Tantalizing Tales — June 2025 — Part Two

Hello, dear readers! Has your June been as busy as mine has? It’s probably because my kids are finishing the last years of their respective schools before they launch into their new ones, but I’ve been run ragged keeping up with all their activities (and let’s not even get started on MY activities.) Fortunately, there are some delightful books to help fill the few quiet times I have available, beginning with Eliza Knight’s recently published historical novel Confessions Of A Grammar Queen.

There are no female publishing CEOs in 1960s New York. Savvy, ambitious Bernadette Swift is going to change that, with the help of a pair of pink pantyhose.

As a junior copyeditor, Bernadette is in the habit of pushing her personal life aside for the intentionally unmanageable workload her boss piles on her desk. Part of this is because she’s determined to become the first female CEO in the publishing industry. First, however, she’ll need to take the next step up the corporate ladder, with a promotion that her boorish and sexist boss very much wants to thwart.

Seeking a base of support, Bernadette accepts the unusual offer of a bold pair of pantyhose and joins a feminist women’s book club at the New York Public Library. Soon, she’s inspiring her fellow members to ask for more, to challenge the male gatekeepers and decades of ingrained sexism in their workplaces, and to pursue their personal and professional dreams. Their movement starts small but grows: demanding and receiving more scandalous books for the club; more time for their personal lives (and, in Bernadette’s case, for a certain charming male colleague); more women’s equity marches, and more women’s voices in publishing. Will a bad boss and a jealous colleague be able to stop her rise? Not if Bernadette and her friends have anything to say about it!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/13/tantalizing-tales-june-2025-part-two/

Raymond Chandler’s Trouble Is My Business by Arvind Ethan David, Ilias Kyriazis & Cris Peter

Quick aside before we get to the meat of the book itself: being one of the few Malaysian American book critics in the industry sometimes makes it extra hilarious when I read claims like Arvind Ethan David’s in his opening dedication, where he says that elc International School is Malaysia’s “preeminent private school”. Insert me and my Malaysian-private-school-educated siblings all going “who?” a la Korath the Pursuer from the Guardians Of The Galaxy movie. That said, elc certainly managed to instill the loyalty part of their name in at least one alumnus, so good for them!

School joshing aside, this graphic novel is a remarkable adaptation of the classic noir tale. Full disclosure: I hadn’t read the original, and genuinely couldn’t remember if I’d ever read any Chandler, prior to this graphic novel. As such, I’ve had to do a little digging around on the Internet to see exactly how closely the creative team hewed to the original story and how much was extrapolated in the creation of this comic.

The answer, as far as I can tell, is quite a bit. Some would argue that this dilutes the effect of Chandler’s style, but given how disparaging that same style could be of people he disdained for purely cosmetic reasons, I think the changes only improve on the original. Tho speaking of, I cannot be the only person convinced that Anna and Gladys are lesbian lovers. Alas that Gladys has been omitted altogether from this adaptation. Fortunately, there’s plenty of other representation to be had here, as Chandler’s most iconic hero — the tough, alcoholic gumshoe Philip Marlowe — is hired for a dirty job.

The client, Jeeter, is a very wealthy man, and his stepson Gerald will be too, when Gerald comes into the trust left to him by his mother on his twenty-eighth birthday. Unfortunately, Gerald has recently become enamored of a young woman named Harriet Huntress. The beautiful redhead works as a shill for casino owner Marty Estes, which was how she and Gerald presumably met. Old Man Jeeter wants Marlowe to get Harriet to drop Gerald, whether by threatening her with old dirt or with new consequences.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/12/raymond-chandlers-trouble-is-my-business-by-arvind-ethan-david-ilias-kyriazis-cris-peter/

Friends In Nature by Marina Ruiz

subtitled Discover Earth’s Amazing Ecosystems.

And oh what a lovely and surprisingly topical look this is at not only the ways that plants and animals form mutually beneficial ecosystems in nature, but also how integral they all are to human life! A lot of science books talk about humans almost as if we’re separate from the rest of the planet, but that simply isn’t true. Friends In Nature integrates humanity into the tapestry of biodiversity worldwide, underscoring both how important ecology is to our continued existence and how that makes it our responsibility to be thoughtful custodians of the planet.

