Book Review: D (A Tale of Two Worlds) by Michel Faber

Book #270 of 2021: D (A Tale of Two Worlds) by Michel Faber Not bad, but a pretty typical novel of the child-goes-to-another-world-to-have-a-series-of-strange-encounters variety, a la The Phantom Tollbooth, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and so forth. The most distinctive part of this book is also its most frustrating, as there’s no consistent and coherent explanation …

Book Review: Sad Cypress by Agatha Christie

Book #269 of 2021: Sad Cypress by Agatha Christie (Hercule Poirot #22) A curious story. The first half of this Agatha Christie mystery reads almost like one of her pseudonymous Mary Westmacott romance / character studies up until the murder happens, and then when Poirot finally makes his entrance, he doesn’t spend much time investigating …

TV Review: Brooklyn Nine-Nine, season 8

TV #73 of 2021: Brooklyn Nine-Nine, season 8 Over the course of its history, the writers and cast on this police sitcom have appeared increasingly uneasy with its role as copaganda, leading to public statements and scripts that openly engage with institutional abuse and other social justice issues. For this last season, written in the …

Book Review: The Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison

Book #268 of 2021: The Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison (The Goblin Emperor #2) I’ve enjoyed this spinoff sequel to 2014’s The Goblin Emperor, but I don’t love it nearly as much as the original novel. Leaving the imperial palace and its lonely ruler behind, we’re instead presented with a low-stakes, street-level plot …

Book Review: This Is Not the Jess Show by Anna Carey

Book #267 of 2021: This Is Not the Jess Show by Anna Carey (This Is Not the Jess Show #1) I love the premise here, which is like a YA mashup of The Truman Show with The Running Man, but I’m less sold on the execution. Partly that’s a matter of structure: our teenage protagonist …

Book Review: The Quiet American by Graham Greene

Book #266 of 2021: The Quiet American by Graham Greene This 1955 novel reads as a prescient (though obviously unheeded) critique of colonialism and American-style foreign intervention, following a journalist and an intelligence officer in the ‘Indochina’ region at the start of the Vietnam War. It draws on author Graham Greene’s own experience as a …

Book Review: In the Time of Dinosaurs by K. A. Applegate

Book #265 of 2021: In the Time of Dinosaurs by K. A. Applegate (Animorphs Megamorphs #2) I’m rather lukewarm on the first Megamorphs release, but this is the sort of big blockbuster adventure that the line seems built for, an over-the-top extravaganza that might strain the limits of the regular Animorphs series and benefits from …

Book Review: Last Drink Bird Head edited by Ann VanderMeer and Jeff VanderMeer

Book #264 of 2021: Last Drink Bird Head edited by Ann VanderMeer and Jeff VanderMeer In this 2009 charity anthology to benefit the ProLiteracy organization, eighty writers answer the prompt, “Who or what is Last Drink Bird Head?” It’s flash fiction, meaning the authors are encouraged to respond off the top of their heads, unplanned …

Book Review: One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston

Book #263 of 2021: One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston This novel hasn’t quite grabbed my heart as fiercely as author Casey McQuiston’s earlier Red, White & Royal Blue, but it’s still a pretty great story with incredible levels of queer representation. That includes not only the bi protagonist’s F/F romance, but also her found …

TV Review: ReBoot, season 1

TV #72 of 2021: ReBoot, season 1 I have a lot of fondness for this old cartoon, which premiered in 1994 as the world’s first all-CGI series (before the movie Toy Story helped popularize the technology). Set inside a computer where the digital heroes have to fend off viruses — plus the users playing games …

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