THE RARITIES By Mariah Carey

I’ve been a Mariah Carey fan from the beginning of her career. Back in the early 1990s, Carey was pumping out Number One hits with regularity. Carey is the first artist in history to have their first five singles reach Number One on the Billboard Hot 100, from “Vision of Love” to “Emotions“.

Of course, everyone knows that Carey gambled on a movie called Glitter (2001) that opened the week of 9/11 and bombed. That lead to Carey’s emotional and artistic breakdown. If the story ended there, it would have been tragic. But, Carey got herself together and she returned to the top of music charts with The Emancipation of Mimi (2005), the world’s second-best-selling album of 2005. Mariah Carey has sold over 200 million records and her music still sounds good to me. This new release of early music possesses verve and energy. Are you a Mariah Carey fan? Any favorite songs? GRADE: A

TRACK LIST:

1.“Here We Go Around Again” (1990)Mariah CareyBen MarguliesCareyMargulies3:55
2.“Can You Hear Me” (1991)CareyBarry MannCarey4:06
3.“Do You Think of Me” (1993)CareyWalter AfanasieffMark C. RooneyMark MoralesCareyAfanasieffRooneyMorales4:48
4.“Everything Fades Away” (1993)CareyAfanasieffCareyAfanasieff5:25
5.“All I Live For” (1993)CareyAfanasieffCareyAfanasieff3:22
6.“One Night” (1995)CareyJermaine DupriCareyDupri4:41
7.“Slipping Away” (1996)CareyDave HallCareyHall4:31
8.Out Here on My Own” (2000)Lesley GoreMichael GoreCarey3:16
9.Loverboy” (2001 – Firecracker Original Version)CareyMartin DennyCareyClark Kent[a]3:14
10.“I Pray” (2005)CareyKenneth CrouchCareyCrouch[a]2:53
11.“Cool on You” (2007)CareyDupriManuel Seal, Jr.Johntá AustinCareyDupri[a]Seal[a]3:11
12.“Mesmerized” (2012)CareyLoris HollandCareyHolland[a]Randy Jackson[a]3:22
13.Lullaby of Birdland” (2014 – Live)George ShearingGeorge David WeissCareyJames “Big Jim” Wright[b]3:18
14.Save the Day” (2020 – with Ms. Lauryn Hill)CareyDupriWrightCharles FoxNorman GimbelCareyDupri[a]3:48
15.Close My Eyes” (2020 – Acoustic)

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #2: WHERE THE VEIL IS THIN Edited by Cerece Rennie Murphy & Alana Joli Abbott

The cover by Anna Dittmann lured me into reading Where the Veil is Thin: An Anthology of Faerie Tales (2020). Like many of these themed anthologies, there’s a variety of quality among the stories. My favorite story in Where the Veil is Thin is Alethea Kontis’s “The Seal Woman’s Tale.” The Seal Woman is a skin walker, a supernatural being with the power to physically take the appearance of anyone (but she doesn’t like become a man).

“The Seal Woman’s Tale” starts with the changing of appearances and leads to a more sinister circumstance: the Seal Woman becomes the prisoner of the King of Trolls. The King of Trolls is cruel and power-mad. But the Seal Woman plays the Long Game. I also enjoyed “See a Fine Lady” by Seanan McGuire. If you’re in the mood for some stories that will capture the essence of Halloween, give Where the Veil is Thin a try. GRADE: B

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction” by Jim Hines — 5
“The Tooth Fairies” by Glenn Parris — 8
“Glamour” by Grey Yuen –19
“See a Fine Lady” by Seanan McGuire — 33
“Or Perhaps Up” by C.S.E. Cooney — 44
“Don’t Let Go” by Alana Joli Abbott — 65
“The Loophole” by L. Penelope — 90
“The Last Home of Master Tranquil Cloud” by Minsoo Kang — 102
“Your Two Better Halves: A Dream, with Fairies, in Spanglish” by Carlos Hernandez — 113
“Take Only Photos” by Shanna Swendson — 139
“Old Twelvey Night” by Gwen Nix — 152
“The Seal Woman’s Tale” by Alethea Kontis — 164
“The Storyteller” by David Bowles — 182
“Poisoned Hearts” by Zin E. Rocklyn — 186
“Colt’s Tooth” by Linda Robertson –196

THE EDITORS — 204

THE AUTHORS — 205

WINGS OF THE DOVE [DVD]

This 1997 movie based on the Henry James novel from 1902, would confuse money-obsessed Americans today. Young Helena Bonham Carter plays Kate Croy, an emotionally intense impoverished woman whose wealthy Aunt Maud (Charlotte Rampling) keeps trying to marry her off. Kate is in love with a journalist, Morton Densher (Linus Roache). who is equally impoverished. Densher wants to marry Kate but she knows their marriage would never survive without money.

Kate meets an attractive American millionaire heiress Millie Theale (Alison Elliott). Millie has a secret that Kate decides is the answer to her and Densher’s happiness. Kate, Millie, and Densher travel to Venice and a romantic triangle fueled by money blossoms.

I would expect most young Americans today would find the conclusion of the movie and the novel to be inexplicable. Morality and ethics regarding money morphed over the past century. Honor sounds good, but money pays the bills. The title refers to the 55th Psalm, which records the deceit and guile of conspirators and exclaims, “Oh that I had wings like a dove!”

Wings of the Dove, with a strong cast–especially Helena Bonham Carter–provides a cautionary tale that would fall on deaf ears today. Still, this film moved me. GRADE: B+

HOW TO THINK LIKE SHAKESPEARE: LESSONS FROM A RENAISSANCE EDUCATION By Scott Newstok

Scott Newstok’s slim book celebrates Shakespeare and his various works. Newstok organizes his book around topics and then manages to find new insights (at least new to me) about what the Bard was thinking about.