All of this is done in a very gentle manner, however, as at no time does Marina Ruiz come across as preachy. And she doesn’t have to be! Her selections, in both text and in her charming art, are wisely chosen to convey not only a wide array of ecosystems but also to hook in both young and advancing readers through curiosity, utility or sheer cuteness. Whether talking about different kinds of seeds to (teehee) poop to elephants to otters to salmon, and then back to trees (with plenty of pitstops along the way,) her global journey is fascinating and lyrical, with a style meant to convey the cyclical, circular nature of it all.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/11/friends-in-nature-by-marina-ruiz/

An Interview with Wendy Gee, Author of Fleet Landing

Hello, dear readers! It’s been a while since we’ve published an interview with an author, so I’m super pleased to share with you a brief Q&A conducted with debut novelist Wendy Gee!

As a volunteer at the Charleston Fire Department, Ms Gee had a front row seat to the hustle and intrigue common in firefighters’ line of work. She turned her stories from the station into Fleet Landing, the first in the gripping Carolina Crossfire mystery series.

ATF Special Agent Cooper “Coop” Bellamy has been doing his best to repair his strained relationship with his 11-year old daughter. But when Charleston’s fire chief calls him in to investigate a series of nuisance fires that swiftly turns deadly, he finds himself torn between his family and his duty to protect society.

Tenacious TV reporter Sydney Quinn is determined to find justice for a man wrongly imprisoned for arson. Uncovering a decades-old conspiracy sets her on a collision course with a sinister figure known only as the Falcon. Despite receiving a chilling warning to back off, she refuses to let the truth stay buried.

Coop and Quinn will have to join forces, setting the differences in their personalities aside in order to better navigate a labyrinth of lies and corruption together. Will they be able to catch the (real) arsonist without anyone getting hurt in the process?

Read on for an illuminating interview with the author about her background, inspirations and plans for future novels!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/10/an-interview-with-wendy-gee-author-of-fleet-landing/

Redcoat, Volume 1: Einstein & The Immortal by Geoff Johns & Bryan Hitch

With a tagline like “Immortal. Mercenary. Kind of a tool” this is the kind of book that is usually pure catnip to me. Tho I have to admit that by the fourth or fifth issue opener of “My name is Simon. Simon Pure. Though I’m anything BUT”, I was ready to cheerfully strangle someone, character, creator or otherwise.

And, y’know, if I’d read this title in issue form, there’s a very good chance I would have bounced right off it somewhere around Chapter 4. But I’m glad I persevered with the trade paperback, because it was ultimately the kind of warmhearted, thoughtful work I generally associate with Geoff Johns and Bryan Hitch, even if I did feel that the beginning was edgelordier than I prefer. I don’t think that the me of twenty years ago would even have noticed or cared, but the premise of the Founding Fathers of the USA being a cabal of immortals with supernatural powers — and then the protagonist of this book being a Redcoat who shot Washington, crashed an immortality ceremony, and over a century later has to team up with young Einstein to save America… ugggghhhffff. Can’t we just let people be human? Do we really need to mythologize historical figures who have already accomplished great things with the powers of their heads and hands and hearts alone? George fucking Washington isn’t heroic enough for leading the ragtag Continental Army to victory almost entirely through sheer force of will: he has to have superpowers, too?!

And yes, yes, I know old George wasn’t perfect, but that’s exactly my point! My main beef with this (admittedly very human) desire to turn men — and have you noticed, it’s almost always men? — into gods is that it absolves “regular” people of trying to do good, too. But, and very crucially, Chapter 7 of Redcoat Vol 1 neatly turns that desire inside out, in an issue that absolutely made the rest of the book worth reading for me. I presume this was Mr Johns’ sneaky way of delivering his warmhearted, thoughtful message to people who really need to hear it, after dabbling in a bunch of ridiculous theories beloved by dumb people who think that they’re smarter than everyone else in order to suck them into the book in the first place.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/09/redcoat-volume-1-einstein-the-immortal-by-geoff-johns-bryan-hitch/

Tantalizing Tales — June 2025 — Part One

Hello, dear readers! I hope you’re having a Happy Pride Month, even as we in America watch our politicians regress in a myriad of appalling ways.

