Fading Memories

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Ramblings about books and other things that will soon fade from my memory.

Boudewijn Rempt

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    2003-10-26

    Havank, schets van leven en werk

    By J.P.M Passage
    Reviewed by Boudewijn Rempt on October 26, 2003

    Almost completely forgotten (although the capital of Frisia, Leeuwarden has named the streets in a new development after characters in his books), the Dutch author Havank has been treated to only one biography; this book.

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    Computer Graphics: principles and practice

    By Foley, van Dam. Feiner, Hughes
    Reviewed by Boudewijn Rempt on October 26, 2003

    Foley et. al. is the current incumbent of Newman and Sproull: the absolute standard text for budding graphics programmers. The field has widened, deepened and generally ballooned; that's clear just from the difference in page numbers: Foley is twice Newman.

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    Principles of Interactive Computer Graphics

    By William M. Newman and Robert F. Sproull
    Reviewed by Boudewijn Rempt on October 26, 2003

    I'm trying to hack Krita into submission. I want a paint application that fakes natural media and the way they work, not just the way they look. So I've started studying C++ and computer graphics, a completely new field for me.

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    2003-10-20

    De man uit de verte

    By Havank (Hans van der Kallen)
    Reviewed by Boudewijn Rempt on October 20, 2003

    Between 1935 and about 1975, Havank was the most popular, most widely read Dutch author. Therefore it's no wonder that he has never received much critical acclaim. Still, i consider him not only an author of fine, formulaic mystery novels, but also as the Dutch Wodehouse. But where Wodehouse received acclaim for his similes and virtuoso use of language, Havank was derided for his Popish boarding-school type of humour.

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    2003-10-01

    Monstrous Regiment

    By Terry Pratchett
    Reviewed by Boudewijn Rempt on October 01, 2003

    When I first read the Amazon blurb of Monstrous Regiment, I thought that this might very well be one of the better Discworld novels to appear in recent years. Terry Pratchett seems to need a fresh setting to do his best, and this book was set in a new place, with new characters, too. All set to spark the author's imagination.

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