
The 5-2 Buffalo Bills take on the 1-7 Washington Redskins. After being trounced by the Philadelphia Eagles 31-13, the Bills should be eager to resume their winning ways over an NFC East doormat. But, this is the NFL so the Bills better not play down to the quality of their opponent today. We’ll be watching the game in Airports today as we fly home from BOUCHERCON #50. How will your favorite NFL team perform today?
Author Archives: george
WESTERN STARS

This Bruce Springsteen documentary captures The Boss singing all 13 songs from his 19th album, Western Stars (my review of the CD can be found here). Springsteen filmed this astonishing performance in a 140-year old barn on his property in Colts Neck, New Jersey. Springsteen is backed by a 30-piece orchestra, his wife–vocalist/guitarist Patti Scialfa, four harmony singers, and a quintet featuring drums, bass, pedal steel, piano, and electric guitar. The sound is fabulous!
Springsteen introduces each song with some thoughts on how he wrote it and the circumstances that fueled the emotions the song evokes. As I pointed out when I reviewed the CD, the songs are more mellow than you’ll find on most Springsteen albums. Some reviewers claim Western Stars is a homage to classic California pop songs from the late 1960s and 1970s. Clearly, Springsteen was influenced by Jimmy Webb.
The beauty of Western Stars depends on Emmy Award winner Thom Zimny who captures the complexity of the film’s subject. If you’re a Bruce Springsteen fan, this is a must-see. If you like music documentaries, Western Stars is one of the best. GRADE: A
FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #553: THE GREAT SF STORIES #15 (1953) Edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg

The most famous story in The Great SF Stories #15 is Arthur C. Clarke’s classic “The Nine Billion Names of God.” But the best story is Jerome Bixby’s chilling “It’s a Good Life.” Theodore Sturgeon’s “A Saucer of Loneliness” is one of the early SF stories with a homosexual theme. And Theodore R. Cogswell’s “The Wall Around the World” made a big impression on me when I first read it decades ago. Do you see any of your favorite SF stories here? GRADE: A
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
INTRODUCTION by Martin H. Greenberg 9
“The Big Holiday” by Fritz Leiber (THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION, January 1953) 13
“Crucifixus Etiam” by Walter M. Miller, Jr. (ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION, February 1953) 24
“Four in One” by Damon Knight (GALAXY, February 1953) 48
“A Saucer of Loneliness” by Theodore Sturgeon (GALAXY, February 1953) 86
“The Liberation of Earth” by William Tenn (FUTURE SCIENCE FICTION, May 1953) 102
“Lot” by Ward Moore (THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION, May 1953) 123
“The Nine Billion Names of God” by Arthur C. Clarke (STAR SCIENCE FICTION STORIES, 1953) 155
“Warm” by Robert Sheckley (GALAXY, June 1953) 164
“Impostor” by Philip K. Dick (ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION, June 1953) 176
“The World Well Lost” by Theodore Sturgeon (UNIVERSE SCIENCE FICTION, June 1953) 194
“A Bad Day for Sales” by Fritz Leiber (GALAXY, June 1953) 216
“Common Time” by James Blish (SCIENCE FICTION QUARTERLY, August 1953) 224
“Time is the Traitor” by Alfred Bester (THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION, September 1953) 250
“The Wall Around the World” by Theodore R. Cogswell (BEYOND, September 1953) 277
“The Model of a Judge” by William Morrison (GALAXY, October 1953) 308
“Hall of Mirrors” by Fredric Brown (GALAXY, December 1952) 322
“It’s a Good Life” by Jerome Bixby (STAR SCIENCE FICTION STORIES 2, 1953) 331
HALLOWEEN 2019
HEX LIFE: WICKED NEW TALES OF WITCHERY Edited by Christopher Golden & Rachel Autumn Deering

