Friday, December 15, 2023

What I Did About The Books I’m Reading and What I Should Do About the Games I’m Playing

Back at the beginning of the year, I posted about wanting to change up the way I was keeping track of the books I read. Previously I posted a book post every few days with the new books in a big list. I was inspired by Sharon Lee who does that and it seemed like fun.

I wanted to make the changes for a few reasons. First off as technical task it was surprisingly frustrating to maintain a list over a series of posts and it was a bit redundant as my GoodReads profile is public and you can see the list there. The other reason was that the book posts were inflating the number of posts I was making in a month and taking time away from working on other things. I though, as a next step, making a monthly “infographic” update might be fun and interesting and maybe teach me a few things at the same time.

As someone who has worked in post secondary education for a while now, I can assure you that nobody (including myself) has any idea what an infographic is. So I settled on an answer that was high on info and maybe a bit low on graphics.

All of the posts are under the Books in 2023 tag and they look more or less like this:

A screen shot of the top of the Books of November 2023 post.
A screen shot of the lower middle of the Books of November 2023 post.

I’m pretty happy. As I said, it might not be as pretty as it might be, but at least for now I’m enjoying making it. I learned, for example that for some reason I haven’t read a single book published in 2023, which seems weird, but now I know.

More technically, I learned a bit about getting formatting to work properly. I also learned that books are almost never in a 2:3 ration. I mean, I shelved books for years, I knew this, but until I tried making a grid of book covers I hadn’t realised just how wacky the world of book cover sizes is. I also messed around with hand crafting a word cloud, mine is certainly not as pretty as some, but I kinda like it.

A word cloud of authors from June 2023 (listed fullin in that post). Tomohito Oda is very large in the centre and Elizabeth Bear is barely visible below her. Other authors include Charles Todd and Patrica Briggs a little bit smaller that Tomohito Oda.

I’m doing a very simple translation where the author’s percentage of the books translates directly to the font size the author. So in the June example above, Tomohito Oda represented 26.4% of the books I’d read to that point in the year and her name is in 264 point font. Elizabeth Bear only accounted for 1.6% at the time and so she’s in 16 point font.

From a production point of view, it takes me about 3 hours to put together the post and certainly requires more hand done portions than it might. When I set out that was fine but as the year went on, I hand wrote more HTML than I really enjoyed, especially when it came to keeping the two column tables balanced. There’s also still some book keeping that’s duplicating Good Reads.

So eventually, I want to either automate the process or make it more manual. I still like the idea of hand building my infographic, but also creating fewer points where I can get in my way seems helpful too. For the time being I’m going to keep doing what I’m doing because it’s fun enough and kind of meditative, without taking up all of my time.

I’m having enough fun with it that I’m thinking about how I can modernise my system of video game tracking. I think those posts are alright, but they have a few problems.

The top of my November 2023 in Video Games post (I do appologize for the low quality alt text for this post, I wasn't sure how to illustrate it and I'm just short of time to put all of the text from those posts back in).

I’ve had a lot of trouble this year keeping track of what I’ve played and when and so the data going into the posts is a lot worse than it was. This has happened before and I might get better about it again, but I’m also a spot right now where games are less important to me than they were. I’m not sure I need to be quite as granular about it as I have been.

There’s also a problem that a lot of games show up every month. If you read those posts regularly you’ll know that my nuanced view of Mario Kart 8 (Deluxe) is “Vroom Vroom Beep Beep” because I really haven’t had that much to say about it in the … almost decade since it game out (the first time). I don’t mind doing a new review for something new or a point about something interesting, but I think those posts are some of my worst writing and I want to put that energy somewhere else.

One of the things I’ve always meant to do with game tracking is build one of those theme river diagrams. At the moment for me capturing the very large things about what I’m playing is important. For example: “The summer of 2023 was the the summer of Tears of the Kingdom” is the kind of insight I’d like to hang on to (and I’m not sure is even that apparent in what I’m doing).

I’d also like to make sure that I have a picture in my head of what I played in a year, new and old. Like right now I know I played Hollow Knight at some point in the last year, and apparently a lot of that was in the winter, and then I played a little bit of Breath of the Wild just before Tears of the Kingdom came out.

Overall, it’s time for a change, I’m just not totally sure what the change is going to be. Writing it out this way makes me think something similar to the book infographic might be the right way to go. Here’s what my 2024 in games looks like at a glance updated each month, with a few insights to spice up everything else.

I think I can also dial back the tracking. I’m not sure at this point that it’s doing me any good and while I don’t think it’s doing much harm if I can streamline to “Here are games I played a little and Here are games I played a lot” that might be what I need. That’s going to be weird and I might end up continuing just because it’s an ancient habit by this point (and imagine all the data I won’t have if I want it later!).

Anyway, those are my Updates updates. Making infographics is fun, if a little bit tedious and even I, after doing something for seven years, can make a change. I don’t know exactly what you can expect in terms of my media consumption nonsense in 2024, but I, at least, intend to have fun with it.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Blog: Video Games of November 2023

I spent a lot of November down with COVID, so I don't really remember the month and certainly didn't have a lot of energy to play. I'd planned to pick up Sea of Stars around my birthday and that turned out to be a pretty good speed when I had the energy for it.


