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Soh Kam Yung Locked account

sohkamyung@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 10 months ago

Exploring one universe at a time. Interested in #Nature, #Photography, #NaturePhotography, #Science, #ScienceFiction, #Physics, #Engineering.

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Soh Kam Yung's books

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Artemis: A Novel (Paperback, 2018, Ballantine Books) 3 stars

Augmenting her limited income by smuggling contraband to survive on the Moon's wealthy city of …

More of an SF thriller than a Hard-SF story like "The Martian"

3 stars

An interesting story set on a lunar colony, Artemis. The main character, Jazz Bashara, is introduced as a smuggler involved in getting minor prohibited items (like cigars) into the city for her clients. We soon learn that she has apparently made some bad life decisions early in her life that has led her to become estranged from her father and people who thought she would make something of her life due to her high intelligence.

She also has a past debt to pay off, and one day she is given the opportunity to pay if off when one of her clients proposes an audacious sabotage attempt by her in order to corner a market on Artemis. But the attempt goes wrong, and Jazz now finds herself not only a fugitive from the law, but also a target of a mob that is very angry at the sabotage. Running for her …

The Pauper Prince and the Eucalyptus Jinn: A Tor.Com Original (2015, Tor Books) 4 stars

"The Pauper Prince and the Eucalyptus Jinn" by Usman T. Malik is a fantasy novella …

A story that takes it time to build up to and introduce its fantasy elements.

4 stars

An interesting fantasy story that takes its time setting the scene before it starts to introduce its fantasy elements. The main story is told from the point of view of the grandson, whose grandfather came from Pakistan. Via the story, we learn of the grandfather's past and his relationship with a former Princess who ran a small tea stall at a eucalyptus tree, rumoured to be inhabited by a Jinn from the ancient past.

But tragedy would strike (literally) after a boy gets hurt after a fall from the tree. Amid calls to remove the tree as a menace to the community, it get destroyed by lightning, including the stall and the Princess moves away, while the grandfather gradually migrates to the US after adventures in various other places, gradually losing his memory of events apparently due to senility.

All this sounds like a perfectly normal non-Fantasy story until the …

Synthetic Perennial (EBook, 2022, Tom Doherty Associates) 3 stars

K'Mori has died once already. Brought back to life, she struggles with the limits of …

Okay story about being revived from the dead, but could have been better

3 stars

An okay story that looks at the immediate 'life' of a girl in hospital that has been 'revived' from the dead (due to cancer) and the aftermath of that revival on the outside world.

A promising premise that does not quite deliver for me, for the revival is implied but never explicitly stated (it was not clear if she really was revived from the dead or maybe woken from a deep unconscious state after numerous operations). The effects of her revival on the outside world are only shown through protest crowds outside her hospital and in brief news scenes.

Perhaps the story would be more engaging if it was enlarge to encompass more of the implications such a revival would have on the girl personally and on the world.

The Dominion of Leviathan (EBook, 2022, Tom Doherty Associates) 3 stars

Lord Ajax! First and greatest Ascendant; conqueror of the Martian machine-minds; mighty Steward of Leviathan's …

An okay story, but I was expecting more.

3 stars

An okay story that, while 'Space Opera' in scope, is let down by a narrative that informs the reader of events that have (or will occur) off-stage, rather than letting the reader discover it.

In a written missive, the narrator tells the story of Lord Ajax, who rules over the Solar System and will not tolerate weakness and presumed treachery. She also tells the story of how she is discovered by Lord Ajax, transformed in an 'Ascendant' (basically a uber-human), undergoes trials, only to be arrested and punished.

Elder Race (EBook, 2021, Tom Doherty Associates) 4 stars

Lynesse is the lowly Fourth Daughter of the queen, and always getting in the way. …

Interesting mix of SF and fantasy that works.

4 stars

An interesting tale that starts out like a fantasy story of a lowly Princess asking for the aid of a wizard to fight a demon. But when the viewpoint switches to that of the wizard, we learn that he's actually a very lonely off-world anthropologist studying the culture on a colony world and despairing at getting contact with his own home world.

