the “that’s not big enough!” department!

But I’m going to tip my hat to the prohibitive favorite: The land of Real Gundam.

As my post indicated:  the purpose of this device is to BE AWESOME.  Why did we build it?  BECAUSE WE COULD.

Now THAT’S what I call a robot!


Dave Barry Tribute Band Names

As always, I noted ideas for band names, taken from real science and technology articles.

Let me pick a couple of favorites:

Trilobite Eyes
Fluidic innervation

Most of this years list:

Ankylosaur’s Tail-Club
Ankylosaur’s Hair Club
Leidenfrost effect
Structured Thermal Armour
Embayment
Foehn wind 
Fluidic innervation

Sensorize
Ultrafast
Energy exchange
Two single Rydbergs
A jumping reaction wheel unicycle
Non-holonomic
Under-actuated dynamics
Two unstable degrees of freedom
Self-erection
Disturbance rejection
While balancing
Entanglement purification
Doubling architecture
Quantum memories
Entanglement fidelities
Brain slosh reductions (This should be a cocktail)
Contactless Fabrication
Full Acoustic Trapping
Elongated Parts
Speculative Side-channel Attack
A Forward Speculative Interference Attack
Reorder Buffer Contention
Speculation-invariant instructions
Delay-on-miss
Trilobite Eyes
Metalens
Extreme Depth of Field
Boasts Huge


Books

As always, I read continuously and posted weekly book reviews.  This year I reviewed 22 non-fiction and 55 fiction.

Some Best Books

This year I read most of new fav Mick Herron’s Slough House, as well as recurring favs Stross, Aaronovitch, etc.

Special mention for The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi– because it’s such a pro-nerd fantasy.  There are plenty of stories by nerds and for nerds, but not so many about nerds.  Heroic nerds! 

Non-fiction of note:  Legacy of Violence by Caroline Elkins. As I wrote, “Hit ‘em again, Elkins!”, I say. “Let me hold your coat while you put the boot in!” 

Special mention for: Math Without Numbers – super great math book, and remarkably easy to understand. I gave this as gift.

All the reviews in loose chronological order.

Q1

Fiction

Anthem by Noah Hawley
Quantum of Nightmares by Charles Stross
Escape From Yokai Landby Charles Stross
Before the Coffee Gets Cold by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
Tales from the Café by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
The Goodbye Coast by Joe Ide
Persephone Station by Stina Leicht
Mermaid Confidential by Tim Dorsey
Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood by Quentin Tarantino
Century Rain by Alastair Reynolds
To Sleep in a Sea of Stars by Christopher Paolini
D (A Tale of Two Worlds) by Michel Faber
Creative Types by Tom Bissell
White on White by Ayşegül Savaş
Harrow by Joy Williams
Fan Fiction by Brent Spiner
Constance Verity Destroys the Universe by A. Lee Martinez
The Kaiju Preservation Societyby John Scalzi

Non-Fiction

Treasured by Christina Riggs
Spooked: The Trump Dossier, Black Cube, and the Rise of Private Spies by Barry Meier
The Modern Detective by Tyler Maroney
The 1619 Project ed. by Nikole Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman, and Jake Silverstein
Math Without Numbers by Milo Beckman
Otherlands by Thomas Halliday

Q2

Fiction

Glitterati by Oliver K. Langmead
Razzmatazz by Christopher Moore
Bad Actors by Mick Herron
Slough House by Mick Herron
This Time Tomorrow by Emma Straub
Book of the Night by Holly Black
Siren Queen by Nghi Vo
Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
The Good Wife of Bath by Karen Brooks
The Impossible Us by Sarah Lotz
Amongst Our Weapons by Ben Aaronovitch
Portrait of a Thief by Grace D. Li
Out There by Kate Folk
Battle of the Linguist Mages by Scotto Moore
The Paradox Hotel by Rob Hart
The Left-handed Twin by Thomas Perry

