Author Archives: george

DIRTY BLONDE By Lisa Scottoline


Welcome to Blonde Week! This week the posts will follow a Blonde Theme. Let’s get started with Lisa Scottoline’s novel from 2006, Dirty Blonde. Cate Fante, a successful lawyer, becomes a Federal Judge. Despite her skills as a lawyer, Cate has a Deep Dark Secret: she randomly picks up men and has sex with them.

When Cate’s first case as a Federal Judge results in a murder, she finds herself stalked, her house is broken into, and her Federal Office is ransacked. Scottoline shows that becoming a Federal Judge can bring some serious consequences and threats. I liked Cate Fante’s style in Court and wish there were more of those scenes. There’s also a subplot with Cate’s closest friend, Gina, whose young son has problems. Do you have a favorite Lisa Scottoline mystery? GRADE: B+

THE DEFENDERS [Netflix]


Some people call The Defenders a “low-rent” version of Marvel’s The Avengers. In the run-up to The Avengers movie, Marvel carefully launched movies about Iron Man, Thor, and Captain America. In the run-up to The Defenders series, Marvel launched Daredevil (starring Charlie Cox), Jessica Jones (played by Krysten Alyce Ritter), Luke Cage (Mike Colter), and Iron Fist (Finn Jones) on Netflix.

Now, these four characters are brought together to fight The Hand, a secret organization led by five Immortals with Sigourney Weaver plotting to destroy New York City! Of course, these four super-heroes have plenty of problems and getting them to work together takes four of the eight episodes. But, when Jones, Cage, Iron Fist, and Daredevil finally start working as a team, there’s plenty of action.

Yes, The Defenders don’t have the fire-power of The Avengers, but I found this Netflix series entertaining and compelling. How about you? Are you a fan of The Defenders? GRADE: B+

WIND RIVER


Jeremy Renner pretty much carries Wind River playing a U. S. Fish and Wildlife tracker who agrees to work with Elizabeth Olsen, an FBI agent, investigating a death on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming. Elizabeth Olsen has the thankless role of a “city” FBI agent assigned to this case because she was closest geographically. Olsen’s character is a young, naive woman who is a fish out of water in the Wyoming wilderness.

Much of this movie consists of emotive dialogue between two characters. Then, all hell breaks loose. This pattern is repeated several times. Life on the Reservation is portrayed as hellish. The crime mixes brutality and courage. Women characters don’t fare well, but many of the male characters end up dead. GRADE: B-

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #438: SPACE OPERA Edited by Brian Aldiss


I had other plans for today’s FFB, but with the recent death of Brian Aldiss, I thought I’d pay homage to one of great Science Fiction writers by featuring one of my favorite SF anthologies, Space Opera (1974). Aldiss wrote eloquently about Science Fiction in his Trillion Year Spree, but I think the memory of Brian Aldiss is best served by this quirky collection of Space Opera stories with Aldiss’s brilliant “Introduction.” My first Brian Aldiss story was half of an ACE Double titled Bow Down to Nul back in the 1960s. I thought Bow Down to Nul was somehow connected to A. E. Van Vogt’s World of Null-A (another half of an ACE Double I’d recently read). Wrong! What is your favorite Brian Aldiss work? GRADE: A
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
“Introduction” (Brian W. Aldiss)
“Is Everything an Illusion?” (Brian W. Aldiss)
“Zirn Left Unguarded, the Jenghik Palace in Flames, Jon Westerley Dead” (1972) (Robert Sheckley)
“Honeymoon in Space” (excerpt from A Honeymoon in Space) (1968) (George Griffith)
“The Red Brain” (1927) (Donald Wandrei) (appeared in Futura edition only)
“Tonight the Sky Will Fall” (1952) (Daniel F. Galouye)
“Precipices of Light That Went Forever Up ….” (Brian W. Aldiss)
“The Star of Life” (excerpt) (1947) (Edmond Hamilton)
“After Ixmal” (1962) (Jeff Sutton)
“Sea Change” (1956) (Thomas N. Scortia)
“Exile Is Our Lot” (Brian W. Aldiss)
“Breaking Point” (1953) (James E. Gunn) (appeared in Futura edition only)
“Colony” (1953) (Philip K. Dick) (did not appear in Futura edition)
The Sword of Rhiannon (excerpt) (1949) (Leigh Brackett)
“All Summer in a Day” (1954) (Ray Bradbury)
“The Mitr” (1953) (Jack Vance)
“The Godlike Machines” (Brian W. Aldiss)
“The Storm” (1943) (A. E. van Vogt)
“The Paradox Men” (1949) (Charles Harness)
“Time Fuze” (1954) (Randall Garrett)
“The Last Question” (1956) (Isaac Asimov)
“Answer” (1954) (Fredric Brown) (appeared in Futura edition only)
“Envoi” (Brian W. Aldiss)