My top five games (by play time) for November were:

  1. Sea of Stars - Sea of Stars is a lot of fun. I think it stands up on its own, but it's also the modern extension of great SNES role playing games. It's certainly made with a lot of Chrono Trigger in it's heart and kind works as the sequel I'd been imagining, rather than Chrono Cross.
    Screenshot: The three heroes talk to a wanderer on a mountain top at sunset. The Wanderer says 'Mountains're nice'


  2. Dicey Dungeons - Dicy Dungeons has been the thing to play when I don't want to use my brain too much.
    Screenshot: The Inventor, an orange D6 faces off against Beatrice, a vampy bee woman. The invetor has a shocked card, which they can't use without adding a die, a two handed sword which will do at least six damage plus another die's worth and a jackhammer where when you push the button your opponent's equipment will be shocked.


  3. Tactics Ogre: Reborn - I started a new playthrough to look at the differences of the routes. I'm finding the overall story a little flat, and some of that is due to them trying to keep a dark and gritty tone. The game play in each mission is always fun, so as long as you don't think about the war crimes you keep committing, it's fun.
    Screenshot: Our heroes, lead by the Hawkman Canopus, fight their way up a large rough fortress on a dark and stormy night. The battle seems to have turned with only a few opponents remaining.

  4. Stardew Valley - I found it hard to come back to Stardew Valley. It's still a good an enjoyable game and the core farming is enjoyable, but I found having played through all of the story years ago, I just didn't really connect.
    Screenshot: Our farmer looks at a patch of Kale in a rather patchy looking farmyard.


  5. Mineko's Night Market - I thought I'd try this out as something new in the farming / store management genre. It's fun, but not quite what I'd hoped. It's slow on its own and then has some fairly severe technical issues on the switch that make it frusterating to play.
    Screenshot: A closeup of a white cat, looking bewilderedly at the front of a van which has been made to look like a snail.


Here's my total play time for November:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Monday, December 04, 2023

Books of November 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - November Edition.

Stats in November - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 14 (113)Pages Read - 4399 (37631)

Books Read

Murder at an Irish Wedding by Carlene O'Connor Beguilement (The Sharing Knife #1) by Lois McMaster Bujold
Legacy (The Sharing Knife #2) by Lois McMaster Bujold Passage (The Sharing Knife #3) by Lois McMaster Bujold
Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4) by Lois McMaster Bujold Children of Ruin by Adrian Tchaikovsky
Alpha & Omega by Patricia Briggs Cry Wolf by Patricia Briggs
Miss Moriarty, I Presume? by Sherry Thomas Hunting Ground by Patricia Briggs
A Room Full of Bones by Elly Griffiths Ruth's First Christmas Tree by Elly Griffiths
Tsubasa Omnibus 1 by CLAMP Magic Shifts by Ilona Andrews

Collage of the covers of the 14 books listed above.November 2023 Covers

Authors - 10 (46)

Adrian Tchaikovsky - 1 (4)Agatha Cristie - (1)
Alexander McCall Smith - (2)Alexandra Rowland - (1)
Angeline Boulley - (1)Ann Leckie - (2)
Anthony Horowitz - (1)Becky Chambers - (1)
Brandon Sanderson - (1)Carlene O'Connor - 1 (2)
Charles Todd - 1 (10)CLAMP - 1 (1)
Connie Willis - (2)Dan Moren - (2)
Daniel O'Malley - (2)Deanna Raybourn - (1)
Ed Yong - (1)Elizabeth Bear - (1)
Elle Cosimano - (1)Elly Griffiths - 2 (5)
Emma Newman - (1)Fatima Ali - (1)
Hiromu Arakawa - (2)Ilona Andrews - 1 (7)
Isaac Asimov - (2)Jim Butcher - (1)
Lois McMaster Bujold - 4 (4)Louise Penny - (1)
Martha Wells - (1)Mary Robinette Kowal - (1)
Matt Parker - (1)Mur Lafferty - (1)
N. K. Jemisin - (1)Patrica Briggs - 3 (9)
Rick Riorden - (1)Robin McKinley - (1)
S. A. Chakraborty - (1)Scott Hawkins - (1)
Sherry Thomas - 1 (6)Stephen King - (1)
Tasha Suri - (2)Timothy Zhan - (1)
Tomohito Oda - (17)Ursula K. Le Guin - (1)
Waubgeshig Rice - (1)Xiran Jay Zhao - (1)
Yoshiki Tanaka - (6)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size. Patricia Briggs, Charles Todd, Illona Andrews and Yoshiki Tanaka are also notably larger than the rest.2023 Author Cloud - November Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 2006 (1951)Most Recent Book - 2021 (2022)

Publications by Decades

2020s - 1 (40)2010s - 5 (39)
2000s - 8 (23)1990s - (4)
1980s - (4)1960s - (1)
1950s - (2)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 4 (64)Borrowed From Friends - (2)
My Audible Library - (3)My libro.fm Library - 5 (16)
My "Kindle" Library - (5)My Kobo Library - 5 (24)

Formats

Audio Book - 7 (56)eBook - 6 (35)
eBook (Comic) - 1 (21)Hardcover - (1)

Saturday, December 02, 2023

Video Games of October 2023

October was a complicated month, so I wasn't thinking too much about what I really played. I did install steam on my Mac and so that was nice to expand the pool, although there's not a lot that plays nicely on my 2016 mac.