Non Fiction

How to Take Over the World by Ryan North
The Method by Isaac Butler
Origin by Jennifer Raff
Legacy of Violence by Caroline Elkins
Seven Games by Oliver Roeder
Pandora’s Jar by Natalie Haynes
Ways and Means by Roger Lowenstein
What the Ermine Saw by Eden Collinsworth
The Pope at War by David I. Kertzer

Q3

Fiction

Total by Rebecca Miller
Calling for a Blanket Dance by Oscar Hokeah
NSFW by Isabel Kaplan
The Pink Hotel by Liska Jacobs
The Longcut by Emily Hall
An Honest Living by Dwyer Murphy
The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Sylvia Moreno-Garcia
Bone Silence by Alastair Reynolds
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin
The Absolute by Daniel Duebel
The 22 Murders of Madison May by Max Barry
Slow Horses by Mick Herron
Spook Street by Mick Herron
Real Tigers by Mick Herron
Dead Lions by Mick Herron

Non-Fiction

The Last Days of the Dinosaurs by Riley Black
Bad Mexicans by Kelly Lytle Hernández
A Quantum Life by Hakeem Oluseyi
The Swerve by Stephen Greenblatt

Q4

Fiction

A Restless Truth by Freya Marske
The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin
The Oracle of Maracoor by Gregory Maguire
The Book of Goose by Yiyun Li
The Furthest Station by Ben Aaronovitch
Melancholy of Mechagirl by Catherynne M. Valente      
Astro-Nuts by Logan J. Hunder
The Golden Enclaves by Naomi Novik
August Kitko and the Mechas from Space by Alex White
Joe Country by Mick Herron
London Rules by Mick Herron
Sweet, Soft, Plenty Rhythm by Laura Warrell
Viviana Valentine Gets Her Man by Emily S. Edwards
Secret Music at Tordesillas by Marjorie Sandor

Non fiction

Survival of the Richest by Douglas Rushkoff
Indigenous Continent by Pekka Hämäläinen
Magnificent Rebels by Andrea Wulf

Third Quarter Roundup

Happy October, almost.

The blog rolls on!

Just because nobody reads it doesn’t mean I will stop posting.

Robots! Dinosaurs! The Cryosphere! El Salvador—The Bitcoin project!

Band names

It was a great quarter for the Dave Barry Tribute Great Names For A Band.  All of these phrases are torn from real science and technical papers!

Fluidic innervation
Sensorize
Ultrafast
Energy exchange
Two single Rydbergs
Timescale
A jumping reaction wheel unicycle
Non-holonomic
Under-actuated dynamics,
Two unstable degrees of freedom
Self-erection
Disturbance rejection
While balancing
Entanglement purification
Doubling architecture
Quantum memories
Entanglement fidelities
Brain slosh reductions (Or a cocktail?)
Contactless Fabrication
Full Acoustic Trapping
Elongated Parts
Speculative Side-channel Attack
A Forward Speculative Interference Attack
Reorder Buffer Contention
Speculation-invariant instructions
Delay-on-miss

Books

As always, I read and briefly reviewed books every week. This quarter I mentioned 15 fiction and 4 non-fiction. Mostly newly published books.

This summer I read most of the rest of Mick Herron’s Slough House, four of the novels are in the list, another two will be reviewed in coming days.

Fiction

Total by Rebecca Miller
Calling for a Blanket Dance by Oscar Hokeah
NSFW by Isabel Kaplan
The Pink Hotel by Liska Jacobs
The Longcut by Emily Hall
An Honest Living by Dwyer Murphy
The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Sylvia Moreno-Garcia
Bone Silence by Alastair Reynolds
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin
The Absolute by Daniel Duebel
The 22 Murders of Madison May by Max Barry
Slow Horses by Mick Herron
Spook Street by Mick Herron
Real Tigers by Mick Herron
Dead Lions by Mick Herron

Non-Fiction

The Last Days of the Dinosaurs by Riley Black
Bad Mexicans by Kelly Lytle Hernández
A Quantum Life by Hakeem Oluseyi
The Swerve by Stephen Greenblatt

Book Review: “Bone Silence” by Alastair Reynolds

Bone Silence by Alastair Reynolds

Bone Silence is the third (and final?) installment of the story of the Ness Sisters (Revenger (2016), Shadow Captain (2019)).  There was a lot of stuff to wrap up, so this book is almost as long as the first two books put together!

