Let’s Split Up by Bill Wood

Let’s Split Up was the fastest selling UK Young Adult debut of 2024. It’s said to appeal to the demographic that loves both the Scream movie franchise and Scooby Doo fans, but I suspect that this leans more to the former than the latter, at least if my reaction to it has been anything to go by.

Cam is one of those effortlessly cool kids in high school who can be both a jock and a nerd. His best friend is an outright nerd named Jonesy, who moved to their small town of Sanera, California, from England when they were both kids. Lately tho, things between Cam and Jonesy have gotten a little weird.

Amber, the last member of their tight little trio (and who I feel is very Black-coded,) knows that Cam and Jonesy are into each other, but is wise enough not to say anything until the boys figure it out for themselves. She’s smart and empathetic, and tho her traditionally-minded parents don’t understand why and how she could possibly be platonic best friends with two boys, they’re okay enough with it as long as she keeps her grades up and doesn’t get into trouble. She has absolutely not told anyone besides Cam and Jonesy that she’s bisexual tho. It may be 2001, but being out and proud certainly isn’t an option for everyone.

When new girl Buffy moves to town, the gang swiftly adopt her, tho not without some resistance from Jonesy, who’s a little suspicious of new people. Buffy is super perceptive, so it doesn’t take her long to figure this out. A greater mystery befalls them tho when their school principal interrupts lunch period to announce terrible news.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/15/lets-split-up-by-bill-wood/

Just One Oak by Maria Gianferrari & Diana Sudyka

subtitled What A Single Tree Can Be. And in the case of the oak, the answer is “a lot!”

Growing up in Virginia, I had two massive oak trees in my front garden which, along with the red maple I spent hours climbing, were my favorite trees for the longest time. My dad made a plank swing that hung from a bough of the oak closest to the house, and I spent plenty of time either vigorously sailing through the air on it or just idly swinging to and fro with my thoughts and/or a book. I’d spread a picnic mat at the foot of the oaks when the weather was nice, and read or daydream while staring up into the leaves. So believe me when I tell you that I was very much inclined to love oak trees even before I read this beautiful and informative book on how important they actually are.

Even as an amateur naturalist, I was surprised to discover how crucial the oak’s position is as a keystone species in whichever ecosystem it’s in. Maria Gianferrari goes into this in greater detail, showcasing not only the oak’s importance in the diet of numerous insects, birds and mammals, but also how its adaptive traits have made it easier for pretty much everything in its surrounding area to thrive. Whether this comes from providing safe a/o nourishing habitats, or from rebalancing the environment through creating microclimates more suitable for the living organisms around it, the oak tree does a lot more (and in a lot more places!) than I knew of before I read this book.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/14/just-one-oak-by-maria-gianferrari-diana-sudyka/

The Counterfeit by Ralph DeFalco (EXCERPT)

Hello, dear readers! Today we have an excerpt from a thrilling novel that reads like it could have been ripped from tomorrow’s headlines!

In his debut novel The Counterfeit, historian and national security intelligence veteran Ralph DeFalco depicts a disturbingly plausible near future in which China has won a Pacific War against the United States of America. Now Beijing is maneuvering to control the next US president, while the corrupt regime that has presided over the US’ defeat, bankrupcy and political fracture entrenches power through a sprawling Internal Security Division that is essentially America’s own Gestapo.

Not everyone is ready to take this lying down, tho. Philip Nolan, Commander, U.S. Navy is a former POW who finds himself paroled into an America starkly divided between privilege and deprivation. His own twin brother — a near identical lookalike — is now chief of the secret police. Recruited by a rising Resistance, Nolan undertakes an audacious mission to infiltrate the secret police by replacing his own twin. Embedded in the highest levels of power, Nolan will have to navigate political treachery, foreign manipulation and moral peril, risking torture and execution to undermine the regime from within.

Mr DeFalco blends the insider realism of a five decade career in intelligence with the urgency of contemporary geopolitics in this gripping dystopian thriller that explores loyalty, identity and the cost of freedom in a world where the truth itself has become a weapon to be used and manipulated.

