I hope you had a Happy Easter weekend. It's winding down here and we've one more day to relax and then tomorrow head back to Victoria for one more week; one chemo treatment and 3 more radiation sessions. It's been nice to relax here and just enjoy our familiar surroundings. We'll see what's next for Jo probably after this session. More chemo up here for sure and another surgery. I hope for her sake that the light at the end of the tunnel is getting closer for her. She's had a rough go.
Since it's the start of a new month and we'll be away for a couple of days, I thought I'd provide an update on books and reading. Before I do that thought, I've joined another 'chat' group. It was recommended by a couple of Canadians that Jo and I follow; Tod Maffin and Guard the Leaf. It's a Canadian designed website, with no commercial. I think they want to try it as a competitor to Facebook. Anyway, I'm barely in the group but I like what I see so far. It's at a site called Hey.Café and it's set up in groupings, cafés about subjects you might like to talk about; books, Canadian music, Canadian culture, pets, etc. Anyway, if you're interested, check it out.
So... books...
Recently Completed
(Four books completed since my last update)
1. Report from Planet Midnight by Nalo Hopkinson (2012)."Report from Planet Midnight by Nalo Hopkinson is the 2nd book from the PM Press's Outspoken Authors series. It contains two of Hopkinson's short stories (novella); Message in a Bottle and Shift, a speech she made to her colleagues Report from Planet Midnight and her interview with Terry Bisson. All of it fascinating (my overused descriptive these days).
Message in a Bottle is a time travel type story, although they could be aliens. The story went somewhere I wasn't expecting from the point it started. The narrator discusses his feelings about children, especially in relation to the adopted child of his best friends. The child, Kamla, it is gradually determined, suffers from DGS, Delayed Growth Syndrome or Diaz Syndrome, which inhibits Kamla's growth.
Kamla is a difficult child and her parents eventually move to Vancouver, even though Kamla doesn't want to leave. A relationship develops between Kamla and the narrator, even with his difficulties with children and even though he finally ends up married and with children... But there is quickly a twist to this story that I won't ruin. It moves along nicely, gets better and better and is beautifully written.
Shift is a take on Shakespeare's The Tempest and it's a great story. It took me a short time (that's all you have because it is a short story after all... duh) to get into the flow, getting comfortable with the Afro - Caribbean 'lingo' but after that, the story just got so darn interesting. Caliban has escaped from his mother (something he regularly does) and his sister, Ariel has tracked him down and reports to mom. It seems a simple story but it's rich and just... wait for it... fascinating. I loved it.
Report from Planet Midnight is a speech / presentation that Nalo Hopkinson was asked to give as Guest Author at the International Conference of the Fantastic in Arts in 2009. The theme was Race in the Literature of the Fantastic. She indicates that she prepared for this for over a year and ended up by starting her presentation as an alien trying to grasp concepts on race on Earth. She finishes with a powerful, sometimes angry speech to the audience; about the predominance of white male authors in Sci Fi / Fantasy and the difficulties of accepting other voices. But it is so much more than that.
The interview was far-ranging and Hopkinson's responses were thoughtful, clear and often quite funny. I immediately took a liking to her, especially with her lovely answer about Ursula K. Le Guin, "Le Guin can make me cry with the simplest, seemingly inconsequential sentence" and also on Octavia Butler; "I wish more people would talk about the ways in which she messes with normative sexualities, and I miss her very much and I don't care that that's really two sentences masquerading as one."
And she loves graphic novels and the first one she mentioned as loving is the Love and Rockets series by Los Hermanos Hernandez, which I've only recently discovered and to which I'm now addicted.
Anyway, I'm enjoying this PM Outspoken Authors series very much so far and have three more books on the way. Check them out. You might discover some new authors to try.. Oh, I now have Hopkinson's Brown Girl in the Ring on my book shelf to try out. (4.5 stars)"
2. East of West, Volume 3; There is no Us by Jonathan Hickman (Graphic novel)."East of West, Vol. 3: There Is No Us is the 3rd book in the East of West graphic novel series by Jonathan Hickman. It presents a dystopic or alternative future where the US is divided into territories; the North (Union region), the South (Confederacy), Texas, that area of the West held by the children of Mao, the Empire (not sure exactly where that is... central America?? and The Endless Nation, the most automated group, short on people but lots of machines..
Of course you've also got sort of mystical people wandering around, the Horsemen of the Apocalypse, some bratty kids who go around killing... and then there is Death and his companions, The Wolf and the Crow... and sundry other folks..
