Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Operation Bounce HouseOperation Bounce House by Matt Dinniman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Obligatory reference to Dungeon Crawler Carl here, since it's the same author--BUT this isn't a LitRPG.

This is, quite simply, a fantastic SF with multiple takes on AI, Colonialism, Corporatism, and simply just LIVING. A lot of these topics are more than topical and even heartbreaking in the way that any mirror to reality can be.

*cough*g-za*cough*g-cide.

But more importantly, we spend a lot of time with these New Sonora farmers and their youthful stupidities and it just feels REAL, especially the rock band stuff, their dreams, their messed up romances, and the sheer, nasty reality that hits them. And even after it all becomes tragic and war devastates everything they'd known, they fight. A true underdog situation that had me on the edge of my seat to the end.

Even with Roger helping them out.

I'll admit I've read a number of books quite like this, but this one in particular hit me in the feels. It's the happiness, the strive to be better, to just LIVE that was the best part of it. Oh, the tactics and the mechs and the explosions and insults were fantastic, mind you, but it was the softer stuff that brought me to tears even at the very last page.

Very, very good SF.

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DegenerateDegenerate by Matt Casamassina
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

LOL this book has some twists and turns in it. Good ones. Strange ones. Cosmic horror and more.

Right off the bat, however, it reads like it could be a mystery-thriller, quietly transforming into revenge-horror, becoming almost UF in its buddy-fiction hi-jinx, before turning right around and surprising us in a very Nick Cutter/Gone World/Dark City way. Which is, by now, becoming something of a genre in itself. What do we call it, if not cosmic horror? It's a very specific KIND of cosmic horror, anyway. It's rather hard-SF.


So, YEAH, this ostensible HORROR is all those things with a little romance thrown in the mix as well. And superhero action.

And as long as you are going into this book with proper expectations--EXPECT ANYTHING--it's a wild, creative ride. It's an author having an awful lot of fun.

I recommend it wholeheartedly--with these caveats.

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Monday, February 2, 2026

After the FallAfter the Fall by Edward Ashton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Interesting novel. Billed as humor, it definitely has satire at its core. Post-humanity being slaves for an overwhelming alien race, gaslit into believing it's lesser on its own planet, growing up treated as utterly disposable, worse than pets... very funny. Really funny IF our heroes are genuinely bumbling idiots.

And for the most part, they ARE.

No spoilers, but this is a pretty wild, satirical ride. And definitely not relatable in today's climate. Not at all. *wink, wink*

I think I'm going to check out more books by this author.

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Sunday, February 1, 2026

The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound 12 (The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound, #12)The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound 12 by Noret Flood
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What pretty much amounts to an extended prep session and goodbye to Earth (renamed for the Nexus, not destroyed--yet), this novel is nevertheless fun and full of great worldbuilding. Literal worldbuilding. Glorious and extensive worldbuilding. And quite a bit of old-character progression and wrap-ups to make us feel good about sending Randidly off into the great bloody unknown of the core of the Nexus itself.

It was quite fun. :)



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Saturday, January 31, 2026

Stranger in a Strange LandStranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Re-Read 1/31/26:

I took out my old copy and took my own sweet damn time to read and revel in this book again. I wondered if I had changed again so much inside that I might have gotten an entirely new damn take on the novel.

And guess what? I have.

I focused on the SHARP satire and point-by-point criticism of 1950's America, and by some extent, the whole world. Skewering politicians is easy. Skewering social mores, nudity taboos, and ESPECIALLY religion of all stripes, this book rightly took off after it was published in 1961 to become a word-of-mouth cult favorite that rightly became a kind of anthem and dog-eared darling of the late '60s counterculture.

You Grok me? Well, it may be safe to assume that all the alternate religiosity curiosities of the time leading up to the counterculture, the spiritualism, the very wholesome idea that you are god, I am god, we are god, might have come directly from this. And even if it just plugged into the zeitgeist, it still plugged in. And all the while, it had heart, spoke truth, WHILE skewering the living shit out of our world at the time.

And you know what? It still skewers.

