Weekly media report – 2025 07 16

Books
Stone and Sky, by Ben Aaronovitch. Most recent of the Rivers of London books, in which the gang goes to Aberdeen to find out what’s up with a mysterious sheep-eating cat, and ends up involved with merfolk, selkies, North Sea oil, and Scottish independence. I’ve actually been to Aberdeen once and it felt right to me. I really enjoyed the Abigail/foxes subplot more than usual, and I was fascinated by Beverly and the babies. Also, kudos to Ben for getting around Brexit.
Last Call at the Nightingale and The Last Drop of Hemlock. First two books in a 1920s set mystery series centering on a jazz bar in New York. Our heroine is an Irish orphan who stumbles into two mysteries. The supporting cast is diverse and the mysteries are interesting: the first one involves a body found outside the club and gets into whiskey runners and gangsters; the second involves the demise of our heroine’s (Black) best friend’s uncle and has some great twists. There are 2 or 3 more in the series and I’m definitely down for the lot of them.
Picks & Shovels by Cory Doctorow. I’m glad he writes from the perspective of a (sometimes really dumb even though he’s really smart) man, because the story he’s telling in this one would be unbearable if he were trying to write from a woman’s POV. Third in the Martin Hench series, this one tells a story about Marty’s arrival in San Francisco in the 1980s and his involvement in the quarrel between a religious computer company and the women who left them and tried to take them down. I like these books a lot; I just don’t like the protagonist very much even when he’s theoretically doing the right thing. Also, the overall ending was strong, even the parts I didn’t like.
Death by Misadventure, by Tasha Alexander. 18th in the Lady Emily series. Lady Emily and her husband do a locked room mystery in the Bavarian Alps. I correctly predicted the killer but not the reasoning, which was well-done. This series has the annoying past-history interspersions but this time I figured out the significance about halfway through the book and thought it was much more interesting than the previous books: it explained a lot more about the current mystery than the interspersed stories have in the past.
The Lily of Ludgate Hill and The Muse of Maiden Lane by Mimi Matthews. Third and fourth in the four-hander Regency romances in the Belles of London series, in which four horse-riding friends get paired off. Book three involves one of the girls calling in a favor from an old flame. Timewise this is interspersed with events from the previous books in a very clever way. Book four involves the aftermath of those events and ties in with them the same way. This time the clergyman’s sister has to forsake her home to get her independence and her man, who’s a disabled artist (he can’t walk after a bout of scarlet fever). The way the series ties the books together is really clever.
Miss Caroline Bingley: Private Detective, by Sharmini Kumar & Kelly Gardiner. Inspired by the side characters in Pride & Prejudice, this one uses a Regency mystery as a jumping-off point to get into the history of the East India Company and subcontinental Indians in Regency London. By the end of the book we have Caroline set up with an Anglo-Indian lady friend, a possible romance/foil in the Company, friends and allies and enemies, so I expect there to be another one.
A Daughter’s Guide to Mothers and Murders, by Dianne Freeman. 8th in the Countess of Harleigh series. This time Frances and her husband are in 1900-ish Paris, at Longchamps and dealing with a mystery in which the Divine Sarah (Bernhardt) is a suspect. I like the expansion of the family in the B-plot and the resolutions with Frances’ mother and personal friends, and while I did see one of the twists coming, there was one that surprised me, so that was good.

Movies & TV
Murderbot, Episode 10. I’ve really enjoyed this series even if most of the finale was predictable (they weren’t going to destroy the protagonist!) I liked the ending and look forward to S2.

Music
Apple Essentials: Wet Leg and Wet Leg, Moisturizer. None of the other stuff is as droll as Chaise Longue but I do like me a little female fronted rock music. Of the new stuff I think I like CPR (the new single) best.