My top five games (by play time) for October were:

  1. Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - I'm reaching the ending of my first play through. Maybe should have pushed thought quicker, just to let the story go at speed. ToTK has been
    Screenshot: Link stands on a snowy hill looking out on a mountainous landscape, while a korok looks at him squarely in the side of the head.

  2. Dicey Dungeons - This has been pretty good for quick pick up and play situations. The number of different ways to approach the core concept of role dice and use them to activate cards is fun alghough, I would love a design my own deck and just play with things, even if it would be stupidly imbalanced.

  3. Pikmin 4 - Continues to be solid and I appreciate just how much there is. Have drifted off in the last little bit, but I'm sure I'll be back.

  4. Tactics Ogre: Reborn - It snowed, and just to confuse everyone, rather than playing Ogre Battle, I played Tactics Ogre. It's a little thin for story, but the actual combat in an encounter is always fun.

  5. Hades - Still great. Does not like my Mac's keyboard.

Here's my total play time for October:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Friday, November 03, 2023

Books of October 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - October Edition.

Stats in October - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 17 (99)Pages Read - 4873 (33232)

Books Read

A Conspiracy in Belgravia by Sherry Thomas The Hollow of Fear by Sherry Thomas
The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz Eyes of the Void by Adrian Tchaikovsky
The Art of Theft by Sherry Thomas Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 25) by Tomohito Oda
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 26) by Tomohito Oda The House at Sea's End by Elly Griffiths
The Confession by Charles Todd Murder on Cold Street by Sherry Thomas
A Curious Beginning by Deanna Raybourn Endurance by Yoshiki Tanaka
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 27) by Tomohito Oda A Taste of Gold and Iron by Alexandra Rowland
Mercy Thompson: Homecoming by Patricia Briggs Moon Called by Patricia Briggs
Stratagem by Yoshiki Tanaka

Collage of the covers of the 17 books listed above.October 2023 Covers

Authors - 10 (46)

Adrian Tchaikovsky - 1 (3)Agatha Cristie - (1)
Alexander McCall Smith - (2)Alexandra Rowland - 1 (1)
Angeline Boulley - (1)Ann Leckie - (2)
Anthony Horowitz - 1 (1)Becky Chambers - (1)
Brandon Sanderson - (1)Carlene O'Connor - (1)
Charles Todd - 1 (10)Connie Willis - (2)
Dan Moren - (2)Daniel O'Malley - (2)
Deanna Raybourn - 1 (1)Ed Yong - (1)
Elizabeth Bear - (1)Elle Cosimano - (1)
Elly Griffiths - 1 (3)Emma Newman - (1)
Fatima Ali - (1)Hiromu Arakawa - (2)
Ilona Andrews - (6)Isaac Asimov - (2)
Jim Butcher - (1)Louise Penny - (1)
Martha Wells - (1)Mary Robinette Kowal - (1)
Matt Parker - (1)Mur Lafferty - (1)
N. K. Jemisin - (1)Patrica Briggs - 2 (6)
Rick Riorden - (1)Robin McKinley - (1)
S. A. Chakraborty - (1)Scott Hawkins - (1)
Sherry Thomas - 4 (5)Stephen King - (1)
Tasha Suri - (2)Timothy Zhan - (1)
Tomohito Oda - 3 (17)Ursula K. Le Guin - (1)
Waubgeshig Rice - (1)Xiran Jay Zhao - (1)
Yoshiki Tanaka - 2 (6)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size.2023 Author Cloud - October Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 1984 (1951)Most Recent Book - 2022 (2022)

Publications by Decades

2020s - 6 (39)2010s - 7 (34)
2000s - 2 (15)1990s - (4)
1980s - 2 (4)1960s - (1)
1950s - (2)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 7 (60)Borrowed From Friends - (2)
My Audible Library - (3)My libro.fm Library - 5 (11)
My "Kindle" Library - (5)My Kobo Library - 5 (19)

Formats

Audio Book - 9 (49)eBook - 4 (29)
eBook (Comic) - 4 (20)Hardcover - (1)

Friday, October 06, 2023

Games of September 2023

I'm trying to focus on other stuff and be intentional with my play time, so my play time was down overall for September and most days I didn't play more than an hour. In trying to be intentional I'm trying to play things I find fulfilling and so I took a deep breath and installed Steam on my Mac Book. I'll eventually get my gaming PC fixed back up, but this will do for today (assuming the laptop survivies, it is a 2016 model).


My top five games (by play time) for September were:

  1. Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - I spent a lot of my time in Tears of the Kingdom wandering around and finishing things up. I'm not sure that hunting almost everything down on the first playthrough has been that good of a choice, but as always the moment-to-moment game play is good so it's usually fun.
    Screenshot: Link dressed in desert garb runs past a giant dragon standing on a huge rock.

