- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
1250 lines
113 KiB
Plaintext
1250 lines
113 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1933
|
|
Title: HPR1933: HPR AudioBookClub 11 Street Candles
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1933/hpr1933.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-18 11:27:36
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HBR Episode 1933 entitled, HBR Audio Book Club 11th Treat Candles, and in part of the series, HBR Audio Book Club.
|
|
It is hosted by HBR Audio Book Club, and in about 134 minutes long, the summer is.
|
|
In this episode, the HBR Audio Book Club Reviews Treat Candles by David Collins Rivera.
|
|
This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
|
|
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An HonestHose.com.
|
|
Hello and welcome to today's episode of Hacker Public Radio. Today, you've got another episode of the Hacker Public Radio Audio Book Club.
|
|
My name is Pokey, and I will be one of your co-hosts today.
|
|
With me as well is the ever-popular Krispy 150. Howdy folks.
|
|
We got my buddy Pegwall. Hey hey. We got Super Taj. What's good, everybody?
|
|
And X1101, who I can't stop saying that now, even though I really want to say X1101 for speed.
|
|
Well, I thank you for saying it the way that I everyone is supposed to think it.
|
|
Right on and how you doing, buddy? Doing good. Doing good.
|
|
Good. So I'll say it right at the beginning of this time. So I don't have to interrupt
|
|
our flow of conversation like I do every time. This is the Hacker Public Radio Audio Book Club,
|
|
in which we review an audio book for the episode that we've all listened to. Just in case this
|
|
is your first one. The rules for the book club are that it has to be freely available audio file.
|
|
Means free of cost, free as in beer. We want something that everyone or anyone on Earth who wishes
|
|
to listen or participate with our show can do so. Once we've finished listening to the book,
|
|
we do the review show here. We're using all free software. And this is free as in freedom,
|
|
free as in speech as well as happens to be free as in beer because we use a mumble. And during
|
|
the show we'll do kind of a review with no spoilers. We'll just get in and say what we think about the
|
|
book, the production, the audio files, that kind of thing without any spoilers. We'll take a break,
|
|
midway through the show, in which we will each review a beverage of our own choosing.
|
|
And then after our beverage review section, we continue reviewing the audio book,
|
|
but we spoil it at that point. So if you have not yet listened to this audio book and you would
|
|
like to do so, feel free to stop this now and listen to the audio book. It's a good one.
|
|
And then come back to us or you can listen to us right up and through the beverage review and then
|
|
stop after that so we don't spoil the book on you because we will certainly wait until after
|
|
the beverage review to spoil it on you. And that's that for now. Did I miss anything guys?
|
|
Sounds like the plan. Yep. Let's roll. Okay, so the book that we're reviewing tonight, the audio
|
|
book that we're reviewing tonight is Street Candles by David Collins Rivera. And he is also well
|
|
known in our community as Lost in Bronx. He's a hacker public radio contributor. He's authored
|
|
several audio books and I guess internet radio series that you may be familiar with,
|
|
depending on how long you've been part of the community and how into the the hacker public
|
|
radio and the odd cast planet community you are. He's this is the second book in the series.
|
|
The first one was called Motherload and it's a short one, but both of these are standalone.
|
|
So you didn't have to listen to Motherload to listen to this. He's also done the EDK series
|
|
and a couple other things. So yeah, that's that. We all decided to do this one. Everybody was
|
|
excited for it. Everybody loves Lost in Bronx. He's a great guy and everybody seems to like his
|
|
writing so far up until this book. And I guess we'll find out what we thought of this book now.
|
|
Um, Taj, what'd you think? So I read Motherload and came out and I was like, yeah, you know,
|
|
it's pretty good. You know, Lost in Bronx. Order book. That's cool. I dig it.
|
|
Was it too terribly excited about it, but I thought it was a good, good first crack at something new.
|
|
So when Street Candles came out, I kind of ignored it and, uh, you know, just didn't pay much
|
|
attention to it. And then I heard everybody talking about it and how good it was. So I was like, okay,
|
|
we're gonna do it. So I sat down and listened to it and I'm probably the first five chapters. I was
|
|
like, yeah, you know, this is pretty similar. Everything's going down. It's about a crew in space.
|
|
And then something happens and I'm like, damn, this book is awesome. Um, I, uh, I was telling,
|
|
I think it was 5150. I was telling that a testament to how good the end of this book is, is that
|
|
I actually listened to the last chapter in real time, which for me is like practically a sin.
|
|
Yeah. Nice. X 1101. How about it? I love so much. I listened to it twice.
|
|
Yeah, I did too. I'm dying to hear what you thought of this book, Pegwell.
|
|
It was a fantastic postmodern essay on life. That's what I think it was.
|
|
Really? And in what way, did you find it paralleling your own life for the lives of people you
|
|
know and love? Many different ways. I absolutely loved it. And I cannot recommend it enough.
|
|
And see, and I thought it was more modern than postmodern. How, how so do you, do you see it going,
|
|
beyond what we know today and understand, uh, the meaning of life to be?
|
|
Because I listened to the wrong damn audiobook and I'm completely talking out of my ass.
|
|
Wap, wap. I will be surprised if I did not wake my child up with as much as I was laughing right
|
|
there. Push to chuckle X 1101. Push to chuckle. We have to trademark that. But I don't chuckle. I
|
|
cackle at the top of my lungs. You can push the cackle, push the gaffal, whatever you like.
|
|
I'm a fan of pushed a chortle myself. Oh, poor Pegwell. Listen to next month's book already.
|
|
He was so excited because he's the one that picked our next book.
|
|
So you haven't listened to street candles yet? No. Oh, you four soul.
|
|
I think I can speak for everyone else here. It, uh, it, if you're listening to this show in the
|
|
in the future and you haven't listened to street candles, pause the show right now, go down,
|
|
download street candles and listen to it because it's so much incredibly better than anything
|
|
that we could think of to say about it. Oh, yeah. Yep. I think you nailed it. It's absolutely fantastic.
|
|
This is, I don't even think we said what it is yet. It's a, it's a science fiction genre.
|
|
Space opera is what, uh, what everybody calls it though. I don't think I could define that word for
|
|
you if I was asked to, but, uh, this, I do not recall there being any opera. No.
|
|
No, you might be right. But anyway, I mean, this was, this was a science fiction adventure. It was
|
|
action based. It was, um, the very fast pace, uh, almost it, the first time I've listened to it twice
|
|
now, the first time I listened to it, it seemed epically long, but that may just be because he was
|
|
releasing it, uh, uh, uh, chapter a week. So it took a lot of real time to listen to it. Um, the
|
|
second time through I, um, you know, I flash baked it as, as quick as I could. And it, it took me
|
|
maybe three days because it is still pretty long. And it's, I mean, it's worth every second that
|
|
you spend on it. I flash baked it right after or actually started before the last book club.
|
|
And then again, last week, that just wow. Well, you know, it's the type of book. You know,
|
|
it's an audio book. You know, when it's over because the, uh, the music comes up at the end.
|
|
There are time, every time that happens, uh, you know, I'm shaking my fist at
|
|
lost and brought to say, oh, you bastard. Yeah, I know that he had, I know he had originally done
|
|
this as like a podcast and it came out once I guess a week or something like that. I wasn't
|
|
around when that, well, I wasn't around. I just wasn't paying attention when that happened. Um,
|
|
I, I would have not been able to handle that. I very much incur the man perfected the art of a
|
|
cliffhanger to the point where it would have driven me crazier. That's what I was about to say too.
|
|
He's just, he's a master of the cliffhanger. I think, uh, it was maybe 45 or 47 chapters
|
|
long and maybe three of them. I was like, okay, I better stop now where I'm not going to sleep tonight.
|
|
I just, there was only three that were not, you know, cliffhangers that I couldn't put down.
|
|
Another thing I can say about it right off the bat without any spoilers was I found the,
|
|
the main characters adventure. I didn't even realize it, uh, the first time through,
|
|
but I found it so engaging that the second time through during the first few chapters and I've never
|
|
had this feeling before while listening to an audio book and, and this is the kind of feeling
|
|
you get as a little kid when you're watching a movie. And I kept like saying to myself, no, don't,
|
|
don't go do that. No, don't do that. No, that's going to lead you down the wrong road. No, just turn
|
|
around. I kept, I'd never had that feeling before with an audio book like, no, we, we'll have to go
|
|
through this again. We can't do it. One of the things about this book that I, that I noticed is
|
|
it really makes me want to go back and, and read the first book again, because I think now,
|
|
because that first book is so short, it's kind of hard to get a kind of a beat on the character.
|
|
And now that I know so much more about him, uh, I think that first book would be a whole lot more
|
|
interesting. Can confirm. I listened to street candles and then I went back and listened to
|
|
mother load and then street candles all straight through. And you, I guess I can't say I got more
|
|
out of it since I didn't get anything out of it the first time because there was no first time,
|
|
but definitely think knowing the character, the, you could, it felt more like just another
|
|
episode of his life listening to mother load. That's interesting. I hadn't even thought to do that.
|
|
I don't know why I hadn't, but yeah, it is, it is, I don't listen to many things twice,
|
|
unless it's for the book club. So I guess I just didn't think to do that.
|
|
I have a thing with reread a book, rereading actual books. I mean, for me, it's this weird like,
|
|
I almost feel like I'm visiting old friends and doing the things we've always done. It's kind of the
|
|
nostalgic vibe I get from it. Even though you know what's happening, it's, you know, enjoying all of
|
|
the detail even more. And I, even though it was less than a month apart, I definitely still had
|
|
that same feeling. I will probably listen to this again several times in my life, even though it
|
|
is so massive, it will be an undertaking. Oh, he had such detail in this book, such subtle little
|
|
things that painted entire pictures with just a few words, you know, I think it's not a spoiler
|
|
to say that there was some, some conflict in this book. And there was a struggle for the main
|
|
character. And a lot of the people around him were living in desolation. And he, he, at one point,
|
|
one of the later chapters, he, you know, he describes a scene as he, as he goes through it.
|
|
And then a couple chapters later, he comes back and he just simply says, when I went back through
|
|
the same people were there, or at least they were similar enough that I didn't notice, or something
|
|
like that. It's some wording like that. And I just thought that was brilliant. Like that knocked me
|
|
out of my chair. I loved it. One of the things that I'm interested to see is if you take this book and
|
|
you put it on a shelf and just kind of let it set there for 10 years, how will it will hold up? I'm
|
|
sure it will hold up because it's a good story. But I mean, there's so much in this book that is
|
|
of right now, or at least kind of the last 10 years that is kind of extrapolated out. I wonder
|
|
how much it will resonate, or if it's just really resonant right now. I know for me, I was
|
|
completely just drawing parallels to just the situation in the world right now.
|
|
Well, I think what you're referring to a lot of is Zeejok. You know, a lot of the solutions that
|
|
he comes up with to be better in his job. And, and I just wish to tell people he's, he's a professional
|
|
gunner, which is, you know, in this space opera future, you know, you have unions like you would
|
|
now for ships and people will, you know, have different qualifications and get hired through union
|
|
hall or get hired off the web or whatever, make applications through the web. But he's professional
|
|
gunner. So usually nobody else on a small ship knows, but they only have one, well, he'd be like
|
|
a security person. He'd be like war fun star track, though not exactly. Yeah, he didn't say
|
|
they were dishonorable even once. But, but I think get back to my original point. Zeejok comes up
|
|
with, I mean, he's not just taking the stock items and the stock software. He's out there hunting
|
|
the web, you know, he's always coming up with combat scenarios that he's running through on the
|
|
equipment. And, and so he, you know, he's pulling from all these different sources, you know,
|
|
he, every time he saves a file and a lot, a lot of times files he's saving are not necessarily
|
|
completely legitimate. In other words, stuff, stuff is still copyrighted in the future. And sometimes
|
|
he's pulling stuff off their people that, you know, people posted to, I guess the 30th century
|
|
equivalent to Torrance. So, and going through them and seeing what he, if even if he doesn't
|
|
think they'll ever apply to a situation, he could use it and he's looking at it and taking a
|
|
part to see if there's something he could learn. So I mean, anybody who does IT work or programming
|
|
or whatever, none of us would be successful today without the modern internet because we don't,
|
|
we don't have the total knowledge of how everything works in our minds as we go, as we go through our
|
|
jobs. I mean, we know how to use the tools out there on the web to find out the things that we
|
|
don't know. I mean, it, well, I was a math major in school and they wouldn't let us bring any of
|
|
the higher math algorithms into a test with us. And I even had had a graduate assistant once
|
|
in class, he's teaching the classes. I don't know why they make you memorize this stuff. You are,
|
|
you're not being paid to memorize this stuff. You're being, you're being paid to know where to go
|
|
look it up. And the same same thing out there, you know, anybody works in IT. We come up with,
|
|
with, uh, practically every job is a new, is a new situation. Something we haven't quite seen
|
|
before. And you've got to go out and hit Google and hit the manufacturer's website and, and, uh,
|
|
learn what it is you're, you're supposed to do. And that's, that's so perfectly replicated in this
|
|
story. Yeah, I completely, completely agree with that. The other thing is the, the whole universe
|
|
that was created for this is reminiscent for me of the, the universe created in Joss Whedon's
|
|
Firefly. Different enough that I would say that there's no, you know, direct ripoff or anything.
