The Rosie Effect

Book Notes

And here we go, the 104th book of the year for me, and likely the last one I will finish this year.

This is book two of the Rosie series, the sequel to The Rosie Project. In this one, we have much of the same humour derived from a person (yes, an autistic person) taking everything said literally. Balance this with always making objective statements, without any social nuances, and you have the humour and charm of the first book.

What you also have, unfortunately, is an ass in the book. I really do not like books where one person is abusing power, which is the premise of much of the plot in this book. I should be less upset by it, given how much the world is about abusing power and not doing the right thing. Less upset, sure, and I also can choose not to seek out that particular style of conflict, given there are plenty others to choose among (Man vs. Fate/God, Man vs Self, Man vs. Society, Man vs. Nature, Man vs. Supernatural (-ish), and Man vs. Technology).

It is a quick read.

It's an amusing book, but much less so than the first Rosie book. I would liken the two books to the first and second bites of a treat: the first bite is amazing and delicious, and while the second bite is good, it isn't as amazing as the first bite.

Planetary

Book Notes

Okay, another graphic novel series. Unlike the Alias / Jessica Jones series, this one is from the DC Universe, which I know not a lot about other than the over-arching storylines of Superman and Batman.

Like all good stories, we start out with world building. Like all great stories, we don't have a lot of overly explicit explanations of the world. Instead, things just "are" and we are left as the reader to figure out the laws of this universe.

And, in this universe, the laws are very strange indeed.

I picked up these books on Susan's recommendation, not really able to resist a good story, regardless of the telling form.

The book follows the mystery of Elijah Snow, "Mr. Snow" to the world. He's been wasting his life in a desert diner. He's invited to a new job at a mysterious corporation, Planetary, whose job is to discover secrets and uncover mysteries. The world is strange, and Planetary keeps it strange. Sorta like Austin and Portland, I suspect.

I binge read these books, which are a collection of the entire saga, issues 1-29. I don't know if the storyline would have been more suspenseful doled out over 6 years, but the story by Warren Ellis was fun, and the cultural references interesting (in the actual definition of interesting, and not the "I'm using a neutral word to describe something not engaging").

I recommend the series (and currently have a full set available for friends to borrow).

New Car Parts

Blog

I went to Pep Boys today to pick up a bulb today. It reminded me of walking into auto parts shops as a kid with my dad. The giant racks of parts in the back of the store, a counter for the guy to look up part numbers and go back to pluck the parts in their boxes from the floor to ceiling shelves. And the smell! New car parts smell! I managed to walk in maybe 10 steps before I had to stop and just feel the memories flood.

The bulb aisle was all the way in the back of the store. Looking up the part number wasn't difficult, finding the bulb was. Turns out, the store was sold out for the bulb size I needed. Boo. I have a short but growing list of car fixes to make, with changing the bulb being the first one up. I was hoping for better car-fixing momentum than stopped-on-the-first-task.

Light at the End of the Tunnel

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