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So What Are you Reading?: Generations

I've picked up more than one book that I remembered (or that contained short stories I remembered) from childhood. From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler was read to the class by my 5th grade teacher; as an adult, I thumbed through it in Waldenbooks once or twice, and was vaguely aware that a movie version had been made; I finally bought a copy (through Alibris, I think) a few years ago. Likewise, I bought Robert Arthur's anthology, Ghosts and More Ghosts (again through Alibris), on the strength of a short story that had been included in a reader I had in elementary school, "The Marvelous Stamps From El Dorado."

And I make no secret of the fact that I grew up on The Bobbsey Twins. And a few years ago, I went to great lengths to obtain a copy of every single title in the series, and Project Gutenberg downloads of the original versions of the first three. Many are surprisingly well-written. And astonishingly well-researched, especially the later ones: the first time I visited Colonial Williamsburg, I found that I could find my way around the whole historic district just based on recollections from having read The Bobbsey Twins Red, White and Blue Mystery (the first time I read it was also the first time I'd ever heard of the place, and it wasn't until sometime later that I even knew it was a real place). And they even got the color right, with regard to the gray shuttle buses that circulate around the perimeter of the historic district, providing free transportation to any visitor with an admission badge.

Never underestimate the quality of children's literature, just because of the intended audience.
 
Never underestimate the quality of children's literature, just because of the intended audience.

Hear, hear. I'm always somewhat shocked by the idea that anyone would expect the things we make for children to be of inferior quality, as if somehow children were not important enough to make your best effort for. Surely nothing demands greater care and quality than the things we provide for our children.
 
And that is one of the many things so endearing about Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. When Fred Rogers first decided that the music would be a jazz trio, piano, bass, and drums, playing live on-set (but almost always off-camera), everybody thought he was nuts, and said it would go right over the heads of the preschool target audience. And yet he became one of the most recognized and respected leaders in children's television, and his show holds up rather well, watching as an adult, because he refused to "dumb-down" anything (which is more than can be said for a lot of current prime time sitcoms).

Oh, and CLB just enthusiastically agreed with me. Be afraid. Be very afraid.

But to get back on-topic, I'm now a few chapters into Flinx Transcendant. Flinx has overstayed his non-welcome on the AAnn homeworld of Blasusarr, made a friend there, and resolved to do what he can about the Great Evil, but hasn't yet figured out how to make off-planet without the AAnn authorities arresting him.
 
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Godslayers by Zoe Hana Mikuta.

So far, it's ok, but I think I preferred the previous one, Gearbreakers. We'll see as I get further into it.
 
Not only was Clarity Held all wrapped up in her work, she was all worked up in her wrap.
-- ADF, Flinx Transcendant, opening of Chapter 12

ADF's talent for witty turns of phrase is as formidable as his talent for world-building.

I've finished re-reading Flinx Transcendant. It took so many pages for Flinx to finally make it off Blasusarr, and then for Flinx, Clarity, Tse-Mallory, and Truzenzuzex (not to mention another face from the past) to make it off New Riviera (Page 262 of 398), that I was expecting Flinx's triumph over the Great Evil to be an anticlimax. Nothing could be further from the truth. The massive Tar-Aiym weapons platform -- a spherical station twice the diameter of the Earth, studded with multiple Krangs, could barely scratch the Great Evil. And so Flinx had to go to the remains of a dead civilization even more ancient than the Tar-Aiym, to find a weapon that had been purpose-built to deal with the Great Evil. With the Order of Null, who saw the Great Evil as a cleansing Purity, still on his heels.

A final end to the "Flinx vs. the Great Evil" arc, that nonetheless leaves the door wide open to additional Flinx stories (that would begin, eight years later, with Strange Music).

And I will note that the Order of Null is nothing less than a precision skewering of all the eschatology-obsessed cults that claim to be Christian, even claim to be the only "real" Christians, while going against everything Jesus of Nazareth ever stood for.
 
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Just finished Section 31: Rogue by Mangels and Martin (2001). Will post my full review in a review thread for that soon. (It’s too late for me to do that tonight.)

I’ve already begun reading Slings and Arrows Book 5: A Weary Life by Robert Greenberger, after which I’ll finish the series with Keith R.A. DeCandido’s Book 6: Enterprises of Great Pitch and Moment.

—David Young
 
My current and upcoming Trek reading is Q-Squared and Federation. Both rank extremely highly among my favorite Star Trek books. I admire the ambitious nature of the storytelling, and they capture the characters and wonder that make the Trek universe so appealing.
 
Non-fiction: NIGHTMARE FUEL: THE SCIENCE OF HORROR MOVIES, by Nina Nesseth.

Fiction: PAPER GIRLS, Vol 1. The graphic novel that inspired the new TV series.
 
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