Arafura and Adrana Ness have reunited in joint command of the former pirate ship, renamed Revenger.  The forces of law and order are still on their tail, and the sisters have taken on a mission to delivering the alien, Tak to the spindle world Trevenza Reach.

Stuff happens, there are casualties.  The Revenger captures an innocent ship, and so the Ness sisters split up to captain the two ships.  But there is a powerful squadron chasing them, led by a spooky young man who seems to be even better at bones than they are. They must push on regardless.

The Nesses arrive at Trevenza, and right into a trap.  And then a revolution.  And then the pursuit arrives.  Action!  Intrigue!  Robots!  Aliens!  Space ships! Crawling through sewers!

When the Ness girls discover what Taz was coming to Trevanza for, things become much weirder. Much. Weirder.

One thing leads to another.  The Ness sisters get a glimpse of the big secret that may explain everything.  It’s certainly a mind-blowing development!

And then the book ends….

Phew!

The author’s note suggests that this is the end of the series.  What? Huh?  You can’t leave us hanging like this!  Nothing is resolved.

Perhaps he was exhausted, but I have to say, the ending seems rushed.  Unsatisfactory all around.

The big reveal is thrown at us with little preparation, and, frankly, very sketchy explanation.  The Ness sisters leap to some conclusions that I just don’t follow, at least not from the information given in the book.  (Who built the mysterious artifact? That’s far from clear.)

There is so much left unresolved, it’s ridiculous.

Altogether, this is a great series, except for the ending.  I won’t be the only one demanding that Reynolds must finish. Finish. The. Damn. Story.


  1. Alastair Reynolds, Bone Silence, New York, Orbit, 2020.

Sunday Book Reviews

Q122 Roundup

This quarter marked a milestone:  I have posted every day for 3K days in a row!

That’s more than eight years, now. I guess we’re going for a decade?

Readership-unknown

That’s nice, but..

Is anyone reading the posts?  I don’t know.  The stats are running far fewer hits than last year, but I don’t know what that means.  Is this an artifact of the reporting system?  Is this an artifact of something I don’t see, such as WordPress publicizing?  Perhaps WordPress has improved its robot filtering, killing a lot of bogus traffic.   Is this a side effect of larger factors, such as the fragmentation of the internet?  (E.g., I get no hits from China, and now from Russia.)

Or are people just not looking at my stuff?

Not that it matters.  I’m blogging for my own benefit.  If other people like it, that’s pure bonus for me.

Recurring Features

Some Dave Barry Tribute Band Names

A few ideas for band names, from real science and technology articles.

Leidenfrost effect
“Structured Thermal Armour”
“Embayment”
“Foehn wind”  (which is “A warm, dry, downslope wind”)—so
“Downslope wind”

Books Reviewed This Quarter

6 non-fiction, 19 fiction this quarter

Special mention for: Math Without Numbers by Milo Beckman and The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi

Non-Fiction

Treasured by Christina Riggs
Spooked: The Trump Dossier, Black Cube, and the Rise of Private Spies by Barry Meier
The Modern Detective by Tyler Maroney
The 1619 Project ed. by Nikole Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman, and Jake Silverstein
Math Without Numbers by Milo Beckman
Otherlands by Thomas Halliday

