Book Review: A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers

Book #364 of 2021: A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers (Monk and Robot #1) As with most titles from author Becky Chambers, this novella reads like a warm hug of hopepunk goodness. Although I wouldn’t say it’s quite on the level of her Wayfarers series, it shares with that space opera of the …

Book Review: Sparkling Cyanide by Agatha Christie

Book #363 of 2021: Sparkling Cyanide by Agatha Christie (Colonel Race #4) This 1945 novel, also published under the name Remembered Death, is the fourth and final appearance of Colonel Race, after a previous book where he stands alone like this and two that he shares with his friend Hercule Poirot. As a character he’s …

Book Review: Matrix by Lauren Groff

Book #362 of 2021: Matrix by Lauren Groff This title is an interesting exploration of a woman fiercely marshaling what power she can as a nun in 12th-century England, at a cost of forgoing any real hope at emotional intimacy with anyone around her. It’s a fictionalized treatment of the life of the anonymous poet …

Book Review: The Conspiracy by K. A. Applegate

Book #361 of 2021: The Conspiracy by K. A. Applegate (Animorphs #31) Kudos to Laura Battyanyi-Wiess, our first repeat ghostwriter: this Animorphs novel is possibly Jake’s strongest outing as narrator yet, and I love that it springs from such a simple premise. The hero’s great-grandfather has died, and his dad is insisting the family take …

TV Review: Fringe, season 3

TV #88 of 2021: Fringe, season 3 This is my favorite era of Fringe, and I am so tempted to give it a full five stars. Picking up on the cliffhanger escape from the parallel world, this run starts with our Olivia Dunham trapped over there, being brainwashed to believe she’s her doppelgänger, while that …

Book Review: This Poison Heart by Kalynn Bayron

Book #360 of 2021: This Poison Heart by Kalynn Bayron (This Poison Heart #1) This YA fantasy novel is a breath of fresh air, especially after I wasn’t entirely sold on author Kalynn Bayron’s previous offering Cinderella Is Dead. The plot is a little slow, but in that hopepunk, Maggie Stiefvater way that focuses on …

TV Review: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, season 5

TV #87 of 2021: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, season 5 Another strong year of life aboard this space station, where an ongoing plot provides important background context for the episodic concerns, where the characters and their relationships change over long-term arcs, and where the local geopolitics likewise continues to develop with a history and …

Book Review: Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim

Book #359 of 2021: Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim (Six Crimson Cranes #1) This is an #ownvoices East Asian retelling of the Wild Swans fairy tale, wherein a princess’s brothers are transformed into birds by their wicked stepmother while the girl herself is cursed to be unrecognizable and warned that each new word from …

Book Review: Poison for Breakfast by Lemony Snicket

Book #358 of 2021: Poison for Breakfast by Lemony Snicket This new novel from author Lemony Snicket is very discursive, a word which here means wandering down endless alleyways of thought instead of sticking to the nominal plot of the narrator investigating his discovery of a note warning he’s eaten poison for breakfast. As he …

Book Review: Dark Rise by C. S. Pacat

Book #357 of 2021: Dark Rise by C. S. Pacat (Dark Rise #1) I’m quite torn on how to rate this historical fantasy novel, but ultimately I think three-out-of-five stars is a fair reflection of my overall reaction to it. Although I really love the ending and the broader shape of the story that’s revealed …

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