Benjamin Espen
Darkness and Stone: The Lost Book 3
Darkness and Stone wraps up Peter Nealen’s WarGate series The Lost nicely. You get a cataclysmic final confrontation, endless chthonic horrors, and the phrase, “you mean you just guilt-tripped him to death?”
One of my favorite things about this series is that Nealen manages to give the impression that
Linkfest 2022-04-29: The Well at the World's End
John D. Cook points out the inherent tradeoff between predictive accuracy and serving as a public authority.
This never stops being funny to me.
Isegoria: The Well at the World’s End
Friend of the blog Isegoria points us to William Morris’ forgotten work The Well at the World’s
Mariokart
Audible Annual Series Sale
I see that Audible has some titles I recommend on sale. You can sometimes get good deals on audiobooks by buying a ebook on sale and then using Whispersync, but in this case the audiobook is directly on sale. Amazon links do benefit me if you buy something, but I
Sand People All Over Again
The history of science clubs
In reading JD Cowan’s series on The Immortal Storm, a history of the foundation of science fiction fandom in the 1930s, one of the major conflicts that developed in those early days was between fans who were interested in science as such, and those who wanted stories about fantastical