1. What, Ho! By PG Wodehouse
A collection of short stories from various Wodehouse works – Jeeves & Wooster, Blandings, Uncle Fred, Mulliner, Ukridge, etc. It also includes a few letters from Wodehouse which journal his life in US and also his thoughts on several contemporary writers. As a bonus, there’s a couple of really brilliant poems to boot.
Jeeves, Wooster and Lord Emsworth always make me laugh but it’s nice to get acquainted with other characters in Wodehouse world, though Mulliner turned out to be my least favorite as his stories are always about him narrating someone else’s experiences. But of course, only Wodehouse can make me read stories about golf (*yawns*) and actually enjoy them. As this review says, this book is intended for Wodehouse enthusiasts and not beginners. I always recommend Leave it to Psmith or Inimitable Jeeves to start PG W. 3.5/5
2. Feynman’s Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun – by David L Goodstein
This is strictly for people who do not mind a little bit of math, especially geometry. If you're one of those who hated science then better ignore this one. I was previously recommended another excellent book on Feynman’s life – Surely you’re joking, Mr. Feynman? – but before I go there eventually, I am happy to get a chance to read this book. The book deals with Richard Feynman's impromptu lecture to his grad students and his explanation of why planets move around the sun in only elliptical orbits. The actual material is probably 40 pages long but the author, who was a good friend of Feynman, gives a lot of introduction about Aristotelian world, the successive theories about our star system from Copernicus, Tycho (Brahe), Galileo, Newton before presenting us Feynman’s analysis. Newton actually proved Copernicus’ law about elliptical motion of the planets by using his own famous three laws in his Principia Mathematica, but he used a lot of properties of conic sections and stuff. Instead, Feynman uses simple geometry (congruent triangles, tangents to circle, foci, radius, parallelogram, etc) to prove the elliptical motion. I liked this book very much. The nerd side in me is a happy chappy. 4/5
3. And Another Thing by Eoin Colfer
Eoin Colfer is the famous author from Artemis Fowl series but he did a grave mistake of expanding on Douglas Adams' amazing H2G2 series. I blame Hollywood for inspiring Colfer into taking something really awesome and making terrible continuation of the same. If I hadn't come across this name in one of the book club discussions, I'd have been happy with my ignorance that H2G2 is only a trilogy in five parts. But now I read this and my life's a little wretched. This doesn't have my favorite Marvin the paranoid android. This has barely any lines for Arthur Dent. Ford Prefect is always drunk and doesn't make any sense. Random Dent is more a highly annoying teenager rather than cute little teen. I don’t even want to talk about Trillian's role in this. This book was saved solely by Zaphod Beeblebrox, who continues to be his stupid self and Thor the thunder god. The bits about Asgard and all were kinda ok. Don't recommend this to anyone unless you want to spoil your H2G2 experience. 2.5/5
4. Dork by Sidin Vadukut
I haven't read a single page of this when I was sober. That's some achievement, surely? This book only reiterated my dislike for upcoming Indian writers aka CB's evil spawn (thankfully this book doesn't have much romance & s). This book was supposed to be funny but I can't remember laughing more than a handful of times and we are talking about my drunk self who's known to giggle too much. Parts of it were boring, parts of it were unnecessary, parts of it were superfluous, parts of it made me want to throttle someone around, parts of it made me kick my neighbour's cat 9 stories high. If you think it's a decent book, I won't disagree with you. You may get a call from my drunk self for some in depth analytical discussions though. 2.5/5
5. The Silver Spike by Glen Cook
This is a continuation of the Black Company trilogy which I reviewed last month. This book deals with the aftermath of The White Rose and is mostly written with Case as protagonist. It does miss my favorite characters like Lady & Croaker completely. It's a spin off and a decent book but the series at this point is getting a bit too tedious with the evil stuff. It’s like the evil just won’t die and that is because Cook wants to write a zillion more books. I hope the next ones (think there are 7 more) get better. 3.5/5
6. The Murder on the Blue Train by Agatha Christie
