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    Alex KeaneS
    Over the last year or so, I’ve been revisiting books that were influential both to tabletop RPGs I’m playing and to genres I really enjoy. Snow Crash belongs a little bit to both lists. I originally came through it as an influence to a game I enjoy, but the cyberpunk genre has come to be one I really enjoy.Its publication in 1992 puts it a little later in the cyberpunk canon than books like Neuromancer.It tells the story of hacker turned pizza delivery boy for the mafia Hiro Protagonist and the eponymous virus that can jump from computers to humans.There’s a concept that floats around in some online Fandom communities of the “suck fairy,” referring to those times we revisit favorite media from when we were younger and we’ve changed in ways that our appreciation of the media has been changed by the experience for the worse. We notice things that blew past us, or treatment of certain groups that we just took for granted doesn’t sit the same with us. For me, there are some pretty big chunks of Snow Crash that have been visited by the suck fairy since I first read it.I first read Snow Crash as a 22-year-old law student on the recommendation of my buddy Ed who now writes at Throat Punch Games. I was starting to run the Shadowrun Missions program at our local gaming store and hadn’t really dived into cyberpunk outside the short stories in the book and some films like Blade Runner and The Matrix. This book drew me in and sparked an interest that led me to other books and other media and influenced some of the in-jokes we made at our Shadowrun table.It’s been a little over a decade since I first read the book, but I went into a reread as I was preparing to run Cyberpunk Red. A lot of things have changed since I was a first semester law student who had just moved away from home, both for my life and a lot of stuff becoming more apparent in society generally.To begin with, there’s this throughline between sex and violence that recurs throughout the book but never quite gets to the point of feeling like an intentional theme. Our secondary protagonist, not to be confused with Protagonist, is Y.T., a 15-year-old girl who is absolutely blasé when talking about the measures she’s taken in the event she’s raped while working as a courier. I’d probably chalk this up to just a ’90s men-writing-women thing of using the threat of sexual violence to point out how dystopian the setting is if it weren’t for the equally jaded way Y.T. discusses her relationship with Roadkill, her much older boyfriend who is called by phone but otherwise does not appear in this book; discusses that maybe she’d like to climb in the pizza car with Hiro; and the on-screen relationship she forms with Raven, one of the main antagonists. In between readings, I remembered Y.T. as this awesome street-skating courier, and she absolutely is, but things like being a dad definitely make the 15-year-old girl who solves problems by showing skin hit a little different. I don’t know that a book with Y.T. as written here would necessarily become a classic of its genre released today.Nor is the tie between sex and violence kept only to our secondary protagonist. Hiro comes into possession of a massive machine gun during the course of the book. He, unlike its previous owner, reads the instruction manual and learns that the gun has special straps to hook onto your pelvis to absorb recoil. So uh, that’s a whole gun-phallus trope. And also made the entire next scene stick The Time Warp from Rocky Horror Picture Show in my head.It’s the pelvic thrust that really drives you insane!Then there are sections that with my newly minted Bachelor’s in Linguistics really piqued my interest on my first read but stink of colonialism and racism a little over a decade later. This is basically the history of Sumer and Enki and Asherah that forms the background to how the Snow Crash virus came to be. There’s a whole section about how Sumerians mostly didn’t have conscious thought, which was left for these specific educated neurolinguistic hackers. Then parallels get drawn to the book’s modern time where you have hackers who build the things and then the Clints and Brandys of the metaverse who mindlessly consume what the hackers create. Then there’s this whole temple of a hacker and creative bar, The Black Sun, where that division is underlined.This “didn’t have the words to enable conscious thought” really strikes me of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis taken to an extreme. Like, the peasants lack the words and experience to describe abstract things so they must not have had a rich internal life. It just smacks of “natives didn’t have words to describe sailing ships so they literally couldn’t see the Quinta, the Pinto, and the Santa Maria approaching.” It’s a hypothesis that just bugs me because of the sheer condescending way it views civilizations that are seen as more primitive or lesser. Like Western Europe didn’t have to come up with words for these big ships as they were made.So sexualized violence, especially involving a child, and a colonial attitude toward ancient Sumeria made portions of the book hit me differently on the second read. But there are definitely both bones and some meat on them where I still see what drew me in on the first read. Like there is still a tense plot of Hiro trying to track down the Snow Crash virus for Juanita. There is still the plot of Y.T. getting in good with the Mafia for helping Hiro and working with them parallel to Hiro’s work to track down the new drugs that are coming into their territory. There’s still the epic battle between Hiro and Raven, with the revelations that come to them during it.As a friend of mine put it, “it’s a problematic favorite.” There is absolutely a solid cyberpunk noir adventure story here, it just has a good deal of side stories thrown on that core that can detract moment to moment. In the end, I’m still glad I took the time to reread it, even if I no longer have that half remembered idealistic version of it in my head. There’s definitely a lot here that I can mine for when I get back to running Cyberpunk games.