Fiction

Anthem by Noah Hawley
Quantum of Nightmares by Charles Stross
Escape From Yokai Land by Charles Stross
Before the Coffee Gets Cold by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
Tales from the Café by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
The Goodbye Coast by Joe Ide
Persephone Station by Stina Leicht
Mermaid Confidential by Tim Dorsey
Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood by Quentin Tarantino
Century Rain by Alastair Reynolds
To Sleep in a Sea of Stars by Christopher Paolini
D (A Tale of Two Worlds) by Michel Faber
Creative Types by Tom Bissell
White on White by Ayşegül Savaş
Harrow by Joy Williams
Fan Fiction by Brent Spiner
Constance Verity Destroys the Universe by A. Lee Martinez
The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi

Book Review: “Century Rain” by Alastair Reynolds

Century Rain (2004) by Alastair Reynolds

I’m still working my way through Alastair Reynolds books, which are worth catching up on.

This story is yet another space opera, imbued with plausible science and galaxy spanning civilizations. 

Spaceships!  Wormholes!  Nanotech!  Terraforming!  Terraforming with Nanotech gone wrong–the Nanocaust!  “Smart weather”—uh, oh!

And the main plot line centers around a unique “backup copy” of Earth—a snapshot down to the quantum level, encased in a sort of Dyson sphere—which has awakened and started to have its own alternative timeline.  Noone knows who created the copy or how, but the 27th century discovers a way inside, initiating a neat twist on time travel and alternative histories.

Nasty things are happening in the solar system and in the second Earth.  A Simenon inspired Parisian gumshoe is on the case, as is a 27th century archaeologist. 

Stuff happens.  Things blow up.  People fall in love. The fate of the alternative Earth and a lot more hangs in the hands of a few little people.  It’s the same old story, love and glory, and all that.

OK, aspects of this story are a bit sappy, and definitely predictable.  And I didn’t find the politics or fighting to be very believable, as in plausible behavior.  For that matter, I don’t really understand the point of the big crime everyone is worried about.

But there is so much flat out wonder here.  The nanotech is awesome, the wormhole stuff is interesting.  The eco-catastrophe is a timely reminder about the potential perils of geoengineering, and yet another variation on “grey goo”.

And one of the charming things is how deeply the post-apocalyptic people are affected by exposure to nature on the second Earth.  With all the glorious technology of the future, they are absolutely rapt when they encounter live horses or penguins. 

We haven’t killed the Earth yet, and we should all appreciate what we still have.


  1. Alastair Reynolds, Century Rain, New York, TOR, 2004.

Sunday Book Reviews

Book Review:  Two Books by Alastair Reynolds

I have only read a couple of stories by Reynolds, but he’s definitely growing on me.  (Earlier posts here and here.)

This summer I read two more and I’m going to have to read some more.

Revelation Space (2000) is one of the foundational stories, introducing this sweeping space opera.

Elysium Fire (2018) is a relatively recent addition to his universe, though I’m not sure about the overall chrononology of the stories.

(With the weirdness of relativistic travel, the notion of an absolute time line is tricky.)


Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds

OK, let’s carve ourselves out some storytelling space.

Humans have spread, first through sublight generation and sleeper ships, and then through some kind of worm holes (I think).  Humans have found evidence and artifacts of ancient civilizations dating back almost a billion years.  But the old ones seem to be gone, died out—or wiped out.

The story is chock-a-block with wheeze-bang technology, including human augmentations that pushes “human” to the point of “no-longer-human”.  

One of the interesting technologies is the recording and instantiation of “betas”, brain scans that are essentially incremental backups of a life history.  The highest quality betas operate as mentors and standins for the original, even after the Carbon-based unit dies. This kind of hi fidelity ghost creates a whole new dimension to the question of “who done it?”.

This story centers on investigations of a 900,000 year old archaeological site.  The ancient culture seems to have been just about to leap into space when they were wiped out.  What happened to them?  And who did it?  And, most important, are they still out there?

These investigations get tangled with local and interplanetary politics, including complicated dynastic fights.


Elysium Fire by Alistair Reynolds

Meanwhile, across the galaxy….

