Book Review: The Closers by Michael Connelly

Book #262 of 2021: The Closers by Michael Connelly (Harry Bosch #11) After two volumes spent as a private investigator, Harry Bosch has now returned to his roots at the LAPD. (In an afterword, author Michael Connelly explains that his favorite cases are the murders, and it seemed too implausible for a civilian to keep …

Book Review: The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass

Book #261 of 2021: The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass There’s enough of a distinctive (and #ownvoices) gay black perspective to this YA horror novel to save it from my lowest possible rating, but overall, it’s a real mess. Our protagonist can see visions of dead people, but the exact nature of his …

Book Review: The Gap Into Madness: Chaos and Order by Stephen R. Donaldson

Book #260 of 2021: The Gap Into Madness: Chaos and Order by Stephen R. Donaldson (The Gap Cycle #4) The penultimate volume in this Wagnerian space opera is a welcome step back up in quality after a third novel that I personally consider a bit slow and talky. This one is an improvement on all …

Book Review: The Decision by K. A. Applegate

Book #259 of 2021: The Decision by K. A. Applegate (Animorphs #18) The sci-fi concept of Zero-space in this series is one that doesn’t necessarily stand up to close scrutiny: it’s the empty dimension where Andalite spaceships go during faster-than-light / warp travel, but it’s also where a morpher’s excess body mass is temporarily deposited …

Book Review: The Spirit Thief by Rachel Aaron

Book #258 of 2021: The Spirit Thief by Rachel Aaron (The Legend of Eli Monpress #1) Eli Monpress is a very silly character — a thief pulling audacious heists and kidnappings in country after country apparently just to amass history’s largest total bounty on his head — which is not necessarily a problem, except for …

Book Review: The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black

Book #257 of 2021: The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black This standalone YA fantasy novel hasn’t completely won me over, but I like it a lot more than author Holly Black’s The Cruel Prince, which has a somewhat similar premise of fairyland intrigue. (The central romance here, for instance, strikes me as …

Book Review: The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories by Agatha Christie

Book #256 of 2021: The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories by Agatha Christie As in the detectives’ respective novels, the five stories in this collection about Hercule Poirot are of variable quality, the one about Miss Marple is a touch stronger, and the two about Parker Pyne are a bit worse. (The latter’s whole schtick …

Book Review: The Family Firm: A Data-Driven Guide to Better Decision Making in the Early School Years by Emily Oster

Book #255 of 2021: The Family Firm: A Data-Driven Guide to Better Decision Making in the Early School Years by Emily Oster So far Cribsheet is still my favorite data-driven parenting title by economist Emily Oster, but this latest one is a solid self-help book for household organizing and thorny decision-making about raising kids particularly …

TV Review: I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson, season 2

TV #71 of 2021: I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson, season 2 Just like its initial run, a lot of the bits in this season of the sketch comedy show take weird and unpredictable turns by the end — which sometimes yields absolute hilarity, but more often produces a skit I only partially …

Book Review: What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat by Aubrey Gordon

Book #254 of 2021: What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat by Aubrey Gordon This provocative title relates the current scientific consensus that most weight-loss programs of diet and/or exercise simply don’t produce long-term stable results for most users, explores the systemic way that our culture is organized around the assumption of …

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