|
|
It's, it's a, it's a similar version of the future. Now I'm surprised, uh, and maybe you've not
|
|
read Nathan Lowell's books, but I was, I was, you know, I kept faking this, this, and I'm not,
|
|
I'm not saying that it's not original, but seems like a, you know, in Nathan Lowell's universe,
|
|
either a few hundred years before or a few hundred years after because they're not using the,
|
|
the, uh, solar sales for, for propulsion, but a lot of the other things, uh, you know, are similar.
|
|
There's no, no such thing as subspace communication and that, uh,
|
|
ships, you know, have to drop into, uh, drop into a solar system far, far out of the gravity well.
|
|
They, you know, there's, there, there are, uh, plotted points that are an appropriate place to
|
|
drop in just out, out of hyperspace into the solar system. But, uh, then the first thing you do is
|
|
make contact with the planet and you upload, essentially, the contents of their internet and
|
|
download the contents of what you have of the universal internet. So, in other words, messages
|
|
between planets might be delayed by months, uh, because it, it, they can only go so fast as the
|
|
ships can go. So the whole galaxy running on a whole bunch of our sync. Uh, yeah, very much so,
|
|
actually, um, now I was gonna, I was, I'm glad you brought that up 50 because I was gonna bring
|
|
that up as well. I, I, um, I did get a little bit of a, a feel of firefly from this, um, not a whole
|
|
lot, just, just a little, just enough, just a little sprinkling of spice in there and it was good.
|
|
And I did not find many similarities to Nathan Lowell's universe, even though I was kind of
|
|
looking for them, um, because, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, lost a Bronx used
|
|
some similar verbiage in this book. And I don't know if that's because they're common words
|
|
in current sci-fi writing or if it's because Nathan Lowell just did such a good job, uh, naming,
|
|
you know, put, put in a real specific name to a certain event or, or a certain, um, procedure.
|
|
I think he used some similar words and yeah, the gravity well was similar, but I, I easily can see,
|
|
like parallel invention on that, um, the jump points, again, once you're out of the gravity
|
|
well, there's, that's pretty similar, um, um, yeah, I didn't see a whole lot of parallel between,
|
|
between this and Nathan Lowell other than some verbiage. And a lot of the concepts also pop up in,
|
|
you know, Star Wars extended universe when you're talking about gravity wells and jumping in and
|
|
out of the system and dealing with mass shadows and things like that. It almost feels like the,
|
|
the middle ground between the Firefly universe and the Star Wars universe. If I had to pick a
|
|
technological settings thing to generalize it as. Yeah, I, I kind of, maybe I just read a lot
|
|
of science fiction books. I don't know. It didn't seem very unique to me. I think that, uh, there's
|
|
really, you can kind of break books down into like, you know, three faster than like travel methods
|
|
and, and books just pick one and go with it. Um, so I mean, this seemed pretty standard to anything
|
|
that kind of uses what I assumed to be some sort of hyperspace, um, delio to get from, you know,
|
|
bypass faster than light. So I didn't see anything remotely too different from other books that
|
|
use the same mechanism. I like that while they were traveling in hyperspace time passed for them,
|
|
even though to the outside observer, it was an instantaneous jump. Is that fairly common to other
|
|
books as well? Or is that unique to this? Not in the, in my limited sci-fi experience. I've not seen
|
|
that before. I've seen it as more of a parallel, you know, you are jumping as long as you're jumping.
|
|
There's no time differential. And if you think about it a little bit, this way seems to make a little
|
|
more sense. Yeah. My understanding of like, you know, baseline physics and then science-fiction
|
|
physics on top of that is that like the whole idea of hyperspace is you're basically punching
|
|
into another sub dimension where time and space are arranged in a different fashion. And so things,
|
|
it would probably still take time to get from one place to another, but it may be a shorter distance
|
|
or time may pass differently inside that other dimension. And then when you pop back out,
|
|
you go back into real space. So I mean, it would make, to me, it would make sense that it
|
|
traveling through that hyperspace would take time to them. Now, I guess if you pop out of one
|
|
reality and pop back in, maybe that takes no time, but I don't think there's like a standard way
|
|
of dealing with it. I liked it either way. I thought it was, that was interesting. It was one
|
|
layer deeper than the actual story to think about, you know what I mean? And I like one book's
|
|
provoked thought. Well, and I liked, I liked a lot of mechanisms like that, the faster than like
|
|
travel and other technical details. We got enough of it to kind of extrapolate what the picture was
|
|
without going into nuts and bolts. But at the same time, it seemed ubiquitous enough that
|
|
the characters are like, oh, it just works that way. We like the food. No, I hate to keep going
|
|
back to the first book. But I think part of the reason that I didn't, wasn't too keen on the
|
|
first book, like I liked it, but you know, it wasn't that, wasn't all that to me was it was basically
|
|
a couple ships, you know, sub light in space dealing with issues, which is a great story. But if
|
|
you're looking for like space operas, probably not exactly what you're thinking of. And I would
|
|
argue that this book isn't exactly what you're thinking of, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
|
|
I can't find like he would mention things in street candles and just like not explain it.
|
|
And then you got a better picture of it, like as it went on, like you didn't have to explain it.
|
|
It was definitely like show don't tell, like you got an idea that, oh, all these people that have
|
|
the same accent are from the same group. And like you never have to say that, but you just keep
|
|
meeting people and then it makes it starts to like coalesce. Like if you got dropped in the middle
|
|
of the foreign country, and you know, you had to learn about all these different ethnic groups
|
|
they were there, unless you had a tour guide, nobody's going to tell you, you're just going
|
|
to figure it out. And it was very natural. I kind of liked that about it. That's kind of,
|
|
that's a much more succinct way of saying what I was, what I meant.
|
|
I loved the names of the languages. I thought that was fantastic.
|
|
Yeah, I definitely see classes in low speak in these jocks future.
|
|
I didn't quite possibly say Sean. Yeah, I loved English and say Sean. I thought that was
|
|
fantastic. Just the subtle change. Of course, knowing E. Jock, he's probably figures he's never,
|
|
ever go sit, sit foot on the planet again. That's one of the things about the character. He, he
|
|
may have been born on a planet, but he hasn't spent a whole time on one sense.
|
|
That doesn't seem, I seem to recall him being born on a space station. So still in a gravity
|
|
well, but not on the actual planet. Yeah, he went out of his way to say he didn't like planets.
|
|
Never felt comfortable on them. The specific language in that sentence was really
|
|
it evoked. You could almost feel what he felt about it. It was, it was well done.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. I mean, at one point, geez, I think that might be a spoiler. You know, it wasn't
|
|
a spoiler. And, and I emailed Austin Bronx about this to mention it. The audio quality is
|
|
fantastic on this. I mean, he really spent some time getting everything perfect. Everything is
|
|
is perfectly documented as well because everything that he used that was not his own was license
|
|
creative commons. He's released this creative commons. I think just by essay, you can even use this
|
|
for commercial purposes. Fantastic. He crossed every tee dotted every eye to put out the absolute
|
|
best product. Not just that he could, but the best product possible. I mean, I know and speaking
|
|
to him in the past, he custom built his operating system specifically for producing ebooks and
|
|
audio books. He learned text editors. He learned audio editors. He learned tag editor. I mean,
|
|
he went out of his way to put together the absolute best product that could be put together.
|
|
And the only criticism that I could find as far as the quality of the writing, the the sound,
|
|
everything was that if I was listening late at night, sometimes when the chapters would change
|
|
from one to the next, the music came on a bit loud in the next chapter and it might start
|
|
on me awake again. I mean, that's the only nit picking detail that I could that I could pick out of
|
|
this quality wise to criticize, but see only criticism I can find other than than one particular
|
|
one in the story, which should be a spoiler. And I'll have to talk about it later. Yeah, that's one
|
|
that's one of the things I'm really worried about about this book is it is so good and it is
|
|
so long and I've I've heard him talk about like the process of it like Poke was talking about.
|
|
I'm afraid that this took it all out of him and it's going to be a really long time before we get
|
|
the next book. I hope I'm wrong because I really want a sequel. Yeah, to add to what Poke was saying
|
|
with the quality, I agree that it was really, really fantastic. When we first decided on listening to
|
|
this book, I went to go grab it and the RSS feeds were broke. They did not work and we a couple of
|
|
us mentioned in the HPR mailing list and I want to say it was David Whitman maybe who fixed it before
|
|
I got a chance to, but we both sent Lost in Bronx corrected feeds and almost instantly it was
|
|
up corrected and usable again. That was nice. Yeah, that was that was the same day that was a
|
|
same day fixed and it was the day after we announced it on the mailing list.
|
|
One thing I wanted to say, our friend Ken Fallon, he criticized Shaman's tale because he didn't
|
|
think that the in the story were evil enough and all I could say is, Ken, you missed your perfect
|
|
opportunity to be on the book club because the corporations in this one are right bastards.
|
|
Yeah, you get that right. I'm pretty sure that's in the requirements for becoming a corporation.
|
|
Yeah, you get that right. No soul check can be a corporation.
|
|
I mean, not even the Chinese make the core constricted children workers live between the
|
|
machinery the way they do in this story. And yet life aboard the ship sounded pretty good.
|
|
You know, it didn't sound bad. You know, I mean, it's not like what we're used to today, but it
|
|
didn't sound terrible, you know, especially compared to, you know, the station and the planet's
|
|
side life. I mean, it didn't sound good, but it sounded like, you know, you worked hard and
|
|
were rewarded. Well, you know, and the part of the book was Ejaxe's worldies. I mean, he felt
|
|
sorry for the way the workers were treated on this world, but even so, he could not condone the
|
|
incredible cruelty and savagery that they visited upon the people they perceived as being their
|
|
masters. And, you know, I thought maybe that could have been fleshed out a little bit.
|
|
All fairly early in the book, and I won't say who it was, you guys all know that Ejaxe encounters
|
|
someone who sympathies with the workers. And, you know, this person was surprised to learn Ejaxe was
|
|
not an owner of the ship. He was just hired on as a worker and thought, well, you know, Ejaxe
|
|
loyal, he's ought to be entirely with us. It was just, well, it was all black or white for this
|
|
other character. And, you know, I would have gone into a little bit, you know, hey, you know,
|
|
even the people I work for, they're owners, but, you know, they're, they're mortgaged up to the
|
|
hill. And if, you know, if anything goes wrong, they lose their shirts in the ship too, so that
|
|
it's not like they're, you know, living the life of Riley out there on the ship. They're essentially,
|
|
you know, living the same, under the same conditions, all the crew members are.
|
|
That's almost commentary of the difference between, you know, a small business owner and
|
|
a corporation. They both may technically own the business, but one of them's got a little more
|
|
skin than a game. Todd, you're lit up, but I don't hear you.
|
|
Can everybody hear me and or touch?
|
|
Can hear Pokey. I do as well. I hear everyone but Taj.
|
|
I think it hasn't Taj had this problem before on the, on the server.
|
|
How about now? There you go.
|
|
Unplugged, unplugged, back in fixes most things. Have you tried turning it off and on again?
|
|
Or crushes them. I literally have that as my signature on that email. It works. That's usually
|
|
my first reply. Anyways, like I was saying, I thought that that was without going into the spoiler
|
|
realm. I thought that was one of the really cool things about the book is that it is very careful
|
|
to never sit its foot solidly on one side of anything. It's always kind of in the middle,
|
|
and I think a little more realistic that way.