Just in time for Halloween, Christopher Golden and Rachel Autumn Deering’s Hex Life: Wicked New Tales of Witchery delivers an anthology of magic, mystery, and mayhem. My favorite story is Kelley Armstrong’s “Black Magic Momma: An Otherworld Story.” Armstong’s witch, Eve Levine, deals with plenty of supernatural baggage as she tries to protect and provide for her daughter. Armstrong’s urban fantasy blends witchery and criminal duplicity to produce an action-packed story. I also enjoyed “Toil & Trouble” by Sherrilyn Kenyon & Madaug Kenyon where the Kenyons show it never plays to double-cross witches. Hex Life concludes on a high note with Theodora Goss’s fractured fairy tale, “How To Become a Witch-Queen.” The Sleeping-Beauty story gains depth and strategy in Goss’s version.
If you’re in the mood for magic spells and spooky situations, Hex Life conjures up fear and fun. GRADE: B
TABLE OF CONTENTS
An invitation to a burning / Kat Howard — 7
Widows’ walk / Angela Slatter — 17
Black Magic Momma: An Otherworld Story / Kelley Armstrong — 41
The Night Nurse / Sarah Langan — 63
The Memories of Trees / Mary SanGiovanni — 99
Home: A Morganville Vampires Story / Rachel Caine — 117
The Deer Wife / Jennifer McMahon — 147
The Dancer / Kristin Dearborn — 169
Bless Your Heart / Hillary Monahan — 187
The Debt / Ania Ahlborn — 207
Toil & Trouble / Sherrilyn Kenyon & Madaug Kenyon — 223
Last Stop on Route Nine / Tananarive Due — 239
Where Relics Go to Dream and Die / Rachel Autumn Deering — 263
This Skin / Amber Benson — 275
Haint Me Too / Chesya Burke — 287
The Nekrolog / Helen Marshall — 309
Gold Among the Black / Alma Katsu — 333
How to become a Witch-Queen / Theodora Goss — 347
THE ADDAMS FAMILY MOVIE

This new animated feature about the Addams Family captures both the creepiness and dark humor of Charles Addams’s brilliant cartoons. The title for this film could have been Mosters vs. HGTV. A massive new housing development opens near the Addams Family house and skullduggery results. The star of the housing development, Margoux Needler (Allison Janney), intends to destroy the Addams’s house which she sees as an eye-sore. Meanwhile, Gomez (Oscar Isaac) trains his son, Pugsley (Finn Wolfhard), in the Addams Family tradition of the Mazurka, a rite of passage for Addams males. Wednesday (Chloe Grace Moretz) attends the local Middle School and learns many valuable lessons. I also enjoyed Morticia Addams (Charlize Theron) and her icy demeanor.
If you’re in the mood for a campy romp with a Halloween vibe, I’d recommend The Addams Family. Are you an Addams Family fan? Do you have a favorite Halloween movie? GRADE: B
VOICE CAST:
Oscar Isaac as Gomez Addams, Morticia’s husband.
Charlize Theron as Morticia Addams, Gomez’s wife.
Chloë Grace Moretz as Wednesday Addams, Gomez and Morticia’s daughter.
Finn Wolfhard as Pugsley Addams, Gomez and Morticia’s son.
Nick Kroll as Uncle Fester, Gomez’s brother.
Bette Midler as Grandmama, Gomez and Fester’s mother.
Conrad Vernon as Lurch, the Addams Family’s butler.
Vernon also voices a priest that presides over Gomez and Mortica’s wedding; the spirit that haunted the abandoned asylum that Gomez and Morticia move into (who often threatened anyone in to “Get Out!”, much to the family’s delight); and Dr. Flambe, a devil-like relative of the Addams family with fire-like abilities.
Snoop Dogg as Cousin Itt, Gomez and Fester’s hairy cousin.
Allison Janney as Margaux Needler, a sly and greedy reality TV show host and homemaking guru.
Elsie Fisher as Parker Needler, Margaux’s neglected and rebellious daughter who befriends Wednesday.
Tituss Burgess as Glenn, Margaux’s agent.
Pom Klementieff as Layla and Kayla, twin girls who are Parker’s friends.
Chelsea Frei as Bethany, a girl who picks on Parker.
Jenifer Lewis as Great Auntie Sloom, Grandmama’s dwarfish sister who uses stilts under her dress to appeared much taller than Grandmama.
Martin Short as Grandpa Frump, Morticia’s late father who Morticia contacts through a séance.
Catherine O’Hara as Grandma Frump, Morticia’s late mother who Morticia contacts through a séance.
TALKING TO STRANGERS By Malcolm Gladwell

