2005 in review: Books

2005 was an excellent reading year. In terms of quantity, I got through 45 books, which is more than I have read in a single year in a long time. The quality was good, too, with only four books falling below my standards for “entertaining”. But best of all was the fact that I found three authors who have gone straight on to my list of favourites.

John Scalzi - Old Man's WarWhile we were on holiday in Boston in February, Keith took us to a small SF bookstore in Cambridge (Pandemonium Books), where I bought a copy of John Scalzi‘s novel Old Man’s War. I had been reading Scalzi’s blog for a while, so I knew the book was out and that it had been getting good reviews. I cracked it open while we were still in Boston, and I finished it in about a day. It is fantastic.

John Scalzi - Agent To The StarsWhen Subterranean Press did a special edition of his book Agent To The Stars later in the year, I got a copy of that, too, and it is equally good. These two books are easily the most entertaining science fiction I’ve read since Lois McMaster Bujold’s early Miles Vorkosigan novels. They feature solid ideas, warm characters you can get really involved with, and fast-moving plots. Scalzi’s writing style is simple and perfectly unobtrusive. I never felt like I was wading through lovingly crafted yet unnecessary descriptions, or page count padding. He just gets on with the story. I love these books, and am eagerly awaiting The Ghost Brigades, which is due in February.

Also while we were in Boston, I read Quite Ugly One Morning by Christopher Brookmyre. Many people had recommended Brookmyre to me, but it took me until this year to read anything by him. I think I’ve made up for that by guzzling down seven of his novels since then. He writes satirical, wickedly anti-establishment thrillers, set mostly in Scotland. (Not The End Of The World takes place in L.A., but features a Scottish protagonist.)

Christopher Brookmyre - Quite Ugly One MorningIn his Jack Parlabane series (Quite Ugly One Morning, Country Of The Blind, Boiling A Frog, and Be My Enemy) he takes gleeful aim at corporate greed, political corruption, and religious hypocrisy. The Angelique de Xavia series (A Big Boy Did It And Ran Away, and The Sacred Art Of Stealing) are strongly plotted crime capers, full of twists, black humour, and pop culture references. They are all steeped in Scottish nature, culture, and language. If you’re not Scottish, you might not get all of the jokes–or even understand what some of the characters are saying, fooaltiyeman–but I recommend them very highly nevertheless.

Neal Asher - GridlinkedLast up is Neal Asher, whom I had the pleasure of interviewing via email back in June. Neal Asher is an “action movie” kind of storyteller. Situations are Desperate, Heroes are Tough, and Stuff goes Boom. A lot. My favourite books of his are the Ian Cormac series (Gridlinked, The Line Of Polity, and Brass Man), a set of stories about a secret agent dealing with psychotic criminals and cryptic alien entities in a far-future setting. You want tense SF thrillers? Look no further.

But those aren’t all the books I enjoyed in 2005. Also of particular note were Market Forces by Richard Morgan, the Coyote books (Coyote and Coyote Rising) by Allen Steele, the Hammered series (Hammered, Scardown, and Worldwired, which I have yet to read) by Elizabeth Bear, and two Prey books (Hidden Prey and Broken Prey by John Sandford. I keep reading stuff by Charlie Stross, and I keep wanting to like it…but it the books of his I’ve read this year (Singularity Sky, Iron Sunrise, and Accelerando) have just failed to set me alight. I think I’ll try his Hidden Family series next. With a little less emphasis on the hard science, he might be writing characters I would find more interesting.

2005 in review: Films

I saw 78 films in 2005. Not quite the 100 I managed to catch in 2004, but still a respectable haul. However, the average rating I handed out was 3.06, which is quite significantly down from 3.23 last year. I said I needed to watch more rubbish in order to fine-tune my critical senses, and I think I’ve achieved that goal. There were some stinkers this year–three that didn’t even warrant a full star, as opposed to only one in 2004:

Yuck, yuck, yuck.

Also, I only found 9 films that were worth more than 4 stars, compared to 14 in 2004:

So overall, I’d say it’s been no more than an okay year for films. I haven’t made as much use of my Screenselect membership (DVDs by post) as I thought I would–probably because I haven’t been paying much attention to my movie queue. As a result, I’ve been getting a lot of films which I’d added to my queue because of a vague inkling of a fancy, rather than because I actively wanted to see them. I think I need to spend some time just removing a bunch of titles from the 200-odd long list I’ve built up, and concentrate on picking up on some of the films I missed in the cinema throughout 2005.

Here’s the full chart.

Chart of the ratings of films I saw in 2005

So what would I pick as my top films of the year? Actually, the list above comes pretty close. Removing Adaptation and Pieces Of April because they are from previous years (and remember that although The Aviator was up at the Oscars at the beginning of this year, it didn’t get a UK release until January of 2005), my list is as follows:

  1. Crash
  2. The Aviator
  3. Batman Begins
  4. Lord Of War
  5. Wedding Crashers
  6. Kung Fu Hustle
  7. A History Of Violence
  8. Sin City
  9. Serenity
  10. Sahara

Windows security alert: WMF vulnerability

In case you haven’t come across this already, a new and highly nasty Windows security flaw has been uncovered in the last few days, and it is being actively exploited to infect Windows machines with rootkits and who knows what else. The flaw can be exploited by merely looking at a particular kind of image (a .wmf file) in Internet Explorer any browser or your mail client. It can even be activated without being viewed, if it happens to get indexed by something like Google Desktop.

I’ve been tracking news about it over on the F-Secure blog. Fortunately, there is a temporary patch available. If you’re running any form of Windows from 2000 upwards, you need to follow these instructions and install the patch right now. The patch doesn’t cover earlier versions of Windows, but the flaw is present in them, too. In fact, it has been there since Windows 3.0.

I don’t normally go into a flap about security issues, but this one has particular resonances with the short story “BLIT” by David Langford, which describes a fractal image that is “incompatible with human neural input”, and can kill you just by looking at it.

Sometimes I look forward to the day when I can access the cybersphere via a hardwired neural connection…and sometimes I just plain worry.