Author Archives: george

BUFFALO BILLS VS. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS

The 6-2 Buffalo Bills face the struggling 1-6 Jacksonville Jaguars today in sunny Florida. The Bills are 14-point favorites. Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence–Number One in the 2021 NFL Draft–finds himself surrounded by mediocrity and ineptness. Lawrence’s coach, Urban Meyer, has been embroiled in a lap-dancing incident. While Meyer was a very successful College coach, like many College coaches before him, he’s finding the NFL a completely different game. My guess is Urban Meyer will be looking for a new job at the end of the season. How will your favorite NFL team perform today?

ETERNALS

Chloe Zhao’s first movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Eternals, features two historical moments: the first sex scene in a MCU movie (but if you blink, you’ll miss it) and the first MCU homosexual kiss. But, with an ensemble cast of 10 stars, the plot becomes rambling and confusing.

The 10 Eternals–leader Ajak (Salma Hayek), fighter Then (Anglina Jolie), laser eyes warrior Ikaris (Richard Madden), matter-changer Sersi (Gemma Chan), engineer Phastos (Brian Tyree Henry), mind controller Druig (Barry Koeghan), super puncher Gilgamesh (Don Lee), illusions caster Sprite (Lisa McHugh), speedster Makkari (Lauren Ridloff), and finger guns Kingo (Kumail Nanjiani)–are sent to Earth to defend it from the deadly, dinosaur-like, Deviants. After 7000 years, the Eternals feel their mission is over. Wrong!

A massive world-wide earthquake unearths a pack of Deviants from their sleepy snowy slumber. Many battles follow. But the Eternals face more than the Deviants. Their mission to protect Earth is more complicated than they thought.

Eternals represents a new phase in the MCU where the emphasis will be less on action and more on inter-personal conflict. It may take some getting used to… GRADE: B-

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #664: THE MAN WHO LOVED THE MIDNIGHT LADY/IN THE STONE HOUSE By Barry N. Malzberg

I’ve been reading Barry N. Malzberg’s short stories and novels since the 1960s. Malzberg’s fiction focuses on paranoia, the Kennedy assassination, and the fluidity of Reality. Stark House collects two of Malzberg’s short story collections, The Man Who Loved the Midnight Lady (1980) and In the Stone House (2000), which covers some of the best of Malzberg’s hundreds of published short stories.

In The Man Who Loved the Midnight Lady, at the end of each story, Malzberg comments on the genesis of the story, the publishing circumstances at the time (sometimes dire), and details surrounding subsequent reprinting of many of the stories.

In addition to excellent stories like “The Man Who Loved the Midnight Lady,” Malzberg includes three stories he wrote with Bill Pronzini. Malzberg and Pronzini also teamed up to write three excellent and underrated novels.

Also impressive is Malzberg’s thoughts on Science Fiction: “The Fifties (essay).” As Malzberg points out, dozens of SF magazines that provided a large market for Science Fiction stories at the start of the decade disappeared by the end of the decade. The market for SF morphed to paperbacks, hardcovers, and competition for sales to the remaining SF magazines in the Sixties.

THE MAN WHO LOVED THE MIDNIGHT LADY/IN THE STONE HOUSE displays Barry N. Malzberg’s unique talents and interests while delivering an adrenaline rush equivalent to a literary zipline thrill ride! GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

THE MAN WHO LOVED THE MIDNIGHT LADY — 7

Introduction — 8

On the air — 9
Here, for just a while — 16
In the stocks — 22
The fifties (essay) — 30
The man who married a beagle — 38
Big Ernie, the royal Russian, and the big trapdoor — 48
Ring, the brass ring, the royal Russian and I — 53
Of ladies’ night out and otherwise — 58
The annual once-a-year bash and circumstance party — 63
The appeal — 70
Yahrzeit — 77
Another burnt-out case / with Bill Pronzini — 80
I’m going through the door — 91
Cornell — 96
On account of darkness / with Bill Pronzini — 99
Impasse — 104
Varieties of technological experience — 111
Varieties of religious experience — 116
Inside out — 121
Line of succession — 126
Reaction-formation — 131
Indigestion — 135
A clone at last / with Bill Pronzini — 142
Backing up — 144
September 1958 — 148
Into the breach — 152
On ‘Revelations’ (essay) — 157
Thirty-six views of his dead majesty — 162
The trials of Sigmund — 178
The man who loved the midnight lady –182

IN THE STONE HOUSE –189

Heavy metal — 190
Turpentine — 203
Quartermain — 213
The Prince of the Steppes — 222
Andante lugubre — 230
Standards & practices — 236
Darwinian facts — 242
Allegro marcato — 253
Something from the seventies — 261
The high purpose — 266
All assassins — 282
Understanding entropy — 289
Ship full of Jews — 293
Amos — 302
Improvident excess — 309
Hitler at Nuremberg — 316
Concerto accademico — 321
The intransigents — 326
Hierartic realignment — 332
The only thing you learn — 343
Police actions — 347
Fugato — 356
Major league Triceratops — 374
In the stone house — 396

AFTERWORD: The Sprawl of Intensity, the Intensity of Sprawl — 422

Acknowledgments — 425

Bibliography — 428

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #44: Belladonna Nights and Other Stories By Alastair Reynolds

I’m a big fan of Alastair Reynolds and his space operas. In Belladonna Nights and Other Stories, Reynolds captures the immensity of Space with its isolated, disparate human habitats. “Plague Music” explores the aspects of a future Pandemic. I’ve read Reynolds’ SF novels about Prefect Dreyfus who is a future law enforcer. “Open and Shut” takes Prefect Dreyfus into some very unpleasant corners of the extreme libertarian-democratic Glitter Band culture, where personal freedom collides with necessary limitations, hard choices, and harder punishments. 

