Book Club 2025: Death and the Princess by Robert Barnard

After the fairly incompetent mystery I read last, I wanted something more reliable, and Barnard is usually reliable.

But this isn’t quite satisfactory. Barnard is quite varied in scenery and plot, but this is pretty unusual even for him. It’s like his agent told him to write a mystery set in royal circles, and he reluctantly agreed. So he spends quite a bit of the book bemoaning how little interest he has in royals, and this seems to affect the plot as well: It’s one of those books where it’s not even clear whether there’s been a crime… and then the resolution comes out of left field with twenty pages to go.

So even if this is a short novel, Barnard has to pad it with blather about Society These Days, and it all leads to a book that feels like it’s caught in a complete stasis — as if Barnard, usually a master plotter, didn’t really know where to go with it all.

But Barnard has the amusing patter down as always, so it’s not that bad, really.

Death and the Princess (1982) by Robert Barnard (buy used, 3.46 on Goodreads)

Search Ranking Tweaks on kwakk.info

The search engine on kwakk.info (the comics research site) uses a very simple ranking algorithm. For instance, if you want to see if anybody has talked about Batman in conjunction with (Dirty) Harry, you might lazily type batman harry… but then the first four hits don’t really talk about that.

That’s because the search engine first finds all pages that have batman and harry, and then ranks them by how many instances of both these words there are. And that’s it.

But the search engine does allow using operators like ADJ and NEAR to say “just give me results where these words are (respectively) after one another (with some words in between) or just near each other in general”.

No users can be expected to know that, so I wondered whether I could just do three queries and then smush the results together. Tada:

Now the search engine first does ADJ, then NEAR, and finally (as before) AND, and uses that to give a better ranking. The number of results is the same as before — the only thing that’s affected is how the results are ordered.

Now hopefully with more relevant stuff towards the top.

This makes searches a bit slower… and I may have screwed something up, because the rewrite wasn’t altogether trivial, so let me know if you see any oddities.

Oh, and:

So close to 11K!!!

Book Club 2025: A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett

I was quite impressed with the first book in this series. I mean, it was utterly stupid, but it was extremely entertaining. And so I read the second book.

And… it’s not good. The first book was nice in that it was all investigation all the time, but there’s a whole lot less plot in this book. Instead it feels like we’re in total stasis for large parts of the book, and the author resorts to adding bickering between the characters to pad things out, as well as adding character development (it turns out that the protagonist’s father wasn’t there for him when he grew up) and several scenes of gross grossness.

It was way too easy to guess who the killers were in the first book, so I wondered whether he had honed his mystery-writing skills on that point for this one, but nope: As soon as the character was introduced, he might has well have had neon signs flashing pointing at him: “HE’S THE ONE!!!”

This book felt like it was twice as long as the first, so I was shocked when I saw that they’re the same number of pages.

Of course this book has an even higher Goodreads rating than the first book — but that’s usually the case with series: People who didn’t like the first book aren’t going to be reading the second book, so a book has to be really awful to have the ratings decrease. It is interesting that the second book has half as many reviews, but then again, it’s newer, so…

Amusingly enough, the third book (which will be published in August 2026) already has 43 reviews. Lots of psychics use Goodreads.

Wow.

Well, gotta have a look at the one star reviews…

That’s more like it.

This one is accurate.

Well, it’s all a disappointment after the first book — I thought I had found an entertainingly schlocky author, but the entertainment factor dissipated.

A Drop of Corruption (2025) by Robert Jackson Bennett (buy new, buy used, 4.49 on Goodreads)

My Ten Most Popular Blog Posts in 2025

Hey, I’ve got WordPress blog statistics in Emacs now, so I can whip up one of these posts like *snap*. Perhaps there’s something interesting here…

Some caveats: Web stats are just hard, and they’re getting more and more useless. Even if you try to use old-fashioned best practices in filtering out non-human traffic (i.e., register stats via JS callbacks to avoid counting curl, as well as filtering out bots that announce themselves), there’s just so many AI browsers that will slam you (and use normal User-Agents) that it’s just impossible. I’ve resorted to filtering out traffic from data centres and all traffic from China/Hong Kong, and so on, but it’s just impossible to get realistic stats these days.

