Book Review: Exit Strategy by Martha Wells

Book #236 of 2020: Exit Strategy by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries #4) This final Murderbot novella (for now, at least) draws the initial series arc to a close, clearing the way for whatever new plots the sequel novels will deliver. Linking back up with the supporting cast from the first volume helps reinject some …

Book Review: The Shadows by Alex North

Book #235 of 2020: The Shadows by Alex North The backstory to this crime thriller is undeniably creepy — two of the protagonist’s friends killed their high school classmate in a ritualistic murder that has spawned multiple copycat acts in the quarter-century since, with one of the original culprits never brought to justice — but …

Book Review: Doctor Who: Time Lord Victorious: The Knight, The Fool and The Dead by Steve Cole

Book #234 of 2020: Doctor Who: Time Lord Victorious: The Knight, The Fool and The Dead by Steve Cole This is the first novel in Time Lord Victorious, a multimedia Doctor Who event unfolding over books, comics, Big Finish audio dramas, and more. It’s also the first title so far to feel like it’s taking …

Book Review: Clay’s Ark by Octavia E. Butler

Book #233 of 2020: Clay’s Ark by Octavia E. Butler (Patternist #3) The Patternist books were written all out of chronological order (5-2-4-1-3), and I’m finding that reading them as they take place is an odd experience, since the texts don’t really form any coherent narrative arc so far. My working assumption for now is …

Book Review: How Not to Get Shot: And Other Advice From White People by D. L. Hughley and Doug Moe

Book #232 of 2020: How Not to Get Shot: And Other Advice From White People by D. L. Hughley and Doug Moe The satire in this book is heavy-handed but warranted, laying out how the smug lectures given to black people like “don’t mouth off to the police” are a) contradictory, b) not followed by …

Book Review: The Magnificent Monsters of Cedar Street by Lauren Oliver

Book #231 of 2020: The Magnificent Monsters of Cedar Street by Lauren Oliver This middle-grade adventure story has a nice anti-bigotry message, objecting to prejudice both against marginalized human groups and against the misunderstood creatures in the heroine’s care, but that’s somewhat muddled when the ultimate villain is revealed to be a monster himself. I …

Book Review: The Extraordinaries by TJ Klune

Book #230 of 2020: The Extraordinaries by TJ Klune (The Extraordinaries #1) I’ve gone back and forth on my rating for this YA superhero title, parts of which are definitely cute and fun and offer some delightful gay and ADHD representation. I have friends who justifiably adore it, but as a whole I just can’t …

Book Review: The Power That Preserves by Stephen R. Donaldson

Book #229 of 2020: The Power That Preserves by Stephen R. Donaldson (The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever #3) A suitably epic conclusion to this classic postmodern fantasy trilogy, bringing both its setting and its reluctant champion to the verge of apocalypse before pushing forward to a measure of redemption for each. This series …

TV Review: The Office, season 3

TV #40 of 2020: The Office, season 3 Another strong year for this classic workplace sitcom, delivering laughs that largely still stand up today and fun new developments to long-term character dynamics. If I have one complaint about this stretch of the series, it’s that it ends up feeling far less daring than it begins: …

Book Review: If You Come Softly by Jacqueline Woodson

Book #228 of 2020: If You Come Softly by Jacqueline Woodson (If You Come Softly #1) Here’s a book like Bridge to Terabithia that’s almost impossible to discuss without spoilers, especially given the content warning that many prospective readers might appreciate. It’s a love story between two fifteen-year-olds, one a black boy and one a …

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