DAY BREAKS By Norah Jones


Like most listeners, I was blown away by Norah Jones’s first CD, Come Away With Me, back in 2002. Great voice, great songs! I liked the second Nora Jones CD, Feels Like Home (2004), but not quite as much. Where the first CD had strong songs, on Feels Like Home, Norah Jones and her band wrote most of the material. Not so good. Then, Norah shifted gears, stopped singing the jazzy songs and went “mainstream” with her next few albums. I listened to them once and gave them away to whoever would take them off my hands.

Now, Day Breaks, Norah Jones’s new CD, goes back to the sound and style of Come Away With Me. Yes, most of the songs are written by Norah Jones and her band but they are better songs (still not great). If you’re looking for some pleasant background music, Day Break is your answer. If you buy the TARGET exclusive version (which I did) you get four more songs. GRADE: B

TRACK LIST:
1. “Burn” Norah Jones, Sarah Oda 4:38
2. “Tragedy” Jones, Oda 4:14
3. “Flipside” Jones, Peter Remm 3:41
4. “It’s a Wonderful Time for Love” Jones, Oda 3:53
5. “And Then There Was You” Jones, Remm 3:05
6. “Don’t Be Denied” Neil Young 5:36
7. “Day Breaks” Jones, Remm 3:57
8. “Peace” Horace Silver 5:15
9. “Once I Had a Laugh” Jones 3:12
10. “Sleeping Wild” Oda 3:07
11. “Carry On” Jones 2:48
12. “Fleurette Africaine (African Flower)” Duke Ellington 5:21
BONUS TRACKS:
13 “Carry On” (Live Performance From the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts in Burlington, VT) 2:37
14 “Flipside” (Live at Newport Jazz Festival) 4:39
15 “Peace” (Live at Newport Jazz Festival) 4:12
16. “Don’t Know Why” (Live at Newport Jazz Festival) 3:36

NEW APPLE iMAC COMPUTER


About two months ago, my DELL desktop computer died. I spent the next week or so trying to bring it back to life. I failed. Patrick recommended that I replace the old DELL with a new APPLE iMac desktop computer.

I’ve rarely used APPLE products. No iPhone, no iPod. Diane and I use the iPad Patrick gave us mostly to read ebooks. So I had a little trepidation switching from a WINDOWS computer (all the computers at the College I used to work for were WINDOWS computers, DELLS or HPs). My last three computers at home were DELLs.

So far, I love my new APPLE iMac. Love the 27-inch screen! Love the speed and ease of use. Yes, there’s still some quirky things that vary from the ways things work in WINDOWS, but I’ll master them. Patrick ordered the new APPLE iMac. Katie–who was home for a friend’s baby shower–installed the new computer. It’s great to have tech-savvy kids! Are you a fan of APPLE?