Luckily, there is plenty of good reading to keep us company and comforted — if not outright inspired — starting with Elena Malisova & Katerina Silvanova’s swoony, star-crossed gay romance Pioneer Summer. This TikTok sensation underscores how important representation continues to be, and how much it frightens bigots and tyrants, even as they find our stories impossible to suppress. The publication of this novel actually catalyzed one of Russia’s largest-ever crackdowns on LGBTQ+ representation, culminating recently in the arrest of staff from its Russian publisher for distributing “LGBT propaganda”. With Anne O Fisher’s English-language translation, however, this story now has an even wider audience than before.

The story itself is set in 1986, as Yurka Konev, aged sixteen, has been sent off for yet another summer at Pioneer Camp. Impulsive, forthright and unfairly branded as a troublemaker, he anticipates the weeks ahead of him with boredom and dread. But when he’s pushed into working on the camp’s theater production, he meets serious, thoughtful troop leader Volodya, and finds himself drawn to the slightly older boy. Surprisingly, Volodya seems to like him too. Despite their mutual fear of the consequences of their illegal attraction, its gravity pulls them together. Twenty years later, Yury returns to the abandoned camp to reminisce on the relationship that changed his life forever — and discovers that not all history is destined to remain in the past.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/06/tantalizing-tales-june-2025-part-one/

Fishflies by Jeff Lemire

w a terrific guest chapter by Shawn Kuruneru that really exemplifies the benefit of having someone else come in and contribute their entirely different style to your already well-told story.

Three boys are walking to the convenience store one night during fishfly season, when the titular insects rise in swarms off of the nearby lakes and make a general nuisance of themselves in certain waterside towns of Canada. Paul, the most beleaguered of the three, is dared to cross the fishfly-infested parking lot in his bare feet for the reward of twenty bucks. Wanting the money, he takes off his shoes and walks into the minimart, where he’s struck dumb by a scene that could change his life… if it doesn’t end it for good.

Franny Fox is a lonely little girl whose mother left her and her asshole dad years ago. She has poor hygiene and the other kids at school pick on her. When she finds a strange man in her barn one afternoon, her greatest concern is making sure her dad doesn’t find him. The man is bleeding and clearly unwell, but Franny knows better than to judge a book by its cover. She’s determined to help him, whether he wants the assistance or not.

And so begins a strange but ultimately hopeful story of horror, redemption and the breaking of cycles, as a naive young kid, a well-meaning cop out of his depth, and a determined mother whom others have long labeled “crazy” work — not always together, but generally in the same direction — to break the curse that’s haunted the town of Belle River. It’s a weird but strikingly original coming of age tale which has a profound sympathy for so many of its damaged characters.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/05/fishflies-by-jeff-lemire/

Madame Sosostris And The Festival For The Brokenhearted by Ben Okri

Do you believe that books come to you when it’s the right time for them? That doesn’t mean that you’re going to read them and immediately connect: and there’s a lot to be said for coming to books like Catcher In The Rye and the more dire works of Anne McCaffrey as an adult, when you can see how godawful the behavior your more adolescent self might have romanticized actually is. But sometimes, your (my) reading queue will bump books around and give you (me, oh fine, us) exactly what we need when we need it.

Which, ofc, is my roundabout way of saying that if I’d read Ben Okri’s wise, compelling Madame Sosostris And The Festival For The Brokenhearted earlier in the year, I might not have felt so moved by the insights of this slender book. The tale itself revolves around two pairs of well-off slightly older Britons. Viv is a member of the House of Lords, a compulsive organizer and improver. Her husband Alan is irritable but well-bred, a veritable titan of industry. Her best friend Beatrice is retired from finance and now rivals Viv’s organizational efforts with her own activities on numerous charitable boards. Beatrice’s husband Stephen is a self-made intellectual who runs a newspaper. While the women are great friends, the men don’t particularly get along.

