Wednesday, April 1, 2026

CHAOTIKCHAOTIK by T. Crissey
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I'll be clear here: I really did love a few things about this. Great transpositions of descriptions, especially for the weird stuff. It sat just right where it needed to be, being creative and funny at the same time. I also loved the chaos... in places. In dialogue especially.

But for everything else, I felt un-grounded, lost in "who is this and why do I care" space.

If I could name one precise thing I wish this had, it would be that grounding. That full feeling you get when you've immersed yourself in characters before they get thrown into the shit.

And there's plenty of shit here. Nasty stuff. That could have been truly glorious if we were getting deep in revenge or survival mode for real with characters that I loved.

But I didn't love them. Indeed, at least just for me, this novelette felt more like a snippet of extremely social weirdos enmeshed in an admittedly awesome cyberpunk/magic setting. I just wanted more... much more... grounding.

I may be a bit more critical than usual, but I feel INVESTED in this kind of setting. I want more. Alas.

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The Primal Hunter 6 (The Primal Hunter #6)The Primal Hunter 6 by Zogarth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Totally addictive. Still.

The aftermath was very amusing--what, with visiting family (assassins) and an auction and starting termite genocide with a world-ending cursed weapon that makes people hungry.

It's fun.

And if that wasn't amusing enough, it's just about SCHOOL TIME. You know, in a hell dimension. :)

Great LitRPG.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The Primal Hunter 5 (The Primal Hunter, #5)The Primal Hunter 5 by Zogarth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Super fun. Not only are we getting a GREAT alternative to the standard tournament trope with a treasure hunt, but we get a couple of the most epic battles in the series (so far).

Classic. Really fun. I couldn't set the book down. LitRPG at its finest.

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Monday, March 30, 2026

The Primal Hunter 4 (The Primal Hunter, #4)The Primal Hunter 4 by Zogarth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Still a standard big-scale LitRPG that's very much a solo-leveling bunch of goodness, but here's where it really excels: it's also grounded. It has some cool moral conflicts. But most importantly, it's great on the animal friendship angle. :)

Leveling up is always so damn fun.

In this case, it's truly solid and quite beautiful. I always thought First Defier and Randidly was pretty great, but this definitely has its own unique spin.


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Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Primal Hunter 3 (The Primal Hunter, #3)The Primal Hunter 3 by Zogarth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Things are really shaping up in a fun way. Purpose. Friends. An endless parade of super strong monsters he really, really shouldn't be trying to take on. And snark with his god-friend. Heretic, indeed. Muahahahahaha

This particular volume has some pretty great pacing and developments. And animal friends are pretty damn great to make it super easy for us readers to sympathize even more with the MC. It's a no-brainer. One might say it's instinctual.

I do like how the settlement is handled, the way it is growing. Never outstaying its welcome in the text, while being meaningful.

I'm looking forward to see how far this'll go.

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The Primal Hunter 2 (The Primal Hunter, #2)The Primal Hunter 2 by Zogarth
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Quite enjoyable. Loner who becomes insanely powerful is a very, very common theme in these kinds of books, of course, and this one excels at it. But more importantly, I find it fascinating to see real friendships arising, too. Not just with a god or two, but with regular folk who just happen to stumble in upon your forest sanctuary or annoying, head-pecking birds. :)

Who says you have to be a loner as a primal hunter?

Oh, and the mulled vodka is to die for.



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Saturday, March 28, 2026

Glory RoadGlory Road by Robert A. Heinlein
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Re-Read 3/28/26:

I'm reading this mostly because I insisted to myself that I'd read ALL of Heinlein's works in publication order and this one's number came up.

Here's my new reaction: The first part of the novel is a VERY grounded Isekai novel. It's actually rather great. Vietnam war, being wayward, getting sucked in by a mysterious girl, and WHAM--adventure, fighting, magic in a world without high-tech and can't even support high-tech.

