Subjects: Books 書物

Recent Reads: Veniss Underground

Veniss Underground

This book is worth every dollar and cent I paid for, despite my initial reservations about purchasing it: it seemed just too expensive for a 207-page paperback. I had intended to borrow it from the national library but it turned out that for some strange reason it was not available in the library’s catalogue even though the book had been on sale for more than a year.

Most of reviews I’ve read for this novel describe it as a Dantean-Ophean phatamasgoric fable set in a futuristic society where biological living artworks have pervaded into human society for both aesthetic and functional purposes. Having read this novel, I come to the realisation that there is probably no better way to describe it: it is the sum of what the reviewers have described and much more. Vandermeer’s writing style is impossible to describe, it can only be felt through reading and imagination.

Subjects: Books 書物

Mood: Raves and Rants

Tags: bio-art, Jeff VanderMeer, new media, Olaf Stapledon

Books and decomposition

D E P R E S S E D … . .

While I was repacking some of my books last night, I discovered, to my dismay, that quite a few of my favourite books have yellow spots on corners and edges of the pages. The covers are in near-perfect condition because of the plastic wrappings that were administered to them months ago but I completely forgot about the weather factor. Humidity in Singapore is such a problem. I should have been a bit more careful. Thankfully the graphic novels in my wardrobe-cum-bookshelf are still safe. i remember how upset I got when I found yellow rings decorating my Alan Lee illustrated Lord of the Rings hardcover some years ago.

Right now, the walls of the shelf are laced with thick porous paper that I ripped from a free Japanese local leisure newspaper; the books have been replaced in their original locations. Hopefully this will help reduce the problem for the time being. I know that in order to prevent the issue from worsening, I’d have to purchase one of those dehumidifying agents. Sealing the books in special vacuum bags is another method but it’s a little too extreme: my books are meant to be read and enjoyed not packed away.

Subjects: Books 書物

Mood: Raves and Rants

Tags: Lord of the Rings

Desired Books: 2004-04-06

Books that I HAVE to read:

Most of the damn books on this site.

Particularly Dan Simmon’s Ilium and Jeff VanderMeer stuff (which I have been meaning to read but simply forgot to. Note that the books on this list that I have to read specifically exclude anything by William Gibson.

City of Saints and MadmenJeff VanderMeer’s City of Saints and Madmen

IliumDan Simmon’s Ilium

Subjects: Books 書物

Tags: Dan Simmon, Jeff VanderMeer

Clearing the stockpile

I have amazing stockpiles of books lying around my house that desire to be cleared. In other words: They need to be read. It’s this idiotic collector’s syndrome of mine. Whenever I buy a book, I lose the compulsion to read it since I know it’ll always be there for me when the want arises. Then I hear about a book that interests me, but that I do not want to purchase (unless I’m so hooked by it that I just have to have it: e.g. The Fountains of Paradise), I try all means to borrow a copy from the library. Then of course, the limited loan period presses me to complete and return the copy before a fine is imposed.

The books at home languish in waiting.

Subjects: Books 書物

Mood: Raves and Rants

Tags: Arthur C. Clarke

The End of Eternity

I finally read a book that has been lying in my collection for months because of blasted school and my annoying penchant for laziness: Asimov’s “The End of Eternity”.

My God, the story’s payoff has completely overwhelmed me. It’s in the league of the alien story in “The Gods Themselves” and more. I love it as much as the brilliant quote in his “Robots and Empire” where he philosphises through the eyes of Elijah Baley about humankind as a complex tapestry.

Eternity” begins as a science fiction story that appears to neatly tighten the loose ends of time-travel paradoxes that has often been questioned and criticised whenever the notion of time travel is discussed. But it evolves into something more: the consequences of controlling time and evolution to suit our ethical standards that are subjective to the era in which we are brought up in; the aesthetics and risk of seeking the unknown.

The book links also, very nicely with the Robots and Foundation stories. I would say it is sort of a prequel to the Robots series. However, this link is more a speculative one to the Robots and Foundation mythos than a direct connection.

Subjects: Books 書物

Mood: Raves and Rants

Tags: Arthur C. Clarke, ethics, Foundation, god, Issac Asimov, Olaf Stapledon, robot, science fiction