|
|
Well, it does a good job illustrating that every situation, no matter how black and white you might
|
|
feel it is, has plenty of gray.
|
|
And I think let me kind of set the tone a little without spoilers for people listening to this.
|
|
Because we really have it. What the book is about is Ejak gets hired on sort of the last minute
|
|
as a replacement for a dead crew member whose responsibilities were to work the very basic
|
|
gun systems of this fast and relatively small freighter the Griselda.
|
|
And their next assignment after he ships out with them is dictated because a news crew
|
|
is going to this little planet that you see sort of things, sort of the realism
|
|
that unlike all the planets you visit in Star Trek where the whole planet is available.
|
|
This is a very very cold planet and there's just a very small,
|
|
temperate zone around the equator that is just barely livable and usable for agriculture.
|
|
And so they're going there and this can felon point where you said the bastard corporations
|
|
because that was because of a shoddy job terraforming the planet that some bastard corporation did.
|
|
So I didn't meet the interrupt you but wanted to get that in.
|
|
Right and well on that point you could always use the Chinese labor argument.
|
|
You know well they weren't working for a dollar a day they wouldn't have any job at all so
|
|
but this this is a planet where it's very you know it's it's very hard to get anything out of it
|
|
so there you know it's not like this usually resourced and and rich plant now we do find out later
|
|
that it's not all the fault of the atmosphere on the planet that that that comes later
|
|
that these corporations are running at such you know minimal margins that they at well you
|
|
say they choose to treat their workers horribly you know that's that's one thing I may have a
|
|
little bit discussion with later but I really don't want to get in that so much but they're
|
|
they're going this planet because there's unrest and since you know because you have this
|
|
you know weeks or months out of sync getting getting news from one planet to another planet
|
|
they're getting theirs things are just about to hit the fan and they'll be lucky to get out again
|
|
that's not that's that come fairly early so that's not really much of a spoiler.
|
|
Yeah and they have to basically stick around and wait for this news crew to leave their ship
|
|
for the station head down to the planet and do their job and then come back they have to wait
|
|
for them to make it back or they won't get paid for their contract and the owners of the ship
|
|
who are all officers and crew members on the ship as well they're so indebted that if they
|
|
lose this contract they're going to miss a payment and they're going to lose their ship so
|
|
everything for everyone in this story is right on the ragged edge of of what's
|
|
possible and survivable as well so that there's always that conflict throughout this whole story
|
|
and we should tell people there are as they say on tv sexual situations talked about if not
|
|
described in the book so they're you know it's probably an elder teen age limit on it
|
|
yeah it wasn't so much sexual content in there but there was some descriptions of sexual
|
|
assaults it's not it's not the kind of you know risque type of thing it's it's more like the
|
|
brutality more more of a violence warning than a sexually explicit warning I would say
|
|
well you're right you know and there's a whole lot of horrible violence actually
|
|
actually described in in pretty much detail now I I'm curious as to what you guys thought of
|
|
the main character hijak I found him very relatable but that also may be a a a weird kind of
|
|
coincidence and I can explain that after I want to only hear you guys think about him the main
|
|
character first I think he's relatable but he's not he doesn't make the same decisions I would
|
|
make in the same situation so like I understand why he makes his decisions but like you were saying
|
|
earlier a lot of times I'm standing back to shaking my head going it's not gonna work out well
|
|
for you bro I have some thoughts that I think I better choose to save until the spoiler section
|
|
50 how about you well I think I've already said you know I think anybody who's ever worked
|
|
an IT is gonna recognize the IT guy and hijak I mean he he you know he's he's not exactly athletic I
|
|
mean he's a he's a guy you know when he's when he's you know he when he's running the ship's guns
|
|
you know he you know he's like maybe the best guy he could get but you know he's he's no soldier
|
|
right right he's not running back and forth on the ship with the and manning hardware
|
|
and you know essentially and this isn't much of a spoiler because it comes from the first
|
|
couple chapters he comes in and you know and he's putting this hard position because the guy he's
|
|
replacing who got killed what you know was incredibly popular with the crew and he has to go
|
|
to him and say look this guy doesn't know didn't know what he was doing if you ever got in the
|
|
firefight with this guy you would be dead because you know he didn't have the gun set up right and
|
|
you've got all this you know sort of junk equipment everything not made to talk to each other
|
|
that's one of the first things he said he said well actually it's kind of reference to a
|
|
Raspberry Pi almost and the future equivalence like look I can go out you know and get and get
|
|
this really cheap device and plug it in and all your weapons systems will suddenly talk to each
|
|
other and they'll you know they'll they'll they'll talk to my modern modern equipment that I've
|
|
got on my on my pda essentially in my and my retinal implants and everything will work so
|
|
much better if you spend just this little bit of tiny amount of money yeah he the guy before him
|
|
I think it wasn't that he bought shawty hardware he bought like high-end stuff but he bought you
|
|
know different systems it would be like if you tried to buy a he player and a sony tuner for
|
|
your stereo and a and a samsung television and now you've got 74 different remote controls and
|
|
there's no way to really tie him together and and not have the same ins and outs right right
|
|
everything needed a converter to plug into the one thing into the other and hijok was the guy who
|
|
knew how to make the you know the remote control out of a Raspberry Pi basically is what 50 was
|
|
getting that and and he was like yeah none of this stuff it all works but you can't use it all at
|
|
the same time because it's not it's not coherent it's not tied into one system so he was making like
|
|
fighting that getting permission to make these things work when everybody thought his predecessor was
|
|
God's gift to gunner me and and he was telling him look you know he tests fired the guns on the way
|
|
out of the first port and they said well what was that we've never seen him do that before and he
|
|
says well that's the way it's supposed to look you know the last guy didn't know what he was doing
|
|
I mean overall as a as a character I think that his mindset hijok would not at all be out of place
|
|
in in the community yeah right on so the reason I asked I found this guy incredibly relatable and
|
|
I think he did make many decisions that I would have made while I was in his if I were in his shoes
|
|
and I don't know if that is by design or by accident because I remember early on when lost
|
|
in Bronx was beginning to write or maybe he had written mother load he asked me if I would be
|
|
interested in voicing the character in the audio book and it didn't wind up happening of course
|
|
he wound up reading it himself but he told me at the time it's because he thought I'd be perfect
|
|
for that role he thought I was very similar to his character and I don't know if he saw
|
|
similarities and kept writing them that way or what but I really related to this character in a
|
|
way that was almost uncanny so for the rest of the evening we're just gonna call him spacepokie
|
|
I second this that's not where I was going with this but I mean like right down to the
|
|
you know this dumpy guy who who's got a run for his life and can't run you know like a hundred yards
|
|
and he's winded and that kind of thing like right down to the very last detail the the way that the
|
|
guy stuck to his word because he gave his word like that kind of thing a lot of people in the
|
|
situation he was in he had several opportunities throughout this book where he could have just bailed
|
|
and no one would have blamed him for it and things would have turned out okay but it would have
|
|
meant that he would have broken his word even if just to himself about the people that he cared
|
|
and I find that I've done that to myself several times and it's shot me in the foot and this guy
|
|
talks about how he shot himself in the foot several times throughout his career and several other
|
|
places too yeah right by sticking with his principles you know and just I don't know I like
|
|
D. Jack and I was really rooting for him well there are a lot of places in the book you know listen
|
|
you know they said no come come back you know let's let's regroup don't go out being a hero and he
|
|
was like I'm not being a hero but I can I can go around here and I can you know I can I can do
|
|
something I can find out something then I'll be back and then you know things don't go exactly
|
|
as planned I'm getting thirsty I was just about to say the same I need to step away to grab my
|
|
beverage I can be three minutes or something I'll be back sure 50 you must have a drink in your hand
|
|
surely I don't sound plowed already but it wasn't it's not the one I'm planning to introduce
|
|
no no you don't sound plowed I just I know you're well enough to know that there's a 5150 to 50 shot
|
|
that you have got one in your hand the required podcasting fluid yeah fuel for podcasting
|
|
well I don't want this show to be like a recent show where as soon as it came out I had to
|
|
listen to the last 20 minutes to make sure I didn't get too far off the handle
|
|
well you don't have to drink it all during the beverage review just take a sip and tell us
|
|
what you think you still with us yeah I'm here I didn't know that need a response
|
|
well what are you drinking tonight what's your beverage well this is one that I have had before and
|
|
I was I was I was saving some for tonight and last time I went by my liquor store fortunately
|
|
had more so I picked up another couple six packs this is Newcastle Weirwolf and Newcastle is
|
|
it's actually imported from Great Britain and let's see it's actually in Scotland they don't
|
|
they don't claim to be a Scottish ale but yeah it says it's an Edinburgh so obviously it's
|
|
Scottish read the description what a better way to toast the falls and have a bottle of this
|
|
formidable dual character brew at first with male overtones of sweet berry fruit a bite of
|
|
bitterness suddenly cuts through long deep and lingering brew with rye malt it is naturally blood
|
|
red in color unlike mythical wolf creature said to roam the bleak morlands surrounding Newcastle
|
|
this is real so consider yourself warned so it pours I'd say a light amber color I wouldn't call
|
|
it dark red like they do pouring down certain glass so there's quite a bit ahead on it's
|
|
it's pretty light in alcohol content it's only 5.7 percent so it's not a complete light
|
|
weight beer but it's not one of those hard hitters either and it's you definitely can taste the
|
|
rye in the rye in the rye ale if you've had one before unlike most of the rye ale I've ever had
|
|
this like description says it starts off as slightly sweet and then as it rolls against the back of
|
|
your tongue you can feel the hops in there then they're not abrasive hops they're you know I wouldn't
|
|
call this a really hoppy beer it's not it's certainly definitely not one of those my hops can
|
|
beat up your hops kind of beers but I you know I had this last month and you know I've been
|
|
getting it just about every trip back since this is in you know definitely makes one of my top 10
|
|
less which is hard to get into you know top top down in my favorite beers definitely
|
|
and it's not what I would call an expensive it's nearly $9.6 pack so I think the last time
|
|
we discussed this someone said on the coast that that's pretty cheap for a six pack
|
|
well for craft brew anyway it depends on the level of craft brew new castle around here it runs
|
|
probably $7.8 for a six pack but I've only ever seen new castle brown ale I haven't seen
|
|
or heard of werewolf before but you make it so very interesting what's the finish on that like
|
|
because I know the the brown ale kind of it's way too sweet up from not way too sweet it's very
|
|
sweet up front it's in it's a little stale on the aftertaste how about the werewolf
|
|
well if you don't like a sweet beer I do but if you don't like a sweet beer this is probably
|
|
still still a little too sweet for you I would say it's probably not that's you know that sweet on
|
|
the start I need I need to get some of that brown ale to compare with it because I have had that
|
|
before it's probably not as sweet to start as the brown ale but the hops certainly don't
|
|
don't come through hard enough to wash it all away I see now and I actually do like a sweet beer I
|
|
just find a lot of them take it one step too far and I'd rather them be on the the side of a
|
|
little less sweet than a little too sweet if you know what I mean like once they gone too far it's
|
|
like too much I don't know I do like a sweet beer just summer too sweet well I guess I would say that
|
|
when on the valuation my last sip the hops do wash through and they you know they kind of wash
|
|
the sweetness out but then the aftertaste comes back and it's still sweet oh okay that's not bad
|
|
I I'd rather have that than like a stale aftertaste cool so that was a werewolf a new castle werewolf
|
|
yes that's correct cool and 50 if you wouldn't mind did I give you the link for the ether pad that we're
|
|
using I did right yes they're in the in the text chat would you mind just throwing up a couple of
|
|
words about that in the beverage section okay I'll do that I'm on my phone so I'd rather not
|
|
try to type on that during during the show oh okay sorry yeah no that's perfectly understandable
|
|
all right uh pegwall what have you got a beverage tonight I have coffee right on man we'll
|
|
kind of coffee anything special nope I know what you had last time yeah well ladies and gentlemen
|
|
a returning favor pegwalls coffee you should at least try to have different coffee every time I think
|
|
last time was a french roast this is a medium roast oh hi fluton might I recommend recommend a nice
|
|
sumatra next time I will keep that in mind I might even go crazy no Colombian X1 101 you said you
|
|
returned with something special yeah I was out over the weekend at the one of the many
|
|
vocal natural markets swear you can't swing a cap without hitting a dozen of them around here
|
|
but I got a black island organic oatmeal stout got it because I hear so many good things about
