Catchy Tune

I hadn't heard anything from M. Ward's new album, Hold Time, until this morning, but the situation has now been remedied. I found "Never Had Nobody Like You" totally poppy and charming, equal parts nodding at The Beatles, Nick Drake, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. I hope the whole record's this good.

Here's the song, via Music for Kids Who Can't Read Good. Enjoy: "Never Had Nobody Like You."

Now that the MFA is over, I can start following a few of the music blogs again. Happy days.

p.s. Unrelatedly, I did a little interview over at Micol's Bradford Blog Bash about blogging and such as guest blogger of the day. Please excuse my typos (mostly missing ats for some reason); I plead a cold while answering. Also, do not mock my woodenness in the graduation photo–relaxed scholarly owl stance was not taught in advance!

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Weekend Hangovers

  • Workworkwork proceeds apace. Clearing out some tabs.
  • IndieBound has individual pages for books now, yay, and their affiliate program is supereasy tMoDo manage to boot. Check it out
  • And how better to experience the wonders of IndieBound than to buy Jedediah Berry's* debut novel, The Manual of Detection, nownownow from a local book shop and read it as fast as you can? There is no better way. It's an IndieNext pick for March. It's a beautiful object. You want to possess it. You're getting very sleepy. I think I'd better read it again this week, so I can finally do a proper post. See also: Holly's endorsement or enter your mystery-in-need-of-solving to win.
  • Nice piece in the NYT about Raleigh outsider artist Renaldo Kuhler and his imaginary Rocaterrania. A documentary film about the artist premieres this week in San Jose. Noted for the add-to-queue file.
  • RIP The Middleman, though the show creator says over at the Middle Blog that he prefers to think of it as "hibernating in a high tech vat."  Oh, how the sensible, non-angry commentary reminds me of same tune after the Freaks and Geeks cancellation. How about they just keep letting you put weird awesome television on FOREVER instead of pretending one season is enough? I know the sentiments are right and necessary for, y'know, having a career, but ::shakes fist:: At any rate, the finale comic book sounds excellent.
  • Downturn good news for board games? Board games are good news anytime! (A post on the new edition of Clue coming soon, by the by. WTF?!)
  • Alan Gratz lives the Project Runway dream!
  • More to come, but Cynthia Leitich Smith's Eternal = MAJOR WOW. You need to read this one. Nownownow. Like I said, more to come.

*Someone got a pretty site redesign! I dream of the day I graduate from template-world. It won't be anytime soon, I'm afraid.

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Dollhouse Discussion

And this week's ep is:

The Target. Echo becomes the ultimate outdoorswoman when she is is hired by a handsome young client named Richard, but it may turn out that neither of the pair is what they seem to be. Meanwhile, Agent Ballard receives a clue about Echo's past, and we learn about Dr. Saunders' scars.

Post thoughts in the comments after if you got 'em.

See also:

Maureen Ryan's interview with Tahmoh Penikett over at The Watcher, where he says a couple of things that give me hope things will get good if we hang in there:

To help viewers understand "Dollhouse's" provocative concept, the first few episodes are self-contained hours focused on Echo's weekly adventures. But Penikett says that midway through the show’s 13-episode season, the mythology will kick into high gear.

"Halfway through the season, you'll start seeing some of the main story lines and arcs developed in a more serious way, around the fifth episode. I think that's when Joss and his writing team really found their feet and said, 'OK, this is what we wanted. This is what we were aiming at and we’ve got it now,'" Penikett said.

"I can't tell you how confidence-building it is when you experience that," the actor added. "Because as everyone knows, we had somewhat of a tumultuous start. There was a lot of speculation, a lot of bad press, and you inevitably get caught up in it a little bit. … Once I read the fifth and sixth episode, specifically [Episode 6, the Whedon-penned] 'Man on the Street,' I was like, 'This is it. This is the show.'"

And if you want to see some interesting thoughts about the first episode, check out this Coffee & Ink post.

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Negative Numbers

Liz Hand is my favorite reviewer, not least because the results are equally fascinating no matter whether she loves/likes/hates/etc the book in question. This has got to be one of my favorite negative reviews in ages though, of Dale Peck's Body Surfing. A snippet:

I appreciate gratuitous sex and violence as much as the next person, but not when it's this badly written. The hypnotherapist nods "his stately, philosophical head"; Q is disturbed by memories of "ungovernable, irresistible lust." Villains pause from their villainy to deliver explanations that would embarrass Dr. Evil. Someone actually says, "Just be quiet and no one will get hurt."

::claps:: Let's hope he doesn't go all Crouch on her.

And I think I'm taking the next week off the Internet (except for the obligatory Dollhouse post or random aside). I need a last burst of space and time for revision purposes and, also? Just feeling a bit of information overload. Behave.

