Julio Biason
5 years ago
2 changed files with 86 additions and 0 deletions
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title = "Dragon's Winter - Elizabeth A. Lynn" |
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date = 2019-08-14 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["en-au", "books", "reviews", "fantasy", "elizabeth a lynn"] |
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[Goodreads Summary](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22746453-dragon-s-winter): |
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Karadur and Tenjiro are twin sons of Kojiro Antani, the dragon lord of Ippa. |
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But only Karadur, whose name means "fire-bringer," bears the blood of the |
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dragon in his veins. His younger brother, Tenjiro or "Heaven's hope," was |
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second out of the womb and is the weakest and smallest of the two. As the |
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twins grow to maturity, Karadur is anxious to attain the promise of his blood |
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and transform into the dragon he is capable of becoming. But Tenjiro, who |
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bears the scars of Karadur's claws, resents his older brother and, on the eve |
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of Karadur's transformation, steals the talisman that makes the change |
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possible. That same night he disappears, fleeing to a distant, icy realm where |
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he will reemerge as a powerful wizard bent on destroying his older brother. |
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But Karadur, lord of Dragon Keep, is prepared to go to war against Tenjiro, |
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and it's likely only one will survive. --Craig Engler (less) |
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{{ stars(stars=3) }} |
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A fantasy book with changelings, a feud between brothers and a medieval |
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setting. |
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The problem? It is too cliché. |
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Sure it's a simple read, but the amount of clichés, like the big baddie, the |
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corruption of a character by some supernatural power, the character with an |
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immense power that he needs to learn how to control, even the freaking "let me |
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build a character you'll cheer for and I'll kill them" is there. |
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title = "Microservices In Action - Morgan Bruce" |
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date = 2019-08-13 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["books", "en-au", "reviews", "microservices", "morgan bruce"] |
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[GoodReads summary](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/36579817-microservices-in-action): |
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Microservices in Action is a practical book about building and deploying |
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microservice-based applications. Written for developers and architects with a |
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solid grasp of service-oriented development, it tackles the challenge of |
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putting microservices into production. You'll begin with an in-depth overview |
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of microservice design principles, building on your knowledge of traditional |
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systems. Then, you'll start creating a reliable road to production. You'll |
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explore examples using Kubernetes, Docker, and Google Container Engine as you |
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learn to build clusters and maintain them after deployment. Throughout this |
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rich, experience-driven book, you'll move through real-world use cases |
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including a continuous delivery pipeline, production monitoring, and practical |
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techniques for scaling and maintaining a healthy system. |
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{{ stars(stars=2) }} |
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For an "In Action" title, there is very little "Action" going on. Not that the |
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book lacks information: There is plenty of theoretical information, although a |
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lot is hidden in "cohesive" adjectives: "If you do this, the service will not |
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be cohesive", "doing so will make it more cohesive"... and what the author |
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means by "cohesive" is never explained -- I'd ask the author to replace every |
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reference to cohesive with a proper explanation. |
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Also, there are a lot of images. Not that images by themselves is bad, but when |
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they are used for the obvious, it really irks me -- specially 'cause I read |
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those books on a "black background with white letters" and images do not fit |
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that properly, using a white background that usually just hurts my eyes. And by |
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"used for the obvious", there are images follow the description of "A and B |
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communicate with C" and a large image showing "A --> C <-- B"; was that really |
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necessary? |
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The intro says the code is in Python, and that was something that I'd really |
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like to see. There is very little code in this book and the parts shown are |
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basically "look at this library" instead of focusing on what it really does; a |
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library for retrying is nice and all, but would it be so hard to write the |
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code, even if that code would be somewhat longer, to show the point you're |
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trying to make instead of being just an example of a library? |
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Speaking of code, there is also a long discussion about deploying |
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microservices, which is a good thing, but the author decided that it would use |
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Google Cloud Platform and every single explanation focuses more on how to |
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deploy on GCP instead of actually discussing deployment. |
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