Showing posts with label November 2023. Show all posts
Showing posts with label November 2023. Show all posts

Saturday, December 30, 2023

Scott's Take: Power Girl Returns by Leah Williams


Power Girl Returns by Leah Williams has the difficult assignment of being the first new book staring the character in years. Power Girl along with the JSA has been relegated to the bench for several years. They had no place in the main DC universe until recently.

 

This book comes out of the events of Lazarus Planet where a lot of stuff happened, but the only relevant part for this book is that magic rain poured down on the world and caused changes in people. One of those changed people is Power Girl as she now, for some reason, has telepathic powers. With these new powers, she has agreed to be a psychologist for the superhero community. She has also agreed to help Omen (formerly a member of Teen Titan) also be a psychologist for the superhero community. Together they will treat patients and their first patient is Beast Boy who has recently survived a gunshot to the head.

 

Thanks to the head trauma caused by the bullet, he now seems to be stuck in the form of a calf and unable to speak. Because of his ability to shape shift, the injury was healed and there is now nothing physically wrong with him. That means the problem is mostly likely in his head and could be PTSD related or something like that.  This first case leads to more as they attempt to figure out why other heroes in the Superman family are now also suddenly having strange issues as well.

 

Also included in this read is a second graphic novel storyline that collects the Knight Terror tie in issues. In this part, a bad guy has managed to bring every person’s nightmares to life. The entire human race is experiencing their worst dreams. If you are a person like Power girl who has survived the death of two worlds, you are going to have serious issues. What happens when your nightmares become real?

 

The sections have different artists with their own look and style. They are both great, but very differentin style and tone. There is plenty of humor and action. There is a lot of character exploration. There are changes made to classic elements of Power Girl as a character that I am not sure how I feel about them. But, they are trying to find a way forward for the character since she has been benched for so long. 

 

One thing that I wish would have been explored, would have been the fact that Nightwing brings Beast Boy in and they both have suffered being shot in the head in the last few years. A talented author could have drawn parallels to the different consequences they experienced suffering the same type of injury.

 

The stories in Power Girl Returns are a little short since they were originally backups for the main Superman title. Backups for people who don’t know is like little short stories included after a main book has finished. But they are released in parts together.



This series is being relaunched as a main book by the same author. It is only just started, but the plot is that a Kryptonian virus is killing normal human beings. It seems to have some tie to Power Girl’s Krypton. If Power Girl can’t figure out what is happening, more humans will die and the Superman family of this Earth will take the blame.

 

My reading copy came by way of the Hoopla App and the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2023

Thursday, November 30, 2023

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange 11/30/2023

 In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange 11/30/2023

Review: Resurrection Walk: A Lincoln Lawyer Novel by Michael Connelly


Resurrection Walk: A Lincoln Lawyer Novel by Michael Connelly splits the time between Bosch and his brother, Mickey Haller. At its core, the novel is about a flawed justice system and trying to get innocent people released. But, the read is far more complicated than that.

 

Mickey Haller is doing pretty well. He just got Jorge Ochoa out after years of being wrongfully imprisoned for a crime he did not commit and he likes the feeling that kind of victory. He enjoyed that thrill of victory as Ochoa walked out, a sort of “resurrection walk.”  

 

These days Bosch works for him so that he has insurance. Bosch was going to let the cancer do what it did, but changed his mind. Bosch is fighting, and when he isn’t in treatment, he is driving Haller around and reading letters from inmates seeking help to overturn convictions.

 

It is their own version of the “Innocence Project” and Bosch thinks he may have spotted a case worth looking at in greater detail. Lucinda Sanz was convicted of manslaughter in the shooting death of her Los Angeles County Deputy Husband. She pleaded nolo to manslaughter as a plea deal. She has no idea who killed her husband in the front yard of their house, or why, but she took the deal because her public defender said to do so. Now she urgently needs to get out and back home to her son.

 

While Haller is doing various things, Bosch does some poking around and is soon questioning the merits of the case against her. Overturning her plea is going to be damn near impossible, but going to Federal Court might be a step in the right direction. That case and the fight to get Lucinda Sanz out of prison is the primary overarching storyline.

 

Other cases, Bosch’s cancer fight, and various ongoing matters make up secondary storylines in a complex novel.

 

While the cancer fight is tough reading for those of who have gone through it with a loved one, the overall novel does not spend a ton of time in that storyline. Many things are going on in Resurrection Walk: A Lincoln Lawyer Novel by Michael Connelly. The result is a highly entertaining read that pulls the reader along at a rapid clip. The book is well worth your time.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3VeSovI

 

After the publisher skipped my NetGalley review request, my reading copy came by way of the Libby/OverDrive App and the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2023

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Lesa's Book Critiques: TIM DORSEY, RIP

 Lesa's Book Critiques: TIM DORSEY, RIP

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 96 Calls for Submissions in December 2023 - No submission fees

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: I Could Pee on This; Dracula; Rabbit-Proof Fence

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SleuthSayers: Mind the Gap

SleuthSayers: Mind the Gap: Pottery shard, Ramat Rachel, Israel. Today I find myself in a situation I have not experienced since, at least, July 5, 2021. Specifically, ...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "Three Times Loser" by Michael Gilbert

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George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #152: Masterpieces in Miniature: Stories: The Detectives; Parker Pyne; Harley Quin, Hercule Poirot, and Miss Marple By Agatha Christie

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Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: "GAWKY" FOR GUARD

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Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday "Debarking" from BARK by Lorrie Moore

 Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday "Debarking" from BARK by Lorrie Moore

Short Story Wednesday Review: Guilty Crime Story Magazine: Issue Seven, Winter 2023


Guilty Crime Story Magazine: Issue 7, Winter 2023, contains seven short stories and one true crime article. As always, the read here is dark. Those seeking cozy mysteries or lighthearted fare should look elsewhere.


