User Profile

Nils

Nils@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 9 months, 1 week ago

I read books in English and my native Norwegian. I'll comment and review in the language of the book. Main preferences are fantasy, sci-fi and crime (fiction), and history, social sciences and nature/evolution (non-fiction).

To support my reading habits I work as a developer/data scientist, with a M.Sc. in energy engineering. I care about the war in Ukraine, climate change, democracy. I reside in Oslo, Norway with wife and two kids.

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Nils's books

To Read (View all 8)

Currently Reading

Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman: GOOD OMENS (2006) 4 stars

According to The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch (the world's only completely …

Fun and light

4 stars

This was a light and mostly funny read with some (to me) novel ideas, but not hilarious or deep. I was hoping for either. I would probably have enjoyed this book more 20 years ago at the end of my teens.

I recently read American Gods by one of the authors (Neil Gaiman). That book made a much bigger impression with more interesting ideas.

P. W. Singer, August Cole: Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War (2016, Eamon Dolan) 4 stars

I was hoping for more

2 stars

I've been trying to find a visionary book about future warfare - something like White Sun War by Mick Ryan. Based on reviews and mentions online I had high hopes for this book.

But although it was a light and sometimes fun read I was disappointed by both the story line, where attention was places and the language. The book is action packed, but this comes at the cost of what would be more interesting focus on the strategic aspects of this future war.

I will not re-read nor recommend. There are probably plenty of better action filled books out there.

Mick Ryan: White Sun War (2023, Casemate Publishers & Book Distributors, LLC, Casemate) 5 stars

After decades of poising on the brink, the United States and China finally go to …

Great book with an agenda

5 stars

This is a great read for anyone with an interest in international affairs, armed conflict and the future. I tick all boxes.

The book explores a realistic near-future conflict over Taiwan in a realistic and believable fashion.

If you consider this book you should be aware that the author has an agenda, beyond just your entertainment in informing decision makers and military personell on how tactics, strategies and materiell may evolve in the near future. The author is a retired Australian Army Major General and regular writer on these topics.

As he writes in the introduction: "Consequently, I decided that I would eschew non-fiction and instead write the history of the war for Taiwan as a novel" (to make the lessons more accessible - my comment).