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kevinrutherford

kevinrutherford@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

I loving walking in the great UK outdoors -- usually in the Scottish highlands or (more usually) in and around the Peak District, which is close to where I live. I read a lot of police procedurals and books about software development.

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Martin Edwards: Coffin Trail, The (Paperback, 2005, Allison & Busby Limited) 3 stars

Oxford historian Daniel Kind and his partner Miranda both want to escape to a new …

Rough around the edges

3 stars

If this had been Edwards' first novel I would be saying it's not bad for a new novelist starting out. But for an author who had been writing for a decade by this time, I thought most aspects of this novel -- plotting, characters, dailogue, use of language -- were clumsy. And this applies particularly to the moment of inspiration in which the lead suddenly understands the identity of the murderer.

I'm put off reading the rest of the series now, which is perhaps a shame.

In a word: amateurish.

Efrat Goldratt-Ashlag: Goldratt's Rules of Flow (Paperback, North River Press) 2 stars

Marc Wilson is not giving up. He is determined to turn around the struggling family …

Goldratt re-invents kanban

2 stars

This is a fairly short "business novel" in which Eli Goldratt's daughter explains Lean and Kanban using Theory of Constraints terminology, by re-hashing most of what's in Goldratt's earlier 'Critical Chain'. I suppose some of the ideas might be new to some people, but there's nothing really important here if you're already familiar with Lean and Agile. And the "novel" is pretty thin on the ground, with little of the allegorical story-telling that made 'The Goal' so wonderful.

In a word: lame.

Martin Edwards: Gallows Court (2020, Head of Zeus) 5 stars

The night is sooty, sulphurous, and malign. A spate of violent deaths has horrified the …

I couldn't put it down!

5 stars

Gallows Court is a highly entertaining and gripping crime caper, told mostly through the eyes of a junior newspaper reporter. The plot's twists and turns are always unexpected, and so for once I had no advance inkling as to how things would play out. Highly recommended.

Peter M. Senge: The Fifth Discipline : the art and practice of the learning Organization (2010, Penguin Random House) No rating

Currently re-reading the introductory sections on feedback loops in systems thinking and thoroughly enjoying it all again. Makes me want to build dynamic models for on of my current clients, or build a simulation tool.

Also, it has me thinking about the relationship between Systems Thinking and Goldratt's Theory of Constraints. How do they interact? Under which circumstances is each the more appropriate tool? Etc etc. Maybe there's some hobby maths to be done here...!

reviewed A Rising Man by Abir Mukherjee (Wyndham & Banarjee, #1)

Abir Mukherjee: A Rising Man (2017, Penguin Random House) 4 stars

India, 1919. Desperate for a fresh start, Captain Sam Wyndham arrives to take up an …

A good old-fashioned thriller

4 stars

I know next to nothing about the British Raj in Calcutta after WWI, so I found this tale both enjoyable and highly informative. The main characters are likeable, the story is told at a good pace, and the plotting is accomplished. Shame the identity of the murderer was telegraphed so clearly that guessed it after reading only 20% of the book...