Weekly media report – 2025 07 09

Books
Organizing Solutions for People with ADHD (3rd edition), by Susan C. Pinsky. I don’t have ADHD but chronic illness has given me some of the same management issues, and I’m pretty sure spouse has his share as well. This is the third edition; I’d previously read the second edition, and there’s some additional useful information in it. Specifically there’s more up-to-date suggestions for keeping your online life organized. I think I’m feeling the desire for what this book calls a Brutal Purge, because I’m thinking about rereading another, similar book next.

Short Stories
Death and Liquidity Under the New Moon, by Vajra Chandrasekera. Post-mortem military service by the author of The Saint of the Bright Doors. Nuff said.

Movies & TV
Murderbot, episodes 7-9. We get to the climax and find out what’s going on, finally, and everything blows up in everyone’s faces. Next week: the payoff. Then I’m going to read the books. I continue to enjoy this series and especially Alexander Skarsgard’s deadpan as he deals with his clients/cow orkers.

Music
Neave Trio, La mer: French Piano Trios & A Room of Her Own. Two albums of chamber music that I’m mostly not familiar with but definitely enjoyed. I picked this album because the trio has two women, putting them squarely in my “listen to more women in 2025” project, and because their newest album (the first) got a nice review in the Guardian.
Apple Essentials: Tangerine Dream. Pretty sure the answer here is still I really like the late Virgin era and am not so crazy about anything else.

Weekly media report – 2025 07 02

I’m going to start putting my mini-reviews here as well as longer reviews for books that I think merit it.

Books
The Starving Saints, by Caitlin Starling. Medieval fantastic horror in which three women (a knight, a heretical nun, and the daughter of an executed noble) are locked in a besieged castle with supernatural forces that come as the face of their goddess and her saints. Really good with vibes and twists. I only picked this up because of the medieval connection; I don’t normally read horror.
The Case of the Missing Maid, by Rob Osler. Series starter with a novice woman private detective in Progressive era Chicago; she has to find a missing woman in the Polish community in a case that hinges on, among other things, exploration of her lesbianism. The second book isn’t out yet but I’ll be interested in seeing where this series goes.

Short Stories
Why We Sing, by C.C. Finlay. Paywalled. The story of how mermaids came to be, with a twist.
Welcome 2 the Freedom Galaxy, by Maurice Broaddus. Paywalled. Interstellar funk wars. I love the Prince-inflected musician our protagonist follows.
Banded Iron, by T. K. Rex. Paywalled. What happens when it’s your turn to go back to Earth to fight the interstellar kaiju?
The Green Glass Paperweight, by Sarah Monette. (Reprint from 2004) Hard to talk about this one without breaking the twist but it’s worth it. What does the hated godson select as his bequest?
All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt, by Marissa Lingen. The gift shop manager convention on a space station takes an unlikely turn.

Music
MARINA, Princess of Power. We listened to this in the car and my husband thinks it’s a post-divorce album. It’s retro disco-pop in a fun way, really girl power, and I’m going to be listening to it again and again. I never really got into her last two albums as much as the first three, but this one hit the sweet spot again.

Review: Billy Idol & Joan Jett

Billy Idol with Joan Jett opening. Dickies Arena, May 7, 2025.

If you have to go to a big arena to see a show, Dickies isn’t a bad one. It’s fairly new and the seats are big and comfortable. Plus even at the back end of the house, where we usually sit, the view of both the stage and the screens is good.

Joan Jett opened, doing a good job, though the covers and hits were clearly what the early-arriving fans wanted. She’s still engaged with the music, but the Blackhearts are a bar band, which limits what they can do for an arena show. The Dallas Observer review of her part of the show was a little unkind, but for all that she got the crowd warmed up and told some great stories, she was clearly the lesser of the two, which pains my feminist heart. I loved her songs back in the day, and she’s still putting out good music, but it’s very similar to the old stuff.

