Stop the clock! Eight years after I decided on a whim to start watching the Star Trek franchise from the very beginning, I’ve finally done it. I’ve seen all of Star Trek now. And because this is how my brain works, I’ll give you my subjective ranking of the various shows, by tier. TIER 1: …
Category Archives: Uncategorized
TV Review: Star Trek: Very Short Treks, season 1
TV #29 of 2024: Star Trek: Very Short Treks, season 1 These five digital shorts are silly and explicitly non-canonical, but I’d say they’re worth checking out for Star Trek diehards, especially given the minimal time commitment (about 18 minutes for the entire run, which you can find in this official YouTube playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLufIO1FTWFz_8X1Tmh3BAlJpqNadViR-E). Commissioned …
Continue reading “TV Review: Star Trek: Very Short Treks, season 1”
TV Review: Doctor Who, season 1
TV #28 of 2024: Doctor Who, season 1 We have, for some reason, started over again with our numbering for this long-running science-fiction franchise, so that there now exists Doctor Who season 1 – 26 (1963 – 1989), Doctor Who season 1 – 13 (2005 – 2021), and a new Doctor Who season 1 – …
Book Review: Dawn of the Planet of the Apes: Firestorm by Greg Keyes
Book #90 of 2024: Dawn of the Planet of the Apes: Firestorm by Greg Keyes A surprisingly strong media tie-in novel, especially compared to the same author’s more aimless later work, War for the Planet of the Apes: Revelations. Like that volume, this one is aimed at bridging the gap between the events of two …
Continue reading “Book Review: Dawn of the Planet of the Apes: Firestorm by Greg Keyes”
Book Review: The Book of Doors by Gareth Brown
Book #89 of 2024: The Book of Doors by Gareth Brown I love the initial premise of this novel, and I still feel like many of its subsequent elements have some potential charm to them. But the execution is beyond abysmal, beginning with the heroine with a severe case of written-by-a-man-itis: “She caught her reflection …
Continue reading “Book Review: The Book of Doors by Gareth Brown”
TV Review: Star Trek: Lower Decks, season 4
TV #27 of 2024: Star Trek: Lower Decks, season 4 Still a loving and satisfyingly funny low-stakes riff on the Star Trek franchise, but not quite as tight a production as the last couple seasons (especially following the phenomenal crossover “Those Old Scientists” on Strange New Worlds). There’s an overarching storyline involving ships of various …
Continue reading “TV Review: Star Trek: Lower Decks, season 4”
Book Review: The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo
Book #88 of 2024: The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo I know from her publicity materials for this standalone adult fantasy novel that it’s a very personal project for author Leigh Bardugo, drawing on her own family history for its tale of a sixteenth-century converso (a member of Spain’s Jewish population or their descendants, whose ethnoreligious …
Continue reading “Book Review: The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo”
Book Review: Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki
Book #87 of 2024: Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki This story seems like it fundamentally shouldn’t work, and yet it pretty much does, and rather gloriously throughout. One heroine is a trans teen runaway, fleeing her parents’ domestic abuse and refusal to accept her identity. Another is the elderly mentor she finds for …
Continue reading “Book Review: Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki”
TV Review: Classic Doctor Who, season 12
TV #26 of 2024: Classic Doctor Who, season 12 A bright new era for the show, with incoming Fourth Doctor Tom Baker — still many viewers’ platonic ideal of the gallivanting Time Lord hero, who would go on for a record seven seasons in the role — making an immediate impression. This initial material doesn’t …
Book Review: Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case by Agatha Christie
Book #86 of 2024: Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case by Agatha Christie (Hercule Poirot #44) This final Hercule Poirot novel is not one of the better mysteries in its series, relying as it does on an implausible understanding of psychology for a serial killer’s eventually revealed motivation and means. It can also be frustrating to read, …
Continue reading “Book Review: Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case by Agatha Christie”