We need a little love and light in our lives. Of course, we need power and strength to PROTECT those who could bring that love and light into our lives--and that's where this is pretty good SF, let alone being a great stranger in a strange land kind of story. :)

Well, let's just agree that we need an ultimate kind of compassion and understanding on par with what Mike's got to even REACH that point.

Jubal's fun and all and a great stand-in for Heinlein's irascible, old-man's "get off my lawn" self, but this is the first time in a long time reading this novel that I came back to feeling more in tune with Mike, himself.

An ultimate INFP if I've ever read one.



Original Review

This one transformed and cemented me as a young adult, totally screwing me up and enlightening me at the same time, showing me that living in a crazy christian culture doesn't mean I have to stay there, or that great imagery can be used soooooo damn subversively. :)

And above or below that, it was a fantastic tale of striving for wisdom, learning that semantics MEANS something, and that I can be blown away by the fact that so much philosophy and striving and understanding, (read Grok,) could be thrown into one single novel and still be a wild tale.

So why all the hate, Ya'll? Oh good ole' Jubal is a stand-in for Heinlein's soapbox tendencies, sure, but he's also a wild character in the sense that he is what he is. He loves women, but says awful things, but on the other hand, these women respect him enough to throw him in the pool and blow raspberries at him, too. As we all should, today, to all men who act as a Mad Man from 1962, all heavy-drinking, heavy-opinions, and "apparently" sexist. But no one really believes that about him when they get to know him. He's a good man and a loudmouth author and all his other progressive ideas like equality between the sexes are SHOWN to us, repeatedly and repeatedly, by actions and deeds and a closer look at all the philosophies. It's the difference between expression and reality. He expresses as the time allows, but in reality he supports everyone. That's Jubal for you.

But he's not even the main character, just the most loud one.

Mike is. He's an alien, yo, born of man but raised by Martians with heavy-ass psychic powers, yo. And he's innocent of mankind, too.

This is his story. Who tries to capitalize on the man who owns Mars, who protects him, how he learns to adapt and later to understand us crazy humans, and what he does with his gifts.

The novel could be an indictment of modern times, a brew-on of absurdity when it comes to religion and religious thinking, a wildly prescient vision of the sexual liberation movement just a few years down the road, (or perhaps the seminal novel that informed the sixties love movements,) or it could be a wonderful shout-out to us all to start trying to UNDERSTAND one another, for grok's sake.

So I think it's wonderfully delicious. You know. To say that Heinlein is a sexist reactionary? When he, like, is the spirit of the sixties? Huh, water-brother? You Grok?

This is easily one of my favorite, if not my most favorite Heinlein, not just because it got into my soul when I was a kid, but because it's just one of those works that lives and breathes and still brings a big smile to my face. :) Oh, and it's one of my top 100 works of all time and it won the Hugo of '62, not that anyone really cares, because it just SPEAKS to so many people. :)

That's controversy for you. :)

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Friday, January 30, 2026

The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound 11 (The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound, #11)The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound 11 by Noret Flood
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Vacation time!

Sorta.

I mean, returning to the Earth to somehow convince the entire planet that it needs to train up hard or be left in the dust of the rest of the universe doesn't QUITE sound relaxing. And massive training regimens that tear your body apart is KINDA relaxing-adjacent. Right?

But it was fun revisiting the changed Earth and so many of the characters we'd gotten to know over the series. And funnily enough, most of the big leaps forward are all leaps backward into memories. Funny, right? Still, a great callback to all that came before.



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Wednesday, January 28, 2026

The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound 10 (The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound, #10)The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound 10 by Noret Flood
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Definitely a more well-balanced LitRPG with character progress well-beyond the skills-and-class leveling. Indeed, it's surprising how many cool characters that actually MEAN something take the front-and-center even over a huge-scale war in the Nether and the fight against the Nether King himself.

I really couldn't tear my eyes from the pages. Even stayed up late to see what happens.

Great fun! VERY satisfying.



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Operation Bounce House by Matt Dinniman My rating: 5 of 5 stars Obligatory reference to Dungeon Crawler Carl here, since it's the sam...