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    Alex KeaneS
    On January 1, 2026, The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett entered the United States public domain. I got my copy of the book from Standard Ebooks.Most people who know The Maltese Falcon are probably more familiar with the 1941 movie starring Humphrey Bogart as Private Investigator Sam Spade. That film essentially set the tone for the Film Noir genre. And the tone of the book isn’t much different. This is fully a hard-boiled detective story. No one in the book is all that great, not even our protagonist Sam Spade. Maybe his secretary Effie Perrine. Maybe.Sam is a private eye who takes on a new client who wants a man tailed. His partner takes on the first night of the job and winds up dead. This sets off a whole series of events that drags Spade first into a murder mystery, then into a hunt for the titular macguffin. All along, Sam is chewing out people who could maybe help because of course they can’t really and Sam knows that because Sam’s been around and knows how things work so Sam’s going to do it Sam’s way.Luckily, Sam’s way leads to all sorts of interesting twists and turns through the plot because otherwise, he’d just be a jerk.Hammett is real good at painting this picture of the seedy underbelly of 1930 San Francisco and the smuggling and double crossing and murder going on. I love the implied cursing coming from Wilmer, the young bodyguard to the primary antagonist Gutman. There is so much in this book that feels like the more things change in how we look at crime, the more they stay the same.With the book being from 1930, or because Sam Spade is a jerk, or both, there’s a fair amount of casual sexism that Spade throws around to his secretary; to Iva, the widow of his dead partner with whom he was maybe having an affair; and to Brigid, the client whose case sets off the whole story. Honestly, it all kind of just fits back into Sam Spade is a jerk, but luckily one who gets himself into enough trouble that you enjoy seeing what happens next.Reading this one, I can definitely see the throughline in detective stories to books like The Dresden Files with that sort of jaded, hard-boiled protagonist.Overall, I had to keep reading this one to see where it turned out, but partially that was to see if Spade would get some comeuppance. This is definitely a book where a few times, I was rooting for the bad guy to just get one good swing in. Everyone was an asshole here.
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    Alex KeaneS
    Like I mentioned in my reviews of Ensign Flandry and The Onion Girl, my interests in gaming, together with interests in science fiction and fantasy have led me to reading some older works and getting more of a sense for where my favorite genres have been in the past.I first learned about The Winds of Gath from a post by Mythic Mountains RPG about what they’d do differently as a new Classic Traveller Referee. From there I also saw references to a post by Rocky Mountain Navy Gamer about how many concepts from the Dumarest Saga show up in Traveller. And the Dumarest Saga does show up on the Traveller Wiki’s Recommended Reading List.It took me a while trying to track down whether I could get a copy of The Winds of Gath through interlibrary loan or Overdrive or track it down through second-hand book store trips, but eventually I just picked up the current ebook edition from Gateway Essentials.The Winds of Gath was originally published in 1967, and is the first book in E.C. Tubbs’s 33-volume Dumarest Saga, which saw its final entry in 2008, just two years before Tubbs’s death in 2010.The thoughts section will have some spoilers for the story.PremiseThe premise of The Winds of Gath is that Earl Dumarest, a penniless space traveller has found himself on the planet Gath, and wants to find a way off the planet to continue his search for a way back to his home planet. From there, he gets ensnared into plots and intrigue of space nobles.ThoughtsOne thing that I’m always caught off-guard by when I read older science fiction is how snappy the pacing is. It’s a refreshing change of pace from slower stories, but the slower and more languid pacing in modern stories leaves more room for characters and situations to develop. Two different ways of going about it, but both get the work done.The world has some pieces that are weirdly progressive for the 1960s, like the Matriarchs of Kund having control over multiple star systems, though their rules about which pieces of life the Matriarchs must eschew do reveal some aged ideas about the exact nature of femininity. There was also a section where a space prince is pensive about whether the blood sport he is sponsoring will be gruesome enough to get the noble woman he wants to pursue turned on enough to accept his advances. And then he drugs and kidnaps her instead. Plots from the 60s are weird.Dumarest is really mostly the Every Man protagonist who has this gruff but mostly blank personality, sort of like a Sam Spade in Space. He’s great at things, but like not so great that you can’t relate. Especially as you get to the point that his travels are all about finding clues to find his way back home to Earth, which at this point in the far future is mostly forgotten.The story definitely has spots where it shows its age, but Tubbs’s snappy writing and the way the sort of episodic structure of this works has me wanting to read more of the Dumarest books. I want to see if he finds his way home. Also, the way this episode just ends isn’t really a cliffhanger in this story but definitely leaves you with a “but what happens next” vibe.