  2. Pikmin 4 - Pikmin 4 is a solid game. The only complaint I really have is that it's menu is on a different button than Tears of the Kingdom. It's a little bit conflicting because I *like* Pikmin 3 more, but as I said last month, I'm so glad to have this much more pikmin to play.
    Screenshot: Red and yellow Pikmin are blasted out of a dark cave. Their faces remain vacent.

  3. Final Fantasy XII - I didn't touch this much and I kinda didn't miss it. There are parts of FFXII which are pretty good, but it's slow and grindy and playing it never really feels that rewarding. I enjoy the concept of the game a lot more than I really like playing it.
    Screenshot: Ashe fights a dinosaur at the beach.

  4. Hades - Uh, so, I can play games on my Mac Book. I maybe *shouldn't* play games on my Mac Book, but I can.

    Scrrenshot: Zagreus arrives in Asphodel, flooded with lava and he stands by a large engraving in the floor of a skull holding a bone.

    Uh, please ignore the melting Mac Book.

    But seriously, Hades is still really good.


  5. Super Mario World - I'm not quite sure what's wrong with me that there are so few games that I really love the controls in, but I'm kinda fussy and sometimes Super Mario World is still somehow the game that fits.
    Screenshot: Mario swims down into a tunnel surrounded by grey stone.

Here's my total play time for September:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Sunday, October 01, 2023

Books of September 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - September Edition.

Stats in September - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 10 (82)Pages Read - 3827 (28359)

Books Read

Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky A Lonely Death by Charles Todd
The Janus Stone by Elly Griffiths Marple: Twelve New Mysteries by Agatha Christie (and a dozen more)
Planetfall by Emma Newman The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins
The Stars, Like Dust by Isaac Asimov Ambition by Yoshiki Tanaka
The City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty A Study in Scarlet Women by Sherry Thomas

Collage of the covers of the 10 books listed above.September 2023 Covers

Authors - 10 (42)

Adrian Tchaikovsky - 1 (2)Agatha Cristie - 1 (1)
Alexander McCall Smith - (2)Angeline Boulley - (1)
Ann Leckie - (2)Becky Chambers - 1 (1)
Brandon Sanderson - (1)Carlene O'Connor - (1)
Charles Todd - 1 (9)Connie Willis - (2)
Dan Moren - (2)Daniel O'Malley - (2)
Ed Yong - (1)Elizabeth Bear - (1)
Elle Cosimano - (1)Elly Griffiths - 1 (2)
Emma Newman - 1 (1)Fatima Ali - (1)
Hiromu Arakawa - (2)Ilona Andrews - (6)
Isaac Asimov - 1 (2)Jim Butcher - (1)
Louise Penny - (1)Martha Wells - (1)
Mary Robinette Kowal - (1)Matt Parker - (1)
Mur Lafferty - (1)N. K. Jemisin - (1)
Patrica Briggs - (4)Rick Riorden - (1)
Robin McKinley - (1)S. A. Chakraborty - 1 (1)
Scott Hawkins - 1 (1)Sherry Thomas - 1 (1)
Stephen King - (1)Tasha Suri - (2)
Timothy Zhan - (1)Tomohito Oda - (14)
Ursula K. Le Guin - 1 (1)Waubgeshig Rice - (1)
Xiran Jay Zhao - 1 (1)Yoshiki Tanaka - 1 (4)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size.2023 Author Cloud - September Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 1951 (1951)Most Recent Book - 2022 (2022)

Publications by Decades

2020s - 1 (33)2010s - 7 (27)
2000s - (13)1990s - (4)
1980s - 1 (2)1960s - (1)
1950s - 1 (2)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 8 (53)Borrowed From Friends - (2)
My Audible Library - (3)My libro.fm Library - 1 (6)
My "Kindle" Library - (5)My Kobo Library - 1 (14)

Formats

Audio Book - 5 (40)eBook - 5 (25)
eBook (Comic) - (16)Hardcover - (1)

Monday, September 18, 2023

Hanging out with "My Microbes and Me"

My partner got invited to present at Beakerhead with a team of science communicators from the University of Calgary. I got to tag along and it was a really fun day.

A swab held in front of a table with petri dishes, labels and a bit of other science mess.

My Microbes and Me was a chance for people to see what their microbes looked like either by taking a culture from somewhere on their body or by swabbing their cheeks and getting to look at those swabs under a microscope. The cultures were tagged with an anonymous number and people can go look at their swabs after a few days by going to a site and finding their tag.

It was a lot of fun and I was really glad to get to hang out with a great group of science educators and the kick-ass grad students who helped make it all happen.

A lively crowd around a table full with of microboloy equipment.

Things I learned (or relearned) at BeakerHead:

  • The bacteria on you feed tend to grow best at a lower temperature than other parts of your body so they need a special growth medium.
  • Microscopy is really fun.
  • The university could probably use a really robust set of lending technology which includes an audience setup for a microscope.
  • I’m not great at putting parafilm on petri dishes.
  • I like organising events and managing the back of stage stuff.
  • I struggle a bit with the speaking up to do the communicating.
  • Standing for six hours kinda took it out of me and it really is time to get some strength and stamina back.

