TV Review: Star Wars: The Bad Batch, season 2

TV #14 of 2023: Star Wars: The Bad Batch, season 2 The first year of this Clone Wars spinoff was a surprisingly propulsive affair, but this sophomore season struggles to recapture and maintain that sense of momentum. It’s still a solid delivery of weekly Star Wars thrills — although I question the decision to have …

Book Review: Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marisha Pessl

Book #50 of 2023: Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marisha Pessl Everyone in this 2006 debut novel is either deeply pretentious and misanthropic or else a fringe figure patronizingly pitied by those who are. They’re regularly sexist and racist, too! I actually tried reading this once before, five years ago, and put it down …

TV Review: Gilmore Girls, season 3

TV #13 of 2023: Gilmore Girls, season 3 This year is probably peak Gilmore Girls for me, although it’s overall a show that’s remained consistently strong across its tenure. (I’m already looking forward to defending the less popular final original season and subsequent Netflix revival miniseries when I get to my reviews of those.) Rory’s …

Book Review: Portrait of a Wide Seas Islander by Victoria Goddard

Book #49 of 2023: Portrait of a Wide Seas Islander by Victoria Goddard I like this midquel novella to author Victoria Goddard’s excellent fantasy tome The Hands of the Emperor, but I think I’m not totally impressed by it, especially after the previous short spinoff work for this series Petty Treasons seemed to up the …

Book Review: We Had to Remove This Post by Hanna Bervoets

Book #48 of 2023: We Had to Remove This Post by Hanna Bervoets On the one hand, this translated novella offers a blisteringly grim look into the work of content moderators for social media platforms like Facebook: the employees paid to review posts that other users have flagged, to remove any material they confirm as …

Book Review: Babel-17 by Samuel R. Delany

Book #47 of 2023: Babel-17 by Samuel R. Delany This 1966 Nebula Award co-winner is a product of its time and the New Wave movement that grew into the cyberpunk aesthetic, the sort of hard sci-fi that tends to be more interested in big ideas than compelling characters. It’s practically overflowing with tossed-off worldbuilding details …

TV Review: Shadow and Bone, season 2

TV #12 of 2023: Shadow and Bone, season 2 I continue to enjoy this YA fantasy adaptation, but I think this second season fumbles its ending enough that downgrading my rating to three-out-of-five stars feels appropriate overall. After rushing through a condensed version of the novels Siege and Storm and Ruin and Rising that close …

Book Review: The Life and Crimes of Hoodie Rosen by Isaac Blum

Book #46 of 2023: The Life and Crimes of Hoodie Rosen by Isaac Blum Overall an excellent #ownvoices slice-of-life YA contemporary, about a frum — ultra-observant Orthodox — Jewish teen who finds himself shunned by his insular community for striking up a friendship and potential romance with an outside girl. Hoodie (short for Yehudah) is …

Book Review: Lirael by Garth Nix

Book #45 of 2023: Lirael by Garth Nix (The Old Kingdom #2) Another fine fantasy adventure, although I have never loved it quite as much as its predecessor. Jumping forward a couple decades and following an entirely new cast is a risky maneuver, and while I feel it pays off fairly well, I do miss …

TV Review: Six Feet Under, season 2

TV #11 of 2023: Six Feet Under, season 2 Credit where credit’s due: the second year of this funeral home drama is a noticeable step up from the first, and it continues to improve over the course of its run, building to a finale that’s a clear series high point thus far. The show appears …

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