This story is a police procedural set in the jaw dropping Glitter Band, ten thousand habitats in orbit around Yellowstone, home to Chasm City, the largest city ever built by humans. 

The Glitter Band operates as a near anarchy—there is so much space that you can generally find what you want or bug out and build what you want.  But the swarm does have a sort of overall government which a radical direct democracy of constant voting.  This is done through brain implants which makes it easy (and also impossible to get out of).

Let’s be clear.  This society depends on software.  Software inside your head.  Software than is relied on to be completely, 100% correct and secure at all times.

What could possibly go wrong?

The Panoply is a small police force dedicated to protecting the polling process, the habitats, and the people. These coppers are faced with a failing public confidence, a populist separatist uprising, and what appears to be serious covert attack on the information infrastructure.  Sound familiar?

The story progresses as they try to unwind multiple mysteries and hold things together.  There is plenty of high tech policing, as well as some awesome high tech settings.

Stuff happens.  There is a satisfactory conclusion to the case—but the story is far from over.


There are several more stories set in this universe, and I’ll get to them directly.


  1. Alastair Reynolds, Revelation Space, New York, Orbit, 2000.
  2. Alistair Reynolds, Elysium Fire, New York, Orbit, 2018.

Sunday Book Reviews

Wrapping Up 2020

This year was tough all over.  In addition to the world-wide pandemic disaster and the US election disaster, your humble correspondent faced treatment for deadly illness.  (Ironically, I probably would have been homebound much of the year even without the pandemic.)

Nevertheless, the blog persists!  Without interruption!  The blog has surpassed 2500 days in a row of daily posts.

This year saw over 34K hits*, which is more than 90 hits per day on average. This is up 6K (>22%) from 2019.

Once again, much of this traffic has been a “long tail”, a hit here and there on old posts.  With about 3000 posts from almost 7 years, these dribs and drabs add up.

From the stats I have, the traffic has been extremely bursty.  Throughout the year, I see a week or 10 days with 50 hits per day, then 4 or 5 days with 250 or more hits, then another period of less traffic.   (The standard deviation was over 97, with a mean of 94) This happened again and again, with no clear pattern or known underlying driver.

Combined with the long tail already mentioned, it’s difficult to draw conclusions.

(*I should note that I am only using the default stats provided by wordpress.  I do not have enough information to know exactly how they are collected, or what possible sources of error or omission exist.)

Round Up

For convenience, here are some year end summaries.


Great Names For Bands

As always, I’ve noted some “great names for a band”.  Dave Barry pioneered this joke for many years in his columns.  My variation is mainly taken from or nearly quoted from actual, real, “I am not making this up” scientific and technical articles.

Here are this year’s bands:

Rocks from Ryugu
Rocks from Ryugu with Bennu Dust
Wing Models of Yi
The Great American Biotic Interchange
Venus Feelers

Skid n’ Bump – All-mechanical, Mostly Passive
Clockwork Cucaracha
Scotch Yoke Clinometer
Double Octopus
Compound Obstacles
The South Pole Wall  (also ia great name for a cocktail)
Solar Canals of Gujarat
Bottlebrush block copolymer photonic crystals
Antarctic Frogs
First Fossil Frog
Eocene High Latitude
Gondwanan Cosmopolitinism
Tape-spool boom extraction system
Flux Lobe Elongation
Magnetic Pole Acceleration
Towards Siberia
Possible common capture events
Radially Symmetric Fertile Parts
Pendicle Bending
Wing Heart

Scent Pads
Failed Squid Meal
Prey Seizure


Books Reviewed

As always, I wrote short reviews of books I read this year, usually appearing every Sunday.  Over the whole year, I reviewed 55 fiction and 24 non-fiction books.

Glancing at the list, I would especially recommend:

Fiction:

The City We Became  by N. K. Jemisin
October Man by Ben Aaronovitch (And other stories by Aaaronovitch)

Non-Fiction:

Trekonomics (2016) by Manu Saadka
Braiding Sweetgrass (2013) by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Here are the links for all the reviews.