My favorite story in Belladonna Nights is “Night Passage,” a grim encounter with alien technology and its unanticipated effects. If you’re looking for well-told tales of the future, I highly recommend Belladonna Nights and Other Stories. They possess that elusive “sense of wonder.” GRADE: A

Table of Contents:

  • Introduction: Winter Did Come
  • Belladonna Nights
  • Different Seas
  • For the Ages
  • Visiting Hours
  • Holdfast
  • The Lobby
  • A Map of Mercury
  • Magic Bone Woman
  • Providence
  • Wrecking Party
  • Sixteen Questions for Kamala Chatterjee
  • Death’s Door
  • A Murmuration
  • Open and Shut
  • Plague Music
  • Night Passage
  • Story Notes

TREE TRIMMING

Diane wanted our trees trimmed and when we saw a crew of Kelley’s Tree Service, she decided it was “a sign.” We watched seven men with chain saws trim our evergreen tree, cut down our dead apple tree, and trim our giant oak tree. A guy in a tractor removed the cut limbs which went straight to their wood chipper.

No ladders for this crew! With the tall trees, they used a cherry picker unit that took them up 30+ feet. Rain was in the forecast, so these guys raced with rain to complete the trimming. Now, everything looks so much better! Are there any home improvements on your list?

FIVE DECEMBERS By James Kestrel

Claudia Caranfa’s cover artwork captures several of the key elements of Five Decembers by James Kestrel (aka, Jonathan Moore). You’ll notice in the background a squadron of bombers dropping death in a world on fire while a man watches with a gun in his hand. Oh, yeah, and the girl.

Five Decembers begins in 1941 with Honolulu police detective Joe McGrady discovering a vivisected body. Minutes later, McGrady engages in a shoot-out with a suspect. McGrady lives, the suspect dies. But the murder morphs into a story that resembles The Odyssey as McGrady is sent to Hong Kong to investigate a lead. As luck would have it, McGrady is framed, beaten, and jailed just as Hong Kong is invaded by the Japanese.

McGrady’s trials and tribulations continue during the war years, but he never gives up his obsession with the case that launched his incredible Asian journey. If you’re in the mood for a high octane crime novel with more twists and turns and surprises than the Le Mans Grand Prix, rev up your engine and read Five Decembers. GRADE: A

HAPPY HALLOWEEN & MIAMI DOLPHINS VS. BUFFALO BILLS

The Buffalo Bills, fresh from coming off their Bye Week, are 14-point favorites over the 1-6 Miami Dolphins–a team the Bills lit up in Week Two 35-0. The weather at Highmark Stadium might be a factor: scattered showers and breezy. How will your NFL team do today? We have two huge bags of candy to distribute tonight. Last Halloween we had over 100 Trick-or-Treaters. How many kids show up at your door on Halloween?

THE REVENGE OF DRACULA By Peter Tremayne

Peter Berresford Ellis (aka, Peter Tremayne) wrote a Dracula trilogy forty years ago. Of the three books, I like the middle volume the best.

The Revenge of Dracula begins when Upton Welsford, a British Diplomat, buys an enigmatic jade figurine. The jade figurine brings nightmares to its owner. Upton Welsford then discovers the woman he loves seems possessed. How does the ancient relic connect Welsford with the Dracula’s quest for immortality? Welsford travels to Transylvania to found out and to rescue his lover.

The Peter Tremayne Dracula trilogy keeps to the story elements that Bram Stroker used. The Dracula trilogy is more of a prequel to Stoker’s Dracula but shares many of its themes and horrors. If you’re a fan of Dracula this trilogy–especially The Revenge of Dracula–might just serve up the bite that you need! GRADE: B+

Dracula Lives Series
   1. Dracula Unborn (1977)
     aka Bloodright : Memoirs of Micrea Son to Dracula
   2. The Revenge of Dracula (1978)
   3. Dracula, My Love (1980)

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FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #663: A NIGHT IN THE LONESOME OCTOBER By Roger Zelazny & Gahan Wilson

Jack the Ripper meets Dracula, Dr. Frankenstein, Sherlock Holmes, and a menagerie of exotic characters in Roger Zelazny’s screwball Halloween novel, A Night in the Lonesome October. Each chapter is a day in October leading up to the Big Day. The novel is narrated by Snuff, a guard dog who can perform complex Thaumaturgical calculations in his head. Snuff’s duties also include keeping an eye on the various Things that are trapped in mirrors, wardrobes, and steamer trunks who are constantly trying to escape.

Snuff’s master, Jack, possesses a magical blade and a mission to stop the confluence of Powers who plan a cosmic event on Halloween.

I know some people who read A Night in the Lonesome October (as well as Neil Gaiman’s “Only the End of the World Again) every year in the run-up to Halloween.

And don’t forget Gahan Wilson’s funny and creepy illustrations! A Night in the Lonesome October will dazzle you and delight you! Do you have a favorite Halloween story or book? GRADE: A