I don't know if I've overgrown Christie and I don't know if it is ridiculous to expect the mystery authors to put a bit more focus on narration and liberal scattering of clues and I don't know if I'm the only one who thinks a mystery book which ends with the main detective pulling something out of the hat saying "voila" is completely stupid and only underestimates the reader's intelligence. After a thoroughly excellent book Murder on the Links in Jan, this was such a downer. I'm mixing a lot of Christie and I make sure to read at least one every month but a good book is hard to come by. 2.5/5
7. Thank You, Jeeves by Wodehouse
Unlike the previous 3-4 Wodehouse books I read, this one's a complete story where…hold your breaths…Jeeves leaves Wooster's service. This severely reduces the number of interactions between Jeeves and Wooster – and any Wodehouse fan would tell you that the charm in J & W series is the conversations between them, Jeeves is bland without W and Wooster’s got nothing without J. This is still a decent book and it deals with the American Stoker family as well as Wooster's pal Chuffy and there's also the loony doctor Sir Roderick Glossop who provide fun. I watched this episode already and I enjoyed the book more than it was worth purely by imagining Fry and Laurie as J & W. 3.5/5
8. Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief, The Sea of Monsters, The Titan’s Curse
After getting embarrassed in a Mythology Quiz (I think my score was 3/150), this series provided me an excellent chance of reading through Greek mythology. I don't know about others who studied in fancy schools and read fancy mythology stuff, but I didn't do it a decade and a half ago. There are so many references to Greek mythology that I end up spending most of my time on Wiki entries, so the book series is not progressing as fast as I would've liked. Still, I only have 2 more books to finish in this series before taking his other one – The Heroes of Olympus. I'd recommend the books for 12-14 yr kids as the stuff feels very childish and there are too many adventures which I suppose to have come very well on screen (I hear Titan’s Curse is in pipeline now). But the books are getting a bit predictable and I was very angry with Percy's entry into Polyphemus' cave – I knew only a little bit about Cyclopes and they had to repeat Ulysses' exact plan. Damn you, man! 3/5 (I wish I were 12)
A collection of short stories from various Wodehouse works – Jeeves & Wooster, Blandings, Uncle Fred, Mulliner, Ukridge, etc. It also includes a few letters from Wodehouse which journal his life in US and also his thoughts on several contemporary writers. As a bonus, there’s a couple of really brilliant poems to boot.
Jeeves, Wooster and Lord Emsworth always make me laugh but it’s nice to get acquainted with other characters in Wodehouse world, though Mulliner turned out to be my least favorite as his stories are always about him narrating someone else’s experiences. But of course, only Wodehouse can make me read stories about golf (*yawns*) and actually enjoy them. As this review says, this book is intended for Wodehouse enthusiasts and not beginners. I always recommend Leave it to Psmith or Inimitable Jeeves to start PG W. 3.5/5
2. Feynman’s Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun – by David L Goodstein
This is strictly for people who do not mind a little bit of math, especially geometry. If you're one of those who hated science then better ignore this one. I was previously recommended another excellent book on Feynman’s life – Surely you’re joking, Mr. Feynman? – but before I go there eventually, I am happy to get a chance to read this book. The book deals with Richard Feynman's impromptu lecture to his grad students and his explanation of why planets move around the sun in only elliptical orbits. The actual material is probably 40 pages long but the author, who was a good friend of Feynman, gives a lot of introduction about Aristotelian world, the successive theories about our star system from Copernicus, Tycho (Brahe), Galileo, Newton before presenting us Feynman’s analysis. Newton actually proved Copernicus’ law about elliptical motion of the planets by using his own famous three laws in his Principia Mathematica, but he used a lot of properties of conic sections and stuff. Instead, Feynman uses simple geometry (congruent triangles, tangents to circle, foci, radius, parallelogram, etc) to prove the elliptical motion. I liked this book very much. The nerd side in me is a happy chappy. 4/5
3. And Another Thing by Eoin Colfer
