Same. I wasn't motivated to read more.Because it came up in Stranger Things, I re-read A Wrinkle in Time, which my across-the-street best friend's mother liked to read to him/us when I was 10-11. It's been a long time since I read it or saw an adaptation (I don't think I saw the Disney version, but there was an earlier TV miniseries I saw), so it was a mix of things I remembered and things I didn't. Fairly interesting, but it ended surprisingly abruptly, and it had more of a religious element than I remembered. It felt like it was probably an inspiration for Diane Duane's Young Wizards series. Still, I was lukewarm on it and don't feel particularly motivated to seek out the sequels.
. . . [A Wrinkle in Time] had more of a religious element than I remembered.
Been a long, long time since I've seen any of those. My Gran used to get them.The February/March issue of Reader's Digest.
Looking it up, they stopped totally in 2024 here in the UK.They canceled the Canadian edition, so now our library system gets the American one. Now they're down to 6 issues a year. Eventually, they'll probably move to quarterly, twice, and ultimately a single issue, a la the almanac.
And while I definitely see your point, Mr. Bennett, about "tessering" (I ended up looking up "tesseract" on Wikipedia, myself), I find myself thinking about the Great Bird once saying something to the general effect of "Does Sgt. Friday explain that his revolver is a Smith & Wesson .38 snubnose?".
Really? I thought it was a vocal group from the late 1960s and early 1970s, known for "Up, Up, and Away."Although IIRC, the characters in Wrinkle said tessering was actually travel through the fifth dimension, which as we all know, is correctly referred to as The Twilight Zone.

Yes, I think it must have been an influence on Duane-- the Darkness in L'Engle is very similar to what Duane says in the first Young Wizards book about the threat of the Lone Power. I reread the Meg books a few years ago (and read the ones about her daughter Polly for the first time), and found Wrinkle my least favorite of the three as an adult. Wind in the Door was my favorite.Because it came up in Stranger Things, I re-read A Wrinkle in Time, which my across-the-street best friend's mother liked to read to him/us when I was 10-11. It's been a long time since I read it or saw an adaptation (I don't think I saw the Disney version, but there was an earlier TV miniseries I saw), so it was a mix of things I remembered and things I didn't. Fairly interesting, but it ended surprisingly abruptly, and it had more of a religious element than I remembered. It felt like it was probably an inspiration for Diane Duane's Young Wizards series. Still, I was lukewarm on it and don't feel particularly motivated to seek out the sequels.
Yes, I think it must have been an influence on Duane-- the Darkness in L'Engle is very similar to what Duane says in the first Young Wizards book about the threat of the Lone Power. I reread the Meg books a few years ago (and read the ones about her daughter Polly for the first time), and found Wrinkle my least favorite of the three as an adult. Wind in the Door was my favorite.
It's one of Shatner's books that flashes back to the Tarsus IV massacre - but I'm drawing a blank on which one.Are you going to read any of the Bond comics too? I haven't read it yet, but I've had the first Dynamite collection on Kindle account for a while now.
How many different versions of the Tarsus IV massacre have there been now? I didn't know about A Flag Full Stars, but I do know about Disco: Drastic Measures, and I swear there's at least one other book or comic I've read about.
Avenger.It's one of Shatner's books that flashes back to the Tarsus IV massacre - but I'm drawing a blank on which one.
It's one of the first three, I think.
My mom used to subscribe to Reader's Digest, but I thought they had stopped publishing it ages ago.The February/March issue of Reader's Digest.
Entertainment Weekly also changed to just a website a few years ago.Lots of magazines have done that. Smithsonian has been less-than-monthly for a few years now. Popular Science went to online-only (and my subscription, which I'd held since I was 9 years old, has gone bye-bye) years ago. On the other hand, Model Railroader and NMRA (formerly NMRA Magazine, formerly Scale Rails, formerly the NMRA Bulletin) both remain steadfastly monthly, even after Kalmbach (the founding publisher of MR) was bought by Firecrown.
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