TV Review: Shōgun, season 1

TV #14 of 2024: Shōgun, season 1 An exquisitely-rendered adaptation of the classic historical fiction novel about simmering political tensions and warfare in 17th-century feudal Japan. I can’t compare it to the 1980 NBC miniseries, which I haven’t seen, but I’m impressed with how closely this one hews to the original book in its plot …

Book Review: Olivetti by Allie Millington

Book #66 of 2024: Olivetti by Allie Millington I understand that when the premise of a book includes half of its chapters being narrated by a sentient typewriter, you kind of have to suspend a lot of your disbelief going into the thing. All the more so for the twelve-year-old other narrator and the overall …

Book Review: Dream Girl by Laura Lippman

Book #65 of 2024: Dream Girl by Laura Lippman This 2021 thriller feels like a take on Stephen King’s Misery for the #metoo era, in which a bedridden white male writer is held accountable and ultimately held captive by an overbearing nurse figure for the sins of his past, oblivious to most of them though …

Book Review: Book of Doom by John Peel

Book #64 of 2024: Book of Doom by John Peel (Diadem: Worlds of Magic #10) This is the last of the second wave of author John Peel’s Diadem novels, the four published from 2005 to 2006 under Llewellyn (following the original six volumes put out by Scholastic from 1997 to 1998). It also functions as …

Book Review: Elephants Can Remember by Agatha Christie

Book #63 of 2024: Elephants Can Remember by Agatha Christie (Hercule Poirot #42) This is the last Hercule Poirot novel that Agatha Christie wrote, although it would be followed in publication by Curtain, which she’d completed decades earlier and kept locked away in a vault. It’s an odd story, with a rather obvious twist and …

Book Review: Warbreaker by Brandon Sanderson

Book #62 of 2024: Warbreaker by Brandon Sanderson [Disclaimer: I am Facebook friends with this author.] I should admit upfront that I didn’t care much for this novel upon its initial release back in 2009. But I’ve heard so many people praise it over the years (and I’m such a big fan of author Brandon …

Book Review: He Who Drowned the World by Shelley Parker-Chan

Book #61 of 2024: He Who Drowned the World by Shelley Parker-Chan (The Radiant Emperor #2) I think that objectively speaking, this sequel is generally of the same high quality as its predecessor She Who Became the Sun, which began this queer fantasy retelling of the 14th-century founding of China’s Ming Dynasty (which appears to …

Book Review: Doctor Who: The Legends of River Song edited by Justin Richards

Book #60 of 2024: Doctor Who: The Legends of River Song edited by Justin Richards The year is 2016. The latest episode to air on the show Doctor Who was the recent holiday special The Husbands of River Song, which brought back the titular time-traveling archaeologist for her single on-screen adventure alongside the Twelfth Doctor, …

TV Review: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, season 1

TV #13 of 2024: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, season 1 I went into this latest Star Trek series with fairly low expectations. In addition to being another prequel in a franchise that could stand to be more forward-facing, it is moreover a direct spin-off from the messiest season of Star Trek: Discovery. On paper, …

Book Review: Alien Blood by Chris Archer

Book #59 of 2024: Alien Blood by Chris Archer (Mindwarp #2) This sequel is an improvement over the first book, but I’m still not yet loving the middle-grade 90s Mindwarp series on this adult reread. We’ve switched protagonists, and the new girl’s plot plays out along similar lines to the boy’s from the novel before: …

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