Book Review: The Liar’s Dictionary by Eley Williams

Book #96 of 2021: The Liar’s Dictionary by Eley Williams This story starts off on the wrong foot — taking the first 4% to wax rhapsodic about the soul of dictionaries before we even meet a single character — and somehow grows worse from there. It’s a split timeline, with one lexicographer protagonist in Victorian …

Book Review: The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

Book #95 of 2021: The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett This novel offers a beautiful assortment of character studies, although it feels less like a single coherent plot and instead an intricate mosaic of interrelated lives. Central to the web of connections are two light-skinned black girls, identical twins who seem inseparable until the day …

Book Review: The Mysterious Disappearance of Aidan S. (as told to his brother) by David Levithan

Book #94 of 2021: The Mysterious Disappearance of Aidan S. (as told to his brother) by David Levithan I love a nice postmodern portal fantasy, and this middle-grade novel spins a premise I don’t think I’ve seen before, where the focus is not on a child who vanishes into another world, but on a sibling …

TV Review: Star Wars Rebels, season 1

TV #32 of 2021: Star Wars Rebels, season 1 This cartoon is definitely kid-friendly, but it offers a lot to older Star Wars fans as well, and largely avoids the sort of slapstick humor and wacky episode premises that could be so grating in The Clone Wars. As the first TV show in the franchise …

Book Review: Things My Son Needs to Know about the World by Fredrik Backman

Book #93 of 2021: Things My Son Needs to Know about the World by Fredrik Backman Author Fredrik Backman’s collection of parental / life wisdom, ostensibly addressed to his one-year-old, is certainly funny, but it lacks the heart and insight that I’m used to from his novels. It also relies on a few tired gender …

Book Review: Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick

Book #92 of 2021: Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick A fascinating personal glimpse into life under the repressive regime of North Korea, drawing on deep interviews with escaped citizens as well as journalist Barbara Demick’s general experience in the region. This 2009 book — focusing mainly on the two …

Book Review: The Hazel Wood by Melissa Albert

Book #91 of 2021: The Hazel Wood by Melissa Albert (The Hazel Wood #1) Quite a lot in this YA portal fantasy doesn’t work for me, but I think it mostly comes down to the characters. Alice, our protagonist — yes, this is largely a riff on Alice in Wonderland — is just so angry …

Book Review: True Believer: The Rise and Fall of Stan Lee by Abraham Riesman

Book #90 of 2021: True Believer: The Rise and Fall of Stan Lee by Abraham Riesman Drawing on years of archive research and interviews with Stan Lee’s closest associates, this new biography is probably the definitive account of the Marvel Comics editor-turned-Hollywood cameo superstar. It also complicates if not contradicts a lot of our established …

Book Review: The Hero of Ages by Brandon Sanderson

Book #89 of 2021: The Hero of Ages by Brandon Sanderson (Mistborn #3) This closing volume to the original Mistborn trilogy is another outstanding adventure by the standards of the epic fantasy genre at large, but I think it’s perhaps just a minor step down from the first two books. The malevolent force called Ruin …

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