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malada: Greenland flag (Default)
Monday, April 10th, 2023 07:59 am
No spoilers.

I just finished Kingfisher's ( aka Ursula Vernon of 'Digger' fame) "The Hollow Places". It was pretty good if you like that type of thing. It had a nice build up, little bits of creepiness here and there, fun characters, a really horrifying (and grizzly) situation, some boss battles... and a happy ending. It made me examine a bit why I (occasionally) like to read horror novels.

I think it comes down to three factors:

1. The characters. You have to like the characters. In this novel the main characters are quirky, a bit damaged and very human. Faced with eldrich horrors they run away, have breakdowns, get wounded... and soldier on. I wanted to hug them.

2. The setting. There has to be some plausibility to the setting - even if it's bizarre. It can be far fetched and sci-fi or magical, but it has to make sense. (That's why I don't read Harry Potter books. Hogwarts makes *no* frelling sense. At all.)

3. The story. Or perhaps I should say, the writing. The writer has to lure you into the Scary Place and after you stop for a break (do not read this book after dark) you come back to the book wanting to know 'what happens next'. The characters are presented with A Problem. How do they solve it? What happens next? They also didn't act *completely stupid* when faced with a mind bending situation.

It's not a perfect book. At one point I almost shouted, "I KNEW IT! I KNEW IT!" and the ending might have been a little pat but it was an enjoyable... if really really creepy... book.
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malada: Greenland flag (Default)
Tuesday, November 23rd, 2021 07:42 am
I have books. In bookshelves. Some books I've read, some books I haven't. So... reading those I haven't and seeing if they're keepers.

"Hitler's Spies - German Military Intelligence in World War II" by David Kahn was plucked from the shelves because it was the biggest book and I needed the room. Kahn's research looks into the very convoluted and messy group of agencies that were used by the German military starting at the end of World War I. It covered a vast array of intelligence gathering from spies, aerial snooping. radio intercepts - really the whole field of intelligence. Time and again, the author points out that intelligence gathering was the sickly stepchild of the German military, always underfunded and understaffed, was increasingly staffed with Nazi party members instead of talented professionals, and were split up into competing agencies that rarely shared data. Reality was frequently disregarded if it conflicted with Nazi ideals or would upset the grand puppet master: Adolf Hitler.

Sure, they had ENIGMA - but the Allies broke ENIGMA. Rarely did the the Nazi break any of Allies codes.

Underfunded, inept, ignored, the many Nazi intelligence agencies fought more amongst each other than they did against the Allies.

Well, one book down... lots more to go.

-m
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