Since then I've been thinking about what I could share at a Beakerhead setup and I think there are a lot of fun collaborative AI projects (what if instead of the an LLM picking a word, what if people build up the model) and also some art (there are some old swarmart projects I'd love to revisit and play with further).

The Beakerhead workshop hall full of cool science projects.

Friday, September 15, 2023

Good Reads Ratings

I still keep track of the books I read on Good Reads. One day I might switch over to the fediverse, BookWyrm, but for now the process of switching seems like more work that I’m excited to put in. Good Reads is also home to several people who I really appreciate and I’m always glad to see what they’ve read and what they’ve rated what they’ve read.

Good Reads is updating its interface and the tool tips that share Good Reads rating system are going away, so I thought I’d briefly share what I’m thinking about when I rate a book.

Ratings on Good Reads are complicated. There’s a five start system and everyone is free to give how ever many stars as they want to anything they read (or haven’t read). I find knowing my friends on Good Reads, I understand a bit about a book depending on how different people rate it.

When you look at reviews, it’s evident that a lot of people are putting a lot of different rules together to determine how they rate books. Slightly in secret however, Good Reads has its own tags for what the stars mean and I’ve adopted and adapted that scale for my own ratings.

I should start by saying that my book ratings are totally subjective, and also that they change over time. I re-read the first two books of The Checquy Files this year and didn’t love them as much as I did before. In writing this post, I looked back at Becky Chambers’ books and was surprized at how few stars I gave them at the time.

Beyond that, though here are the five named star rating levels from Good Reads tool tips and how I think about them.

  • 1 Star - did not like it

    A row of five stars the left most gold and the others greyed out and the tool tip `did not like it`.

    This is a great place to start the stars scale. If I find a book totally unreadable, then I usually don’t finish and don’t give it a rating. This is for the books that weren’t great but had some element that made me keep going. Some of them have writing problems, but for me the books I don’t like tend to have a poorly articulated plot or wild mischaracterization.

    I haven’t given a book 1 Star this year, but the recent ones include The Murder Room and Nemesis and in both cases I think the authors were starting to go into decline. I also have Mr. Churchill’s Secretary here, which mostly did not jive with my understanding of mathematics and codebreaking and civil service during World War II and The Forever Peace which I can’t actually remember reading (or can’t differentiate from The Forever War at minimum).

  • 2 Stars - it was ok

    A row of five stars the two left  gold and the others greyed out and the tool tip `it was ok`

    Even if I don’t like a book, there’s usually something interesting to see in it. Sometimes there’s something specific and large that pushes me out, but often they’re books I just don’t really jive with. If I were to use the Sword and Laser scale, they’re mostly books I have to force myself to read rather than make excuses to read.

    The vast majority of Issac Asimov’s books have fallen in here for me. The foundation world building is always interesting, but having two men whose only distinguishing characteristic is that one of them has a beard argue each argument really doesn’t do it for me. The Oleander Sword is an example of a book not jiving, it’s very well written, but so bleak I struggled to read it.

  • 3 Stars - liked it

    A row of five stars the three left gold and the others greyed out and the tool tip `liked it`

    These are the books I’m happy to read. They were good. I liked them. They may not have made me fall in love with them, but when it was time to read (on the Sword and Laser scale) I was happy to be reading them.

    There are a whole bunch of books that come in here, recently most of the Charles Todd’s Rutladge books and the Illona Andrews Kate Daniels series. Just pretty good books that I like, but that don’t really sink their hooks into me.

  • 4 Stars - really liked it

    A row of five stars the four left gold and the others greyed out and the tool tip `really liked it`

    These are the books I make time to read. “You know, I should really go give the sink a wash so I can put the audiobook on and listen”.

    These are the books with something really compelling in them, usually the characters that make it easy to read. Sometimes the story, sometimes the writing and very occasionally the world building will be the thing that keeps me in.

    Patricia Brigg’s Mercy Thompson books go here for me, even though there are elements that I might not like I’m attached enough to Mercy and co. that I’m really happy to get to spend time in their world. Komi Can’t Communicate, seeing the characters live life, sometimes struggling and sometimes succeeding makes me happy. The Firekeeper’s Daughter also fit in here for me, written in a way that kept me wanting to read more, similarly with Moon of the Crusted Snow, where both the writing and the world building kept me interested through out.

  • 5 Stars - it was amazing

    A row of five stars all gold and the others greyed out and the tool tip `it was amazing`

    If a four star book helps get the chores done a five star book is so good that I get nothing done. These are the books I love, the characters or the worlds I’m compelled by and usually the books I don’t ever stop thinking about.

    This year, they are Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie and An Immense World by Ed Yong. Ancillary Justice is a fascinating read, with interesting characters, unusual perspectives, intricate world building and an exciting plot. It’s the book I’ve read the most as an adult, it inspires me to write and if you talk about enough things with me I will start telling you why you aught to read it.

    An Immense World is also fantastic. It breaks down your understanding of perception and beautifully illustrates how different animals in the same space experience the space based on their own umwelt which means a lot of that experience not only isn’t shared but is profoundly incomprehensible to each other.