On the twentieth anniversary of her greatest heartbreak, Viv has a revelation while chatting with a stranger at a party. Tho she’s married to Alan happily enough, she’s never really gotten over the pain of her first husband leaving her. Why, she wonders, are there no support groups for people who’ve had their hearts properly broken? A vision of a festival for those who’ve been hurt this way comes to her, but nothing really solidifies until she runs into the famed fortune teller Madame Sosostris during a party at the House of Lords. The clairvoyant agrees to come read fortunes at the woodland festival that Viv wants to organize in the south of France. It’s with some trepidation thus that Viv, Alan, Beatrice and Stephen are pulled into a strange journey that will change their lives forever.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/04/madame-sosostris-and-the-festival-for-the-brokenhearted-by-ben-okri/

A Year of Diana Wynne Jones: the mid 2000s!

In my quest to read all of Diana Wynne Jones’s books in one year, this month I read The Merlin Conspiracy, Conrad’s Fate, and The Pinhoe Egg!

We have now entered the era of Diana Wynne Jones books I read one time when they came out, and generally have not read since. It is an interesting perspective to be revisiting these for the first time in the context of this readthrough! I definitely appreciate their places in their various series more this time around. For instance …

The cover of one edition of The Merlin Conspiracy by Diana Wynne Jones shows a figure raising their arms in a swirling cape against a crackling backdrop of purple and green The Merlin Conspiracy (2003)

The Merlin Conspiracy is a sequel to Deep Secret, which I love very much and reread annually. The two main point of view characters in Deep Secret don’t even appear in The Merlin Conspiracy, however. Rather, the sequel features Nick—slightly older and slightly more mature—on adventures in several worlds, and his counterpart Roddy, who is experiencing some real problems in her own homeworld.

When I first read The Merlin Conspiracy, I missed the voices of Rupert and Maree from Deep Secret too much to appreciate what was actually featured in The Merlin Conspiracy. This time around, I appreciated the inventive worldbuilding, and the intricate way the plot elements are intertwined.

Nick, yearning to become a magid, has been trying to traverse between universes, so when he is pulled through to a different one he thinks it might be a dream. He gets caught up in political issues spanning several worlds, which ultimately seem to culminate on Roddy’s world. As in Deep Secret, there are two points of view, this time alternating between Nick and Roddy, who of course eventually join forces. From my older and wiser 2025 perspective, I think I would recommend The Merlin Conspiracy at least as much as Deep Secret. It’s got a lot of great stuff.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/03/a-year-of-diana-wynne-jones-the-mid-2000s/

A Dumb Birds Field Guide To The Worst Birds Ever by Matt Kracht

Lol, that really is the entire title, which should prepare you for the irreverent humor within the pages of this bird guide, written from the point of view of someone who (hilariously) loathes birds.

Matt Kracht has been writing about birds for quite a while: while he might really hate them, he certainly knows his enemy! In this third installment of the series, he takes a look at what he deems the Worst Birds Ever. Unsurprisingly, there are a lot of highly qualified candidates for his list here!

In the tradition of all the Dumb Birds books so far, he describes why he made each of these fifty selections while giving it a fairly comprehensive field guide breakdown. Thus you get each bird’s mean nickname, scientific name, common name, then a long description of why it’s terrible. You also get a short physical description and an accompanying illustration that’s really quite well done for amateur work! Each entry is rounded out with a note as to the regions where the bird may be found, before an idiosyncratic rating according to the Bird Universal Mathematical Modeling and Ranking (BUMMR) system. The BUMMR system doesn’t make sense and doesn’t have to, tho Mr Kracht’s explanation of it and where one can send critiques is just another humorous part of this book.

Comedy-wise, my personal favorite bit was the opening, which involves an argument with his doctor over the calming effect of birdwatching. As funny as it can be to read the author’s (not entirely unjustified) rants, his humor really shines when he has a human foil to work off of.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/06/02/a-dumb-birds-field-guide-to-the-worst-birds-ever-by-matt-kracht/