In a collision of culture and world-views about magic and technology indistinguishable from magic, they (and a few others) would forge a bond as they confront the demon, which the wizard assumes is 'just' a local bully with advanced tools scavenged from the colony's initial technological days. But both would learn that the demon is more than it seems and some magic may be that: magic and not just advanced technology.

Resolving the problem of the demon may be anticipated by attentive readers, but the ending is still …

Galaxy’s Edge Magazine : Issue 43 March 2020 (Paperback, 2020, Phoenix Pick) 4 stars

A tribute issue to Mike Resnick, who was editor of the magazine and well known in SFF circles

4 stars

A nice, average issue with fun stories by Andrew Peery, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Larry Hodges, J. Scott Coatsworth, Eleanor R. Wood, Janis Ian and Mike Resnick. Between the stories are appreciations by numerous writers about Mike Resnick's influence on themselves and the SF community.

  • "Life Is Too Short To Drink Bad Wine" by Gerri Leen: it's the end of the world and for two people who knew each other for a long time and then separated, it was time to get together again and enjoy each other's company one last time.

  • "Thank You For Your Service" by Andrew Peery: people line up to send their loved ones through an alien machine that can cure them of illness. But not everyone makes it through. And for two of them, the journey would end in both happiness and sadness.

  • "Petra And The Blue Goo" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch: a librarian at the …

The Last Truth (EBook, 2022, Tom Doherty Associates) 3 stars

In AnaMaria Curtis's "The Last Truth", a Tor.com Original, a runaway and indentured thief, Eri …

A story about breaking locks with the truth and forgetting about yourself

3 stars

An interesting story about an indentured lock breaker on a ship who would be free after this final trip when she breaks the locks in the hold of the ship for her master, who steals the items. But to break the magical locks, she must tell a truth about herself to the locks, and each truth is lost to her in the telling. In this story, she meets a musician, whose music has the power to make people dance and possibly forget (or remember) themselves. Together, they plan to escape their indentured lives, but only once the thief makes one final effort to break an intricate lock with the last of her truths, and if the musician can help her remember herself.

The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Reporter (EBook, 2022, Tom Doherty Associates) 3 stars

A reporter travels to the Norwegian Arctic to cover an unusual sled race with the …

Surreal story about a zombie race in Norway.

3 stars

A story about a reporter who goes to report on an unusual sled race in Norway that involves zombies. It starts out like an investigative story by the reporter but when the reporter takes part in the race to see where the zombies are going, the story takes a strange, surreal turn into possible paths taken by the reporter in her life that may, or may not, lead to her life being in the hand of the zombies.

Locked in Time (EBook, 2021, Columbia University Press) 5 stars

Fossils allow us to picture the forms of life that inhabited the earth eons ago. …

Fascinating book about some fascinating behaviours caught in fossils.

5 stars

A marvellous book that showcases some fascinating fossils that gives us a glimpse of how life was like for prehistoric organisms. Along with fascinating artwork by Bob Nicholls, the book gives the history of the fossil, what behaviour is captured by it, and it can tell us (or not) about how prehistoric organisms lived.

The book is organized in chapters that cover a specific behaviour shown by the fossils:

  • "Sex" shows us animals caught in the act of copulation, as well as sexual behaviours like 'lekking' dinosaurs. A number of pregnant animal fossils are also featured.

  • "Parental Care and Animal Communities" feature brooding oviraptorid dinosaurs, arthropods guarding eggs, shark nurseries and unusual communities that formed around giant clams, floating ocean logs and even inside mammoth bones.

  • "Moving and Making Homes" shows us fossils indicating that arthropods moult, animals migrate, and make burrows for homes.

  • "Fighting, Biting, and Feeding" are another …

Beyond the Dragon's Gate (2020, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 3 stars

Former Academician Anna Kim’s research into AI cost her everything. Now, years later, the military …

On living from the point of view of AIs.

3 stars

A story that feels like a fragment of a larger story given the background information in it, it has an academic hustled to a military location to help figure out why 'improved' AI driven battleships are destroying themselves. The reason would have to do with the AI's sense of Self and what it means for an AI to be physically embodied in a ship.