    I also have a volume of Komi Can’t Communicate in there, and while I can’t remember specifically which one Volume 17 is, if it’s where I think it is, it’s a situation where the characters we’ve gotten to know for years now, reach a point in their growth where they fundamentally change and become better people for the growing.

So that’s what I’m thinking about when I rate a book on good reads. Obviously a five star rating system is silly, but it’s a convenient short hand and certainly when I see other people’s ratings, it gives me a feeling for what to expect from a book.

Now you might ask yourself whether this was just an excuse to talk about Ancillary Justice, An Immense World and Komi Can’t Communicate, and of course it was.

Monday, September 04, 2023

Games of August 2023

August is always a busy month and it's a transitional one for what I play and how. I tend to think about games for summer and games for fall and August always sits in the middle. My partner also traveled a bunch in August so, I didn't play much of Tears of the Kingdom, which she has mostly watched me play. Instead I picked up Final Fantasy XII, and also poked Pikmin 4. I also played a bit of Cursed Treasure 2 (remastered!) which has suggested to me that it's probably time to get my PC fixed up again so that I can do some medium screen gaming (also also maybe give some money to game makers that aren't Nintendo.

August was also not my greatest month for keeping things organized, so the data for the month is artificially reconstructed in places, but close enough for my purposes.


My top five games (by play time) for August were:

  1. Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age - I find that I like FFXII provided that I don't invest too heavily in it. Which, if you look at my earlier thoughts on the game matches that, half-hour a day model. If you try to rush it, or to push through, the game pushes back and you find yourself under-levelled and under-equipped. It needs to be played slowly and steadily and you get to advance the plot once or twice a week.
    Screenshot: Protagonists Vaan, Ashe and Balthier fight a (relatively small) Tyrannosaurus in a desert.
    There's enough fun in it, especially now that I'm focused on gear and organizing gambits that I keep playing, but I find it makes it really hard to invest in the game. It's done not badly for my audio book listening, and to my watch times for PlayFrame and Noah Gervais.

  2. Pikmin 4 - If I had a complaint about Pikmin 3 it's that there wasn't enough of it. Pikmin 4 is a brilliant answer to that problem in that a) it exists and b) there's quite a bit of it. As a bonus, c) it's an excellent improvement on all of the elements of all of the games. This is the best Pikmin game and it's really fun. I do wish it was a little better at tutorializing things (I know asking Nintendo for more tutorials is a dangerous game). I played like 10 hours not realising that you could switch to your dog co-captain (in addition to riding them and having them fight all your fights.)
    Screenshot, The Rescue Squad Rookie and Oatchi the dog direct glowing green pikmin to take start bits back to their nest in the dark of night.

  3. Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - I mostly didn't play ToTK this month, but did pick it up a couple of times when I was feeling low energy or down. One of the brilliant things about Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom is how easy it is to jump in and find something interesting to do or find something interesting to see. I really appreciate that deeply absorbing nature.
    Screenshot: Link aims an arrow at a Moblin Boss and crew coming up a rise in a grassy field.


Here's my total play time for August:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Sunday, September 03, 2023

Books of August 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - August Edition.

Stats in August - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 10 (72)Pages Read - 3234 (24532)

Books Read

A Matter of Justice by Charles Todd The Red Door by Charles Todd
Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao Magic Rises by Ilona Andrews
Magic Breaks by Ilona Andrews Humble Pi: A Comedy of Maths Errors by Matt Parker
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths
To Be Taught, If Fortunate by Becky Chambers The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal

Collage of the covers of the 10 books listed above. August 2023 Covers

Authors - 8 (37)

Adrian Tchaikovsky - (1)Alexander McCall Smith - (2)
Angeline Boulley - (1)Hiromu Arakawa - (2)
Ann Leckie - (2)Becky Chambers - 1 (1)
Brandon Sanderson - (1)Carlene O'Connor - (1)
Charles Todd - 2 (8)Connie Willis - (2)
Dan Moren - (2)Daniel O'Malley - (2)
Ed Yong - (1)Elizabeth Bear - (1)
Elle Cosimano - (1)Elly Griffiths
Fatima Ali - (1)Ilona Andrews - 2 (6)
Isaac Asimov - (1)Jim Butcher - (1)
Louise Penny - (1)Martha Wells - (1)
Mary Robinette Kowal - 1 (1)Matt Parker - 1 (1)
Mur Lafferty - (1)N. K. Jemisin - (1)
Patrica Briggs - (4)Rick Riorden - (1)
Robin McKinley - (1)Stephen King - (1)
Tasha Suri - (2)Timothy Zhan - (1)
Tomohito Oda - (14)Ursula K. Le Guin - 1 (1)
Waubgeshig Rice - (1)Xiran Jay Zhao - 1 (1)
Yoshiki Tanaka - (3)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size.2023 Author Cloud - August Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 1969 (1953)Most Recent Book - 2022 (2022)

Publications by Decades

2020s - 2 (32)2010s - 4 (20)
2000s - 3 (13)1990s - (4)
1980s - (1)1960s - 1 (1)
1950s - (1)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 7 (45)Borrowed From Friends - (2)
My Audible Library - (3)My libro.fm Library - 3 (5)
My "Kindle" Library - (5)My Kobo Library - (13)

Formats

Audio Book - 5 (35)eBook - 5 (20)
eBook (Comic) - (16)Hardcover - (1)

Sunday, August 20, 2023

Video Games of July 2023

I felt a bit flat overall in July and mostly disappeared into the immense depths of Tears of the Kingdom. I poked a couple of other things, before switching over to Final Fantasy XII at the end of the month when my partner was out of town. 

