Surreptitious publishing

26 07 2006

Early this month, I headed out into the Stockholm archipelago aboard a 39 foot yacht with all my family. Stopping off on the uninhabited island of Ornö we invented a story (inspired by the copious animal droppings littering the ground) concerning a mysterious race of creatures who lived there but had never been seen by human eyes. As the holiday passed, these creatures were gradually embellished in our imaginations and every new feature (unhygienic, fishlike, hooked, lisping, backwardly ageing, amorous exhibitionists) was immortalised in the Limericks which are now published on this site. The surprisingly vast military presence in the archipelago inspired the doomsday scenario. We were later lucky enough to stumble upon the work of Derek Thompson which seemed to fit so many of our ideas so well that we couldn’t resist “borrowing” them. The work is full of family in-jokes, but we hope that some of them appeal to visitors and that you then visit Derek’s marvelous site.

To qualify for publication, each Limerick had to have either Yuq or Ornö in the rhyme (though one or two non-qualifiers sneaked in). It’s not easy, but Shucks and No Nudity provoked great amusement among my youngsters. Where do they learn this stuff?

Finally, my 12 year old son invented a ruse for surreptitiously distributing the “book” by slipping copies onto the shelves of bookstores and Miles Teves delicious art was raided for a suitable publisher’s logo. We hope he’s pleased by our attention!





Blondie 24

25 07 2006

Book: Blondie 24 by David Fogel
Rating: 9/10, great science writing

As an armchair scientist, I am frequently frustrated by books written for novices (which I’m not) and also books written for experts (which I’m not either).

The former claim accessibility which usually means taking out all technical information, math, etc. The results is anecdotal, “gee-whizz” reporting that is ultimately without any value beyond entertainment.

The latter try to tempt in a large audience by getting “Introduction to …” into the title. They then proceed to rapidly summarise the foundations in twenty insultingly basic pages before shifting to advanced mathematics and a vocabulary/jargon designed only for their inner circle.

Where, you ask, are the books for armchair scientists? Check out my bookshelf for a few, but read on first …

Blondie 24: Playing at the Edge of AI is science as it should be written. It will be genuinely of interest to novice and expert alike (and especially the armchair scientist!). This is a tall claim, made by many books but deserved by few.

The novice will enjoy it because it is engaging and perfectly accessible. David Fogel takes his time setting the scene for the experiment to follow by addressing all key concepts needed to prepare the lay reader. He does it without recourse to jargon and with a literate and witty style. I had already some notions of the subject but felt no desire to skip forward to the “advanced” stuff. I’m glad I didn’t, because his exploration of the background leads logically and inexorably to the questions his experiment poses. I say logically and inexorably, but he seems to be the first to be inspired to answer these questions and the reader experiences the thrill of spotting a scientific avenue worth exploring.

There’s plenty here too for the armchair scientist and the expert. For the former, the investigation is a perfect example of science whose solution is accessible from an armchair. For the latter, it’ s original science, and David Fogel is generous enough to set down all his assumptions, his approach and even criticisms which can be levelled at it, to make it possible to replicate his work and advance it in new directions.

Later postings to this blog will challenge the work described in the book but do not imagine that criticism and admiration cannot share the same platform. This book inspired me with its audacious objective, it entertained me with its engaging style and it challenged me to spend months investigating and testing its ideas.

What more could I ask from any book?





The stuff of dreams

25 07 2006

Book: Lanark
Author: Alasdair Gray
Rating: 8/10 surreal

Alasdair GrayLately I’ve been interleaving the occassional book that really charmed me in my youth with newer writings. I spotted an Alastair Gray tome in a bookshop and that reminded me that I’d read Lanark 25 years ago and loved it. So I’m reading it again and … God help me … I don’t remember a thing!!

I know I’m losing it, but at least the memory of how good it was didn’t betray me. Reading it, I can’t help thinking it must have influenced Iain Bank’s greatest “non-genre” book. Sure enough, a little search of the web reveals that The Bridge was a homage to Gray!





First thoughts

24 07 2006

So how does one start a blog? Why does one start a blog? Beats me really! I guess I’m home alone and the devil makes work for idle hands.

Right now I plan to use the blog to record, for my own benefit, books, film and music that are getting my attention. Maybe a few opinions too. Let’s see where it goes.

I’ve spent about an hour setting up the blog banner. It shows a place that’s special to me and I know it will put me in good humour whenever I sit down to update this blog.