BUFFALO MAKES THE NATIONAL NEWS

“Prosecutors are investigating the actions of two Buffalo police officers who were suspended without pay on Thursday night after a video showed them shoving a 75-year-old protester, who was hospitalized with a head injury.

The video taken by WBFO, a local radio station, shows the man, identified on Friday as Martin Gugino, approaching a group of officers during a protest stemming from the death of George Floyd. He was identified by the Western New York Peace Center, a nonprofit that named him in a Facebook post, saying he is a peace activist and a member.

After the video shows Mr. Gugino stopping in front of the officers to talk, an officer yells “push him back” three times; one officer pushes his arm into Mr. Gugino’s chest, while another extends his baton toward him with both hands. Mr. Gugino flails backward, landing just out of range of the camera, with blood immediately leaking from his right ear.

An officer leans down to examine him, the video shows, but another officer then pulls the first officer away. Several other officers are seen walking by the man, motionless on the ground, without checking on him.”

That’s the story that made the New York Times and most major news outlets. The video of the incident has been viewed 70 million times. Buffalo has been under a curfew for most of the week after some stores were looted earlier in the week.

What’s the state of the protests in your neighborhood?

KYRIK: WARLOCK WARROR By Gardner F. Fox

Fred Blosser mentioned the great comic book writer Gardner F. Fox. Fox also wrote a variety of Science Fiction and Fantasy paperbacks. I just happened upon Fox’s Kyrik: Warlock Warrior which was published by a fringe paperback publisher, Leisure Books, back in 1975. As the cover says–“In the tradition of CONAN”–Kyrik is a fighter and powerful tactician.

But Kyrik first appears in this novel as a small statue. An evil sorcerer imprisoned Kyrik in this statue for a thousand years! A beautiful sorceress named Aryalla finds the statute and casts the spell that frees Kyrik. In return, Aryalla wants Kyrik to help her overthrow the dictator Devadonides. Devadonides relies on the evil sorcerer, Jokaline, to keep him in power.

Kyrik, with his sword Blue Fang, and Aryalla with her Magic, Gardner F. Fox launches them on an adventure worthy of Conan. Sure, this is a pastiche of the Real Thing, but if you’re looking for Sword & Sorcery action, Kyrik is a fun substitute. GRADE: B

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #596: DEATH MASKS By Jim Butcher

Harry Dresden is Chicago’s only wizard who works as a private investigator. I’ve enjoyed the first four books in this series (you can read my reviews here). Death Masks is the fifth book in the series and Jim Butcher jams it with action. A dangerous vampire from the Red Court challenges Dresden to a duel. Then group of hit men target Dresden and his VW Blue Beetle.

But the key plot line in Death Masks concerns Dresden being hired to find the stolen Shroud of Turin. The Shroud becomes a key element in a devastating spell of evil.

And, on top of all this, Dresden’s ex-girl friend, Susan (part vampire) , shows up and complicates his life. The pages fly by when I read a Harry Dresden novel. I read Death Masks in a day. Great fun! If you enjoy Urban Fantasy action novels, you’ll get a kick out of Death Masks. Are you a fan of Urban Fantasy? GRADE: B+

WOMEN & SONGS: BEGINNINGS 2 [2-CD Set]

A few weeks ago I posted about Women & Songs: Beginnings (you can read my review here) and now I’ve listened to the sequel: Women & Songs: Beginnings 2. Like the first collection of songs, the choices include several musical eras. It’s not often that I hear “Johnny Angel” by Shelly Fabares (who I had a crush on back in 1961). I want to get up and dance whenever I hear “The Loco-Motion” by Little Eva. And who can resist “Your Precious Love” by Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell!

Women & Songs: Beginnings 2 presents several hit songs like Carly Simon’s “Anticipation” which was the theme song for Heinz Ketchup commercials from the 1970s to the 1980s. “You Made Me Feel Like a Natural Woman” was one of Aretha Franklin’s biggest hits. And Dionne Warwick’s version of “Walk On By” has always been one of my favorites.

