Book Review: Akata Warrior by Nnedi Okorafor

Book #50 of 2020: Akata Warrior by Nnedi Okorafor (Akata Witch #2) This second novel in the Akata Witch duology has a messier and more episodic plot than its predecessor, but it also feels more like a fully-formed fantasy vision rather than just an #ownvoices West African take on Harry Potter. (Although as with that …

Book Review: Doctor Who: At Childhood’s End by Sophie Aldred with Steve Cole and Mike Tucker

Book #49 of 2020: Doctor Who: At Childhood’s End by Sophie Aldred with Steve Cole and Mike Tucker As the final companion when the ‘classic’ series of Doctor Who went off the air in 1989, the character of Ace McShane casts a long shadow over the franchise. Her nuanced characterization and complicated relationship with the …

Book Review: Witch Week by Diana Wynne Jones

Book #48 of 2020: Witch Week by Diana Wynne Jones (Chrestomanci #3) This has always been my favorite Chrestomanci book, even though it’s a bit of a spin-off, with the multiverse-hopping enchanter only showing up in the last third or so of the text (and not requiring any prior reader knowledge to understand and appreciate …

Book Review: White Kids: Growing Up with Privilege in a Racially Divided America by Margaret A. Hagerman

Book #47 of 2020: White Kids: Growing Up with Privilege in a Racially Divided America by Margaret A. Hagerman There’s an unfortunate disconnect between this 2018 book’s title / framing and its actual content, which discusses author Margaret A. Hagerman’s ethnographic study of thirty affluent white families in one midwestern community from 2011 to 2012. …

Book Review: Whiskey When We’re Dry by John Larison

Book #46 of 2020: Whiskey When We’re Dry by John Larison I don’t read (or watch) a lot of westerns, but I’ve mostly enjoyed this tale of an orphaned rancher who restyles herself as a man to strike off across the frontier in search of her last surviving kin and ultimately falls in love with …

Book Review: Race to the Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

Book #45 of 2020: Race to the Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse A delightful middle-grade fantasy novel that incorporates elements of traditional Navajo folklore while avoiding the paint-by-numbers plot that such modernizations often entail. (I hesitate to call the work #ownvoices, since author Rebecca Roanhorse is not Navajo herself and she makes clear in an afterword …

TV Review: Doctor Who, season 12

TV #3 of 2020: Doctor Who, season 12 I’m honestly still not sure how I feel about this season on balance. The Thirteenth Doctor’s debut year was designed to be maximally approachable for new viewers, and although that could sometimes feel a bit tame, I don’t think any of us expected its successor to bolt …

Book Review: The Lost Book of Adana Moreau by Michael Zapata

Book #44 of 2020: The Lost Book of Adana Moreau by Michael Zapata Ostensibly, this is a novel about a man whose late grandfather has a package come back as undeliverable after the funeral, and his efforts to track down its intended recipient, the son of the woman who wrote the unpublished manuscript inside. But …

Book Review: The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern

Book #43 of 2020: The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern This seems like one of those books that is guaranteed to frustrate a lot of readers, in that it obliquely hints at larger designs instead of ever giving us the full picture. The opening premise, after all, is less a novel than a collection of …

Book Review: The Afterlife of Holly Chase by Cynthia Hand

Book #42 of 2020: The Afterlife of Holly Chase by Cynthia Hand This YA novel is built on a neat idea for a modernization of A Christmas Carol starring a corporate version of the Ghost of Christmas Past, but I have way too many unanswered questions about both the worldbuilding logistics and that protagonist’s exact …

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