Books Reviewed in the 4th Quarter

Fiction

Dead Lies Dreaming by Charles Stross
Attack Surface by Cory Doctorow
Missionaries by Phil Klay
A Visit From The Goon Squad (2010) by Jennifer Egan
Cuyahoga by Pete Beatty
Quillifer the Knight by Walter Jon Williams
October Man by Ben Aaronovitch
A Wild Winter Swan by Gregory Maguire
Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden

Non-Fiction

Billion Dollar Loser by Reeves Wiedeman
Braiding Sweetgrass (2013) by Robin Wall Kimmerer
A World Beneath The Sands by Toby Wilkinson
The Price of Peace by Zachary D. Carter
Time of The Magicians by Wolfram Eilenberger
Wagnerism by Alex Ross

Reviews From Q3

Fiction

Squeeze Me by Carl Hiaasen
Point B by Drew Magary
Crooked Hallelujah by Kelli Jo Ford
Sex and Vanity by Kevin Kwan
Love and Theft by Stan Parish
False Value by Ben Aaronovitch
Moon Over Soho (2011) by Ben Aaronovitch
Midnight Riot (2011) by Ben Aaronovitch
Whispers Underground (2012) by Ben Aaronovitch
Broken Homes (2013) by Ben Aaronovitch
Foxglove Summer (2014) by Ben Aaronovitch
Lies Sleeping (2018) by Ben Aaronovitch
The Hanging Tree (2015) by Ben Aaronovitch
Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell
Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell
A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor by Hank Green
Life for Sale (1967) by Yukio Mishima
A Star Is Bored by Byron Lane

Non Fiction

14 Miles  by DW Gibson
Dark Towers by David Enrich
Trekonomics by Manu Saadka
1177 B. C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed by Eric H. Cline
Empires of the Sky by Alexander Rose

Reviews From Q2

Fiction

88 Names  by Matt Ruff
Providence  by Max Barry
Shakespeare for Squirrels  by Christopher Moore
All Adults Here  by Emma Straub
Afterlife  by Julia Alvarez
Wake, Siren  by Nina MacLaughlin
How Much of These Hills is Gold  by C Pam Zhang
The Automatic Detective  by A. Lee Martinez
Tyll  by Daniel Kahlmann
The City We Became  by N. K. Jemisin
Little Fires Everywhere  by Celeste Ng
Arabella of Mars (2016) by David D. Levine
Arabella and the Battle of Venus (2017) by David D. Levine
Arabella the Traitor of Mars (2018) by David D. Levine
The Orphan’s Tales, Vol 1.: In the Night Garden (2006) by Catherynne M. Valente
The Orphan’s Tales: Vol 2.: In the Cities of Coin and Spice (2007) by Catherynne M. Valente

 Non Fiction

Istanbul  by Bettany Hughes
Tacky’s Revolt  by Vincent Brown
The Library Book  by Susan Orlean
The Lives of Bees  by Thomas D. Seeley
Unworthy Republic  by Claudio Saunt
How to Hide an Empire  by Daniel Immerwahr

 Reviews From Q1

Fiction

Shadow Captain by Alastair Reynolds
The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich
Trace Elements by Donna Leon
Processed Cheese by Stephen Wright
Interior Chinatown by Charles Yu
Highfire by Eoin Colfer
The Feral Detective by Jonathan Letham
Hi Five by Joe Ide
Agency by William Gibson
Zed by Joanna Kavenna
Naked Came The Florida Man by Tim Dorsey
A Small Town by Thomas Perry
Trust Exercise by Susan Choi

Non Fiction

The Shadow of Vesuvius by Daisy Dunn
Leonardo Da Vinci by Walter Isaacson
Imagined Life by James Trefil and Michael Summers
Uncanny Valley by Anna Wiener
The Great Pretender by Susannah Cahalan
Island People (2016) by Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
The Accursed Tower by Roger Crowley