Book Review: How to Stop Time by Matt Haig

Book #45 of 2018: How to Stop Time by Matt Haig There’s a lot of potential to this novel about a man aging at 1/15 the usual rate, but it’s sunk by certain elements that feel barely sketched in. Most glaring is the secret society of people with the narrator’s condition, of whom we only …

Book Review: Star Wars: Leia, Princess of Alderaan by Claudia Gray

Book #44 of 2018: Star Wars: Leia, Princess of Alderaan by Claudia Gray This prequel novel depicts sixteen-year-old Princess Leia coming of age alongside the fledgling rebellion against the corrupt empire that rules her world. Like author Claudia Gray’s earlier novel Lost Stars, it’s a great character-driven drama that asks some smart questions about reform …

Book Review: The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins

Book #43 of 2018: The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins This is a pretty weird book, and I’m still not entirely convinced it’s my kind of weird. But it definitely comes close at times, and by about the halfway point of the novel, I found I simply couldn’t put it down. I think …

Book Review: The Mysterious Mr. Quin by Agatha Christie

Book #42 of 2018: The Mysterious Mr. Quin by Agatha Christie This obscure Agatha Christie title is a bit of a head-scratcher. The short stories in the collection have the general structure of detective fiction, but in lieu of her usual sort of investigator, Christie has penned a borderline-supernatural figure who immediately knows the answer …

TV Review: The Mindy Project, season 4

TV #12 of 2018: The Mindy Project, season 4 I’ve been pretty critical of this show in the past, but I thought season 3 was at least a little step up from its early clumsiness, and I had hopes that the move from Fox to Hulu for season 4 would boost the program creatively even …

Book Review: Final Girls by Riley Sager

Book #41 of 2018: Final Girls by Riley Sager Although I like the idea of this thriller about women who have survived earlier horror movie / slasher-style attacks, I found most of its major plot twists to be either glaringly obvious or completely unearned from what had previously been established. The psychology of certain characters …

Book Review: The Warrior’s Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold

Book #40 of 2018: The Warrior’s Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold (Vorkosigan Saga #3) I’m told that Miles Vorkosigan is the real main character of this series, and after two books about his parents navigating military and political power struggles, he finally takes center stage here. I like our hero: he’s physically weak but tactically …

TV Review: Game of Thrones, season 7

TV #11 of 2018: Game of Thrones, season 7 I literally just reviewed this season when I watched it last year, and even having rewatched all the earlier seasons since then (with my wife, watching the show through for her first time), I think my reaction remains the same: All in all, this is probably …

TV Review: The West Wing, season 7

TV #10 of 2018: The West Wing, season 7 This final season of The West Wing focuses mainly on the general election for president (after the Democratic primary in the back half of season 6). It’s a relatively new look for the show, and I appreciate the writers’ efforts to make the Republican candidate as …

Book Review: Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates

Book #39 of 2018: Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates This slim volume by Ta-Nehisi Coates reflects on the author’s experiences growing up as a black American and what he sees for his fifteen-year-old son coming of age in the time of Black Lives Matter. Presented as an open letter to the boy, …

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