Colin Brightwell’s “Sad Sack” leads things off. It is the holidays and two porch pirates have their own plan to pick up spending money. The first step is hitting some porches and grabbing packages on this cold icy afternoon.


Sammy was a comedian with a bit of a cult following in the clubs he played between Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay area. He borrowed a lot of money from a guy in “Not Funny” by Jim Guigli and headed to the east coast. Now the collectors have caught up to him and he is in a world of trouble.


Crank’s girlfriend, Yulia, wants him to change. He tries in “Crank Baxter Ain’t No God-Damned Christian” by Alec Cizak. His attempt to change from his core nature has a lot of consequences.


Two young girls were murdered in Delphi, Indiana, back in 2017. “The Delphi Murders: A True Crime Story” by N. Fraley recounts the details of the case, the hunt for a suspect, and the status of the case at the time this issue was published.


Editor/Publisher Brandon Burrows is next with his short story, “It’s All An Act.”  A totally insignificant man named Dan Martin ended everything. He has to pay. As does society which refuses to put a stop to such senseless acts of gun violence. The reader can’t help but wonder why this sort of thing does not happen more often when one reads this tale.


The three men had a plan and it should have worked fine. It would have too in “No Trouble” by Wayne McIntire if one man had not tried to play hero. Or if one of three had not acted as he did.


When you are convicted young and do your prison time, coming back home, and trying to get a job can be very hard. Especially in a small nowhere place like Chesterton. Andy had to come back and is now trying to make it as best as he can. It is very late at the convenience store, the weather is nasty, and it is almost time to close for the day in “Conviction” by Anderson Barres. Then a customer shows up and everything changes.


So, there he was sitting in a bar and halfway to where he wanted to be, stranger sits nearby and ask if he is willing to kill the guy’s wife. Not that our narrator has done that before. But, things are hard, it is 50k, and she will soon be dead anyway. The hook is set in “Two Guys Walk Into A Bar” by Robb T. White.


Another interesting issue, Guilty Crime Story Magazine: Issue 7, Winter 2023, is another in an entertaining series of reads. Dark in tone and filled with characters often compelled to make bad choices and deal with the outcomes, the crime fiction short stories presented here makes no bones about the inner nature of people. Some have power and use it one way. Others have it and use it another. Friends become enemies and the world spins on. If you are looking for light hearted, this is not the read for you.



My reading copy was a purchase of the eBook last December by way of funds in my Amazon Associate account.  


Kevin R. Tipple © 2023


Tuesday, November 28, 2023

The First Two Pages: “The Other Wedding Crasher” by Karen McCullough

 The First Two Pages: “The Other Wedding Crasher” by Karen McCullough

Lesa's Book Critiques: MURDER ON TOUR BY V.M. BURNS

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SleuthSayers: Reading for Gems by Michael Bracken

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet: Becky Chambers

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Six Cats a Slayin’ by Miranda James

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Review: Posthumous Child: Inspector Mislan and The Playground Murder by Rozlan Mohd Noor


Posthumous Child: Inspector Mislan and The Playground Murder by Rozlan Mohd Noor is the latest in a good series of police procedurals set in and around Kuala Lumper, Malaysia. This sixth book in the series is a slower read than the previous books though the second half of the book picks up considerably.

 

As always, Detective Sergeant Johan Kamaruddin and Inspector Mislan Latiff work a number of cases over the course of the book. Some are solved fairly quickly. One takes longer and serves as the main case of the book.

 

Such is the case here where the main case regards the discovery of the body of a woman is found in a park in a wealthy area. In the park there is a large playground setup for both adults and children. In the children’s area, near a slide, there is the body of a woman. She is dressed and curled up in a fetal position and clearly dumped at the park.

 

It is only later during the postmortem that Detective Sergeant Johan Kamaruddin and Inspector Mislan Latiff learn that the woman was pregnant. That fact was not obvious on scene. Somebody, presumably, the killer, took the baby out of her. Who killed the woman, why, and what happened to the baby drive the case and thus the primary storyline of the book. Those answers are dark as is most of the book.

 

This is not a light read, not that any in this series are, but the tone of this one is darker than most. Inspector Mislan is also personally going through some things. The pandemic also still has a tight grip on normal life. As the book moves forward, Inspector Mislan is struck again and again how people will do horrible things to each other under the guise of faith or politics. The world is frequently a sick place and Mislan is increasingly more aware of that fact more than most.

 

A slow moving and very complicated police procedural, Posthumous Child: Inspector Mislan and The Playground Murder by Rozlan Mohd Noor is not my favorite of the series by a long shot. I found stretches of it slow and tedious until significant progress is eventually made on the primary case. Of course, that could easily be the mindset of this reader and not remotely the fault of the author. This time of year is hard for me and I am well aware that my mood definitely bleeds over into my reading.

 

While one could start here, I would recommend starting with the first book, 21 Immortals: Inspector Mislan and the Yee Sang Murders, and working forward. Each book has the core characters evolving and going through various things that provide nuance and depth to Inspector Mislan and others. There is a reason why the good Inspector is the way he is these days. To pick up on everything in the latest read, one really needs to have read the previous books.  

 

 

My reading copy was in digital format and a purchase from Amazon as the Dallas Library system does not have this one and staff refused to pick it up when I requested it months ago. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2023 


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