29.4.23

Review: More Gross

More GrossMore Gross by Sam Gross
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I remember being in junior high and discovering National Lampoon, and trying to keep my issues hidden from my folks. I had convinced my Mom it was like Cracked or Mad, but it was quite a bit more adult than that. And hilarious. Little did they know. So when you have to secretly read your adult (or at least college) humor magazines, you need to be quick with your reading. And what is quicker than a one drawing cartoon? That's how I found Gross, and why his cartoons were so memorable to me. Reading this book, now more than 45 years after I found National Lampoon, was a trip down memory lane. They don't all hit, but those that do make me recall those feelings of humor, of confusion, and of naughtiness that I felt back then. Nice trip down memory lane, but still not safe to share with the parents, or with the humorlessly woke. Or, in the words of Sam Gross, "That's not funny, that's sick."

View all my reviews

24.4.23

Review: Normal

Normal (Normal, #1-4)Normal by Warren Ellis
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

As others have said, this is a set up for some big discussions, but in the end it was unfulfilling. Perhaps a bit more focus, and a bit more storytelling instead of backgrounding.

View all my reviews

Review: The Year of Magical Thinking

The Year of Magical ThinkingThe Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I got some feels but not as much as I expected. It did make me appreciate Isabel Allende's "Paula" more for the dealing with a slow moving death.

View all my reviews

Review: Rough Sleepers

Rough SleepersRough Sleepers by Tracy Kidder
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I really enjoyed Kidder’s first book, “Soul of a New Machine”. I read it in college and switched majors because of it. I’ve enjoyed all of his books since. This one, though, seemed less complete than his other books. Kidder’s previous books mostly were told in a story arc. Here, it feels more like straight reporting. Perhaps this was mostly covering a shorter timeline than his other books. Perhaps it’s because this didn’t really have an ending, or at least the ending it had didn’t tie into the beginning. Kidder did make his topic, homelessness and the services supporting the homeless, interesting. The most interesting aspect of this book, like a number of his recent books, is the description of an individual’s self-sacrifice for the greater good.

View all my reviews

Review: Foundation

Foundation by Isaac Asimov My rating: 3 of 5 stars I decided to read the Foundation novels in chronological order, and before this...