I haven't been enjoying game tracking as much the last little while and I'm going to institute a cut off that if I didn't play an hour of the game I'm not going to write about it. (Unless I want to, it's my blog).


My top three games (by play time) for July were:

  1. Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - I've really been plumbing the depths of the side stories and experiences in Tears of the Kingdom. Just like Breath of the Wild the amount of good things to go and do is hard to imagine. I have really distracted myself from the main story, so that's starting to feel a bit vague, but I'm sure once I pick it up again the game will snap back into focus.
    Screenshot: Link stands in a sun drenched golden forest looking at a stone platform.

  2. Mario Kart 8: Deluxe - Vroom vroom. Spent a bit of time working on time trials.
    Screenshot: Roselina races towards Toadstool Castle.

  3. Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age - I needed something to play that my partner wasn't too invested in. With Dan Floyd playing both FFXIV and FFXVI on Playframe I've been thinking about Final Fantasy more and figured it was a good time to pick this up on switch. Despite having played the first few hours not that long ago, it's interesting how much I've forgotten. I like the game but I can't say it's one of the most gripping, not from story or game play or style even.
    Screenshot: Vaan looks towards the camera, he seems to be whining and has been hit hard enough on the side of the face to leave a welt.


Here's my total play time for July:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Saturday, August 12, 2023

Books of July 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - July Edition.

Stats in July - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 10 (52)Pages Read - 3963 (21298)

Books Read

Dawn by Yoshiki Tanaka Station Eternity by Mur Lafferty
Under Fortunate Stars by Charles Todd Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice
A Pale Horse by Charles Todd The Rook by Daniel O'Malley
Stiletto by Daniel O'Malley The Oleander Sword by Tasha Suri
The Cloud Roads by Martha Wells Magic Slays by Ilona Andrews

Collage of the covers of the 10 books listed above. July 2023 Covers

Authors - 3 (31)

Adrian Tchaikovsky - (1)Alexander McCall Smith - (2)
Angeline Boulley - (1)Hiromu Arakawa - (2)
Ann Leckie - (2)Brandon Sanderson - (1)
Carlene O'Connor - (1)Charles Todd - 2 (6)
Connie Willis - (2)Dan Moren - (2)
Daniel O'Malley - 2 (2)Ed Yong - (1)
Elizabeth Bear - (1)Elle Cosimano - (1)
Fatima Ali - (1)Ilona Andrews - 1 (4)
Isaac Asimov - (1)Jim Butcher - (1)
Louise Penny - (1)Martha Wells - 1 (1)
Mur Lafferty - 1 (1)N. K. Jemisin - (1)
Patrica Briggs - (4)Rick Riorden - (1)
Robin McKinley - (1)Stephen King - (1)
Tasha Suri - 1 (2)Timothy Zhan - (1)
Tomohito Oda - (14)Waubgeshig Rice - 1 (1)
Yoshiki Tanaka - 1 (3)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size.2023 Author Cloud - July Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 1982 (1953)Most Recent Book - 2022 (2022)

Publications by Decades

2020s - 3 (30)2010s - 5 (16)
2000s - 1 (10)1990s - (4)
1980s - 1 (1)1950s - (1)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 6 (38)Borrowed From Friends - (2)
My Audible Library - 2 (3)My libro.fm Library - 1 (2)
My "Kindle" Library - (5)My Kobo Library - 1 (13)

Formats

Audio Book - 5 (30)eBook - 5 (15)
eBook (Comic) - (16)Hardcover - (1)

Thursday, August 03, 2023

Ten and Three Years Blogging

Well, it’s August again and I get to wish you Happy Blog End and Start Day.

If this is your first Blog End and Start Day, welcome! This is the day when I “wrap up” my blog and then also the day when I start a “new” blog for a new year. This is the tradition because I always find it hard when long running projects fade away and so I don’t want to take on anything that doesn’t have a committed end date. So every August I start a new season (or edition, or volume) of the blog.

This is somewhat complicated by the fact that I tend to actually make changes to how I’m blogging in January, but I publish my first real post on … July 24, 2011… wait why do I write publish these these on August 1? Aaanyway, this is my yearly update to the Blog as Blog (writing about things, as opposed to project updates).

The biggest thing that’s different this year from last year is that the actual number of posts is way down. I’ve gone from averaging 5ish posts a month to more like 3. Most of that is changing how I keep track of the books I’ve been reading, and going from a list to a monthly infographic. This has generally made me happier because it cuts down on trying to keep track of the books and having a constant need to post and honestly making the monthly infographics has been fun. In light of all of the AI nonsense going on right now, doing things by hand feels worthwhile and entertaining and satisfying.

