To a political pundit: Nixonland, by Rick Perlstein
To a mumorpeger-playing alpha geek: Halting State, by Charles Stross
To someone who needs to quit whining: The Discourses of Epictetus
To someone who has lost faith in fantasy novels: The Name of the Wind, by Patrick Rothfuss
To myself at 10: The Adventures of Endill Swift, by Stuart McDonald
To myself at 16: Callahan’s Crosstime Saloon, by Spider Robinson
To someone who takes things too lightly: Shikasta, by Doris Lessing
To someone who takes things too seriously: Tales of the Dying Earth, by Jack Vance
To someone interested in early 20th century Europe: The Pyat Quartet, by Michael Moorcock
To someone rather clever: Slaughtermatic, by Steve Aylett
To a teenage rebel (or someone you want to make into one): Little Brother, by Cory Doctorow
To the discerning short story reader: The Golden Apples of the Sun, by Ray Bradbury
Happy annual celebration of the Jesus child deity!
In Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book, a toddler, escaped from an assassin sent to murder his family, finds safety in a graveyard. He grows up among the dead and the undead, with ghosts as parents, a vampire guardian, and a witch as friend. Beneath the graveyard lie older evils, and in the outside world the assassin is still searching.

Alan Moore has also written a novel. It wasn’t enough for him to be the world’s greatest comic book writer? He must put authors to shame as well?
I went to Dublin this weekend to expand my social network at Google’s European headquarters. This is to prepare for the day when they turn Evil. With one friend (so far) on the inside, I, for one, will now welcome our new Google overlords.
Jack Vance’s Dying Earth novels are set in the last years of the Sun’s life, when technology has given way to (or become) magic.