Book Review: Moving Pictures by Terry Pratchett

Book #67 of 2021: Moving Pictures by Terry Pratchett (Discworld #10) A weaker effort from author Terry Pratchett, and a little too dependent on referential humor, where the entire joke is something like, “Wouldn’t a Discworld version of Gone with the Wind be hilarious?” I’m also still mostly familiar with this setting through the stories …

Book Review: Chance: Escape from the Holocaust by Uri Shulevitz

Book #66 of 2021: Chance: Escape from the Holocaust by Uri Shulevitz This 2020 title is a little unusual among Holocaust memoirs, both for its aim at a middle-grade audience and for its depicting a life more distantly touched by Nazi violence. Jewish author Uri Shulevitz and his family fled German-occupied Poland into the Soviet …

Book Review: Nights When Nothing Happened by Simon Han

Book #65 of 2021: Nights When Nothing Happened by Simon Han There’s a deep sense of sorrow pervading the four members of this novel’s Chinese-American immigrant family, all of whom seem utterly alienated — from their new country, from their homeland, and especially from one another. That estrangement is achingly rendered, and I’m sure it …

TV Review: WandaVision

TV #23 of 2021: WandaVision Brilliant in concept and nearly flawless in execution, I have very few critical notes for this miniseries, the debut television project under the immediate creative control of producer Kevin Feige at Marvel Studios and the premiere event in his Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Phase Four. It’s a decade-by-decade journey across American …

Book Review: Stormsong by C. L. Polk

Book #64 of 2021: Stormsong by C. L. Polk (The Kingston Cycle #2) This sequel is a decent follow-up to Witchmark, and I continue to enjoy the fantasy setting for its quasi-Edwardian trappings as well as its utter lack of homophobia and slut-shaming. Everyone maturely accepts adult relationships; the drama in this case stems from …

Book Review: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson

Book #63 of 2021: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson (Mistborn #1) This first Mistborn novel is every bit the modern classic that I remember, although it does have a few gender issues that author Brandon Sanderson improves upon in his later works. (Nothing too egregious, but except for our teenage heroine, this is a …

Book Review: American Baby: A Mother, a Child, and the Shadow History of Adoption by Gabrielle Glaser

Book #62 of 2021: American Baby: A Mother, a Child, and the Shadow History of Adoption by Gabrielle Glaser This book is centered on one (white, Jewish) family’s experience with adoption in the 1960s, but it’s also a fascinating sociological and historical account of a topic that I had previously known little about. As author …

TV Review: Star Wars: The Clone Wars, season 7

TV #22 of 2021: Star Wars: The Clone Wars, season 7 If only this last run of the animated Star Wars prequel could be limited to its final four episodes, I think I would give it my first five-star rating of the series. That sequence represents a powerful prelude to the tragedy of Revenge of …

Book Review: Among the Beasts & Briars by Ashley Poston

Book #61 of 2021: Among the Beasts & Briars by Ashley Poston This story has it all: a generic fantasy setting, under-explained and inconsistent magic, a random and meandering plot, weirdly colloquial dialogue, and juvenile characters — both protagonists and antagonists alike — with no credible motivation driving their actions. Also quasi-bestiality, after the heroine’s …

Book Review: The Echo Wife by Sarah Gailey

Book #60 of 2021: The Echo Wife by Sarah Gailey This novel raises a few interesting dilemmas of futuristic technology, although it waits so long to establish its sci-fi premise that I think I should probably be circumspect in this review. (I will say that the marketing description of ‘Westworld meets Killing Eve‘ is almost …

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