|
|
oatmeal stouts but I've not I've yet to have one so here goes it's got a chocolatey multi
|
|
nose to it almost no head but that's because I poured it down the side of the glass to get more
|
|
stout out of it it's got a chocolatey little bit of coffee but mostly a chocolatey malt flavor to it
|
|
it's not overly carbonated but it's not at all sudsy it doesn't have quite the same thick texture
|
|
that I'm used to from like a Guinness but it is definitely a stout
|
|
what was that I have no idea 50 150 I don't know something just happened it's on it like you
|
|
were squeaking a dog toy or something or laughing at me are you still with this 50 killed by the
|
|
squeak yeah something got to his connection I'll bet all right X1 101 where were he said it was
|
|
not quite as okay he's answering a call not quite as thick it was like a Guinness yeah the mouth
|
|
feel it doesn't have that you know creamy oily texture to it as much I mean it's definitely a
|
|
stout but it doesn't have that same creamy oily texture to it but otherwise very very good it
|
|
tastes a lot like a chocolate stout beverage I guess I don't know why it's called an oatmeal stout
|
|
and as it's made with oatmeal or it's supposed to taste like oatmeal but it's good
|
|
you use oatmeal in the brewing process at some point and I've always I think of only had one or
|
|
two oatmeal stouts and I thought they were very thick and and filling like it's stick to your ribs
|
|
well it is Scottish yeah there you go and I'm looking for the alcohol by volume give me a moment
|
|
course it's a measly 7 percent that's not bad 7 percent can you taste all 7 percent of it
|
|
not at all oh that's dangerous so it sounds like overall you give it a thumbs up yes nice can you
|
|
give us any one more time black isle organic oatmeal stout all right hey where is that brewed is
|
|
that is that remain or is it less local considerably it's imported from Scotland oh oh it's actually
|
|
from okay I'm thinking like Scottish style all right sorry about that now it has it says product of
|
|
Scotland imported by orchard gate flushing a certified organic cool oh thanks for that man
|
|
touch what do you got by since I ran in the door just to get here on time the only thing I have
|
|
to drink is my half empty now gene bottle full of water that I brought from work woo-hoo now gene
|
|
oh that's our second repeat to you did that once before yeah typically run a little late
|
|
right on all right and I am drinking something a little different this week I've been trying to get
|
|
into some sort of shape other than pear and I've been going to the gym and doing a little bit of
|
|
running for the past few weeks and so tonight for my drink because I have to go to the gym after we
|
|
record this I am drinking six star pro nutrition creatine times three elite series fruit punch flavor
|
|
and it's not nearly as bad as it sounds I get I got this special little shaker bottle at Walmart
|
|
it's got like a stainless steel ball in it that like an agitator and you can pour it in this thing
|
|
and shake it up and it gets gets it to dissolve a little bit better and maybe puts a little foam in
|
|
there and I like to throw it in there with about I don't know almost twice as much water as it says
|
|
to use and then some ice cubes and shake it up and drink it real cold and it's actually pretty good
|
|
it's not it's not too terrible going to the gym after this wow yeah I got to go to the gym after
|
|
this a guy put together a workout routine for me and I've been trying to stick with it as best I
|
|
can and it's it's a six day a week routine and it'll be disappointed if I don't you put a lot of
|
|
work into my routine for me and it's it's kind of work and I'm getting stronger I haven't lost much
|
|
weight I lose about a pound a day but I've dropped two notches off my belt in the past week or so
|
|
and and I am able to get through most of the routines that he's given me whereas my first week
|
|
I couldn't finish like all the reps in a set and then I couldn't finish all the sets and one night
|
|
I did about half of the exercises in the routine I just could not go any further I was hurting so
|
|
bad and my muscles just weren't responding or cooperating but and then the first day I went out
|
|
running I mean literally the first day I've ever tried running I made it around a quarter mile track
|
|
one time and then I felt like I was going to die and I had to walk for about the next half an hour
|
|
but one night I even made it around seven times so you know to a mile and three quarters
|
|
made around just jog and I'm not flat out running yet I'm not in that kind of shape but
|
|
it's working slowly and surely it's coming along and a couple of people say the creatine helps
|
|
to build muscles so maybe it's part of the reason why I'm not losing weight because I'm just
|
|
converting all my copious amounts of fat oh hush and I've also been going back to the going to the gym
|
|
I've started in March and I've been fairly faithful I go three days a week and do about a half
|
|
hour of cardio and the difference is really amazing the the the the weeks I miss or don't go as much
|
|
instead of no energy but no one I went between work and dinner and that's how I'm still awake
|
|
it's better than a cup of coffee yeah it's pretty good I was I was talking to pegwall before
|
|
the show and I was telling my even I even changed the way I drink my coffee I stopped taking sugar
|
|
in my coffee and I'm now adding coconut oil to it just because that's got some I don't know
|
|
pretty unique characteristics to it and I learned you know what there's a fun fact for tonight's
|
|
show I was I'm trying to research everything that I'm doing because there's so many people out there
|
|
that just there's so much quackery in the health food industry and I'm trying to change my
|
|
diet and eat a little healthier too so I did some research and the water that's in a coconut
|
|
and and the nutrients that are in it are so close to human plasma that you can take coconut
|
|
water intravenously and in some third world countries they do exactly that they put a couple of
|
|
coconuts onto an IV tube and they can rehydrate people with it directly is that astonishing or what
|
|
that's fantastic yeah coconut water is like Mother Nature's Gatorade like except for it actually works
|
|
yeah yeah exactly that's exactly what what I read it sounded exactly like that two or three
|
|
different independent pages made it sound exactly like that and maybe the fourth and the fifth
|
|
one both said this is Nature's Gatorade yeah it was one of those things many many years ago when I
|
|
was I would get up at like four o'clock in the morning and go to two hours of yoga before I went
|
|
to school because I was insane back then that was the traditional post yoga drink was was coconut
|
|
water and it at that point it is very refreshing but just imagine like you're in some hospital like
|
|
close to death and you open your eyes and there's a couple coconuts with tubes coming from them
|
|
going into you and your brain would go but surely I'm hallucinating I can imagine it but I'm
|
|
imagining it in black and white I would just assume I'm in a Monty Python skit to be honest that
|
|
would scare me a whole hell of a lot less than most of the things that would be hanging there going
|
|
into my body that's not that point not now but I know it anyway I've been rehydrated with saline
|
|
solution and I think I would have taken the coconut water how to had a choice yeah I've been there too
|
|
when I had to have it done the cap on the IV now they have the cap so you can add more tubes and all
|
|
that well one of them came off so the saline was going in but it was pushing blood out that was a
|
|
frightening experience to wake up to yeah that sounds terrifying weird so that's that for my
|
|
beverage back to the review back to the review all right now listener dear listener here is where
|
|
we will spoil the book and we will spoil the hell out of it here if you have not listened to the
|
|
book yet you probably want to stop the show now and go download it and listen to it if you don't
|
|
plan on listening to this particular book you can listen to the rest of the show but I don't
|
|
know if any of us are going to like you after we find out you didn't want to listen to this book
|
|
if you don't plan if you haven't heard this book and don't plan on listening to this book please
|
|
send me an email and tell me what's wrong with you actually better yet if if this is the kind of
|
|
book that you don't like if this is not for you we actually do still like you I was being facetious
|
|
when I said that but we probably need you to come on the next show and help us review our next
|
|
audio book or maybe the one after but yeah we'd like to hear your opinion
|
|
all right so I need to get into my first spoiler of the book and that is my other criticism of
|
|
the book and I don't I don't feel bad stating this publicly because I did in fact email
|
|
lost and Bronx about this and had a discussion with them and I sort of wished he had run this one
|
|
by me before he wrote it because it was way too late to do anything about it but the panther
|
|
which is E. Jock's gun in this book I thought was a bit too much like the weirding modules in the
|
|
the film version of doom I thought it was to doom excuse me the film version of doom I thought it
|
|
was more of a plot device than an actual weapon it was just a little too far fetched and
|
|
a little too convenient that it helped him get in and out of situations and it just it felt like
|
|
more of a plot point for a plot tool or whatever you call it sorry can we not bring up that version
|
|
of doom no I love that version of doom 50 actually no I thought about that gun the other the other day
|
|
of course I'm subscribed to like the same g plus groups as a flying rich and there was actually a
|
|
gun like that you know where it's broken down broken down in the case and without you know it says
|
|
yeah you can grab it and fire it without the barrel attached I mean I guess at a certain point
|
|
to get to the book you have to have a gun that shoots plot bullets just to get out of situations
|
|
and I mean I don't fault him for that I mean you got to do what you got to do I like plot bullets
|
|
it's not bad and yes I understand it I don't you know have a big problem with it like it was the
|
|
only criticism of the plot that I could come up with at all and I don't fault him for it but
|
|
and yes 50 I know that that parts of the gun were not impossible science fiction the whole package
|
|
you know the fact that it could shoot an RPG that's the size of a bullet and again okay sure we're
|
|
in the future this is possible now but the fact that it was you know he had the only two seemingly
|
|
inexistence nobody else had technology this advanced until they got into super high-end energy
|
|
weapons it just that was the only part that that I thought was a little of the a little far-fetched
|
|
well I could see it maybe up on the station because the security police you know they had guns
|
|
that were made not to blow holes in the side in the side of the station whereas his gun was made
|
|
for planetary use but yeah you're right maybe the that it seems to be so much more powerful than
|
|
anything that the planet side police had had as a weapon right right and we got space station
|
|
bullets now they're called frangible bullets they're just they're made out of centered metal
|
|
instead of a solid piece of metal and they've been around for over a hundred years it's what
|
|
they used to use in the carnival booths was was centered bullets so that it would you know go
|
|
through the paper and the target and it would probably go through you if it hit you but it wouldn't
|
|
go through that booth if they hit the back wall I don't know I kind of feel like we have that we
|
|
got to have that random time delay on the push to talk but no and I imagine air marshals probably
|
|
carry something similar I kind of feel like we talked about like the firefly similarities I think
|
|
inside eject there's a little Han Solo and and I imagine that if there was a situation like
|
|
this Han Solo would just like reach into cabinet somewhere on the millennium Falcon and pull out a
|
|
badass gun and just be like yeah just head slaying around yeah Han would already have it under the
|
|
table but I have to agree that it shoots plot bullets if you needed he's like oh I need bullets that
|
|
will hurt people but not shoot this to the space station I have those oh I need like super rocket
|
|
lots around it does that too oh I need to shoot it from my bag yeah I can do that well any gun can
|
|
do that that's okay I just it can shoot shoot like half assembled though yeah well I mean that's
|
|
possible too there are guns that break down and and that are reconfigurable it's it's completely
|
|
possible you know and I said to him like this gun the barrel can come off but it can shoot without
|
|
the barrel and the only thing I said to him was well then why have a barrel the only reason
|
|
that you have a barrel on a gun at all two reasons one is for sighting and the second is for
|
|
velocity the longer the barrel the faster the bullet is gonna come out the end of it but if this
|
|
thing shoots RPGs you really don't care too too much how fast the bullets come out and this thing
|
|
was supposed to have a sighting module built into it that interfaced with your eye implants
|
|
your retinal implants so it kind of need it for that either so so the barrel was a little
|
|
unnecessary and I just thought he he and it was weird the first time I listened to it I thought
|
|
he broke it down and reassembled it a little too often but the second time I listened to it I
|
|
that I didn't notice that so I'm like at all I didn't notice it at all so I don't know maybe it was
|
|
just me nitpicking too much as as I have a tendency to do it seems like it seems to me that it
|
|
stayed broken down through a majority of the middle third to like middle half of the book
|
|
and I you know I don't know I mean he did make it clear that without the barrel it was
|
|
not very accurate it was just randomly spraying bullets and he never did shoot a you know an RPG
|
|
round without without the barrel I don't think so I you know and you know even a newsy you know
|
|
you you've got an option between the little stubby three inch barrel and you can you can also
|
|
screw screw on a you know like a 30 inch well not 30 inch 20 inch barrel make it a carbine so
|
|
you know it's it's not that far fetched like it like I said I saw gun just like that that they
|
|
are advertised you know it was a suitcase gun and they are advertising you know where it's
|
|
broke down and all the pieces in the suitcase and I saw one earlier work you know actually did
|
|
like the CIA thing and you had a button in the suitcase handle to shoot the gun out through
|
|
the side of the suitcase but this this one I saw recently wasn't like that but it said yeah you
|
|
you can you can grab just the primary unit slap a clip into it and fire it so it was almost
|
|