After citing a number of examples of Bad Things happening when people trust strangers, Malcom Gladwell sums up with this passage: “We have, in other words, CIA officers who cannot make sense of their spies, judges who cannot make sense of their defendants, and prime ministers who cannot make sense of their adversaries. We have people struggle with their first impressions of a strange. We have people struggle when they have months to understand a stranger. We have people struggle when they meet with someone only once, and people struggle when they return to the stranger again and again. They struggle with assessing a stranger’s honesty. The struggle with a stranger’s character. They struggle with a stranger’s intent.” (p. 45)
Malcolm Gladwell documents dozens of examples of people trusting strangers…and paying a terrible price. Some are hurt physically, some mentally, some fatally. Gladwell’s supposition is that something in our DNA or mental programming predisposes us to trust complete strangers…usually to our detriment. Most of Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know About the People We Don’t Know” is a series of cautionary tales. The bottom line conclusion, after almost 400 pages, counsels caution and wariness in human interactions. But, you already knew that. GRADE: B-
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
AUTHOR’S NOTE xi
Introduction: “Step Out of the Car!” 1
PART ONE: SPICE AND DIPLOMATS: TWO PUZZLES
ONE: Fidel Castro’s Revenge 17
TWO: Getting in Know de Fuhrer 28
PART TWO: DEFAULT TO TRUTH
THREE: The Queen of Clubs 53
FOUR: The Holy Fool 89
FIVE: Case Study: The Boy in the Shower 107
PART THREE: TRANSPARENCY
SIX: The Friends Fallacy 145
SEVEN: A (Short) Explanation of the Amanda Knox Case 168
EIGHT: Case Study: The Fraternity Party 187
PART FOUR: LESSONS
NINE: KSM: What Happens When the Stranger Is a Terrorist? 235
PART FIVE: COUPLING
TEN: Sylvia Plath 265
ELEVEN: Case Study: The Kansas City Experiment 297
TWELVE: Sandra Bland 313
ACKNOWLEDGEMETNS 347
NOTES 349
INDEX 389
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES VS. BUFFALO BILLS

The bickering 3-4 Philadelphia Eagles come to Buffalo desperate for a victory. The Eagles have lost two games in a row–including an embarrassing Bad Game in Dallas last week. The 5-1 Buffalo Bills played a weak Miami Dolphins team last week and just squeaked by with a 31-21 win (with the help of a return of an on-side kick). The weather here is wet and windy. That could affect the game. How will your favorite NFL do today?
KISS KISS, BANG BANG

Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang showed up at my local thrift store this week and I immediately bought it. It’s been about 15 years since I first saw it. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang is a 2005 American black comedy crime film written and directed by Shane Black (in his directorial debut). Starring Robert Downey Jr., Val Kilmer, Michelle Monaghan, and Corbin Bernsen, the movie is loosely based on Brett Halliday’s Bodies Are Where You Find Them (1941). This film turns the classic hardboiled literary genre on its head with inside jokes and sarcasm.
The title comes from an essay by Pauline Kael. After seeing a movie poster in Italy which translated as “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,” Kael wrote, “These four words are perhaps the briefest statement imaginable of the basic appeal of the movies. The appeal is what attracts us and ultimately makes us despair when we begin to understand how seldom movies are more than this.” Well said, Pauline! GRADE: B+
FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #552: THE SCIENCE FICTION HALL OF FAME, VOLUME TWO A & B Edited by Ben Bova


Ben Bova’s two-volume collection of The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volumes IIA & IIB (1973) is subtitled: “The Greatest Science Fiction Novellas of All Time.” That’s a bit misleading since the cut-off on the selections is 1961 with Jack Vance’s classic “The Moon Moth.” Bova identifies two wonderful stories that made the cut but were not included. “A Canticle for Leibowitz” by Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1955) was not available for re-publication in 1973, because it had been incorporated in the fix-up novel A Canticle for Leibowitz (1959) that was still in print. “By His Bootstraps” by Robert A. Heinlein (1941) would have been a second work by Heinlein so that classic story got disqualified. All the stories in The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volumes IIA & IIB were chosen by the members of The Science Fiction Writers of America. Copies are available online at inexpensive prices. You can’t go wrong with a 1,000 pages of great Science Fiction stories! Do you see any of your favorite SF stories here? GRADE: A (FOR BOTH VOLUMES!)
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Volume 2A
Introduction by Ben Bova i
Poul Anderson “Call Me Joe” 1957 1
John W. Campbell “Who Goes There?” 1938 34
Lester del Rey “Nerves” 1942 88
Robert A. Heinlein “Universe” 1941 159
Cyril M. Kornbluth “The Marching Morons” 1951 204
Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore “Vintage Season” 1946 233
Eric Frank Russell “…And Then There Were None” 1951 275
Cordwainer Smith “The Ballad of Lost C’Mell” 1962 342
Theodore Sturgeon “Baby Is Three” 1952 362
H.G. Wells “The Time Machine” 1895 417
Jack Williamson “With Folded Hands” 1947 487
Volume 2B
Introduction by Ben Bova i
Isaac Asimov “The Martian Way” 1952 1
James Blish “Earthman Come Home” 1953 46
Algis Budrys “Rogue Moon” 1960 85
Theodore Cogswell “The Spectre General” 1952 175
E. M. Forster “The Machine Stops” 1909 228
Frederik Pohl “The Midas Plague” 1954 259
James H. Schmitz “The Witches of Karres” 1949 313
T. L. Sherred “E for Effort” 1947 357
Wilmar H. Shiras “In Hiding” 1948 408
Clifford D. Simak “The Big Front Yard” 1958 442
Jack Vance “The Moon Moth” 1961 493
