Author name: Paul Darr

Paul Darr has lived in California, Oregon, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, and currently lives in San Antonio, Texas. Paul is also an Army Veteran, who has deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. On the political spectrum Paul is a Classical Liberal and member of the Libertarian Party. Paul is currently employed as an IT Manager and is a father of a handsome boy and beautiful daughter. In his free time Paul enjoys reading, using and modifying open source software, gaming, and several other geeky pursuits.

Wizards First Rule Review

Wizard's_First_RuleI enjoy reading fantasy literature and “Wizards First Rule” was a good addition. “Wizards First Rule”, written by Terry Goodkind, is the first book in the epic fantasy series The Sword of Truth. The novel was adapted to TV in the 2008 series Legend of the Seeker. People seem to either love or hate this book, so there is a 50/50 chance you will disagree with my opinion.

1. Warning!!! There are many adult themes in this book. I felt Terry Goodkind had a bit of a “split personality” disorder in the writing of this book. He would have scenes like in the beginning which presented a great deal of naiveté on the part of the protagonists. Then in other portions of the book he delves into very dark fantasy with graphic descriptions of or allusions to torture, rape, child molestation. I would not recommend this book for young readers even though the first few pages would make you think otherwise.

2. I felt the story moved along well and I was entertained in spite of it being a bit of an adventure on rails.

3. I thought some areas of the writing was a bit awkward. If you are a perfectionist this will drive you crazy. If you can cut the author some slack like me, then it’s just fine.

4. I actually like that the main character falls far before getting back up. It’s interesting to see how that develops his character.

5. I saw the TV show before watching the book and enjoyed it.
After reading the book I can’t watch the TV show anymore. They changed too much from the book and it just makes me angry to watch.

Overall I would recommend this book to people who like fantasy novels and can deal with adult themes.

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American Gods

AmericanGods10thI recently finished the book American Gods by Neil Gaiman. The version I read was the 10th Anniversary Edition which is the authors preferred text. Overall I enjoyed the book and it’s different take mythology and religion in a fantasy setting. I can see how this book might have influenced some authors over the past ten years. One word of caution is that this book is not suitable for younger or sensitive readers. The book contains profanity and descriptions of nudity/sexual acts and violence. Some of my favorite elements of the book are:

1. It doesn’t answer everything. Some books have major unintentional plot holes… this book is not one of them. I’m just saying it doesn’t explain every plot point and the reader is left with minor questions and this is a good thing. Since the book deals with mythology and the supernatural I enjoy that everything is not explained enough to steal the magic from it.

2. The book is gritty. I don’t mean that the pages are dirty. I’m referring to the fact that element’s of real life aren’t skipped over. Hunger, thirst, pain and mundane stuff like needing to piss are parts of the book. It’s also nice that magic doesn’t solve everything while still being an element.

3. The “hero” of the story isn’t perfect. The protagonist starts off in a jail but is actually a “good” person comparatively. Shadow has many qualities the reader is brought to admire but the guy still screws up on occasion.

4. The book describes some real life crazy places. The House on the Rock and Rock City are both real places. At first I had thought they were complete inventions of Neil Gaiman’s mind. It’s often amusing to have real places used in story’s like this.

I’ve tried to share a few things without putting spoilers in there. If you have read the book, please tell me what you think of it?

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Death of my router

2014-02-16 22.22.24November 24, 2006 – 15 February 2014

I purchased my Linksys WRT54GC during the Black Friday sales of 2006. I got it for $1 (after mail in rebates). I didn’t really expect much of the router at the price but it lasted for over 7 years of heavy home use.

Yesterday evening a friend mentioned noticing my Wifi was down. I normally let guests use it while here. I went upstairs to find the old Linksys powering on but dead. So I scoured through my spare electronics bins and found the power adapter to a regular non-wifi router. It’s not as easy as it sounds I have a few dozen power adapters and 11 bins of old electronic devices and cables.

After finding everything, I was finally able to get the wired network up. Later I decided to get wifi in the house DIY style. I went to my server which acts as a web/file/print/media server in our home and added another duty to it. It’s now pulling yet another duty as a wifi access point. It took around two hours to get that set up because most of the how-to’s I read on setting up an infrastructure wifi access point had a few details different from each other. My setup of course had a few specifics I had to tweak so it basically it became trial and error figuring out how to configure some of it. While frustrating, it was good to learn the process. Now I’m debating if I want to get a replacement wifi router or just keep the setup as is. At any rate I will write yet another guide for how to use a spare pc as a Linux based wifi access point in the future in case someone else runs into the same struggles I had.

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The Deed of Paksenarrion

deed_of_paksenarrionI recently finished The Deed of Paksenarrion which is an omnibus collection of the books Sheepfarmer’s Daughter, Divided Allegiance and Oath of Gold by Elizabeth Moon. The entire collection of books is 1501 pages long which averages to around 500 pages per book. The book length seems to be about average for the fantasy genre. I feel these books have several elements that make it stick out from others.

1. Strong female protagonist

While other books do have female protagonists, they are not well represented in traditional fantasy. I feel this is changing in more recent in fantasy literature and I feel this book gets a female protagonist “right”.

2. Get’s the concept of Paladins

While Paladin’s appear in other fantasy literature I feel this is the first book that I have read that really makes the Paladin more than a two dimensional set piece for the story. On the same note I feel the concept of fantasy world religion is mush better developed in this book than some others I have read.

3. Mercenary life as an aspect of fantasy
The first portion of the book starts very low magic with life as a mercenary. It later increases the magic level of the book but I appreciate the grittiness of mundane military life portrayed in the book.

4. At some points this book goes full D&D
Sure there the elements of Paladins, Clerics and deities that resemble Saint Cuthbert but the parts that got me was the parts that go full dungeon crawl. If you have played a fantasy table top game before, you will recognize when this happens. If you haven’t and you like this book, you might give table top role playing a try.

On a side note, why did the cover artist put Paks in plate armor with breasts? She wore boiled leather and chain mail through most of the book. I guess that just proves that cover artists often don’t read the books.

Overall I enjoyed this book and I would recommend it to others. I’m glad my friend Scott Kesilis recommended it to me.

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