like a handgun that you could then add a barrel to to make it a long gun exactly I think and exactly
|
|
like Lawson Bronx the scenario this is this was that you know this is not the optimal scenario
|
|
to use this weapon but if you know if if you're holding this briefcase and they're you know you
|
|
come up against the fella drawing a pistol against you know you can flip open the briefcase and
|
|
try to beat him to the draw still a better option than being shot so what I think we're all trying
|
|
to say here is Poke your arguments in valid I can move it down space Poke shoots plot bullets
|
|
at real Pokey possibly at least at my one argument and I'm sorry guys I had another phone call
|
|
and then it was bleeding through on both sides understood so I want to bring something up
|
|
when you finally figure out where the title comes from holy crap yeah that was pretty horrifying
|
|
and I didn't even understand it until the second time I listened because it was more horrifying
|
|
than my imagination could handle because I heard it and I was like there's no way that's what that
|
|
just said so I rewind it and I listened to it three times to make sure that it was exactly what I
|
|
thought it said and yeah I was just like I'm not sure I would have the balls to name this book that
|
|
and I think we should sort of leave that you know for the for the future readers to find out but
|
|
yeah wow no I was gonna say I haven't listened to it twice it was more horrifying the second time
|
|
because I think I got more detail the second time yeah this is for people who've already listened
|
|
the only one we're spoiling this for is pegwall and he deserves it but yeah I mean the street
|
|
candles were these people that they put in a barrel of oil and set on fire in the street and
|
|
left them burning like human candles all night long to light their party when they won the war
|
|
it is pretty horrifying yeah it's like it's like calling the book burning rich people yeah the
|
|
essentially the people were the wick in the candles and the whole you know whole system was
|
|
designed to burn them the death as slowly as possible and to be honest the title burning rich
|
|
people might be a little more enticing yeah and don't forget the lit the candle with a
|
|
cattle prod that didn't work on the first strike now my you know my only problem with the book
|
|
I thought it got a little drawn up and drawn out in the whole chapter leading up to that you
|
|
know describing the everything going on in the arena and the and the local comedian and all
|
|
that now now a lot of that description you know and a lot of it has to do with e-jocs divided
|
|
no he understands why these people why these people are rising up because they've just been horribly
|
|
horribly disenfranchised and abused but on the other hand he can you know he just can't condone
|
|
you know this this treatment of the people including you know the children of the people these
|
|
folks considered their enemies some of whom he knew he recognized on the TV monitors one of
|
|
these people that was being burned to death as one of the kids had befriended him or he had
|
|
befriended in his flight through the city and but I you know I'm sorry lost him Bronx you know but
|
|
it's just David it's just that whole leading up to it the whole description of the gala and all
|
|
that and that got just a little tedious for me seemed like e-joc was his point of view was you know
|
|
what you have grievances fight your fight but you won you don't need to be as vicious and brutal to
|
|
them as they were to you after you've won and I think it goes a long way towards saying you know
|
|
you before that you build up a little or at least I did you build up some sympathy for
|
|
the the revolutionaries before you kind of know what's really going on and then you see this and
|
|
you're like oh my god like these people are horrible like I can't believe I had sympathy for them
|
|
and then you get all way to the end and you realize that those people are getting played by the
|
|
same people they thought they were disposing like it's all this huge show game of people just
|
|
being bastards to each other yeah that's what I was going to say and I for that reason I did not
|
|
find this scene long and drawn out I found it very detailed he talked about the the blacks and
|
|
the show that they had put on the day before and hanging some of the the elites that they found
|
|
and then this was a contrast of that this this was the show that the blues put on and it was a
|
|
contrast of that and he just I thought he went into detail as to you know the setup of it the
|
|
the people who were there you know the the plebians how they dealt with it how their leaders their
|
|
new leaders were now dealing with it the reasons behind it all I thought it was well laid out
|
|
and well detailed they did not find it to be tedious I mean as far as details go you know how
|
|
he got in there was to pretend he was a worker he picked up the end of a pipe and boy I'll be
|
|
helping here and it was one of the pipes that they tied these people to to light them on fire it
|
|
with and like his heart was just you could feel that was just a soul crushing moment for him
|
|
this whole thing was horrifying and it changed him emotionally and mentally he kind of had
|
|
had an emotional nervous breakdown here and had to recover from it a lot of the book from
|
|
that he was a changed person and that was only the first time he changed he went through another
|
|
change later in the book as well but this was a real thing that he had to live through and
|
|
and I just I thought it was very well done so I had to disagree with you on that one
|
|
that's one of the things that I was this whole scene kind of is the best example of what I was
|
|
talking about earlier just kind of like mirroring what's going on in the world right now just I mean
|
|
just absolutely recently the last couple of weeks you see these groups that their entire
|
|
motive is to do the most horrifying things and get them in the biggest public display that they
|
|
can to win influence and power I guess is the way to or to at least push their viewpoint
|
|
and it's just that that's that's really close to home and getting to see it is close as he joc is to
|
|
it is like ridiculously powerful and grotesque and I think it goes a long way towards
|
|
making the end of the book make a little more sense and while I was gone did you guys
|
|
explain the difference between the two rebel groups the blacks and and the greens were one
|
|
one group is secular and the and the other group is non-secular and that you know they kind of
|
|
brought in a whole religion religion in as well as their you know as their revolutionary principles
|
|
because if you hadn't explained that you know a few minutes ago pokey was talking about how the
|
|
blacks were hanging people and we should say that that's the color of their hats and their arm bands
|
|
not a not a racial reference so I want to make sure people listen and this did not hear that
|
|
construit the wrong way yeah thanks for that um no we didn't really talk about it but then
|
|
it's not really um it's not really any more detailed in the book than what you just said either
|
|
it's product you know I just wanted to make that clear as I knew that reference by you out of
|
|
context would get letters that's a good point that that probably would not have come across
|
|
correctly if if someone hadn't listened to it well that's true you're only supposed to be
|
|
listening to this if you have read the book so even so maybe pegwall thought I was a horrible
|
|
person for just a minute there clearly pegwall is afk because normally he would have said no it's
|
|
been more way more than a minute um now uh you had brought up 50 you had alluded earlier to a
|
|
character um I think you were talking about uh I think is it tacky are blue is tacky are at the
|
|
butler is that who you were talking about before the spoilers yes exactly and well I don't want to go
|
|
too far off the rails but you want to talk about the only other weak point I saw in the book was
|
|
del dies because hijak does not respond fast enough like he stunned and you know hijak earlier in
|
|
the book when he took his revenge against tacky are uh for you know he'd warned him on the radio
|
|
while you know he and the elites were uh you know uh hijak was escaping with the elites or well
|
|
after that but uh he he knew tacky are suspected tacky are was a rebel high rebel leader and he says
|
|
you know he told tacky are if you hurt these kids the children of the elites that he had met and
|
|
befriended I don't you know I don't know how I'll do it but I will come find you and I will kill
|
|
you and that's exactly what he does later in the book with that you know with the uh automatic
|
|
weapon in the bag that you you have such problems with pokey that you know he saw tacky are standing
|
|
there you know with a with a bunch of his uniformed buddies and he just walked straight up to him
|
|
blew him away and the only way he got away was that the uh uh you know that the that the other rebels
|
|
standing around were just so constantly drunk on grain alcohol the time when bullets came flying
|
|
they had no idea where they were coming from so everybody else just ducked for cover you know if
|
|
he took out the only really sort of more professional soldiers there in the whole place so I you
|
|
know I I don't you know I don't want what to suggest to lost in Bronx if you ever had to rewrite this
|
|
you know for syndicate you know some other thing if there was a way to make it you know so it's
|
|
just not ejected each eye could just standing there and doesn't doesn't react when uh when Del is killed
|
|
may you know maybe that does make it poignant because it's completely hijax fault but it's you
|
|
know it it doesn't seem to fit with what he'd been doing earlier but that happens before he
|
|
kills talk here okay I guess you're right I guess you're right that's what that was after they got back
|
|
I would say I would say that when Del dies he is completely flat-footed because at that point
|
|
he's not successfully engaged in close quarters violence he he's a gunner he deals with you know
|
|
objects in space and it's not until then that he starts to apply those same tax to person to
|
|
person close quarters combat well I guess you're right because while he had not really well he's
|
|
shown reluctance but you know we had do you when he had no other way out of the situation he hadn't
|
|
shown any hesitation using the guns and shooting at people at least earlier in the book I guess
|
|
that probably was the first uh face to face combat that he'd been in at the very least he's the
|
|
first time he when Del dies it's the first time he executes any you know personal maneuvers was
|
|
any kind of finesse all the instances before that were him blundering through to survive it's
|
|
not until when Del dies that he somehow makes the connection of him being a gunner for the ship
|
|
he can apply those same tactics in personal combat well he he came very close to applying them
|
|
very early on when he landed at the space station but before he could take action there was a game
|
|
changer and you know the wall blew apart on him but I think that when he shot tacky are that was
|
|
the first time he actually shot at a person the first time he used that gun he was shooting at a ship
|
|
and trying to blow that up and yes he did kill people but not directly so I can see his mind
|
|
getting over the the damage of it uh well he also shoots a soldier when he's with the kids fleeing
|
|
does he shoot a soldier I remember he shot at the ground and he blew up a steam pipe and it stopped
|
|
to crowd I don't remember him shooting the soldier okay that okay that might have been it you know
|
|
you could be right I don't I know I'm not saying that you're wrong I'm saying don't remember it
|
|
well either way there was gunplay there him discharging the weapon to you know protect himself
|
|
but what I guess my point is he was blundering his way through that with the scene with talk here is
|
|
the first time he deliberately approaches that the way he deliberately approaches his uh
|
|
ship to ship combat scenarios yeah and that that scene with tacky are I have to say was very well
|
|
done it was very it was so subtle um I did not even catch it the first time around I didn't know
|
|
who he shot it didn't it didn't make sense to me uh the second time I listened to the book
|
|
it I I caught on as I go how did I miss that the first time and how did I don't rewind it to
|
|
to figure that out it was so pivotal because I think Ejok suffers three very serious emotional
|
|
blows in this book which which lead to him being such a basket case at the end and needing so much
|
|
treatment um and the first I mean maybe even for if you count the first day that he was there just
|
|
all the physical things he went through although you know horrors that he saw people being beat to death
|
|
you know all those things affected him I'm sure um but then the scene in the street where they
|
|
burned the people had to have had an effect on it did have an effect on him and the second
|
|
was one del died and that had a further effect on him and he assumed personal blame for that
|
|
and then that third scene where he became a murderer he there's no two ways about it he murdered
|
|
tacky are um and i'm not saying tacky are didn't deserve it he was obviously very bad um but
|
|
but this was the case of Ejok giving his word you know saying if you hurt those kids I will come
|
|
find you and I will get you tacky are hurting the kids and Ejok living up to his word even though
|
|
it made him a murderer and that was the kind of duty that I found unique in Ejok that I just
|
|
I mean just that was so fantastic um and I can see those things have a serious mental consequences
|
|
on a person and I almost when he's talking about duty I almost think that it's at least in part
|
|
him projecting some of that duty of what being made honorary family member I'm not even going to
|
|
try and pronounce the word they use for but the honorary family member of of that household
|
|
part of that is you know continuing to protect them and I don't know maybe he saw some
|
|
implied duty there and chose to act on it in addition to you know I said don't do that you did
|
|
that and you know I told you what was going to happen and so here it is I think that I think
|
|
that book does a really good job of never actually calling out um and saying that he's struggling
|
|
with this and like his slow um kind of creep towards um doing what he does but it just shows it
|
|
like you just kind of understand that like he is getting to the point where things are so desperate
|
|
that he's willing to do things he was never able to do before and um a part of that is his
|
|
character I agree with Pokey part of it is I'm like I already told you this was going to happen
|
|
and here it is um but another another thing is is I think he's just slowly almost devolving um
|
|
into into something that he he doesn't really like and I think at the end of the book that makes