It's all beautifully drawn and colored and is such an interesting, and confusing series. I still am learning what the heck is going on... The regions have all met to decide the way ahead, lots of threats and double dealing and politicizing... The meeting breaks up due to various actions and murders and as a result, the Endless Nation has declared War!
Death has discovered he has a son, it was kept a secret from him and wants to find him. The Horsemen want to kill him.. But he's not quite what he seems...
Did I unconfuse you? I have to keep reading to see if and how things resolve themselves. It's not looking too good at the moment. (3.5 stars)"
3. Ship of Spells by H. Leighton Dickson (Fan / 2025)."I've previously enjoyed the first two books in the H. Leighton Dickson's The Rise of the Upper Kingdom fantasy series. I decided to try her latest book, Ship of Spells next.
Ship of Spells is a combination fantasy/ sea faring adventure in a world divided in two, the southern Nethersea of Rhi'Ahr and the northern Empire of Overseas. These two worlds are divided by the Dreadwall, a wall of water that keeps them apart. Although there are gaps as it breaks down.
The story follows Ensign Bluemage Honor Renn. Every Navy ship of Overseas is powered by, defended by, navigated by, etc a corp of mages. A Blue mage is just above a cadet with basic magic capabilities. As they progress with training, they will develop the skills to move onto other specialties. Renn's mother was a Greenmage, possessing healing skills.
Renn's first ship is attacked by a Rhi'Ahr ship and destroyed with apparently Renn being the only survivor. She also gains a new power, that of the chimeric, a wild untamed power that gradually over the course of the book, leaves marks / tattoos over her body. (But that's for later on, eh?) As she struggles in the water, she is picked up by another ship, the mysterious Ship of Spells, aka the Touchstone. We'll discover much more about this mythic ship as the story moves along.
The Touchstone is captained by a Rhi'Ahr, Gavriel Kier, who has betrayed his Rhi'Ahr people and works for the King of the Empire under a Letter of Marque. His job, if you want to call it that is to repair the Dreadwall and to fight Rhi'Ahr ships that get through and attack Overseas cities / ships, etc. The Touchstone is a sentient ship crewed by a weird and wonderful crew of Mages and all sorts of peoples; fauns, minotaurs, harpies, etc. And Renn is now a part of this crew.
Or is she?? That's crux of the story. As the Touchstone continues with it's mission, Renn must decide if she wants to stay as a sailor in the Empire Navy or join the crew of the Touchstone whole-heartedly. There is a constant friction between Renn and Kier, who she perceives as the enemy but who she also feels a strong attraction to. What will Renn do? What will Kier do?
It's a fantastical voyage with so many to's and fro's, will they's or won't they's? Will Renn ever follow an order without questioning it? Will Renn and Kier finally just do it?? And so on... (I had many more during the night when I couldn't sleep, but they've kind of departed my old mind)
Suffice it to say, it's a swash-buckling, fantastical adventure story with so many excellent characters. It gets a bit over wrought at times and the ending was a bit dramatic for my taste, but also reasonably satisfying.. Well, was it the ending? I leave you with the last words of the book
"Not the end"
Most enjoyable. (4.0 stars)"
4. Botticelli's Apprentice by Ursula Murray Husted (2025)."I can't remember why I bought Botticelli's Apprentice by Ursula Murray Husted. I think I was attracted by the artwork on the cover and then the story line which sounded kind of neat.
Botticelli's Apprentice is a historical fiction, young adult graphic novel set in Florence during the Renaissance. It follows Mella, who works for Botticelli as his chicken girl, but hankers to be a painter. Her parents encouraged her to draw at an early age, but, being a girl, she can't seem to get an apprenticeship with Botticelli. In fact, he's not even aware of her drawing talent. One of her drawings, of her dog, Blue, is taken by Botticelli's apprentice, Datus, to impress Bott (I'm going to short form his name). Datus and Mella have a falling out, but gradually begin to become friends and to work together.
Datus teaches Mella what he knows about mixing pigments, making frames, preparing glues, etc and Mella teaches Datus about drawing. They come into contact with Mona Rossa, a wealthy widow, and paint a picture for her contest, under Bott's 'direction.