Of Roses and Kings (2020, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 3 stars

In this dark, skewed take on Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Alice is now the Red …

On what happens after Alice stays in Wonderland

3 stars

Definitely not your usual "Alice in Wonderland" tale. Or rather, this is a tale of what happens after Alice goes to Wonderland, becomes the Red Queen, and never returns. She rules with a Red King (of course) and various other people from both Wonderland and our land serve under her.

But being the Red Queen comes with Duties and, Wonderland being Wonderland, those duties, as told through the eyes of the Queen's servant in this story, involves rather a lot of people losing their heads for breaking the rules. Through it all, the servant has managed to keep her head; until she does something to get Alice out of her Regular Duty with the Red King.

Tied up in this story is the servant's unusual Duty she has with the Queen and which would turn out to be the unusual solution to her problem of not losing her head while …

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, May/June 2020 (EBook, 2020, Spilogale, Inc.) 3 stars

An average issue of F&SF

3 stars

An average issues with interesting stories by Ray Nayler, Holly Messinger and a hilarious story involving American Indians by Joseph Bruchac.

  • "Hornet and Butterfly" by Tom Cool and Bruce Sterling: in a flooded future world, one person struggles to stay alive in a world turned upside down. But doing so may need him to subjugate himself to a person born to be in the upper classes.

  • "Stepsister " by Leah Cypess: a story that continues on from the ending of a familiar fairy tale, but with unusual twists involving the best friend of the king who is sent to fetch the stepsister of the queen. As the tale unfolds, we discover that this happy ever after story involves not so happily married people, fey magic, and decisions that will affect the lives of all involved.

  • "Eyes of the Forest" by Ray Nayler: on a strange alien world, human runners form …

Book Parts (2019, Oxford University Press) 3 stars

What would an anatomy of the book look like? There is the main text, of …

A look at how parts of the modern book came to be.

3 stars

An interesting book that looks at the history and context of the various parts of a modern book and how they came to be. Starting with what covers a book (the dust jacket), the book then looks at what goes in the front of a book (the title, copyright info, publishers info, introduction, table of content, list of characters), what is included with the content (chapter headings, illustrations, footnotes) and what goes in the back (erratas, indexes).

Some parts can be rather dry reading, but some fascinating information on how some parts of a book appeared in the past and then evolved into its current form are fascinating. The book also gives a brief look at how ebooks are affecting the presentation of these parts of the book.

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, May/June 2022 (EBook, 2022, Spilogale, Inc.) 3 stars

Average issue of F&SF, with more shorter pieces of fiction.

3 stars

An average issue, with lots of shorter pieces of fiction and only a few longer ones. The stories that I found more interesting are those by Fawaz Al-Matrouk, Ai Jiang, Julie Le Blanc, Taemumu Richardson, Shreya Ila Anasuya and John Wiswell.

  • "The Voice of a Thousand Years" by Fawaz Al-Matrouk: an interesting story of an old man who discovers a voice coming from a musical instrument in his workshop that turns out to be a 'spirit' that desires to see the world. The old man tries to fulfill it by creating automations for the spirit to inhabit, but fails each time. Until he, and the spirit, decides to make one final attempt that may yet be their final act.

  • "Cold Trade" by Aliya Whiteley: traders from space travel under the ocean of a world to try to trade with large, deep ocean dwellers who only appear interested in moving around …

The Chronologist (EBook, 2022, Tom Doherty Associates) 3 stars

A boy, desperate to escape the drudgery of life in his small town, gets caught …

Discovering what happens when you unravel time as seen by mechanical clocks.

3 stars

An interesting story of a boy in a town whose routines are slightly askew (it's always summer, for instance) because the clocks that make time past are not measuring the passage of time correctly. Until a time-keeper comes to mend the clocks, and mend time.

But the boy's desire for a change in his daily routine makes him steal an item from the time-keeper, which he uses to make all time askew to get the time-keeper to return, so he may escape with him. But time has a plan of its own for the boy, which leads to a possibly inevitable conclusion about the boy and the time-keeper.