|
|
a lot of sense why he just never revisits that part of his life ever again yeah I just it it made
|
|
me feel that he was very consistent uh you know what I mean it just it helped layer that on there
|
|
um and while we've been talking here we've been joined by another person who'd like to participate
|
|
uh someone I don't believe I've met before Tojette uh hey Tojette is your is your audio work and are
|
|
you here to talk yeah I'm here can you hear me yes sir um so you you listened to uh street candles
|
|
yeah so you'd posted it while back and got the feed from it and
|
|
interesting series yeah it's what we've all been saying we're into the spoiler part of the review
|
|
at this point uh the third segment of our show so anything you'd like to say feel free to say it
|
|
so I did have a theory I wanted to float by the rest of you guys and see what you thought
|
|
after having listened to mother load and then um street candles
|
|
e-jock is several times put in the situation where special operatives kind of happen around him and he
|
|
responds very well to it and several times it's implied that he may be an operative of some kind
|
|
himself and based on the fact that the book is being told all from third or first person memory
|
|
I'm almost wondering if he might be eventually or he might be deep cover or something because he
|
|
he seems to make I'll call them either lucky or unlucky guesses and choices at pivotal moments and
|
|
that could just be he's got the magic gun that shoots plot bullets again I see what you're going
|
|
with I see what you're getting at there but I think his guesses are better than luck I think he's
|
|
and this is where he and I depart a little in our characters he's got a very good analytical mind
|
|
and he he walks you through his decisions and this is another one of the things where I got more
|
|
out of it the second time than the first is I I felt like he walked me through those decisions and
|
|
I understood what he was saying and what was going on uh whereas the first time through the book
|
|
there were probably four or five times where he made from my point of view he turned two pages at
|
|
once and I just didn't follow and just said okay well that's fine I'll I'll go with it um it wasn't
|
|
too jarring or disturbing but the second time through I kind of picked up on the subtler details so
|
|
I mean maybe he's an operative but I think he's just very analytical
|
|
well yes that's what I that's kind of what I think I go ahead 50 I think he's just very good at what
|
|
he does uh you know he puts a you know he obviously puts an extra effort to what he does I mean he's
|
|
always scouring and that to find some you know some scenario that he hasn't thought of
|
|
and I take what he can get from it uh I mean you know most most of us we watch cat videos on YouTube
|
|
in our free time we don't you know we'll come home from our work and go out there and
|
|
and uh and I know not everybody hears an IT not everybody listings an IT but I don't come home from
|
|
working and always go looking for okay let you know uh let's go find some uh networking situation
|
|
that I've never dealt with before and learn how to handle it ahead of time so he's he's obviously
|
|
very dedicated and you know this is his vocation this is what he wants to do but I think a lot of it
|
|
on this whole thing Alan Small's you know keeps insisting well you can't be just a civilian you've
|
|
got to be an operative it's just Alan Small's own hubris that you know oh no I can't be beaten by
|
|
some amateur yeah but the end there when he's recovering in the hospital and he gets to visit
|
|
from the uh gunner from the uh military ship asking him how he managed to defeat such an advanced
|
|
ship he goes through and he's basically saying well listen to enough crackpot theories and I'd
|
|
followed one of them and it actually worked yeah but that's what x1101 meant I think when he said
|
|
that since it's told uh in the first person that he could be lying to us at that point if he
|
|
were an agent that's he would lie to us at that point but um you know I just don't I'm not sure
|
|
x1101 what were you going to say to when when you and 50 were colliding there I guess what I was
|
|
saying was you were making the point that he's you know an analytical mind and he puts things together
|
|
right at pivotal moments or puts them together beforehand and plays them close until pivotal moments
|
|
what I'm saying is because this sounds like it is told from the first person memory it could be
|
|
that he becomes an agent or is a deep cover agent or something and this is part of his history or
|
|
backstory as to how he became that you know all of these skills developing and then he becomes that
|
|
but at the same time I also questioned that if his personality would allow him to because there's
|
|
a dishonesty and duplicity in that that I'm not sure he could stomach that's a good point I think I
|
|
agree with that more so than the other I think especially I think especially after meeting some
|
|
of the people he met in this book I think he would find it very unsavory to be like them right now
|
|
I think the whole point V job he's only an accidental hero he you know he's not you know he does have
|
|
this code that pushes him once he gets in these situations you know to to not get to not back down
|
|
and not give up but he you know he's he's not out there glory sinking you know he you know he's
|
|
just out for this nice little ride where he never has to use his guns hopefully but he is a gunner
|
|
and you know I would assume that if you choose the profession of gunnery you have to go into that
|
|
with your eyes open knowing that you know it's my job to shoot and be shot at I hope I never have
|
|
to do my job but it is my job to shoot and be shot at so you have to be willing to accept that too
|
|
going into that kind of a career no no no he's just never having fight for it up close he's only
|
|
from far away he's too different yeah that that was very well done Pokey very well done yeah but uh
|
|
I mean a lot of it was with him choosing a gunner he was attending to shoot at range not actually
|
|
see the person you shooting at but sort of deal with him abstractly in the whole story he's having
|
|
to deal with everything first person which is completely outside of his normal realm of operations
|
|
but even through all that he's trying to be the professional uh doing his job the best he can
|
|
going through there that that really wonderful Pokey and I'm come I'm completely in favor on the
|
|
next next hijack store you you voicing whatever imperial space character uh David decides to come
|
|
up with no no no no I said as I said to him when he first I mean of maybe two years ago now
|
|
or longer possibly when he asked if I'd be interested I said I would gladly ride his coattails
|
|
and that's that's it I would never presume to take it once it's been done if this he's he's
|
|
doing this the way it's intended to be I think after last months uh you know fake can fallon and
|
|
this this year or this time's uh fake then rock stone I think you have a career man you just do
|
|
uh bad impressions of people that'd be awesome thanks man yeah Ben Roganston might have been my
|
|
favorite character in the whole book I at one point um before hijack went playing it side I thought
|
|
Ben Roganston was was a gunner I thought for sure he was gonna die in the next chapter and I was
|
|
so upset and then he didn't and I was so happy did anybody else like this is probably just my
|
|
mess that my did anybody else picture him as a dwarf the entire time every time he came on I
|
|
mentioned to be like three but all no no no now um has anyone has rise to the guardians it's a animated
|
|
movie about these like Santa and stuff and I kind of pictured Ben Roganston as the Santa from that
|
|
movie no I thought he must have looked like um my creek barber who sadly passed away a couple months
|
|
ago but he's just I mean a little short but not short no not dwarf and and or a little person I
|
|
think is what 50 said we're so so calm but um just kind of a a stout roundish old man and very
|
|
likable with a a kind face and I just I really liked Ben Roganston a lot no I'm with like three
|
|
foot tall like braided beard in an axe like this literally what I imagine you're a dope no I
|
|
imagine all the way through this you know this really massive guy you know but maybe
|
|
shorter than you know you know you know you know maybe a tick below average hide or something but
|
|
just you know the huge presence nice very much a large very much a large presence and yeah I'll
|
|
throw that in the uh the show notes as well yeah Lincoln the show notes I hear Ken saying it
|
|
any other characters stick out to any you guys well I had an image of E-Jock through the whole
|
|
thing of being just like skinny guy just being thrown through the whole thing now at the end when
|
|
he's recovering and they talk about the fact that he lost so much weight so through a strange method
|
|
of reconstruction that um made me think that maybe he was a bit chubby going through the whole
|
|
thing and then when they were reconstructing with the end they made him thin
|
|
E-Jock is definitely a guy to spend a lot of time in a chair oh yeah he made mention of that of
|
|
of uh he's spent a lot of time in the chair not a lot of time in the gym or none of the gym and
|
|
eating lousy spacecraft food I like this guy oh yeah he's strangely sounds familiar
|
|
it's so mild you might have liked it more if you'd have listened to the book
|
|
shot fired in coming in coming pig will use your lantern guns
|
|
well my my second favorite was the armless jazz guy who I should should remember the name of
|
|
it's the blues not jazz you got to you got to be particular it's the blues
|
|
yeah he was a very cool character he was he was fantastic and uh I I looked up tar hill Lincoln
|
|
and there are hundreds of results but it wasn't a real singer I was kind of sad
|
|
yes you can find if you can find anything creative commons as outro music or something that's
|
|
passed in the public domain I don't know if it's been quite long enough I kind of imagine I don't
|
|
know how many people in here like blues heads but it reminded me of like in my head I was hearing
|
|
like Robert Johnson or something like that oh yeah or um oh let's do the guy's name gate mouth
|
|
now I don't remember his name but real old tinny sounding recordings I tend to like my blues
|
|
played about double speed and threw a nice aggressive amplifier usually sounds like metal at that point
|
|
I like blues just not all day just just little you know a couple songs and then maybe
|
|
on the something else yeah I like the blues best after divorce maybe a year or two is worth
|
|
that's deep man that's deep hey it's how I survived I thought the character was really cool though
|
|
and I can't remember his name um but I I constantly was like are we ever gonna find out what
|
|
does God did to where he's he's telling like no I'm cool I live in squalor and I I have no arms
|
|
or no hands but you know this is way better than actually going back to real space and trying to get
|
|
fixed because at least I'm not dead right apparently he was some sort of mob informant
|
|
I I liked him I liked about him that he was he reminded me of you know one of these dudes who
|
|
surfs three or four IRC channels at the same time and just makes it his business to pay attention
|
|
and to help when he can be helpful and kind of gets along I mean because he obviously couldn't
|
|
do anything for anyone that didn't involve uh communication and and you know sniffing out
|
|
some data so it's it really this guy had a real IRC feeling to me he also is a character that
|
|
shoots his own plot bullets every once in a while there were there's a couple of times that
|
|
each other getting a jam he's like oh wait a minute let me call my buddy and then it just
|
|
magically gets fixed don't you have an IRC but it's exactly how it works yeah well I know who he
|
|
is now that this this is the space Jay Lindsay actually could be kind of cross between Jay Lindsay
|
|
and Klaatu maybe most of my IRC buddies are right here I was kind of say earlier um that uh I
|
|
now I forget who was even saying it but they were saying that E-Jocks the kind of guy who goes
|
|
home from work and then works on more work and uh it just it reminds me of someone who would
|
|
play net hack just to learn how vi works hey I represent that remark ahead of boy
|
|
yeah I use them all day just so I can figure out how you play net hack nice one
|
|
I I play net hack and then use the emax am I doing it wrong yes this explains why I never
|
|
got more than 30 levels down in net hack I think we should continue the game of taking people from
|
|
our cast planet and just casting them in the book I think that would be fun well the
|
|
double end Dan it has to be syndrome seconded yeah unfortunately unfortunately there's no monkey
|
|
was a gun so and my bill is out well maybe he was the other part of E-Jocks personality
|
|
you know I do want to say um what uh what's tacky are he out of all the people in the book
|
|
I think he was the one character who I couldn't quite come to come to grips with because he just
|
|
he changed so much and I I get that when he was in the service um of oh I forget the guy's name now
|
|
they vealy nearly yes yeah I get that when he was in his service it was a put on I understand that
|
|
but I just I couldn't come to grips with him being so um such a lunatic when he was screaming at
|
|
E-Jock over the the phone and I go well communicated whatever you want to call it um he seemed to
|
|
like flip his lid at that point you know well that seemed a little strange to me because this is
|
|
guy who was apparently butlers are now bred and trained in academies so uh you know it's
|
|
it it seems a little incerned gross that some somebody who has uh been trained from early life that
|
|
you know you're you know you're servant for the uh for the rich and that you know that's
|
|
your uh that's your purpose in life I mean it's like Alfred going to work for the joker
|
|
that that that struck me is you know I a little trouble believing that too
|
|
and everybody take a drink there's a Batman reference for the night
|
|
where it had to be one now we have we had Star Wars now I have to get Star Trek and uh well we
|
|
had a dune reference that was pretty cool yeah everybody pegwalls ages can we say what's dune
|
|
well you can tell there was no Star Trek in this this story because otherwise they would have
|
|
just beamed him back up and E-Jock wouldn't have had the whole episode on the surface
|
|
well either I am uncategoristic for my age or pegwalls even younger than I am because I read dune
|
|
in high school and pegwall will be mad at me because I know I know he's uh uh read dune I have
|
|
and I've just watched the movies I've never read it I read all of them and I mean all of them
|
|
and there's only three you should ever really read which three do you think that is the first three
|
|
don't read the three after and don't read anything that his son had anything to do with it
