




Fredric Brown is one of those unique writers who can write equally well in multiple genres. I grew up reading many of Fredric Brown’s mystery short stories. And, later, read many of Brown’s Science Fiction stories. With Rogue in Space (1957) you get the best of both worlds.
Rogue in Space is a fix-up novel. Brown expanded two earlier novelettes, “Gateway to Darkness”–published in Super Science Stories in 1949 and “Gateway to Glory” published in Amazing Stories in 1950–to form the novel.
A smuggler named Crag is arrested and awaits trial. A Judge offers Crag his freedom and a million dollars if he will agree to steal a McGuffin from a protected facility on Mars. So first there’s a prison escape, next a flight to Mars, then the heist, then the double-cross, and then the First Contact. Yes, Fredric Brown packs a lot into such a slim book! If you’re looking for that old fashioned Sense of Wonder, check out Rogue in Space. Are you a Fredric Brown fan? GRADE: B



Bee Gees fans will love Greenfields. Many causal listeners will find some of these renditions hard to listen to. Take “Words” with Barry Gibb and Dolly Parton for example. Both singers struggle as their aging voices strain to hit the higher notes.
All the songs have been slowed down and “country-fied.” Barry Gibb admits he’s loved country music all his life and apparently that affected the production strategy for this album.
Barry Gibb has plenty of help on these songs. He’s going to need even more help if there’s a Volume Two in the works. Are you a Bee Gees fan? GRADE: C
TRACKLIST:

Despite a snow storm dumping a foot of the White Stuff on us, Diane and I drove to our local Rite Aid–just 5 minutes away–and received our second Moderna Covid-19 shot. So far, the only side-effects we’re experiencing are sore arms and fatigue. Sadly, several other vaccination sites shut down because of the snow. We lucked out!
Meanwhile, the coronavirus rates declined in Western NY. We have 3.7% positive testing. How are things where you live?

Radha Blank plays herself in (and directs) this autobiographical film. Blank is a playwright who was a hot commodity when she was 30 but now she’s approaching 40 and stuck teaching high school kids. Blank decides she needs to change things up and decides to become a rap singer. She finds a music producer named D (Oswin Benjamin), in an apartment in the Brooklyn, and starts rapping.
Meanwhile, Blank’s agent, Archie Choi (Peter Kim), manages to entice a wealthy white investor to produce Blank’s play about gentrification, HARLEM AVE. But problems occur when the promised Black director never eventuates and instead a white director (played by Welker White) changes Radha Blank’s play into “poverty porn.”
Blank shows how contemporary playwrights battle problems of having their creative vision “modified” by financial backers, actors, and social forces which the illustrates the dilemma of Black artists whose careers rely on white decision-makers.
Yes, there’s humor in The 40-Year-Old-Version. But I was confused by the mix of messages. Does Radha Blank really hate teaching? Does she want to abandon her playwriting dreams to become a rapper? Why does Blank avoid her brother? Plenty of questions, not enough answers. GRADE: C+

At a certain point in my college career, I considered pursuing a degree in Intellectual History. Plain old History is one damn thing after another and Intellectual History–according to my professors–makes sense of all those damn things that happened. Johan Norberg’s Open: The Story of Human Progress argues that societies that foster openness do better than societies that are closed.
Norberg presents plenty of evidence that countries that allowed freedom and encouraged innovation had higher standard of livings and more prosperity than the closed countries. But, freedom and innovation threaten powerful elites and they can diminish freedom and reject innovation. Burning libraries and banning books are just tools for the regimes that want to control their populations.
Knowledge is power and dictators fear it. Societies that reject educating women, countries that suppress news on TV and in the press, regimes that poison opponents all face declining economies and civil unrest. Johan Norberg convinced me with his evidence and logic that openness is the way to go. Are you a History buff? GRADE: A
Introduction: Traders and tribalists 1
Part I Open
1 Open exchange 19
2 Open doors 68
3 Open minds 124
4 Open societies 167
Part II Closed
5 Us and them 213
6 Zero-sum 248
7 Anticipatory anxiety 286
8 Fight or flight 334
Open or closed? 362
Acknowledgements 383
Notes 385
Index 418


I love Chinese food so this new cookbook attracted me. But Xi’An Famous Foods isn’t just a cookbook. It tells the story of how Jason Wang and his family left China and made it in America.
I’m going to give some of the recipes in this book a try: Spicy & Sour Spinach Dumplings in Soup, Spicy Asian Cucumber Salad, and Stewed Pork Hand-Ripped Noodles in Soup. There are dozens of mouth-watering food photos to fire up your appetite! Great food and a great story of business success! Do you like Chinese food? GRADE: A

One of the reasons I’m a fan of Jack McDevitt’s Science Fiction novels–I’ve read over a dozen of them–is McDevitt’s tendency to include a mystery in each of his novels. Infinity Beach (2000) concerns an effort to find alien civilizations. Humans have several populated planets and faster-than-light starships, but they haven’t found any aliens…yet.
Dr. Kimberly Brandywine is in charge of public relations for the Seabright Institute. The Institute plans a spectacular feat of stellar engineering in an attempt to signal hypothetical aliens: blowing up a star!
I like the character of Kimberly Brandywine because she’s smart and tenacious…and a bit reckless.
Brandywine’s receives a phone call from an old teacher that causes her to re-examine the circumstances of her sister’s disappearance and presumed death. Emily Brandywine disappeared twenty years earlier, shortly after the early return of an exploratory mission searching for aliens.
Brandywine starts to investigate the disappearance which police dismissed. What really happened? Was someone on the crew of that exploration starship a murderer? Did the crew find evidence of alien life? And then did they suppress their discovery? Why would they do that?
Infinity Beach was nominated for a Hugo Award. It didn’t win but McDevitt did win a Nebula Award for Seeker in 2006. If you’re looking for a SF novel with plenty of suspense and mystery, I recommend Infinity Beach. GRADE: B+

With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, I thought I would introduce you to this Motown anthology of Love Songs. Of course, I’m a big Smokey Robinson fan so I’m delighted by “Tears of Clown” included on this CD. And, of course there’s “Cruisin'”–featured in an Allstate commerical–which is classified as: “A pair of astronauts smoothly traverses the moon as Smokey Robinson’s “Cruisin” sets the mood. Not beholden to gravity, these drivers know they’ll be rewarded with savings from Allstate.”
What’s your favorite Love Song? GRADE: B+