Read on for a pulse-pounding excerpt!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/13/the-counterfeit-by-ralph-defalco-excerpt/

The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher

The Wonder Engine continues and concludes the story begun in Clockwork Boys. To recap: Three misfits have been offered reprieves from their respective criminal sentences (two death, one life in prison) if they can find a way to stop the Clocktaurs, semi-mechanical, semi-magical contraptions that are slowly but surely conquering the lands surrounding the misfits’ home city on a campaign clearly aimed at the city itself. The army’s regular forces have slowed the Clocktaurs some but by no means halted their drive. Previous missions to Anuket City, the source of the marauders, have failed or simply disappeared. It’s desperate measures all around.

The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher

As I wrote previously, Slate is a convicted forger with a death sentence hanging over her head; she also has the mild magical knack of smelling rosemary when danger is near. Brenner is her ex, an accomplished assassin and jack-of-all-crimes with a death sentence of his own. Caliban is a paladin who killed nearly a dozen people while he was possessed by a demon. The possession modified his guilt, in the eyes of the local law, and so he was not hanged but tossed into the dungeon forever. To keep them on task, all three were given magic tattoos that can cause them pain if they begin to stray from their mission, and kill them if they abandon it entirely. In Clockwork Boys, the three gained the assistance of a young scholar, the Learned Edmund, whose abstruse knowledge may be helpful in unraveling the mysteries of the Clocktaurs. More pragmatically, his order also had sent a senior scholar to Anuket City, and his correspondence contained hints about the Clocktaurs, but he, too, seems to have disappeared. If they can find him, maybe he knows how they work and how to stop them. Finally, the group gained a gnole named Grimehug.

Gnoles, in this world, are intelligent bipedal beings with badger-like features. They can speak human languages (humans cannot get far in gnole languages because communications often involve things like the position of a gnole’s whiskers or the angle of their ears) and have partly integrated themselves into human societies, often taking on menial jobs such as street cleaning or removing dead bodies. Like underclasses everywhere, they are often overlooked and underestimated. Gnole society is complex and caste-based; they are not immune to overlooking and underestimating either.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/12/the-wonder-engine-by-t-kingfisher/

Emergent Tokyo by Jorge Almazan + Studiolab

Isn’t this neat? Tokyo is one of the world’s greatest cities, and is regularly praised for its success on a human scale even as the population of the metropolitan area has soared past 30 million. In Emergent Tokyo: Designing the Spontaneous City, Jorge Almazan and his team of more than two dozen researchers and editors try to answer crucial questions about the city. What are some of the key features that make Tokyo so vibrant and appealing? How did they come about? Are there underlying patterns? Can these successes be sustained, or maybe even replicated and extended? As they write, “But to use Tokyo as a source of inspiration, one must move beyond the awed gaze of the tourist and begin to ask questions about the why and how of the city. That, in a nutshell, is the purpose of this book.” (p. 4)

Emergent Tokyo: Designing the Spontaneous City by Jorge Almazan + Studiolab

The authors also warn throughout the book about just-so stories of the unique Japanese-ness of Tokyo and its development. Cities and cultures the world over have their unique aspects, but people in Tokyo were also responding to economic, legal and environmental challenges that have counterparts elsewhere. The choices that they made began patterns that contributed to Tokyo’s unique character, and path-dependency means that the options in other places will be different. The authors hope that showing underlying mechanisms can both contribute to greater understanding of Tokyo itself and help people, especially decision-makers, grasp the dynamics in their own cities so as to make more human-centric choices. Tokyo’s successes are neither impenetrable nor perfectly reproducible, but understanding how they emerged can make corresponding successes elsewhere more likely.

The bad news is that the answer to almost any question posed about Tokyo begins with, “It’s complicated.” The good news is that with diligent work and thorough research, comprehensible patterns emerge. “Instead of reducing the city’s diversity to a singular Tokyo model, we conceive Tokyo as having multiple neighborhood models or archetypes, each with its own distinct urban fabric—areas which are similar in terms of land use, street patterns, and building types, even if they’re on opposite ends of the city. (p. 7) The team describes their approach:

