
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY!



“The second volume of Star Wars Visions expanded the show’s reach to various studios across the globe. This new series features shorts from animation studios El Guiri (Spain), Cartoon Saloon (Ireland), Punkrobot (Chile), Aardman (United Kingdom), Studio Mir (South Korea), Studio La Cachette (France), 88 Pictures (India), D’art Shtajio (Japan), and Triggerfish (South Africa). The creators at each studio are given free rein to re-envision the ideas of Star Wars as they see fit, while receiving guidance from Lucasfilm’s executive team; further, D’art Shtajio’s short was co-produced by Lucasfilm.”
If you’re in the mood for some Star Wars international animation, you might want to give the new Star Wars Visions series a try. The nine episodes feature stories from various parts of the Lucasfilm Universe. I enjoyed all nine episodes in this second season of Star Wars Visions and my favorite was “Journey to the Dark Head” that tells the story of a committed pilot and a troubled Jedi–quite an odd couple. You’ll find the gorgeous animation in this series a real treat! GRADE: A
Here are summaries of each of the nine new episodes:
A former Sith living a peaceful life is confronted with her past when her former master finds her.
A young girl seeking relief from her days in a rural workshop discovers a legendary haunted cave with her friends. The cave’s dark call will change the trajectory of her life forever.
Two sisters, who are the last of their kind, fight for survival when Imperial forces discover them.
Young pilot Anni is forced to participate with her caring but nagging mother, of whom she is ashamed, in a reckless flight academy family competition where their relationship is tested by their old ship.
S2 E5 · Journey to the Dark Head
An optimistic mechanic/pilot and a disillusioned young Jedi join forces on an unlikely and risky mission to turn the tide of galactic warfare, but dark forces follow them on their quest.
The prima ballerina of a well-known cabaret frequented by imperials uses her unique skills to do espionage on behalf of the Rebellion, but the presence of a mysterious officer threatens to compromise her mission.
A young boy and his Force-sensitive younger sister flee their village by train. They are pursued by ruthless Imperial forces, so they seek refuge in a bustling and dangerous marketplace.
A brave young prisoner, forced by the Empire to dig the earth to extract kyber crystals, plans a risky escape for himself and his people when the Imperials abandon the workers in the mine.
An alien child, eager to sing, is brought up by a loving but strict father, who forces her to keep silent because of the disastrous effect her voice has on the crystals in some mines.

As you can see on the cover of this new edition of Fools Die on Friday (1947), Raymond Chandler wrote to Erle Stanley Gardner in 1948 and complemented him with these words: “Fools Die on Friday is about the best of the series since the first two. Perhaps since the very first.” Those words may have been premature given that the Donald Lam-Bertha Cool series has 30 books and Fools Die on Friday is only book #11.
The title comes from Erle Stanley Gardner’s observation that most executions occur on a Friday. In this case Donald Lam and Bertha Cool are hired to prevent a potential poisoning. Donald Lam decides on a tricky strategy that sounds good in theory…but fails monumentally. Lam and Cool have to scramble to limit the damage and catch the killer.
I read Fools Die on Friday back in the 1960s when I binged on both of Gardner’s series: Perry Mason and Lam-Cool. Fools Die on Friday is the sixth book of the series that Hard Case Crime has reprinted. I’m hoping they reprint the whole series! The plots are tricky and the action causes the pages to turn. GRADE: B