Not that it matters much — it’s all just fun and games anyway.

So here’s the list!

  1. Perplexingly Book-Learned Emacs

    This one won because it was on Hacker News, and I guess it’s catnip for that audience: It’s about Emacs and LLMs.

    And update: LLMs are still really bad at what I tried to make them do there — if I ask the newest ones “give me a list of all books written by author X, but exclude books A, B and C”, they’ll respond with a combination of actual existing books, imagined books, and books A, B or C. But of course, never actually all the books like I asked for.

    But it’s marginally useful — it’s certainly faster than doing the search myself (if I’m asking about a group of authors). “Fast and kinda wrong”: That’s the LLM mantra.

  2. Book Club 2025: The Books of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin

    This one is also because of Hacker News. When I started the Book Club 2025 blog series, it was just a lark — a way to bloviate a bit after reading a book. I didn’t really expect anybody to read any of these posts, so when it Totally Went Viral I had to do some emergency typo fixing. (I just write those posts; I don’t read them.)

  3. The Simplest Thing In The World: Modifying Keymaps in Wayland

    This one is not because of Hacker News! I sat down and figured out how to do something as radical as … change the keyboard layout in a non-hacky fashion under Wayland. And it’s the most popular post every single day since.

    Strangely enough, 90% of the referrers are duckduckgo! Which is really weird — that’s not the case for any other posts here. It could be an AI scraper, I guess, but it doesn’t seem to have any of the telltales for that kind of traffic.

  4. Wherein I Explain Why Emacs Is The Best Tool For WordPress

    I think this one went on all the Emacs reddits and blogs? The thesis of the post is still true.

  5. Lenovo Carbon X1 12th Gen & Debian Linux: The Nostalgia Experience

    Like the Wayland post, this is one that’s perennial — a bunch of hits per day.

    But this one has 80% google.com in the referrers. 🤷

  6. 1989: William Gibson’s Neuromancer

    This one makes me a bit suspicious — like the previous one, most of the traffic apparently comes from google.com, but I don’t really see why.

    The traffic seems suspiciously spread out… I mean, sure, there are people reading Gibson in Vietnam, but…

  7. 1986: Omaha the Cat Dancer

    I have no problem believing that this one is real, though, despite not going viral. The internet is for porn, the sage once said.

  8. news.gmane.org is now news.gmane.io

    This one is real, too — all the traffic comes from gmane.io, so it’s people looking around for Gmane.

  9. eww

    This oldie is widely linked — from gnu.org and Wikipedia, so that’s natural.

  10. 1972: Bizarre Sex

    And again, no shocker — not only is it about sex: It’s about bizarre sex! Wouldn’t you read it!?

So that’s the Top Ten.

I’m not sure any lessons were learned.

Book Club 2025: Kykelipi by Jan Erik Vold

This is another Lanterne book — I happened upon this while looking for the previous book (The Birds) and thought “yay”.

Jan Erik Vold is Norway’s most famous poet, and this is a fantastic book. His poems are usually funny, absurd, tending towards aphorisms, but can take sudden turns towards being affecting and moving.

Or political:

(“Today’s Czech”.) Still relevant today!

As is his most famous poem, which I didn’t know was in this book:

“Culture Week”. I remember seeing him on TV declaiming this poem when I was a child, and I was rolling around, laughing.

But is this bit on the top of the next page part of it?

Which brings me to the only thing I didn’t quite enjoy about this book — the way it’s set. Poems often start on one page and then continue onto the next page for a stanza or two, and sometimes they don’t, which just makes you stumble a bit as a reader.

It feels like they had to cram the poems into a specific number of pages or something… But on the other hand, it does make them seem less “precious”, which might be the point.

Kykelipi (1969) by Jan Erik Vold (4.03 on Goodreads)