Category Archives: Books

Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly, editors’ It Was a Dark and Silly Night

Nathan Brazil wrote this review. Across the hemisphere our heroes dash in a flying machine of their own design, when down below in the ravaged tulip fields they spot the herbicidal maniacs. It Was a Dark and Silly Night is … Continue reading

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Michael Pearce’s first five Mamur Zapt novels

The Mamur Zapt & The Return of the Carpet The Night of the Dog: A Mamur Zapt Mystery The Donkey-Vous: A Mamur Zapt Mystery The Men Behind: A Mamur Zapt Mystery The Girl in the Nile: A Mamur Zapt Mystery … Continue reading

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A. A. Milne Winnie-the-Pooh, The House at Pooh Corner, and The Complete Tales & Poems of Winnie-the-Pooh

Pooh, like seemingly everything else, has been Disneyfied. The process actually started when I was a lad in the 1960s, with the short film Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day. Sadly, that was my introduction to Pooh, and I … Continue reading

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Val McDermid & Kathryn Briggs’ Resistance: A Graphic Novel

I worked for more than 30 years in a state government agency that included the public health department before retiring in, coincidentally, 2021. And for nearly all of that time I heard public health doctors and communicators warning about a … Continue reading

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Shatoiya de la Tour’s Earth Mother Herbal

Nellie Levine wrote this review. I’m not really an “earth mother” and my thumb is hardly green, but I do love using herbs both medicinally and in cooking, and I do love watching things grow. I see a sweet, special … Continue reading

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Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana’s Pretty Boy Floyd, Michael Wallis’s Pretty Boy, and Jeffery S. King’s The Life and Death of Pretty Boy Floyd

Craig Clarke wrote this review. “There’s no excuse for dressing like trash in this line of work.” – Charles Arthur Floyd in McMurtry and Ossana’s Pretty Boy Floyd When did criminals become our national heroes? Names like Bonnie and Clyde, … Continue reading

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Jessica Reisman’s The Z Radiant

I’m torn. I don’t want to begin a discussion of author Jessica Reisman‘s wonderful debut novel by opening with the least appealing aspect. But I’m afraid I have no choice. This thing is so huge, and it’s the very first … Continue reading

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Neal Stephenson’s The Confusion

“When a thing such as wax, or gold, or silver, turns liquid from heat, we say that it has fused,” Eliza said to her son, “and when such liquids run together and mix, we say they are con-fused.” “Papa says … Continue reading

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Jacqueline Carey’s Kushiel’s Scion

In the god-touched, sun-drenched land of Terre d’Ange, where people “love as thou wilt,” there is no one person with as significant a heritage, or as portentious a destiny as Imriel de la Courcel. His parents were the greatest traitors … Continue reading

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Jacqueline Carey’s Kushiel’s Avatar

“Once before, my fears had been made manifest in dreams, although it took a trained adept of Gentian House to enable me to see them — and they had proven horribly well-grounded that time. This time, I remembered. I had … Continue reading

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