Since no Beatles songs were included on Classic Rock: 1965 this compilation gives a skewed picture of the music of 1965. Yes, Motown shows up strong: Wilson Pickett, Smokey Robinson and The Miracles, The Temptations, The Four Tops, and The Supremes.
Classics like The Righteous Brothers’s “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’ ” and “I Got You Babe” by Sonny and Cher rub shoulders with novelty songs like “Wooly Bully” by Sam The Sham (related to George Santos) and The Pharaohs and “Down in The Boondocks” by Billy Joe Royal.
“Help Me, Rhonda” is one of my favorite Beach Boys songs. And I never tire of listening to The Byrds’s rendition of “Mr. Tambourine Man.” Do you remember these songs from 1965? Any favorites here? GRADE: B+
TRACK LIST:
| 1 | The Byrds– | Mr. Tambourine Man Written-By – Bob Dylan | 2:22 |
| 2 | The Yardbirds– | For Your Love Written-By – Graham Gouldman | 2:31 |
| 3 | Wilson Pickett– | In The Midnight Hour Written-By – Steve Cropper, Wilson Pickett | 2:28 |
| 4 | The Miracles– | The Tracks Of My Tears Written-By – Marvin Tarplin, William Robinson*, Warren Moore | 2:56 |
| 5 | The Beau Brummels– | Just A Little Written-By – Robert Durand, Ron Elliott | 2:26 |
| 6 | The Righteous Brothers– | You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’ Written-By – Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, Phil Spector | 3:43 |
| 7 | The Temptations– | My Girl Written-By – Ronald White, William Robinson | 2:44 |
| 8 | Sam The Sham And The Pharaohs*– | Wooly Bully Written-By – Domingo Samudio | 2:21 |
| 9 | Billy Joe Royal– | Down In The Boondocks Written-By – Joe South | 2:36 |
| 10 | The Beach Boys– | Help Me, Rhonda Written-By – Brian Wilson | 2:47 |
| 11 | Barbara Lewis– | Baby, I’m Yours Written-By – Van McCoy | 2:32 |
| 12 | The Lovin’ Spoonful– | Do You Believe In Magic? Written-By – John Sebastian | 2:06 |
| 13 | The Four Tops*– | I Can’t Help Myself Written-By – Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier And Edward Holland Jr. | 2:43 |
| 14 | The Kinks– | Tired Of Waiting For You Written-By – Ray Davies | 2:34 |
| 15 | The McCoys– | Hang On Sloopy Written-By – Bert Russell, Wes Farrell | 3:04 |
| 16 | The Yardbirds– | Heart Full Of Soul Written-By – Graham Gouldman | 2:30 |
| 17 | Junior Walker And The All Stars*– | Shotgun Written-By – Autry DeWalt | 3:04 |
| 18 | Sonny And Cher*– | I Got You Babe Written-By – Sonny Bono | 3:12 |
| 19 | The Castaways– | Liar, Liar Written-By – Jim Donna | 1:53 |
| 20 | The Supremes– | Back In My Arms AgainWritten-By – Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier And Edward Holland Jr. | 2:54 |
| 21 | Gary Lewis And The Playboys*– | This Diamond Ring Written-By – Al Kooper, Bob Brass (2), Irwin Levine | 2:10 |
| 22 | The Toys– | A Lover’s Concerto Written-By – Denny Randell, Sandy Linzer | 2:35 |

Once again I was surprised to learn about a book series I didn’t know existed. I picked up this slim paperback (105 pages of BIG PRINT!) at a Library Book Sale and learned this is the first book in a seven book series (you can check out the entire series below). Here’s the low-down from the Quick Reads website:
“Quick Reads is a literacy organisation which works with book publishers to provide low-cost, low-page count books to encourage people to read. A major focus of their outreach are adult readers who need to improve their literacy skills. BBC Books is one of the non-profit’s partners. Beginning in 2006, this relationship produced original Doctor Who fiction.
During the David Tennant years, one Tenth Doctor Quick Reads novella was released each year, including the “transition” year of 2010. No Quick Reads were issued in 2011, but the series resumed in 2012 with the Eleventh Doctor, but was discontinued after the 2013 release (though non-Doctor Who Quick Reads novellas continue to be published).
The 2007 release Made of Steel was notable for being the first piece of original fiction based upon the revival series to be written by Terrance Dicks, a script editor and writer for the original TV series, as well as a prolific writer of Doctor Who prose fiction. The novella was also published a month before the episode Smith and Jones was first broadcast, thus making it the first appearance of companion Martha Jones.”
I found I Am a Dalek a quick 20-minute read. The reading level and plot are set at a low level, but the story was typical Doctor Who stuff which always appeals to me. If you’re a Doctor Who fan, you might be interested in these Quick Reads. GRADE: B
| I am a Dalek | Gareth Roberts | May 2006 | 0-563-48648-1 | 9 | ||||
| Made of Steel | Terrance Dicks | Mar 2007 | 978-1-84607-204-8 | |||||
| Revenge of the Judoon | Terrance Dicks | Mar 2008 | 978-1-84607-372-4 | |||||
| The Sontaran Games | Jacqueline Rayner | Feb 2009 | 978-1-84607-643-5 | |||||
| Code of the Krillitanes | Justin Richards | Mar 2010 | 978-1-84607-928-3 | |||||
| Magic of The Angels | Jacqueline Rayner | Feb 2012 | 978-1-84990-286-1 | |||||
| The Silurian Gift | Mike Tucker | Dec 2012 |

