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Monthly Archives: June 2024
Moviewatch: June 2024
Apocalypse Now, which was…..different than I was expecting. Of course, I’ve seen Sheen’s son Charlie in Platoon and my Vietnam movie knowledge is very muddled. Wonderful shots in the beginning, though: as horrible as war is, they managed to … Continue reading
Midyear Book Freakout
I saw this floating around the book-blogging world, so I figured I’d play along. 2024 has been a most unusual year, as long-time readers may know. I’ve been reading “in public” for seventeen years now, and while my approach to … Continue reading
Posted in General
5 Comments
Recoding History
A few years ago I read Broad Band, a history of women in early computing, which blew my mind. I’d taken for granted that computers and the early internet were wholly the domain of socially awkward dudes with glasses wearing … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged AI, audiobook, digital world, history, human space flight, Technology and Society, women
1 Comment
A Daughter of Fair Verona
The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet was a cautious tale about the dangers of pride and unbridled passion. A Daughter of Fair Verona says phooey on that, tweaks Shakespeare so that our teenage lovers prove too incompetent to actually do … Continue reading
Posted in historical fiction, Reviews
Tagged historical fiction, Medieval, Shakespeare, thriller
5 Comments
Miss Morgan’s Book Brigade
France, 1918: the Great War is almost over, but it doesn’t feel like it for civilians close to the lines, where the threat of a German resurgence hangs as close to the battered ground as the dust from the constant … Continue reading
Posted in historical fiction, Reviews
Tagged 1910s, bookshops and libraries, France, historical fiction, The Great War, women
1 Comment
Minimalist awkwardness
….I wouldn’t notice and neither would my friends. I adopted a minimalist dress code years ago in which my t-shirts, underwear, and socks are all almost entirely black except in the case of some pre-code shirts/shorts that haven’t aged out … Continue reading
A Thousand Ships
Sing, muse, of the confusion of Croseus, and of the anguish of Penthesilea! A Thousand Ships collects stories about the women of the Illiad — mostly of Troy, but of Achaea, too, across the wine-dark sea — and framed by … Continue reading
Fan Fiction
First up: do not read this. Do not read this. Listen to it. Reading this is the equivalent of getting your knowledge of War and Peace from a Wishbone classics edition. Fan Fiction is an audiobook that’s transcended to the … Continue reading