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    Alex KeaneS
    Since the beginning of 2025, I’ve been interested in revisiting some of the classic works in the genres I enjoy. Originally the revisit was brought on by an interest in the Traveller Roleplaying Game and a list of influential science fiction works. From there, I got an interest in some of the classical urban fantasy works. Especially after reading the list of personal recommendations from Seanan McGuire. Neither this book, nor this author, appears on McGuire’s list, but Newford and Charles de Lint come up often enough in urban fantasy recommendations that when The Onion Girl went on sale in ebook form, I decided to take a look.Note however, that The Onion Girl is not the first Newford book. I don’t know how I missed that fact myself when picking it up, but it was published about a decade into the original releases of the series. While the Newford stories each stand alone pretty well, and I did not have issues getting to know the characters starting with this one, those who find the very beginning a very good place to start may wish to look at Dreams Underfoot instead.CW: Sexual Assault, Drug Use, Family Abuse, and 1990s Depictions of Sex WorkHow can who you meet affect how you get to grow beyond the traumas you faced as a child?There are two parallel stories told in The Onion Girl: painter of the fantastic Jilly Coppercorn lies in a bed recovering from injuries she received in a car crash, while Raylene Carter tells the story of how she fought against the brother who sexually abused her and escaped the home where she was abandoned by her older sister, her brother’s first victim. Their tales interweave and continue in parallel, each adding a context of “what if” to the other.Jilly’s story involves a theme that she must first heal what’s inside her before friends and magic can help her heal her physical body. Raylene’s story largely involves her and her best friend Pinky on a cross-country spree inflicting upon others what was inflicted upon them as teens. The two parallel each other as Jilly tries, and sometimes fails, to revisit what happened to her as a girl while Raylene largely continues to live in that abused headspace unable to move beyond it. Jilly meets friends in Newford who get her off drugs, get her into art school, get her away from the work she did as a teen prostitute. Raylene has Pinky who pushes the pair of them into ever more trouble until Pinky ends up in prison and Raylene hatches an idea to go take revenge on the sister who abandoned her all those years ago.Largely these story parallels between the two women carry on a theme that while we might be shaped and informed by the traumas we’ve endured, each of us still retains the choice to be who we want to be. That theme remains consistent throughout the book as Jilly continually makes choices about who she wants to be and who she wants to help while Raylene remains concerned with immediate desires for herself and maybe occasionally Pinky.I was talking to friends as I went through this book joking about how the 90s edginess is strong in this one. It opens with the main character being hit by a car and then basically being told to deal with the trauma of being a sexual assault victim or she’ll be stuck with her injuries. While that was my initial thought, I really enjoyed sitting with the found family that Jilly has in her trio, “the Tribe of Small Fierce Women”, with Sophie and Wendy helping her. Along with all the others around Newford who come to her side.The pacing of this one is a bit slower than a lot of other books I’ve read recently, the conflicts the characters are dealing with are a lot more internal and a lot more contemplative. For a good portion of the book, those issues are actively being ignored by the characters. This is maybe not the best book for someone looking for a lot of action and excitement. But, if you’re a fan of getting immersed in the millieu of a book, and sitting alongside the characters and just experiencing their lives for a bit, I think this is a story you might enjoy. After this one, I’m sold on checking out the other Newford books, because I really did like what de Lint set up with the setting.
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    Alex KeaneS
    This year, I’ve read a lot of sci-fi, especially classic space opera, because of a reading list I found on the Traveller RPG wiki. One of the series listed as a “Primary Inspiration” for Traveller was the Saga of Dominic Flandry by Poul Anderson, which begins with Ensign Flandry.Ensign Flandry tells the tale of Dominic Flandry, a recent graduate of the Terran Empire’s naval academy serving an assignment on what’s considered an unimportant backwater world, where the Merseian Supremacy has nonetheless set up supporting one side of a conflict. He gets dragged into a conflict larger than he expected when he is dragged off-world as part of a diplomatic mission.The conflict involving a young military man getting drawn into a huge interstellar conflict is a common one in space opera, and Anderson does a great job with that part of the book. Where the book suffers for me is where it begins to show its age, having first been published in 1966.There are multiple moments through the book where sexism or racism poke through. The stereotypes characters make toward the alien species all parrot real life racism. Then there’s the sexism that shows through as Flandry talks about the Tigeries. They’re cat people. But the women nurse their young with blood. So the blood flow makes the tiger boobs extra perky, and also that extra blood supply is what lets these women be the smart ones of their species.If you want to take a look at classic sci fi and see how some of the “fresh eyes solve problems” tropes started, the plot is a fun one to read through. Just be prepared for the attitudes of the era to show their age.
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    Lydia SchochL
    Books I Had to Read in School and Liked: https://lydiaschoch.com/wednesday-weekly-blogging-challenge-books-i-had-to-read-in-school-and-liked-2/ #WednesdayWeeklyBloggingChallenge #Books #School #Classics