Billy Joel performed two concerts at Shea Stadium in New York City on July 16 and 18 of 2008. This DVD version was released on March 8, 2011. The film was produced by Jon Small, Joel’s former bandmate in the 1960s groups The Hassles and Attila. The film aired on PBS as part of Great Performances.
The two concerts were the last performed at Shea Stadium before it was demolished to make way for Citi Field. This DVD features guest appearances by Tony Bennett, Garth Brooks, John Mayer, Steven Tyler, Roger Daltrey, John Mellencamp, Mark Wood, and Paul McCartney.
Usually I’m not a fan of concert videos–many feature bad sound–but this DVD delivers crisp footage and clear sound. Worth a look and a listen. Are you a Billy Joel fan? GRADE: B+
TRACKLIST:
| Billy Joel– | Prelude / Angry Young Man | ||
| Billy Joel– | My Life | ||
| Billy Joel– | Summer, Highland Falls | ||
| Billy Joel– | Everybody Loves You Now | ||
| Billy Joel– | Zanzibar | ||
| Billy Joel With Tony Bennett– | New York State Of Mind | ||
| Billy Joel– | Allentown | ||
| Billy Joel– | The Ballad Of Billy The Kid | ||
| Billy Joel– | She’s Always A Woman | ||
| Billy Joel– | Goodnight Saigon | ||
| Billy Joel– | Miami 2017 (Seen The Lights Go Out On Broadway) | ||
| Billy Joel With Garth Brooks– | Shameless | ||
| Billy Joel With John Mayer– | This Is The Time | ||
| Billy Joel– | Keeping The Faith | ||
| Billy Joel– | Captain Jack | ||
| Billy Joel– | Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel) | ||
| The River Of Dreams / A Hard Days Night | |||
| Billy Joel– | The River Of Dreams | ||
| Billy Joel– | A Hard Day’s Night | ||
| – | |||
| Billy Joel– | We Didn’t Start The Fire | ||
| Billy Joel– | You May Be Right | ||
| Billy Joel– | Scenes From An Italian Restaurant | ||
| Billy Joel– | Only The Good Die Young | ||
| Billy Joel With Paul McCartney– | I Saw Her Standing There | ||
| Billy Joel– | Take Me Out To The Ballgame | ||
| Billy Joel– | Piano Man | ||
| Billy Joel With Paul McCartney– | Let It Be | ||
| Bonus Performances | |||
| Billy Joel With Steven Tyler– | Walk This Way | ||
| Billy Joel With Roger Daltrey– | My Generation | ||
| Billy Joel With John Mellencamp*– | Pink Houses |

Philip Schultz won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry with a book called Failure. Comforts of the Abyss presents Schultz’s method of persona writing. I would call it memoir but apparently that’s an out-mode term. Here’s Schultz writing about the books that most affected him as a kid:
“…I’d go around pretending I was Jack Barnes In The Sun Also Rises and Holden Caulfield in The Catcher in the Rye, and even old Huck Finn in Adventurers of Huckleberry Finn. Their opinions and attitudes became mine and I would even try to talk and act the way I imagined they did. Which wasn’t an easy feat for a dyslexic.” (p. 1)
Schultz struggled in school because of his undiagnosed dyslexia. He thought he was dumb. Finally Schultz was diagnosed with dyslexia. He didn’t learn to read until he was 11…but he made up for lost time fast.
Much of Comforts of the Abyss chronicles Schultz’s interactions with famous writers: Philip Roth, Norman Mailer, Elizabeth Bishop, Joan Didon, etc. Those sections are buffered by the poems and poets that affected Schultz’s career as a teacher at Kalamazoo College. Schultz’s favorite contemporary poet is Elizabeth Bishop so he devotes multiple sections of this book to analyzing her work.
If you’d like to see how a poet lives his life, both ups and downs, what famous people he meets, what books and poems most affect him, Comforts of the Abyss reveals much of what made Philip Schultz a good poet. Do you read much poetry? GRADE: B
The Mind’s First Freedom 1
The Shitbird, Named and Unnamed 6
I Never Wanted to Be Me, I Don’t Think 13
Pity and Fear 23
My Two Libraries 32
The Poet and the Fiction Writer; Conduits of Revelation 48
Our Most Curious Artifact 62
Somebody Loves Us All 75
Penurious Arrogance 86
A Magic Act 98
Indian Wrestling 107
Which Side Are You On? 119
Voices Veiled and Unveiled 132
The Socratic Method 144
In the Nature of a Test 151
The Map of the World 160
Gussie 168
I Came, I Saw, I Suffered 176
In the Manner of Poetry 184
A New City of Words 193
Anger and Shame 202
The Argument and the Lullaby 211
What We Want 220
Acknowledgments 223
Credits 227