Billy is pushing 70, but he’s still stomping and snarling and waving his chains and tearing off his shirt just like he did when he was in his 20s. His voice was a little rough in places but he really held the audience with both his stories and his songs. Steve Stevens, his guitarist, did a fantastic job with the guitar on Flesh for Fantasy, which happens to be my favorite Billy Idol song. I was delighted to hear some brand new music; I haven’t followed him closely but I knew he was still releasing EPs and collaborating with other artists. His set was broad, with all the hits, and deep, with some new, some old, and some covers: he did a great Gimme Shelter with one of his singers, which is almost tailor-made for his snarl. By the end he had us really riled up for Rebel Yell, and then went into a four-song encore that included Hot in the City, Dancing With Myself, a new song, and White Wedding.

We danced out of the arena and went back to our hotel, still singing.

Review: Kraftwerk

Kraftwerk at the Majestic Theater. April 22, 2025. Multimedia tour commemorating the 50th Anniversary of Autobahn.

Between Kraftwerk shows, it’s easy to forget how good their live extravaganza really is. For four guys standing at keyboards in front of a screen, it’s big and overwhelming. They’ve been around since 1970 so if they sound a little dated, it’s because they invented a lot of the musical tricks that have since become cliche. But if you know electronic music, you know most of what you’re going to hear at a Kraftwerk show, and more than they have time for because of the sheer depth and breadth of their back catalog.

Only one of the original members is still with the group: Ralf Hütter, after Florian Schneider died in 2020. Hütter is pushing 80 and you have to respect that he’s still out here pleasing the crowds when he could be home relaxing. The music keeps up with the times too: Radioactivity includes Fukushima on its list of disasters along with Three Mile Island (Harrisburg) and Chernobyl.

If you’ve seen Kraftwerk on recent tours, you have a good idea of what you’re getting into: the four band members at the podiums doing the music in the suits with light bands, standing still for the most part and letting the colored light do the work, with the visuals projected on a screen behind. The suits change colors to match what’s on the screen, which is hard to explain but easy to see. The graphics are for the most part computer animations, some of which clearly date back to earlier periods of Kraftwerk’s oeuvre but some of which are also clearly newer. In some cases they’ve put older and newer graphics side by side during the same song, which is interesting to watch. One song where the band used vintage film is The Model, where the fashion puts the film from the 50s or 60s, contrasting the fluid movement of the women and the clothing with the staccato sound of the synths.

The sound crept up on me in this concert. Usually I’m quick to grab my earplugs for hearing protection, but the bass was strong enough that it was rocking the seats in the Majestic before my husband asked for his. I probably lost a little hearing. It was worth it.

Review: Shanghai Quartet

The Shanghai Quartet at Caruth Auditorium, Southern Methodist Univeristy. Final concert in the Dallas Chamber Music 2024-1025 season.

I’m a season ticket-holder, though I often miss for health reasons, and a dilettante in chamber music. I enjoy the more intimate and casual chamber music and early music concerts over more formal and larger orchestral concerts. My knowledge of Western classical music is limited; I’m familiar with the bigger names, particularly as you recede in music history. Modern classical, besides Glass, is out of my bailiwick.

This concert featured two Beethoven quartets and a more recent Penderecki quartet, plus an encore. Beethoven’s style is recognizable to me and the playing seemed solid and full of verve. The Penderecki was new to me; I was initially inclined to dislike the piece but it developed into something I enjoyed more. Reading up on Penderecki afterwards, I found that his later work had moved away from the avant garde style of his earlier period, which explained some of what I’d noticed.

The players were unsurprisingly skilled and other audience members with more experience than I have were particularly complimentary about the cellist, who drew a lot of my attention as well. They received three standing ovations, one at the end of each piece. Unfortunately I couldn’t hear the name of the encore over the whooping and applause, but they played it with even more gusto than the announced quartets. They really let their hair down: literally, as one of the violinists’ hair was flying loose from the vigor of his movements.

Getting out and listening to live music serves the same function for me as the proverbial touching grass. I commend it to anyone who feels terminally online.