|
|
they weren't awful they weren't the same no not at all it went for being Frank Herbert doing like
|
|
a young adult novel almost I don't know it's just like the tone was completely different
|
|
yeah my only really literary accomplishments is reading the entire dark tower series and all
|
|
of the Lord of the Rings the dark tower is quite a hike if you haven't also read the Sumerillion
|
|
I don't think you can call Lord of the Rings a literary accomplishment and I'll scratch that one
|
|
off my list then now here's here's where I'm gonna kick off the show because I read most of dune
|
|
I read I'd say probably four fifths of the way through it and I had to put it down I was too
|
|
frustrated wasn't as much it wasn't enough like the movie that I love so much and see I couldn't
|
|
watch the 1984 version of the movie because it wasn't enough like the books that I love so much I
|
|
love them both like just I they exist in different universes I'm totally cool with both being there
|
|
yeah yeah they're totally different stories as I see I you're the only the person I've ever met
|
|
liked that movie besides me and my brother we both we just sit down and watch that movie any time
|
|
but yes it's not it's a different story it's not the same story it's a David at the David Lynch
|
|
movie with some characters from a book I like have you guys seen the 2000 or 2005 sci-fi mini series
|
|
of the movie as well we don't talk about that one oh I completely disagree I think that it is
|
|
much closer to the book and I loved it 2005 it might have been 2000 I'm I think it was
|
|
two yet had to have been because I bought it while I was still in high school yeah it was good we
|
|
also I've got the DVDs of it I watched it when it was on TV and I bought the DVDs like a six-part
|
|
mini series right Frank Herbert's noon I did like that do we also not talking about the latest
|
|
Star Trek movies yes don't bring that up he still found ways to kill guys in red shirts because I'm
|
|
not gonna lie I don't like Star Trek but I like those well that says it all doesn't it I think
|
|
that was the point and that's why I'm a huge Star Trek fan then I hate those movies and I'm
|
|
looking at the entire set of Star Trek and Star Wars sitting on my DVD shelf at the moment and I
|
|
have to split the difference I am a Star Trek fan and I still like those because maybe we can get
|
|
Star Trek restarted again because it's been too long without good Star Trek you will never be
|
|
the same again oh it'll never be the same but it could be new and it's still okay I don't know
|
|
it didn't got a hold of Star Wars yeah don't remind me I mean how did you go on you go on you
|
|
know a hundred years past next generation and you know because I don't unless they say that the
|
|
timeline heals itself or something like that you can't base anything after that on anything
|
|
happened in next generation because it never happened unless they come out of the hollow room again
|
|
and coming out of the hollow room was a hologram no no no but on the original series either the
|
|
next generation so on the new series they're going to do the alternate generation actually I'm
|
|
such a big dork that I know this um even though that like okay I'm such a nerd even though that
|
|
they like went back a time and rebooted the timeline um according to like the Star Trek I guess
|
|
if you can call a can and it's ridiculous anyways the the prime timeline actually kept going so
|
|
like the books and stuff that are coming out kept going after the destruction oh well I don't
|
|
know if it's after the destruction of Romulus but like after next gen they kept they kept going on
|
|
well it worries me about the new Star Wars movie is that you know they said only only the six
|
|
movies are canon and I mean there there's not been no series you know why Star Wars were the
|
|
games and the books and you know when the cartoons have all been incorporated into canon you know
|
|
so as far as you know it's just laziness of the of the producers oh we're just going to watch
|
|
the six movies and then you know we're free we're free to contradict the entire rest of the
|
|
universe so you know everything's come out with with Haunted Lay and their kids and all that
|
|
oh no that's you know uh we don't have to pay any attention to that oh it's not even good
|
|
laziness because good laziness would be to pick somewhere in the you know several thousand years
|
|
of extended universe and make them into movies somebody already wrote the story I've already
|
|
gotten over the fact that anybody making a movie of something I like is making a movie for me
|
|
I'm past that magic target target demographic where they want and they're just making
|
|
movies to make money and they're not interested in what I love and so for Star Wars I have 30 years
|
|
worth of books and comics to keep me happy and if I don't like the new movies so be it I didn't like
|
|
the prequels it's pretty much ignored them you know what I'm worried about is Ben Affleck as Batman
|
|
now he's he'll kill that Ben Affleck kills every movie he's ever been in the only movie to ever
|
|
survive Ben Affleck in one piece and just barely survived at that was Dogma I was hoping you were
|
|
going to say Dogma I just because of all the like crap that's gone on with that and everything I
|
|
I'm just like secretly like that the movie's going to be awesome like because I have no expectation
|
|
of it being anything other than a tight giant suck fast um it's going to come out and be awesome
|
|
it just has to he's about to have like in mall rats I didn't dig mall rats a whole lot
|
|
he was the right guy for that role though you're right yeah I think they're they're over reaching
|
|
unless they want to actually rename this movie Justice League they've come out with too many
|
|
DC characters that's why you can't do a Justice League movie because they'd all be on
|
|
screen for 10 minutes I guess they they do it with X-Men but look at X-Men they you know they go
|
|
with the they only do the top seven or eight you know you have this whole pathion of X-Men and
|
|
you know people always complain about their several important X-Men and they're
|
|
been in the movie you know we did we had the Avengers and the Avengers were only four of them I
|
|
I'm not that up on the list Marvel stuff but I thought they were more and four more
|
|
Avengers in the comic book I guess more and six whatever I think thought there was more than that
|
|
but you know you split it too many ways and nobody has any kind of screen time and it just
|
|
seems like on this Superman versus Batman a few months every month there's been a new a new DC
|
|
character added well DCs already said that like that's why they changed the title on Batman versus
|
|
well I'm sorry Batman v Superman because they're not versus each other at least that's what the
|
|
director says and they gave it the subtitle Don of Justice is because the next movie after that
|
|
is Justice League like they're just setting up a Justice League movie because they're trying to
|
|
catch up with Marvel and they're not doing a very good job so maybe all of this inconsistency and
|
|
canon and poor storytelling and short cutting and and lack of quality maybe that's what motivated
|
|
Lost in Bronx to write such a complete and well thought out story that that is true to itself
|
|
all the way through bring it back I like it
|
|
poking his master of directing back to on topic well I got to edit this thing and I still
|
|
to go to the gym tonight well are we the point where we can talk about the whole
|
|
Denny Mocha of the story because you know I was kind of just
|
|
thrown for a loop as you know when it came came back
|
|
Hey 50 you just died I don't know what just happened you started kind of
|
|
blinking in and out and now your lips are even just flashing at us and there's no sound coming
|
|
through I thought I heard you ask if we can talk about day new ma and that's fine we can talk
|
|
about that if someone tells me what that word means lol yeah I'm getting a whole bunch of
|
|
notifications all at once that may be part of it but it's it's just how he ended the story you know
|
|
but the last two chapters we had we're having this wrong fucking space battle and
|
|
e-jogga just done the quarter-grow and that's right when pronounced that anyway
|
|
how it's most and we haven't seen how that was going to be resold and suddenly three months later
|
|
he's y'all fucking in the hospital bed um yeah I thought it was the only way you could wrap that
|
|
up I mean he was in a severe space battle I'm still not sure how he survived it the ship
|
|
was at zero g uh excuse me um zero atmosphere and they were all in their spacesuits which was
|
|
something I'd never heard in any other sci-fi I thought that was brilliant that you know you
|
|
should draw the atmosphere out of here and everybody should be in spacesuits in case there's
|
|
a whole breach that that was brilliant I've never heard that done before but that's beside the
|
|
point so like he took a tremendous physical damage and he didn't die in that space suit in the
|
|
time that it took you know a hospital ship to reach them and I I don't know exactly how that
|
|
happened and it wasn't explained um but explaining his long long recovery and tremendous amount of
|
|
debriefing um I felt like it was the only way you could close the story but I like that he took it
|
|
that one extra chapter to explain his mental condition and he's emotionally a broken man and why
|
|
he can't return to the ship and why he can't get out of his bed I thought that was fantastic
|
|
yeah I really liked it because I think um you as a reader your cheer you're kind of want him to do
|
|
one thing but then I don't know about anybody else me as a person I completely understand like
|
|
everything he does at the end of the book like I get get that I've been in that situation where
|
|
you've had a really really really meaningful experience with a group of people and you've just
|
|
have to walk away and you you can't go back it's over like you just can't you can't be around those
|
|
people you can't anything you do is just going to bring it back in a negative way so you just
|
|
kind of have to walk away um which is not what you as a reader I think what I think you to make it
|
|
you know the best fairytale ending he joins the career the grizzled does owner and goes on and does
|
|
you know space piratey things or whatever uh but I think it was more true to him as a person to
|
|
to end it the way it did well I agree I was kind of rooting for he's shot to go for Zelda but
|
|
that's not the story of hijak hijaka is a sloner hijaka is the outsider
|
|
in in every in every situation it would not you know this this this is the series is not the story
|
|
of grizzled it's it's a story it's a story continuing adventures of hijak and having said the
|
|
president's in the first book I mean I agree that's the only way it could him for hijak to go
|
|
off on his own to to a new ship and to new to new people but he you know he really never
|
|
completely connects with there is shipmates but you know they're just as co-workers they
|
|
they they never become his family he you know the the characters just this
|
|
loner type guy you know and like I said I understood that into the book I you know at the end
|
|
man this is great this this is brilliant but you know when he when he first you know day
|
|
first did it it was just so jarring it's like what you know you know I've never seen that before
|
|
in science fiction you would just jump out of the battle without exactly how it ended and it's
|
|
three months later you know and I agree with the fact that they that they fight in vacuum I mean
|
|
that had just so much realism this book I mean you know nothing else in this book could make it
|
|
more plain this is not the Star Trek Star Wars universe where you know but that combat is this
|
|
clean and and high tech and no big deal thing that we've become the thing it is in in science fiction
|
|
stories that's you know it's just incredibly inconvenient and dangerous damn thing that you don't
|
|
want to be involved did that come through it I lose you guys I'm still here yet came through I was
|
|
trying to let someone else have a turn talking and I was typing up my beverage review
|
|
well I thought it was interesting at the end they were he cleaned it up and with each
|
|
jock having to go through all the rehabilitation where they basically did a genetic remaking of
|
|
them they said they weren't sure about his memories and all means for the author if he continues
|
|
the story he can change whatever he wants about the character and just tie it all into the reconstruction
|
|
while still having it be the same person more magic plot bullets well I mean the only reason that
|
|
he got the treatment he did I mean I think if it was in the other character in any other book
|
|
they just sort of let him die because he's not that important but he had something they wanted
|
|
like he had information and so they were going to keep him alive long enough to get it so I
|
|
wouldn't pass him to do some shady stuff with him while he's in a incapacitated state especially
|
|
when they gave him those drugs they could have probably sent him out on some missions or something
|
|
crazy well they want to know how he's how he beat their shiny missile that that was that was
|
|
incredibly unbeatable no they didn't ask him about that that was that was just an enlisted guy he
|
|
was just a crew member that wanted to know they wanted to know everything else of the whole political
|
|
situation and legal situation behind it it was it was weird but not uncommon that this bureaucracy
|
|
didn't even think to ask him how he defeated this uh with a called star shark I think or that's
|
|
what they wanted him to think I would think that with Ejox character he would be much more likely
|
|
to tell the truth about how he beat it to an unassuming fellow gunner than more being
|
|
bludgeoned over the head by suits asking well how did you do that crazy thing that no one should be
|
|
able to do yeah I totally think that guy was a plant that they'd send in to get that information
|
|
yeah that definitely did they ever say that they didn't ask him about that because it seems like
|
|
they were very detailed and everything else that they asked him you know if one of us went into
|
|
essentially dropped ourselves into into another country and shot about people you know because
|
|
that was the only way to get out and that turned back over to our government oh there's you
|
|
you'd be in some dark hole somewhere still well he did say a couple of times during the recovery that
|
|
they kept asking him questions and he started becoming uncooperative and fighting with them and so
|
|
maybe they were trying to ask him and never could get down that train of questioning that's kind of
|
|
what I meant that you know he has a contrary streak of mile wide and so maybe they figured out the
|
|
best way to get information out of him was professional curiosity you know playing to his ego where
|
|