On the minus side, I was never an Edith Piaf fan. Do you remember these songs? Any favorites here? GRADE: B+

TRACK LIST:

Disc 1

  1. You Make Me Feel Like A Natural Woman
  2. Walk On By
  3. You’ve Changed
  4. I’m Sorry
  5. You Don’t Own Me
  6. You Don’t Know How Glad I Am
  7. End Of The World
  8. Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue
  9. Private Dancer
  10. MacArthur Park
  11. Love Is Like A Heatwave
  12. Release Me
  13. Who’s Sorry Now
  14. It That All There Is
  15. Whatever Will Be Will Be
  16. Mister Sandman

Disc 2

  1. Anticipation
  2. Rose Garden
  3. Baby Don’t Go
  4. What The World Needs Now Is Love
  5. Goldfinger
  6. Mangos
  7. Johnny Get Angry
  8. I Cried A Tear
  9. The Loco-Motion
  10. Easier Said Than Done
  11. Johnny Angel
  12. Your Precious Love (with Tammi Terrell)
  13. What’s New
  14. Cry Me A River
  15. Love Me Or Leave Me
  16. La Vie En Rose

THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER [DVD]

In 1984, I read a book that surprisingly made it to the top of the Best Sellers List: Tom Clancy’s The Hunt for Red October. Clancy would go on from that shockingly successful novel to dominate the Military Tech genre at the end of the Cold War.

The Hunt for Red October is the story of a captain of a Russian submarine who wants to defect with his crew and the advanced technology on the nuclear sub. Jack Ryan, a military analyst (who would go on to star in many more Clancy novels and their movie versions), believes the captain’s story, but elements of the Government think the captain wants to launch a nuclear attack on the U.S. instead. Jack Ryan is given three days to confirm or deny the captain’s true intentions.

The 1990 movie version of The Hunt for Red October stars Sean Connery as the Russian captain and Alec Baldwin as Jack Ryan. Both actors are brilliant in their roles. However, Alec Baldwin blew his chance at starring as Jack Ryan in future movies when he described his boss, Disney studio Chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg, as “the eighth dwarf — Greedy.”

Are you a fan of the Jack Ryan movies? Do you like Tom Clancy’s novels? GRADE: A

SCANDINAVIAN NOIR: In Pursuit of a Mystery By Wendy Lesser

 If you’re a fan of Lisbeth Salander (aka, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo) and Henning Mankell’s earnest Kurt Wallander you’ll find Scandinavian Noir an informative exploration of mysteries from Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.

Wendy Lesser takes the reader on a tour of Jo Nesbo’s Harry Hole novels and Stieg Larsson’s noirish mysteries as well as the Martin Beck series of police procedurals by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö. If you’re interested in this genre, you’ll find much to learn and enjoy in Scandinavian Noir. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Caveat Lector3(2)
Fiction As Reality5(124)
Reality As Fiction129(126)
Appendix: An Annotated List Of Mysteries And Thrillers255(18)
Acknowledgments273

MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: COMPLETE FIRST SEASON [4-DVD Box Set]

Back in September 1966, I was wowed by a new program called Mission Impossible on CBS. Back in those days, a TV season included way more episodes (25 or more!) than today’s truncated TV seasons. This DVD box set holds all 28 episodes from the first season of Mission Impossible. I loved the planning and execution of what was essentially a caper each week. This group, with each member possessing a special skill, meticulously planned a complicated mission to accomplish a goal.

I thought casting Greg Morris as the group’s “tech specialist” was cutting edge for the Sixties. Loved Martin Landau’s brilliant disguises. And, of course, like most 17-year-olds of that time, I had a crush on Barbara Bain.

Mission Impossible lasted for seven seasons and I remember enjoying every one. Sure, the formula got a little stale in the last season, but I enjoyed the format and the cast right up until the end of the series. Were you a fan of the Mission Impossible TV series? Did you have a favorite character? GRADE: A-

THE POSTUTOPIAN ADVENTURES OF DARGER AND SURPLUS By Michael Swanwick

Michael Swanwick has won Hugo Awards and Nebula Awards and is considered one of the best Science Fiction writers. I’ve been a fan of Swanwick’s Darger and Surplus short stories and now Subterranean Press has collected them and published this wonderful collection.