Later, it feels like a cultural relativism novel. The sexism is progressively annoying, but the core of cultural relativism IS pretty damn good and modern. So, it's weird. The adventure is almost cartoonishly basic but the conversations are amusing. The characters (aside from the sexism that both sides appear to enjoy, regardless,) are also pretty fun. Contradictions, no?

But you know what really breaks this novel for me?

The execution of the last third of the novel. High tech society. Sure, it's Heinlein playing with Clarke's adage, but I found myself rolling my eyes with the story-logic of it all. Sure, I COULD forgive it for being another embodiment of adventure, but as an all-out cultural relativism romp, but the worst dangers aren't swords and knives or teeth, but accepting your mate for who and what she is.

I'm being generous.

But honestly? I still didn't like it. Just a few too many squirmy bits I was forced to accept. At least Stranger in a Strange Land led us gently into truly interesting topics.


Original Review:

Re-reading my least favorite of Heinlein's works, because who knows? Maybe an older eye can shed some light upon this most shameful of tales rife with sexism, unabashed fantastical thinking (that works because this is a fantasy), or the fact that there *might* be a good reason why Heinlein only wrote one fantasy novel.

Results of my analysis are pretty much the same as when I was a kid. Odd, that. I mean, sure, there's the fighting of dragons and lots of really cool swordplay, geometrical magical symbols and magic flying everywhere, and adventure, adventure, adventure, and while none of that is particularly noteworthy in a world literally overwhelmed with such things, there is a certain odd quirk to this novel that at once feels way out of place for a fantasy novel and later how it becomes almost the entire focus.

It's a book about relationships.

Not heroism, guts, luck, or doing one's manly duty.

It's about getting in the girl's pants, discovering that she's playing him for the same reason, marrying her because of a sense of "that's what men do", learning she's a galactic empress in a high-tech interstellar kingdom, learning he's filthy rich, and then, even though he's "wildly in love" with her, gets bored within months and drops her to go back to earth and act like a screwed-up war vet, all the while obsessing over her, the fact that he'd just given up high-tech immortality and endless wealth, and he dropped her all because she's freaking old, too, and it doesn't even matter if she looks like she's in her early 20's and she's an empress that has been ruling for a long time. He's upset because she went out to sow her wild oats, and he was the result.

Wild sexism is rampant throughout this novel. Absolutely. All on his part. He's pretty much the perfect example of "do as I say not as I do" idiocy that men tell each other about the women in their lives, and because this is a poor fantasy because it is just as fantastical to see this dipshit as a lady's man that all the chicks flock to, it IS a condemnation of such thinking, too.

I mean, I think I'd have preferred to have read the book from Star's PoV, not Scar's. After all, she's out there playing the game and even offering this dipshit not just the world but her wonderful self, endless wealth, immortality, and the respect of a whole empire for the heroic deeds that he (and she) accomplished. She played the game as only a smart and sexy woman of 1964 could play it, hamming it up for the benefit of the idiot male and giving him what he expected at every turn. All she really wanted was fun and companionship and a bit of love. She'd already had three children and 50 born ex-vitro. She has experience, she's smart, and she's bored.

It's just a shame that we had to follow along with this asshole, instead. If the novel had been written the way that Heinlein had written Maureen from Sail Beyond the Sunset, this novel would probably be a long-enduring classic. But it wasn't.

I did like the full synthesis of other-universal conditions that changed the laws where certain tech isn't feasible but magic is. This makes the novel Science-Fantasy rather than standard SF, but I have no problems with it. It was nominated for the Hugo in '64 and Way Station won instead. That was a smart move. Way Station was awesome. :)

I knocked off a star from my original review for all the reasons listed. It may be unfair to judge a work that is of its times this way, kind of like judging the men in Mad Men in the early 60's for their behavior by our standards, but it is what it is. *shrug*

Let's see how some of my better-beloved Heinleins will hold up! :)

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CHAOTIK by T. Crissey My rating: 3 of 5 stars I'll be clear here: I really did love a few things about this. Great transpositions of ...