Tokyo’s metropolitan government now offers a wealth of quantitative information about every building, road, and plot of land in the city, data which can be analyzed algorithmically to lay bare the differences between Tokyo’s diverse neighborhoods. By poring through government databases, we have pinpointed several key characteristics of Tokyo neighborhoods that strongly predict their other contours, enabling us to compare and contrast at the scale of the city in concrete, quantifiable terms. For example, neighborhoods with a similar building scale and mix of land use often resemble each other in subtler metrics as well, such as their permeability to the public, accessibility for pedestrians, and the intimacy and vibrancy of their communities. Through this analysis, one can begin to grasp a common pattern language across Tokyo neighborhoods and gain a sense of how their essential characteristics give them a distinctive tenor and daily rhythm. (p. 7)

The research team took advantage of a long-standing city practice of dividing the city into small administrative units known as chōme. The full city has 23 wards, but within these wards each chōme is only about 0.2 km2 in area. By analyzing the city chōme by chōme, the researchers found six major archetypes: Village Tokyo, Local Tokyo, Pocket Tokyo, Mercantile Tokyo, Yamanote Mercantile Tokyo, Shitamachi Mercantile Tokyo, Mass Residential Tokyo and Office Tower Tokyo. The archetypes differ in their density, balance of residential and commercial building, scale of developments, street sizes, and other characteristics. The authors found that neighborhoods of a given type often had more in common with each other than with their immediate geographic neighbors.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/11/emergent-tokyo-by-jorge-almazan-studiolab/

Tantalizing Tales — April 2026 — Part Two

Hello, dear readers! I haven’t been bedridden in over a week now, which feels like a small but important victory as I struggle to catch up with all the work that’s fallen by the wayside since mid-January. The weather, at least, has been lovely where I am, leading to lots of outdoor reading (after a hefty dose of allergy meds, of course.)

I’ve also been looking favorably at my pile of upcoming reads, with Kelly Yang’s The Take top of the list. I first fell in love with her writing when my eldest child introduced me to Front Desk, a book he’d been assigned in middle school, and I’ve loved everything I’ve read of hers since.

Her debut adult novel revolves around the relationship between Maggie Wang and Ingrid Parker, two women in very different positions in life. Maggie is a broke young Asian American writer, whose work is dismissed as not possessing enough life experience. Ingrid is an aging white Hollywood producer who isn’t willing to be sidelined in an industry that renders women invisible as they age.

Out of desperation, Ingrid makes Maggie an offer. She’ll pay Maggie three million dollars and act as her mentor. In exchange, all Maggie has to do is participate in an experimental age-reversal treatment involving ten blood transfusions.

Their strictly transactional arrangement devolves into a power play as both women discover that simply taking what they want — whether it be youth, wisdom or power — comes at a cost. As they begin to question who’s really benefiting from their relationship, they also have to confront what they’re willing to do and sacrifice in order to succeed.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/10/tantalizing-tales-april-2026-part-two/

Ami Moon And The Galactic Peacekeepers by Frances Lee

For whatever reason, I had this book’s publication date misfiled, but oh what a perfect time to read it, as the Artemis II mission reminds millions of people worldwide why so many of us initially fell in love with the idea of outer space.

And space is, obviously, the setting for Ami Moon And The Galactic Peacekeepers. The graphic novel opens with a greeting to readers from a(n adorable) Peacekeeper named Emo, who will serve as our guide through the experience. Emo relates that the only human among the Galactic Peacekeepers before us was Ami, a girl who couldn’t remember how to get back to Earth. Funnily enough, none of the other Peacekeepers knew of a planet by that name either, so she spent her days helping on missions of peace even as she missed home and her mother terribly.

As we follow along, we learn that being a Peacekeeper means that there are a lot of things to keep both us and her occupied. Ami has been assigned to a team with the much larger, bear-shaped and gentle Sumo, and the smaller, shark-shaped and prickly (in nature if not in body) Rosa. In their downtime, the trio enjoy noodles and exploring the Peacekeepers’ headquarters planet, even as they try to avoid getting into fights with snobbier colleagues. But when their AI, whom Ami wistfully names MOM, has a mission for them, it’s all systems go.

Seeing as how they’re all novices, the missions start out pretty simply, but grow in complexity as their skills develop. Soon, they’re encountering actual dangers with psychological repercussions. Will they be able to complete their missions and return home safely, even as Ami searches for any word of Earth?

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/09/ami-moon-and-the-galactic-peacekeepers-by-frances-lee/

Now You Know Your ABCs (Or Do You?) by Caspar Salmon & Matt Hunt

I honestly cannot remember the last time I laughed so delightedly at a children’s picture book!

