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Paging [livejournal.com profile] jhall1...

Just trundled over to Amazon to poke forlornly at the The Unorthodox Engineers listing to see if there's an affordable copy -- and found that it was released in ebook format by Gateway back in September. I think DRMed, alas, but at least it's available. 30 seconds later I was logged into my Kobo account and chucking a couple of quid at the Kobo server...

Gateway have several other books by Kapp in their ebook catalogue, so I may add to my collection.

http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/the-unorthodox-engineers -- Kobo (epub)
The Unorthodox Engineers - Amazon UK
http://www.amazon.com/Unorthodox-Engineers-Colin-Kapp-ebook/dp/B00F50EX5I/ - Amazon US
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76) Colin Kapp -- Patterns of Chaos

Another of the books that I greatly enjoyed as a teenager but haven't read for some years. Fortunately it turns out that this is one I still enjoy. A man wakes in the middle of a vicious attack upon a city by a starship, dragged from unconsciousness by a voice inside his head. He has no memory of who he is and what he's doing there, but the voice in his head is no hallucination. The first priority is to get him up and moving to where he's supposed to be -- because Bron is a deepcover agent with a telepathic link back to his base, and being amnesiac doesn't excuse him from the job he was sent to do. Within a few hours, the planet he's on will be destroyed by hellburners, deadly missiles that can tear a planet apart. And in those hours, the Destroyer fleet will raid, taking slaves and goods, and most particularly anyone with expertise in chaos theory -- the concept that the patterns of chaos can be read to predict the future. One of the first things Bron learns about himself is that he has a synthetic personality embedded to allow him to pass as one of those experts, making him a target for the raiders - and a Trojan horse.

Which would be an interesting story in its own right, and the initial phase of the book is a very good story of a deepcover agent rediscovering who he is a bit at a time, while in the middle of the most dangerous job he's ever done. But Kapp takes it to a new level, as Bron comes to understand that the hellburner was aimed at him. Specifically him, personally. And that it's been on its way for 700 million years...

This is a solid piece of 1970s space opera, with a plot on the grand scale combined with some fascinating details to flesh out the universe, and some well-realised characters. It's short by modern standards, but that's all to the good, as it's a tightly written story. An entertaining way to pass a few hours.

LibraryThing entry
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Book 92

Anharitte is the port city on a feudal planet whose location makes it an important hub in interstellar commerce. The Free Traders' local agent, Tito Ren, is charged with ensuring that things run smoothly. Alas for Ren, a powerful wizard is educating his slaves well beyond what is needed for them to do their tasks, and it's clear that the wizard is intent on brewing exactly the sort of social disruption that could cause trouble for trade. It's also clear to Ren that the wizard is no wizard, but an import like himself, using advanced technology to create his magic. Proving this to the local authorities is another matter, and Ren embarks on a little local war with the Imaiz, a careful balancing act that he keeps within the accepted practices of the society he's working within. Ren's problem is that he finds himself ever more in sympathy with the Imaiz's goals, while still wanting to keep faith with his employers.

It's a short novel by current standards, but there's plenty packed into it, from the entertainment of the cat-and-mouse game, to the careful description of Anharrite's culture, to the depiction of Ren's growing moral quandary. This is one of the books I happily re-read every so often.

LibraryThing entry

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