Saturday Miscellany—5/17/25

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Pay Attention! The invention of close reading.
bullet Extraterrestrial tongues: Imagining how aliens might communicate prepares us for first contact and illuminates the nature of our own languages
bullet Crime Novelist Don Winslow Unretires For ‘The Final Score’—color me giddy
bullet Murder, Mischief, and Mayhem: The Best Campy and Humorous Thriller Series—Good list (although, I might quibble with one and I have no experience with one other), but better yet, Gagnon putting together a list like this means she has something to plug! See below.
bullet Chapters for Change posted this great video about the Poe and Tilly series (one more of you need to be reading)
bullet Changing the World by Shannon Knight—a good post from Knight (as one expects)
bullet AI Audio vs Human Narration—A great video from someone who knows the subject well.
bullet Are Kids “Bored” by Books Below Their Reading Level?
bullet Do Your Book Reviews Change Over Time?—ooh, this is a good topic, and an interesting take on it.
bullet WELP IT’S BEEN A DECADE SINCE I STARTED BLOGGING – Ten Things I Wish I Could Tell My Younger Self—Only 10 years of The Orangutan Librarian? Good lessons that someone should’ve taught me, too.
bullet Top Five Dragons of All Time—a flawed list, but very fun to read
bullet Announcement: Self-Published Authors Appreciation Week 2025—the annual celebration of Self-Published Authors is back (and I should probably get to work planning what I’m going to do). If any self-published author is reading this and wants to participate on this site, let me know!

To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago Week?
bullet The Younger Gods by Michael R. Underwood
bullet Another Man’s Moccasins by Craig Johnson
bullet Buried Secrets by Joseph Finder
bullet Rolling Thunder; Fun House; and Free Fall by Chris Grabenstein
bullet And I mentioned the releases of: How to Start a Fire by Lisa Lutz; Dry Bones by Craig Johnson; Luckiest Girl Alive by Jessica Knoll; Goddess of Buttercups & Daisies by Martin Millar; and Rumrunners by Eric Beetner

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet This came out two weeks ago, and I’m ashamed to admit that I forgot it: The Amazing Twin Chicken Freedom Fighters by Zephaniah Sole—Reasons to consider this book: That’s a great title; the cover is eye-catching as all get-out; and the blurb: “The war between the agents of the Worldview Freedom Fighters and the minions of the mysterious Hip Gnosis spills into our reality when Jake and Joy, two lost and broken souls, wake up one day in chicken suits they can’t remove and learn they are the key to a prophesied revolution – a revolution that will not be pasteurized.”
bullet Class Clown: The Memoirs of a Professional Wiseass: How I Went 77 Years Without Growing Up—As I said yesterday, this memoir is a great combination of (compressed) personal history and fun anecdotes
bullet The Devils by Joe Abercrombie—Abercrombie’s take on The Suicide Squad in an alternate medieval Europe populated by Fantasy species? Sign me up!!
bullet Slaying You by Michelle Gagnon—back to the world of Killing You? This is going to be a wild and twisty ride.
bullet Whack Job: A History of Axe Murder by Rachel McCarthy James—”Whack Job is the story of the axe, first as a convenient danger and then an anachronism, as told through the murders it has been employed in throughout history: from the first axe murder nearly half a million years ago, to the brutal harnessing of the axe in warfare, to its use in King Henry VIII’s favorite method of execution, to Lizzie Borden and the birth of modern pop culture. Whack Job sheds brilliant light on this familiar implement, this most human of weapons. This is a critical examination of violence, an exploration of how technology shapes human conflict, the cruel and sacred rituals of execution and battle, and the ways humanity fits even the most savage impulses into narratives of the past and present.”

Bookstores have become my candy shop.
(which reminds me, I need to get going to “the candy shop”)

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4 Comments

  1. Thanks for including my post! 🙌🌻📚

  2. Decades ago, I came across a tongue-in-cheek ad for something (a cologne, I think) for men that was guaranteed to make “secretaries and nurses undress in your presence and throw themselves at you” (or words to that effect). I clipped the ad and sent it to Dave (I was already a long-time fan), telling him I immediately thought of him when I saw the ad. He responded with a postcard telling me “Robert, I’ll take a gallon!” and he also credited me as “alert reader Robert Germaux” when he eventually put the whole thing in one of his columns. Many years later, in one of the books in my Grammar Sex series, I wrote an essay about my interaction with Dave. Thanks, HC, for alerting this reader to Dave’s newest book, which I’ll be reading soon. (I still have that postcard.)

    • HCNewton

      You’d better still have it!! (and, I assume, a hard copy of the column?)

      That’s a great story.

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