I'm sure he couldn't help but talk about how to apply his trade he doesn't trust us sending the
|
|
kid from Wisconsin but it doesn't it seems strange that an enlisted guy was able to get into a maximum
|
|
security area to question him about something like that with nobody interrupting him no
|
|
even when he jok started yelling at him at the one point yeah maybe then yeah yeah but I mean if
|
|
you work at a place you know how to get around the place oh basically we can watch guys not
|
|
to take this sideways when I when I send you my notes poke y'all I'll send you a link I just found
|
|
this day you know and for me the last the last review we did what was down and out the magic kingdom
|
|
but I just found a link on YouTube and I want once the show comes out I'll put it in the comments too
|
|
but oh you know I mentioned when we did the review on down and out that I'd been watching
|
|
Disney ride videos because you know I developed a certain fascination and you know there you
|
|
know there's Disney secrets videos and all that but you know one that there's one on there it
|
|
actually shows I don't there's some actually show the tunnels below this thing lad and I haven't
|
|
looked you know there's like service tunnels all over and people got in there and filled them
|
|
even though they can get you know arrested for doing so but there's a couple kids and they
|
|
start out going to the quote secret pets cemetery which is a very secret around the haunted mansion
|
|
but then they I don't know if one or both of them was dressed in Butler's uniform like cast
|
|
members so one I must have been working for Disney and he's probably unemployed now because if anybody
|
|
saw this video but they actually go you know around where the pets cemetery is there's the cast
|
|
interest entrance which isn't locked and then they go up in the facade of the of the haunted
|
|
mansion and you know I did a little poke around here what's actually in the mansion part of the
|
|
haunted mansion because the ride the whole thing from when you get in the cars and you go around
|
|
and all that that's actually this huge complex that you know when you're when you and at least
|
|
in this land you know when you're in the stretching room you're actually going down the level and
|
|
you're going when you go through you know you take the walking part of the ride towards the doom
|
|
buggies it's you know you're crossing under a man-made river and coming out the other side and
|
|
there's like this you know huge factories well factorized with this big industrial building on
|
|
the other side where the actual ride takes place and then you come back around and you get out
|
|
and you exit through the facade place actually looks like the haunted mansion but you know I
|
|
I did a little look so what well what's in the upper stories of the haunted mansion and you know
|
|
actually that you know you have the two stretching rooms the big the big huge elevators
|
|
go down and really it's not room for much else because there's that final partner stretching
|
|
where you look up and the guys hanging from the ceiling which is a story or two above you so
|
|
you know they said these elevator parts actually extend way up into the facades there's not much room
|
|
up those upper two floors for anything else but get back to this video you know it's you know
|
|
these kids are going in the first room after again there is a cast leisure area because you see
|
|
it's it's very poorly shot but you see a bunch of people standing around drinking pop or something
|
|
and then they go down a hallway and up a stair you know it's and most of it is not you know
|
|
set up like the haunted mansion there's one door to go through it's like a haunted mansion door
|
|
but the you know but you can tell they're in places where they got to be careful how loud they speak
|
|
because they're in places where they could be seen by you know people going going into the rooms
|
|
and you know the foray of the haunted mansion and going out into the into the stretching rooms
|
|
and interesting piece of trivia I found out the last few weeks that actually the stretching room
|
|
in the in in the Disney world you're not actually it's all in one level so you're not
|
|
you're not actually descending the top part of the room actually raises above you
|
|
so there's there's a difference there but you know I found that pretty interesting because I
|
|
haven't seen anything else that actually shows pictures from you know behind the scenes and
|
|
while there's behind the scenes stores but not not down the hallways and the and the
|
|
nor normally public inaccessible areas of the building so I've been talking five minutes about
|
|
this I need to shut up so continue with the book review where are we we were talking about the
|
|
Denium on and and uh Ezio and and and the the abrupt transition from the end of the battle to
|
|
he you know to his recovery and even after all the rehabilitation and the money he gets he's
|
|
still wants to go out and be a gunner right he's a possession where he could just get a room
|
|
and stay there for us to his life well I think he I think he kind of is is a standard for kind
|
|
of the Unix philosophy he has one thing and he does it really well and uh he I don't think he
|
|
knows what to do besides that he's a natural being a gunner so that's just he he can't think of any
|
|
other way to be than that way he's either a gunner or he's eating grease or dine greasy diner food
|
|
yeah he just looks up with threat space travel I mean and I can't really say that I would be any
|
|
different I'm sure that if I played the lottery and if I won the lottery and didn't require going
|
|
to work for my paycheck I would find somewhere I liked to work and continue doing what I'm doing
|
|
because somehow I like being an IT I mean this is why rock stars and movie stars uh die broke you
|
|
know because you know you know I'm not saying they're easy jobs I mean when they're when they're on
|
|
you know it's like uh you know nine ten hours a day for rock stars
|
|
on the bus or whatever going from one place and then three hours to just kill on yourself on stage
|
|
and then you know a few hours of sleep and then on onto the next place
|
|
movie actor sits you know when they're recording and then you have this rest of the year
|
|
you know you know TV actors you know when they're not when they're not filming movie actors
|
|
between movies and you know and here you have this pile of money and on the other side you have
|
|
all this time that you have to fill and they tend to do very expensive things to fill their times
|
|
with packages from Columbian stuff and you know so that's that's why they run out of all their money
|
|
you know and some of them work in a job or whatever if they got a moderate amount of extra income
|
|
you know suddenly a matter from heaven they would you know but not enough so they could quit
|
|
in fact uh well sit on it it was all the Katherine Heldenberger's uh character on uh CSI who happened
|
|
to be the secret daughter of one of the mob guys running the casinos uh and she finally went to her
|
|
to her father to get money for daughter's education and she described it to somebody
|
|
as would now now we've got enough money where we can do anything and not enough money where we can
|
|
do nothing there's a similar character in a series that my family's been watching through and
|
|
that's bones where one of the guys is secretly the sole inheritor to some mega corporation and he's
|
|
just got he's made of money and he has like three PhDs and works in a lab studying bugs and
|
|
slime because that's his thing except now that he doesn't because a couple seasons ago the big
|
|
evil character for the season you know said you know had a thing like uh you can you can either go
|
|
online and disfuse this bomb or you can stop me as I quietly empty all your accounts you know
|
|
wasn't you know and and uh put all your property in my name and take your car and stuff so it's
|
|
you know we're in and anybody works with computers just a completely absurd sequence you know
|
|
it's as bad as when somebody's breaking a password and they get they get it one letter at a time
|
|
well you know I have pretty much given up the hope of having any realistic technology scenes
|
|
ever in anything so you should watch the speakers then everything in there's pretty good
|
|
are you telling me that hackers was not factual?
|
|
well there were facts they were just wrong facts
|
|
there was that one part in the new trunk movie where they put who am I on the command line and
|
|
it shot out who it was and I was like hey that's actually a thing a computer will actually do
|
|
the matrix reloaded some of the scenes where Trinity was hacking she's actually using end map
|
|
and she's actually exploiting a vulnerability and old versions of SSH so they have one little
|
|
snippet of actual real like security work who are you hacking as boring and in and in all the CSI
|
|
shows every time like the computer's printing characters in the screen there's a little bit for
|
|
every character a little bit noise my phone does that because that wouldn't drive me crazy
|
|
so you mean I can't hack by flying through a virtual environment like something out of Tron
|
|
no no it's a lot more like lawnmower man you can you just have to move to Washington state or
|
|
Colorado hey I know this it's a unique system I know you next and apparently somebody's left
|
|
to turn them off and because that's the only way you're gonna get in all right is anybody
|
|
have anything else or should we wrap up let's bring this thing in for a landing or at least a
|
|
docking did anybody want to close anything about the audiobook I just want to say again what I
|
|
said earlier and just wow yeah do yourself a favor read this one if you haven't it's it's definitely
|
|
worth your time if you listen to us ramble on this long about it and you haven't listened to it
|
|
please please do and then you need to go to cavalcadeaudio.org.com and you know if you like
|
|
rivaled irreverent and completely not safe for work humor listen through the entirety case
|
|
series and then I I think his earliest published at least online uh uh science fiction work uh
|
|
oh god blue world I knew it earlier in the cast uh but go back that is just brilliant
|
|
I'm gonna take a step further if you liked this book anywhere near as much as any of us did
|
|
head on over to amazon and do a search for David Collins Rivera and buy the ebook editions
|
|
just to kick a couple of bucks his way just in some way to say thank you I mean I it's I I know
|
|
lost in Bronx um that's not why he did this you know it was not for money this is this is a labor
|
|
of love and he I'm sure I he'd much rather just here you say it you just write him an email
|
|
and tell him how much you like it or leave a review on amazon um but still I mean go get the ebook
|
|
and buy it for you know friends of yours who who might also want to read it or or want to
|
|
listen to it it's just you know it's worth it and he's he's more than earned that's all I can say
|
|
hey uh and uh story short stories trying to think of my blue heaven and just it's it's it's it's just
|
|
mind blowing I mean it's an insight into the obsessed person it's it's really nothing at all uh
|
|
what uh like uh the e-joc stories but uh I think you'll enjoy it as well uh blue heaven my blue heaven
|
|
was a uh movie Steve Martin movie okay blue heaven they'll know what I mean when they get to the
|
|
site right right on so what are we listening to for next month all it is was pegwall's uh genius idea
|
|
pegwall you still with us sure am so what's the book you're assigning to us for next month for
|
|
October next month is call of cthulhu by hp lovecraft i am excitement yeah i was so excited i
|
|
listened to the wrong audiobook are you sure that wasn't cthulhu just warping your mind to
|
|
bring him into his clutches you didn't say cthulhu juice three times did you
|
|
cuton lujus cuto the Jikki kikki kikki gajyu the
|
|
i'm the walrus
|
|
all right so clearly nobody said that cuz nobody can
|
|
all right so we'll uh meet back to hit meet back here again boy i'm really tired
|
|
meet back here again on October 14th that'd be Patch Tuesday of October 7 p.m. Eastern
|
|
U.S. time on mumble we're at oh geez I don't even see the mumble address
|
|
yeah it's on the HPR website look it up there join the HPR mailing list the
|
|
email subscription list because I always post them there and you can join us in
|
|
the show you can give your opinion on that book at that time just like
|
|
Tojette popped in and helped us out with this one and actually thanks a lot
|
|
Tojette and to everybody else who showed up this week it this has been a lot of
|
|
fun and and we're gonna do it again next month yeah the address from the
|
|
mumble server is Charlie Hatrack the number one dot team speak dot CC port
|
|
647 47 and HPR room and no password and whatever you want to call yourself
|
|
as optional yep and for anyone who is very new to mumble if you ever try to
|
|
get onto a mumble server that you've been told does not require a password
|
|
and it asks you for a password that's because you've picked a user name that
|
|
someone else has already used on that server so just pick a different user name
|
|
if you've been told it does not require a password then it does not require
|
|
a password and that's a user name issue because this this one does not require
|
|
a password and you should just be able to hop on in here with us so thanks again
|
|
everybody for listening to Hacker Public Radio thank you for sticking with us
|
|
through the audio book club we're really hoping you're enjoying the series
|
|
we've got some positive feedback from some HPR listeners and even some of
|
|
up the authors whose books we've reviewed we've gotten some some really
|
|
positive feedback from them which is a lot of fun but we're doing it for you the
|
|
listener and we're hoping it will encourage you to either join us on the
|
|
book club or listen to an audio book that you haven't heard before or put out
|
|
a show for Hacker Public Radio we can always use new shows we can always use
|
|
new hosts and now you've got something to say and we're dying to hear it so
|
|
with that I will say good night everybody have a good one guys nice folks
|
|
later good night good night
|
|
we are a community podcast and it worked and released a shows every week day
|
|
one day through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by a
|
|
HPR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click
|
|
on our contributing to find out how easy it would be is
|
|
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dog Pound and the Infinite
|
|
on Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution and bin rev dot com
|
|
if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
|
|
on the website or report a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise stated
|
|
today's show is released on rare creative comments attribution share a
|
|
like video show
|
|
so you're caught at this right Poke yeah you can see the low red dot next my name
|
|
is time
|