I’ve also been trying to put less stuff on the blog so that I can focus more on projects, be that [writing] or other stuff. I also want to write more better blog posts, I really want 2023 to be the year I set myself as a writer in my mind, and writing more meaningful posts is a part of that, so I’m trying to put less filler on the blog.

Since April I’ve given myself the objective of writing two meaningful blog posts each month. One is supposed to go on here, and the other is supposed to go on my professional blog Learning and Technology. I should be at eight posts so far, and I’m at five, but I feel like I’m moving in the correct direction. (It is the nature of blogging that all posts are made while moving in the correct direction because when you’re falling around not doing things, one of the things you don’t do is blog.)

Virtual stickies on two squares, one square reading 'General Update on Code Doodles', 'Most Memorable Mario Levels', 'and Station Mystery Process'. The other reads 'Using Good AI for Teaching' and 'Thinking more about AI - June 2023 edition'

I think I’m happy content wise with what’s up and I feel like I’m doing things I like doing in a way I like doing them.

What I’m increasingly less happy with is the platform. I’ve been on Blogger for a while and got very close to quitting a few years back when they suddenly modernised a bunch of stuff and it got easier to use. As a platform blogger is okay, but it isn’t exactly doing what I want. The biggest (and maybe dumbest) thing right now is that it still limits you to 200 characters of tags per post. That’s fewer characters than I generally need and it breaks the way I want to be using tags.

The other thing is it’s past time that I consolidated my digital footprint outside of Google’s infrastructure. Especially with issues coming up around AI, the time feels right to move on, but also just in general if I want to advocate for doing things the right way online I should probably do things the way I think they should be done.

So I’m going to start looking at moving the blog over to my own infrastructure. I’ll post lots of updates as I get things set up, but you may have to move your RSS feed when the change comes. A while back feedburner had a fit, so I took it off the blog, but then it started working again, so if you follow on RSS and have for a while, migration should happen automatically, but it may not. It’s 2023 never trust a corporation, or software, or anyone, or anything. Maybe move to the woods and help restrore the environment...

Cough. I’m not 100% sure what tech stack I’m going to go to, but figuring that out will give me more things to blog about, so it’s a win all around. At the moment, I might lean into wordpress, but I also think, given a lot of what I want out of the web, I may go towards Hugo and try to keep things as flat and dumb as possible.

Anyway, that’s your update for another Year of the Blog. Take care and I’ll see you in August 2024 (plus hopefully lots of days in between).

A sky split with clouds on the left and blue on the right over bright trees.

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Project 23 - Update - Actually Writing the Station Mystery

I’m trying to get better about getting things done and finishing projects. Of course, I’ve decided to try finishing an 80,000 - 100,000 word novel. I hear that this may not be the easiest way to get practice in.

Still I’ve been working on writing a “shitty first draft"1 of my Station Mystery novel for the last few weeks. When I wrote about the book back in January I mentioned not being too sure how to go forward since I’m usually trying to do so many things at once. I’ve decided to focus on the Station Mystery as my primary project and try to prioritise working on it. So for these last few weeks I’ve set a goal of writing for half an hour a day, which I do after the things I have to get done, but before the things I should probably do. I’m not really consistent yet, but I’m moving in the right direction.

Half-an-hour is not a lot of time. I’m only able to write about 500 words if I write the whole time. On the other hand, I’m having fun, I’m actually doing it and 500 words a day is so much better than 0. So for now I’m going to say that it’s a good start.

Chart of words written, with 3 chapters growing over time with the total ending just over 6000 words.

When writing, I’ve instituted a general rule that once I finish a paragraph, I’m not allowed to go back and edit it and this is really helping me to get stuff on the page. I am allowing myself to leave comments in the margin as I go so I can either fix a thing, or just note something or just point out just how shitty the draft is. This gives me just enough of a push that I can let what I’m writing go without getting hung up on it being good or even making that much sense.

A blurred view of green and yellow stickies on a yellow rectangle.

Since I first wrote about the Station Mystery at the beginning of January I did two starts on the first chapter and gave up, but my new rule is helping get things on the page. I’ve also rewritten the outline, with less text but more sticky notes in Miro. Those two outlines have helped me work out what needs to be said and what I’m supposed to be doing in each scene. Since it *is* a murder mystery, it’s also helpful for figuring out how the mystery fits together.

Comments from a google doc saying: 'Weird?' 'Weird.' make sure to make formal bow a thing. No shaking hands and generally not much touching non-family

I’ve also started using Obsidian to build a world book for the story. I’ve been using it increasingly to keep track of things at work and it’s a really helpful way to track things like relationships. I’m trying not to world build too much and it helps to be able to make decisions on the fly.

At this rate I hope I’ll be finished with the first draft by the end of the year and by then I’ll have a whole extra year’s practice of writing and be ready for what ever happens next.

1Lamott, A. (1980). Bird by bird. Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group

The Books I Read - October 2024

Fairly quiet month. My partner and I spent a while reading through A Night in the Lonesome October and at about a chapter each day, it w...