Aubrey Darger is a con artist who can blend into any group. His partner, Sir Blackthorpe Ravenscairn de Plus Preieux (aka, Surplus), is a genetically modified dog with a keen intelligence–and talks. This unlikely duo might remind you of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser (without the swords) given their tendencies toward larceny and adventures. The setting is the Future where the survivors of a brutal war between Artificial Intelligences and humanity live in a steampunk world where technology is feared (with good reason).

In these stories, Darger and Surplus scheme their way into Buckingham Palace and create havoc, fall in love (with disastrous consequences), and are captured by a living hotel. If you’re in the mood of something completely different, THE POSTUTOPIAN ADVENTURES OF DARGER AND SURPLUS delivers escapist fun. GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction:

  • Mother Goose’s Errant Sons 9

Stories:

  • The Dog Said Bow-Wow 15
  • The Little Cat Laughed to See Such Sport 39
  • Girls and Boys, Come Out to Play 63
  • Tawny Petticoats 99
  • There Was An Old Woman 139
  • Appendix:
  • Introduction to Appendix: A Little Smoke and a Mirror or Three 175
  • Smoke and Mirrors: Four Scenes from the Postutopian Future 181

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #595: ROD SERLING’S NIGHT GALLERY READER Edited by Carol Serling, Charles G. Waugh & Martin H. Greenberg

I loved watching The Twilight Zone as a kid. But I really enjoyed Rod Serling’s Night Gallery, too. I recognized some of the episodes right away because I had read the stories by H. P. Lovecraft, C. M. Kornbluth, and Fritz Leiber that the episodes were based on. Take a look at the Table of Contents and you’ll see some familiar authors and stories.

The Introduction by Carol Serling extolls her husband’s love of horror and the supernatural. And, Carol Serling discusses the projects cut short by Rod Serling’s untimely death at the age of 50 after heart surgery in 1975.

How many of these stories do you recognize. Were you a fan of Night Gallery? GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

  • x – Introduction – Carol Serling
  • 1 – The Escape Route – Rod Serling – na The Season to be Wary, Little Brown: Boston, 1967
  • 71 – The Dead Man – Fritz Leiber – nv Weird Tales Nov ’50
  • 104 – The Little Black Bag – C. M. Kornbluth – nv Astounding Jul ’50
  • 138 – The House – André Maurois – vi Harper’s Jun ’31
  • 141 – The Boy Who Predicted Earthquakes – Margaret St. Clair – ss Maclean’s, 1950
  • 152 – The Academy – David Ely – ss Playboy Jun ’65
  • 163 – The Devil Is Not Mocked – Manly Wade Wellman – ss Unknown Jun ’43
  • 171 – Brenda – Margaret St. Clair – ss Weird Tales Mar ’54
  • 184 – Big Surprise [“What Was in the Box”] – Richard Matheson – ss EQMM Apr ’59
  • 191 – House—with Ghost – August Derleth – ss Lonesome Places, Arkham: Sauk City, WI, 1962
  • 199 – The Dark Boy – August Derleth – ss F&SF Feb ’57
  • 215 – Pickman’s Model – H. P. Lovecraft – ss Weird Tales Oct ’27
  • 230 – Cool Air – H. P. Lovecraft – ss Tales of Magic and Mystery Mar ’28; Weird Tales Sep ’39
  • 240 – Sorworth Place [“Old Place of Sorworth”; Ralph Bain] – Russell Kirk – nv London Mystery #14 ’52
  • 261 –The Return of the Sorcerer – Clark Ashton Smith – ss Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror in September 1931
  • 279 – The Girl with the Hungry Eyes – Fritz Leiber – ss The Girl With the Hungry Eyes, ed. Donald A. Wollheim, Avon, 1949
  • 297 – The Horsehair Trunk – Davis Grubb – ss Colliers May 25 ’46; ; as “The Secret Darkness”, EQMM Oct ’56
  • 308 – The Ring with the Velvet Ropes – Edward D. Hoch – ss With Malice Toward All, ed. Robert L. Fish, Putnam, 1968