The more you get into the story, the more you enjoy it. The story is fascinating, a neat picture of life in Florence during the Renaissance period. There are interesting facts about painting techniques, all well researched and presented. The characters are lovingly drawn and created and believable and the artwork is just lovely, clear, each page like its own little painting. And the dialogue is sparkling, lively, and fills the page. I truly enjoyed the story and I hope Husted does more of this kind of story - telling. She does have A Cat Story that I will have to check out.. (4.5 stars)"
Currently Reading
(Started since my last update)
1. American Gods, Shadows by Neil Gaiman (Vol. 1 / 2018)."Shadow Moon gets out of jail only to discover his wife is dead. Defeated, broke and uncertain where to go from here, he meets the mysterious Mr. Wednesday, who employs him to serve as his bodyguard - thrusting Shadow into a deadly world where ghosts of the past come back from the dead, and a god war is imminent."
2. The Sundial by Shirley Jackson (1958).
"Before there was Hill House, there was the Halloran mansion of Jackson’s stunningly creepy fourth novel, The Sundial. Aunt Fanny has always been somewhat peculiar. When the Halloran clan gathers at the family home for a funeral, no one is surprised when she wanders off into the secret garden. But then Aunt Fanny returns to report an astonishing vision of an apocalypse from which only the Hallorans and their hangers-on will be spared, and the family finds itself engulfed in growing madness, fear, and violence as they prepare for a terrible new world. For Aunt Fanny's long-dead father has given her the precise date of the final cataclysm!"
3. Devotions by Mary Oliver (2025). A new author for me. I saw it in my local and thought.. poetry... that's what I want to read
"“No matter where one starts reading, Devotions offers much to love, from Oliver's exuberant dog poems to selections from the Pulitzer Prize-winning American Primitive , and Dream Work , one of her exceptional collections. Perhaps more important, the luminous writing provides respite from our crazy world and demonstrates how mindfulness can define and transform a life, moment by moment, poem by poem.” — The Washington Post
“It’s as if the poet herself has sidled beside the reader and pointed us to the poems she considers most worthy of deep consideration.” — Chicago TribunePulitzer Prize-winning poet Mary Oliver presents a personal selection of her best work in this definitive collection spanning more than five decades of her esteemed literary career.
Throughout her celebrated career, Mary Oliver has touched countless readers with her brilliantly crafted verse, expounding on her love for the physical world and the powerful bonds between all living things. Identified as "far and away, this country's best selling poet" by Dwight Garner, she now returns with a stunning and definitive collection of her writing from the last fifty years.
Carefully curated, these 200 plus poems feature Oliver's work from her very first book of poetry, No Voyage and Other Poems, published in 1963 at the age of 28, through her most recent collection, Felicity, published in 2015. This timeless volume, arranged by Oliver herself, showcases the beloved poet at her edifying best. Within these pages, she provides us with an extraordinary and invaluable collection of her passionate, perceptive, and much-treasured observations of the natural world."
2. Love and Rockets, New Stories by Jaime Hernandez (Vol. 1 / 2008).
"A collection of new stories from the alternative comic series created by three Mexican-American brothers from Southern California. It was the first comic series to give a voice to minorities and women in the medium's then 50-year history. This collection features all-new stories."
"Combining dazzling speculation with a profoundly humanist vision, this astounding alternate history tale presents a dramatic encounter with destiny wrapped around a simple yet provocative premise: the terrifying question of what might have happened if the fateful flight over Hiroshima had gone a bit differently. An extensive interview with the author, offering insight into his fiction and philosophies, is also included."
4. A Place Between by Tim Probert (Lightfall #4 / 2026). It's been too long since I read Vol 3. I was pleasantly surprised to see this coming out.
"In the fourth installment of the award-winning, critically acclaimed Lightfall series, Bea, Cad, and their friends continue their quest to restore light on their dark world. Perfect for fans of Amulet and Avatar, this next book dives deeper into the magical world of Irpa, where ancient secrets and adventures abound.
After surviving a shipwreck on the Fuerre Sea, Cad washes ashore on the shores of Pellidyr. There, he searches for Lorgon, the Water Spirit, but instead finds the other spirits of Irpa who question if their planet can be saved. One of them offers to help Cad and transports him to A Place Between, a strange liminal realm between the living and the dead, where Cad works to uncover the reason Lorgon summoned them to Pellidyr in the first place.Meanwhile, Bea awakens within the walls of the capital city. While Pellidyr’s leader has heard the tales of Bea’s derring-do and believes her to be a hero with all the answers, she’s never felt more uncertain about the future. What she does know is that she can’t accomplish anything without her crew. When Bea’s escape plan also brings her to A Place Between, she makes a shocking discovery that changes her understanding of everything that came before her…and what could soon follow."






