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Tuesday Hangovers

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Another Kind of Apocalypse

Bones_of_faerie Post-apocalyptic realities have become familiar as slippers, the last several years, in the realms of both literature published for adults–The Road, Carhullan Army/Daughters of the North–and for young adults–How I Live Now, Life As We Knew It, The Knife of Never Letting Go. And there are plenty more. I don't know about you, but I love a good post-apocalypse. In her debut young adult novel, Bones of Faerie, Janni Simner inventively and memorably adds to the sub-genre, gracing it with a dark fairy tale of being lost in the woods. The terrifying, murderous woods.

In the novel, a war between humans and Faerie has left the landscape devastated. Young Liza begins showing signs of magic, and must flee her town, or risk being killed for it. A fate she's not entirely convinced isn't what deserves, because magic is dangerous–but still, she runs, with the help of a local boy whose family died from magic run rampant. Over the course of the novel, Liza travels to Faerie, on the other side of the St. Louis Arch in search of her mother. 

I dare you not to want to read this book after the thoroughly chilling opening. Here's a small excerpt:

I had a sister once.

She was a beautiful baby, eyes silver as moonlight off the river at night. From the hour of her birth she was long-limbed and graceful, faerie-pale hair clear as glass from Before, so pale you could almost see through to the soft skin beneath.

My father was a sensible man. He set her out on the hillside that very night, though my mother wept and even old Jayce argued against it. "If the faerie folk want her, let them take her," Father said. "If not the fault's theirs for not claiming one of their own." He left my sister, and he never looked back.

I did. I crept out before dawn to see whether the faeries had really come. They hadn't, but some wild creature had. One glance was all I could take. I turned and ran for home, telling no one where I'd been.

We were lucky that time, I knew. I'd heard tales of a woman who bore a child with a voice high and sweet as a bird's songand with the sharp claws to match. No one questioned that baby's father when he set the child out to die, far from our town, far from where his wife lay dying, her insides torn and bleeding.

Magic was never meant for our world, Father said, and of course I'd agreed, though the War had ended and the faerie folk returned to their own places before I was born. If only they'd never stirred from those placesbut it was no use thinking that way.

How refreshing–if post-apocalyptic stories can be refreshing–to encounter a full-on fantasy version of the apocalypse and its aftermath. It seems that much fantasy that invades this territory is centered around preventing said apocalypse. The dominance of science fiction in this realm might even seem to indicate that magic would serve to dilute the bleak landscape of decay that follows such wholesale destruction. But the magic of Simner's world only magnifies the sense of horror, of land and people still at war, unable to let go of battles that were lost.

Really, these are two territories–faerie and post-apocalypse–that are increasingly hard to do successfully because they seem to demand a recognition of their not-so-recent and recent history that can weigh down even the most skilled of writers. So greater kudos then to Simner for not giving us the easy version on either count. This is a daunting, destructive Faerie, but a mysterious one too–and although we find out what happened to it, we don't really find out much about the details of its before, only what we need for the story at hand. I admired the restraint. I also loved the creation of the human world, the attention to its texture, the attention to the new operating tendencies of nature, and to mixing the old knowledge and technology with the characters' new reality. 

So maybe you liked The Road, but wished it had strong (or any, really) female characters and a bit of honest hope in it. Or maybe you hated it, for the lack of those (or for other reasons). Maybe you found the voice of the protagonist of Meg Rosoff's book off-putting and whiny*. Maybe you think you would rather DIE than read a novel that has anything to do with faeries. I suspect this novel will be worth your time, if any of those things are true–and even if you just like reading about life after the world ends.

See also: Short interview about the book on Tor.com

*I love that book, for the record. But I know a lot of people have issues with Daisy.

(I KNOW, HOLY CRAP, I DID AN ACTUAL BOOK POST.)

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Dollhouse Discussion

I know, I know, I'm just asking to get my heart broken, but demonstrating my faith that the Show Will Be Good (much cheered by this i09 review) and also because I miss our TV chatter of old (see: the Gilmore Gossip Circle, Veronica Mars Talk, Heroes Yammer), here is a place for, um, discussion after Dollhouse airs.

Episode description ahoy:

Ghost. Echo is one of the "Actives" in the elite and illegal Dollhouse. Through different personality downloads, she plays the role of a lovestruck girl on a romantic weekend, and then a ruthlessly efficient kidnapping negotiator. Meanwhile, FBI Agent Paul Ballard is struggling with his assignment to uncover information on the Dollhouse. The chase has destroyed his marriage and is wrecking his career, and it doesn't seem that he'll stop until he uncovers the truth.

Fingers crossed.

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