Agatha and the Truth of Murder: ⭐️⭐️⭐️: An entertaining “what if” exploring what might have happened when Agatha Christie disappeared for eleven days. In this, she finds herself playing the part of one of her own detectives, trying to solve a murder…or two.
📚 Defekt by Nino Cipri
6/2022 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Darker and weirder than Finna, complete with elements of body horror, but just as fun to read, and still with the same optimistic current to it. Liked this one a lot; a strong start to this year’s PKD lineup.

Original Audio? Commentary? Why Not Both?
I’m watching the new 4K restoration of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and one of the nice things about this release is that not only are there commentaries, but there are subtitles for the commentaries (this is a very rare thing, unfortunately). So I can watch the movie with the original audio, but pop on the subtitles for one of the commentary tracks to read that as I watch.
At which point Prairie looks at me and says, “Oh my god, you’re such a nerd.”
Yup.
🖖
📚 Finna by Nino Cipri
5/2022 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Navigating working with someone after breaking up with them is hard enough. Doing that while also navigating a multidimensional IKEA isn’t easier…but can be surprisingly helpful. A quick, funny, and fun read.

Meatloaf Again?
Content warning: Morbid, dark humor.
Seems the Weber grill company sends out regular “recipe of the week” emails, which I’m sure are pre-written and pre-scheduled and just go out automatically.
Today’s was for BBQ meatloaf.

They had to apologize.

“Meatloaf again?”

Also: I honestly did not know until today that Meat Loaf was a vaccine-denying Trumpublican and (at least according to a lot of online scuttlebut) very likely, and unsurprisingly, died of Covid-related complications.
I can simultaneously be disappointed at the death of a long-time favorite musician, be disappointed that he got sucked into MAGAland, and think that it’s his own damn fault for dying that way — which makes it even more disappointing, because it’s quite likely that it was preventable.
PKD Award 📚 Nominees
This year’s stack of Philip K. Dick Award nominees have arrived! (Actually, nominees plus one — Finna is the precursor to Defekt, and I don’t like starting in the middle of a series.) As usual, this looks like a strong selection of books; of note for me is Far From the Light of Heaven, as this is Tade Thompson’s second time as a nominee, and I enjoyed all of his Wormwood trilogy, the third book of which was the earlier nominated work.

Time to get reading! (And if you’re interested, I’ve created a PKD reading challenge on StoryGraph that you’re welcome to join!)
📚 Unlocking the Magic edited by Vivian Caethe
4/2022 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️
An anthology of people living with mental illnesses and magic. Not the old tropes of magic being a sign or cause, but magic as a tool to help cope with the struggles. Definitely some dark moments, but overall, a thread of hope runs through all of the stories.

📚 The Case of the Colonist’s Corpse: A Sam Cogley Mystery by Bob Ingersoll and Tony Isabella
3/2022 – ⭐️⭐️
A somewhat amusing murder mystery and courtroom drama; basically Law & Order: TOS starring Samuel Cogley. Unfortunately, the poor treatment of the two primary female characters (one an overly stereotypical shallow, bitter wife; the other bitter at past events who fares badly) marred my enjoyment.

📚 A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab
2/2022 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️
A recommendation from my 10-year-old niece (V.E. Schwab is her favorite author), this was a fun fantasy adventure through multiple magical Londons. Neat worldbuilding and magic rules and styles; perhaps a bit more violent than I would have expected from a pre-teen’s recommendation (apparently Schwab also writes YA books, which is how my niece came across her, but this is one of her adult novels), but her parents also read and enjoyed it, she’s none the worse for reading it, and I’ve certainly read far worse.

📚 Termination Shock by Neal Stephenson
1/2022 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Near-future technothriller in Stephenson’s trademark “neat stuff infodump” style. Weird to read something so new that it references both Covid and the Jan. 6th insurrection.