I decided to read a book by Annie Ernaux, winner of the Nobel Prize for 2022. Getting Lost, a diary from 1988 to 1990, shows Ernaux’s obsession with a married Soviet diplomat in Paris.
I confess I’m baffled by Ernaux’s obsession with this guy. Ernaux calls him “S” and he shows up at her door drunk most of the time. During sex, S talks about Stalin. S is younger than Ernaux–who is 48 at the beginning of this affair–so there’s a Mrs. Robinson and Benjamin vibe.
“11:45 P.M. He came and stayed five hours. It had been a long time since I’d experienced such perfection, and since we’d been so attuned to each other. Made love, four times, in different ways. (Bedroom, anal sex after many long and slow caresses—downstairs, sofa, missionary very tender too–bedroom, so moving: ‘I’m going to put my sperm on your belly’–the sofa, doggy style, so perfectly in tune.) An infinite need for the other’s body, his presence.” (p. 109)
And Annie Ernaux can be unintentionally funny. “I realized that I’d lost a contact lens,” Ernaux writes. “I found it on his penis.” (p. 33)
Even after a long sex session, Ernaux immediately starts fantasizing about their next encounter. From the minimal facts Ernaux reveals about her lover, he seems like a creep. Not a lot of long conversations between these two: it’s “Let’s Get It On” time whenever they’re together.
Getting Lost is a far cry from one of Deb’s romance novels. It’s almost clinical in the description of the sexual encounters.
The picture I get from reading Annie Ernaux’s diary of these years shows a woman trying to deal with the aging process by engaging in a relationship with a dubious fellow (he could be K.G.B. but Ernaux doesn’t seem to mind) like a compulsive cougar on the prowl.
Annie Ernaux refers to her son, her ex-husband, and her writing career. But, Getting Lost mostly centers around Ernaux getting lost with her Soviet sex toy. GRADE: C

Mild spoiler: Guardians of the Galaxy, Volume 3 appears to be the final chapter of this configuration of the Guardians in the Marcel Cinematic Universe. One reason is that Director James Gunn, who both wrote and directed this film (and the other two Guardians of the Galaxy movies), is now the co-CEO of DC studios over at Warner Brothers so this is his Marvel swan song.
The focus of the film is on Rocket Raccoon, the snide genius rodent voiced by Bradley Cooper. It tells Rocket’s origin story as a cruel lab experiment conducted by High Evolutionary (Chukwudi Isuji) whose quest for “Perfection” leads to a lot of death and destruction.
Chris Pratt returns as Peter Quill (aka, Star Lord) and Zoe Saldana returns in a different format as Peter’s love interest, Gamora. Like the previous two Guardians of the Galaxy movies, the music playlist fills the action with mostly songs from the 1990s and a few from the 1980s and 2000s.
Along with Drax (Dave Bautista), Groot (Vin Diesel) and Mantis (Pom Klementieff), Gunn introduces a new superhero, Adam Warlock (Will Poulter). My favorite character is Nebula (Karen Gillian) who deserves her own movie.
If you’re looking for plenty of action, wacky plotting, and irreverent humor you’ll enjoy Guardians of the Galaxy, Volume 3. GRADE: B

I fell in love with ACE Doubles at an early age in the Sixties. As I walked to school when I was 12 years old, I passed a local drug store with a prominently displayed spinner rack (remember them?) with plenty of paperbacks. But the ones that seduced me were ACE Doubles with their cool double covers in tête-bêche format. I bought Science Fiction ACE Doubles in those early days, but sometime in my late teens I broadened my buying to include ACE Doubles featuring mysteries and Westerns. I ended up donated dozens of ACE Doubles to the Special Collections at the State University at Buffalo as part of the 30,000 volume George Kelley Paperback and Pulp Fiction Collection.
Stark House just published THREE ACES, A Trio of ACE Books with a wonderful Introduction by Richard Krauss, editor and publisher of The Digest Enthusiast. Richard Krauss’s informative and enlightening description of ACE Doubles and Singles from that era highlights the editorial strategy and the changing public tastes of that time. Richard was kind enough to invite me to add some of my fond memories of ACE Doubles and they’re included in the Introduction, too!
The Gilded Hideaway (ACE Single S-107) by Peter Twist (a pseudonym of C. P. Hewitt) was published in 1955. Robert West has success and a wife and friends, but none of that brings him happiness. So West steals $100,000 and flees to Mexico to start a new Life. But West learns money doesn’t solve all problems especially when it comes to the beautiful woman named Mercedes. GRADE: B
In at the Kill by Emmett McDowell (aka, Robert Emmett McDowell) was half of ACE Double D-445 (the other half was McDowell’s Bloodline to Murder), published in 1960. In at the Kill concerns a scheme to locate some rare stamps, but leads to more valuable photos and blackmail. GRADE: B+
Heat Lightning (ACE Single S-74) by Wilene Shaw (pseudonym of Virgina M. Harrison), published in 1954, delivers a hot love triangle in the Kentucky hills. Holly Reed, while attracted to local bootlegger Brandy Elliot, finds herself drawn to a stranger in town: city-bred Larry Carter. Carter turns out to be a man of mystery…and violence. GRADE: A-
If you have three aces, you’re likely to win. Stark House’s Three Aces omnibus is a winner for sure! Don’t miss this one!