Eoin Colfer is the famous author from Artemis Fowl series but he did a grave mistake of expanding on Douglas Adams' amazing H2G2 series. I blame Hollywood for inspiring Colfer into taking something really awesome and making terrible continuation of the same. If I hadn't come across this name in one of the book club discussions, I'd have been happy with my ignorance that H2G2 is only a trilogy in five parts. But now I read this and my life's a little wretched. This doesn't have my favorite Marvin the paranoid android. This has barely any lines for Arthur Dent. Ford Prefect is always drunk and doesn't make any sense. Random Dent is more a highly annoying teenager rather than cute little teen. I don’t even want to talk about Trillian's role in this. This book was saved solely by Zaphod Beeblebrox, who continues to be his stupid self and Thor the thunder god. The bits about Asgard and all were kinda ok. Don't recommend this to anyone unless you want to spoil your H2G2 experience. 2.5/5
4. Dork by Sidin Vadukut
I haven't read a single page of this when I was sober. That's some achievement, surely? This book only reiterated my dislike for upcoming Indian writers aka CB's evil spawn (thankfully this book doesn't have much romance & s). This book was supposed to be funny but I can't remember laughing more than a handful of times and we are talking about my drunk self who's known to giggle too much. Parts of it were boring, parts of it were unnecessary, parts of it were superfluous, parts of it made me want to throttle someone around, parts of it made me kick my neighbour's cat 9 stories high. If you think it's a decent book, I won't disagree with you. You may get a call from my drunk self for some in depth analytical discussions though. 2.5/5
5. The Silver Spike by Glen Cook
This is a continuation of the Black Company trilogy which I reviewed last month. This book deals with the aftermath of The White Rose and is mostly written with Case as protagonist. It does miss my favorite characters like Lady & Croaker completely. It's a spin off and a decent book but the series at this point is getting a bit too tedious with the evil stuff. It’s like the evil just won’t die and that is because Cook wants to write a zillion more books. I hope the next ones (think there are 7 more) get better. 3.5/5
6. The Murder on the Blue Train by Agatha Christie
I don't know if I've overgrown Christie and I don't know if it is ridiculous to expect the mystery authors to put a bit more focus on narration and liberal scattering of clues and I don't know if I'm the only one who thinks a mystery book which ends with the main detective pulling something out of the hat saying "voila" is completely stupid and only underestimates the reader's intelligence. After a thoroughly excellent book Murder on the Links in Jan, this was such a downer. I'm mixing a lot of Christie and I make sure to read at least one every month but a good book is hard to come by. 2.5/5
7. Thank You, Jeeves by Wodehouse
Unlike the previous 3-4 Wodehouse books I read, this one's a complete story where…hold your breaths…Jeeves leaves Wooster's service. This severely reduces the number of interactions between Jeeves and Wooster – and any Wodehouse fan would tell you that the charm in J & W series is the conversations between them, Jeeves is bland without W and Wooster’s got nothing without J. This is still a decent book and it deals with the American Stoker family as well as Wooster's pal Chuffy and there's also the loony doctor Sir Roderick Glossop who provide fun. I watched this episode already and I enjoyed the book more than it was worth purely by imagining Fry and Laurie as J & W. 3.5/5
8. Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief, The Sea of Monsters, The Titan’s Curse
After getting embarrassed in a Mythology Quiz (I think my score was 3/150), this series provided me an excellent chance of reading through Greek mythology. I don't know about others who studied in fancy schools and read fancy mythology stuff, but I didn't do it a decade and a half ago. There are so many references to Greek mythology that I end up spending most of my time on Wiki entries, so the book series is not progressing as fast as I would've liked. Still, I only have 2 more books to finish in this series before taking his other one – The Heroes of Olympus. I'd recommend the books for 12-14 yr kids as the stuff feels very childish and there are too many adventures which I suppose to have come very well on screen (I hear Titan’s Curse is in pipeline now). But the books are getting a bit predictable and I was very angry with Percy's entry into Polyphemus' cave – I knew only a little bit about Cyclopes and they had to repeat Ulysses' exact plan. Damn you, man! 3/5 (I wish I were 12)
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