Now You Know Your ABCs (Or Do You?) begins how books like these usually do, with an A is for Apple and B is for Ball. The story grows increasingly immersive, however, as we plunge deeper into the alphabet. Soon, readers are pulled into a tale at once adventurous and magical, as a wolf pursues us through the charmingly illustrated pages, traversing the entire alphabet for good measure.

There is definitely a hint of danger here but younger readers will, presumably, be enjoying this with a safe adult who’ll ensure that this wild tale feels more exciting romp than actually scary. Honestly, this book hearkens very much to the kind of fairy tale yarn that more creative storytellers than myself often spin for their children’s bedtime stories. Kids do tend to be weirdly bloodthirsty, and many of them will enjoy this epic journey, if they’re not rooting outright for the wolf to win. I know that my little monsters would have been jumping up and down with excitement had this book come out when they were still read-along picture book enthusiasts.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/08/now-you-know-your-abcs-or-do-you-by-caspar-salmon-matt-hunt/

Two Truths And A Lie by Mark Stevens (EXCERPT)

Hello, dear readers! Today I have an intriguing excerpt from the second book in the Flynn Martin series, Two Truths And A Lie.

After being instrumental in helping to catch the notorious PDQ killer who terrorized Denver, investigative reporter Flynn Martin is thrilled that her career is flying high. Juggling her professional responsibilities with motherhood is a continuing challenge, but one she finds worthwhile if it means putting the guilty behind bars.

Serial killer Harry Kugel isn’t ready to let their relationship go, however, even as he’s facing a long prison sentence for the crimes he’s committed. Four months after his sentencing, an upstanding family of four mysteriously disappears. As Flynn investigates, she begins receiving cryptic messages from someone who has no qualms about targeting not only her sources but those nearest and dearest to her as well. Is Harry somehow involved in this case too? Or has yet another copycat killer come out of the woodwork to prey on the innocent of Colorado?

Read on for a scene-setting excerpt, as Harry faces a judge and leaves Flynn with a clear message:

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/07/two-truths-and-a-lie-by-mark-stevens-excerpt/

The Tailor of Panama by John Le Carré

The Tailor of Panama is Harry Pendel, half of the Savile Row partnership of Pendel & Braithwaite, relocated to Panama City some years back. A large portrait of the late Arthur Braithwaite — shipped over from England at his widow’s insistence and damn the expense — presides over the premises just off the prestigious Via España. The prestige of English hand-tailoring has translated into a tidy business for Pendel. He has fitted more than one president, quite a number of ministers, practically all of Panama’s business elite, and wealthy men of discerning taste from around the region. He has not held himself above creating uniforms for men new to their high ranks, and he is far too worldly to inquire about how they attained those ranks, or indeed how legitimate their governments might be. Credit available to the right customers, but cash very much preferred.

The Tailor of Panama by John Le Carré

The book was published in 1996 and is set a vague but not too large number of years following the first Bush administration’s forceful ouster of Panama’s notorious ruler Manuel Noriega in 1989. Corruption is assumed of anyone with money. The deadly violence of the drug trade is also assumed, but stays in the background in this novel. By all appearances, Pendel has created a jolly island of English probity and taste in the tropics. The men who come to his shop enjoy the whisky more than the good fitting, and there are regulars who stop by to be seen and to catch up on the latest gossip, in between business, golfing, maintenance of at least one mistress, and the other accoutrements of being rich and Panamanian. Pendel hears a lot in unguarded moments, whether that is during fittings or when his clients are relaxing in the club-like atmosphere of Pendel & Braithwaite.

Pendel himself is a devoted family man; one of the novel’s first scenes shows him taking his two children to their school. His wife, Louisa, is a daughter of one of the Canal’s leading engineers and grew up when the Canal Zone emphasized the practical colonial status of the country that surrounded the Canal. She works for a Panamanian politico-businessman, and she’s a part of the city’s network of socially elite women, parallel to the men’s networks and just as riven by affairs and personal scores. At times Pendel cannot believe his luck; at others, he cannot meet Louisa’s complex and contradictory psychological demands. Le Carré only partly explores this relationship, which is probably just as well because I do not think it would hold up to protracted investigation.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/04/the-tailor-of-panama-by-john-le-carre/