SUPERNOVA [DVD]


A young, buff James Spader and a professional Angela Bassett (she plays a no-nonsense doctor) are key members of a crew on a medical ship that answers an SOS in space. Like the crew of Alien, the crew in Supernova should have allowed some other med-ship to respond. Nothing goes right. The medical ship is damaged when it comes out of its trans-dimensional warp. The Captain dies. Although the cast includes Lou Diamond Phillips and Robin Tunney (the female detective and love interest on The Mentalist) the predictable plot doesn’t give them much to do. Mildly entertaining. GRADE: B-

TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE 2017


The Total Solar Eclipse has generated a frenzy here in Western New York. The thousands of “solar eclipse glasses” distributed through our local public libraries were gone in days. Then, stores started selling the glasses, some at $8 a pair! Those sold out. TV stations were showing how to build a home-made “pin light projector” to watch the solar eclipse in safety.

At best, we’ll only see 75% of the solar eclipse here (we’re perfectly positioned for the next solar eclipse in 2024). To my mind, if you’ve seen one eclipse, you’ve seen them all. Are you interested in the total solar eclipse? Will you be watching it today?

DEVIL’S BARGAIN: STEVEN BANNON, DONALD TRUMP, AND THE STORMING OF THE PRESIDENCY By Joshua Green


I was reading Joshua Green’s Devil’s Bargain when the news broke that Trump had fired Steve Bannon. Now that I’ve finished the story of Bannon and Trump’s relationship, I can confidently predict that Steve Bannon will continue to raise hell in the coming months. Joshua Green shows how Bannon’s background in the military and at Goldman Sachs prepared him to espouse the “nationalist” vision that he ultimately sold to Trump during the Presidential campaign. With the help of Dark Money and mysterious billionaires and Russian hackers, Bannon helped pull off the most astounding Presidential campaign upset in modern political history!

Steve Bannon, like many of the Trump Inner Circle, is a quirky guy. He’s made movies, built an Alt-Right media empire, and planned to “farm out” the war in Afghanistan to private defense contractors like Blackwater (Bannon’s firing put the kabosh on this nutty idea). We haven’t heard the last of Steve Bannon. GRADE: B+
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Preface ix
1 “It Will Take a Miracle” 1 (22)
2 “Where’s My Steve?” 23 (26)
3 Bildungsroman 49 (18)
4 “A Dangerous Way to Look at the World” 67 (26)
5 Nobody Builds Walls Like Trump 93 (26)
6 The Alt-Kochs 119 (18)
7 A Rolling Tumbleweed of Wounded Male Id and Aggression 137 (24)
8 “The Traffic Is Absolutely Filthy!” 161 (18)
9 “Honest Populism”. 179 (20)
10 Burn Everything Down 199 (26)
11 “The FBI Has Learned of the Existence …” 225 (12)
Afterword: Kali Yuga 237 (6)
Acknowledgments 243 (6)
Notes 249 (16)
Index 265

GIRLS TRIP


I went to the Regal Theater with the intention to see Detroit, but the events of the past week so befuddled me and bummed me out I went to see Girls Trip instead. Yes, it’s raunchy. Yes, it has a predictable plot. But Girls Trip features a strong cast: Ryan (Regina Hall) is a successful author of self-help books who is the keynote speaker at the Essence Festival in New Orleans, Sasha (Queen Latifah) who is struggling financially with a celebrity web site, Lisa (Jada Pinkett Smith) who is a single mother living with her mother, and Dina (Tiffany Haddish) who is wild and freaky is the straw that stirs this movie.

These four friends come together after a five-year absence to rekindle their friendship as they deal with their personal problems. Ryan’s husband, Stewart (Mike Colter) is cheating on her with a younger woman (Debrorah Ayorindle). Sasha and Dina have financial problems, and Lisa is fighting loneliness.

There are some wild scenes in this movie. No one who sees it will soon forget the zip-line episode. Or Dina instructing her friends on sexual techniques utilizing fruit. Girls Trip made me laugh, which is just what I needed during these Dark Times. GRADE: B