In addition, Newstok folds in writings of writers like Borges, Hunter S. Thompson, Abraham Lincoln, Elizabeth Bishop, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Faulkner depending on the subject of each chapter. Are you a Shakespeare fan? GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

What’s Past Is Prologue ix

1 Of Thinking 1

2 Of Ends 13

3 Of Craft 25

4 Of Fit 37

5 Of Place 47

6 Of Attention 55

7 Of Technology 63

8 Of Imitation 73

9 Of Exercises 85

10 Of Conversation 97

11 Of Stock 107

12 Of Constraint 119

13 Of Making 131

14 Of Freedom 141

Kinsmen of the Shelf 153

Thanks and Thanks 165

Index 173

Kansas City CHIEFS VS. BUFFALO BILLS

This game between the Kansas City Chiefs (4-1) vs. the Buffalo Bills (4-1) has been moved by the National Football League–in its infinite wisdom–to Monday, October 19 at 5 P.M on FOX. Meanwhile both the Chiefs and the Bills are battling injuries so we’ll see who shows up to play tomorrow. How will your favorite NFL team perform today?

BATTLE GROUND By Jim Butcher

I found myself exhausted by the end of Jim Butcher’s Battle Ground. It’s a series of battles with Chicago as the prize. Plenty of fighting, plenty of action, plenty of deaths.

Battle Ground is the 17th book in the Dresden Files series. It seems to me that in the 20 years Jim Butcher has been writing these Urban Fantasy novels, all the plot lines have been building to this titanic crescendo of violence and fury. Harry Dresden started out as a wizard who was also a private investigator. Over the span of a couple of decades, Dresden has grown into the Protector of Chicago from Supernatural Threats. The greatest threat Dresden has ever faced shows up in this book: The Last Titan, a nearly invulnerable entity.

If Battle Ground was just a series of fight scenes, the brutal action would become numbing. But, Butcher manages to infuse the plot with some cunning mysteries and surprises that explode at the book’s conclusion. Sadly, much of what happens in Battle Ground depends on knowledge of the preceding volumes in the Dresden Files series. I don’t know how many people in our circle would want to commit to reading 16 books in order to make sense of the 17th–other than me. But, I’m glad I did. GRADE: B+

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #615: THE TINDALOS ASSET By Caitlin R. Kiernan

The March 29, 1929 issue of WEIRD TALES unleashed on the world Frank Belknap Long’s “The Hounds of Tindalos.” H. P. Lovecraft encouraged his friends to contribute to the “Mythos” he constructed and Long’s story might be the best of the bunch. “The Hounds of Tindalos” presents hideous creatures from an alien geometry. Scary hounds from another dimension resonated with readers for almost a hundred years.

Caitlin R. Kiernan, known for her Lovecraft pastiches, returns to the Men (and Women) in Black and Cthulhu mashup that began with Agents of Dreamland (2017) and continued in Black Helicopters (2018) with her newest novel, The Tindalos Asset (2020). Without giving too much away, one of the agents trying to prevent Lovecraftian menaces from destroying our world has a strong connection to a Hound of Tindalos. If you’re a fan of Caitlin R. Kiernan like I am, The Tindalos Asset is a must-buy. If you’re a fan of Lovecraft pastiches, you’ll find The Tindalos Asset a thrilling read. I’m hoping Kiernan continues writing these Agents of Dreamland novels. GRADE: A

THE GREATEST ROCK HITS OF THE 80s: Volume 1: PASSION & POWER, Volume 2: LEATHER & LACE

Priority Records put out 13 volumes in The Greatest Rock Hits of the 80s in the 1990s. I only have a few. Here’s the first two compilation CDs in the series. As you can readily tell, Priority. Records decided to try to choose songs for these volumes as middle-of-the-road as possible. Most of these songs made the charts in the 80s to various degrees. Do you remember these songs? Any favorites? GRADE: B

TRACK LIST:

PASSION & POWER:

1Glenn FreyYou Belong To The City
2Sammy HagarThere’s Only One Way To Rock
3TotoRoseanna
4REO SpeedwagonKeep On Loving You
5StyxThe Best Of Times
6Wham!Everything She Wants
7John WaiteMissing You
8Gino VannelliLiving Inside Myself
9Eric CarmenMake Me Lose Control

LEATHER & LACE:

1Tina TurnerWhat’s Love Got To Do With It
2Joan Jett And The Blackhearts*I Hate Myself For Loving You
3Pat BenatarWe Belong
4The Go Go’s*We Got The Beat
5BanglesWalk Like An Egyptian
6Scandal (4) Featuring Patty SmythThe Warrior
7The MotelsOnly The Lonely
8Kim CarnesBette Davis Eyes
9Laura BraniganSolitare

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #1: AUTHOR’S CHOICE MONTHLY #11: By Ron Goulart

I’ve had Ron Goulart’s Author’s Choice Monthly #11 on my shelves since it was first published in 1990 by Pulphouse Publishing. I bought several of the Author’s Choice Monthly volumes in the series…but I digress.

The Idea behind this series was to allow the writer to choose a handful of his favorite stories. Goulart had a fondness for supernatural elements in his stories and the stories in this collection reflect that. I enjoyed the Max Kearney story, “Hello From Hollywood.” Kearney works in advertising, but his hobby is banishing ghosts. This particular ghost has taken possession of a TV executive and is picking winning TV shows for the Fall Schedule.

I also enjoyed “Groucho,” a story of a reincarnated TV script writer who returns as a cat. “Crusoe In New York” doesn’t have any supernatural elements, but it does have Time Travel as a woman from the Future visits our time to meet her favorite writer.

These Author’s Choice Monthly volumes are fun to read. I’ll review a few more for future Wednesday’s Short Stories. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS: