The Trouble With Leo by Michelle Assarasakorn & Nathan Fairbairn

This fifth installment of the PAWS graphic novel series for Middle Grade readers is too cute!

Jumping into a series on its fifth installment can always feel a little disorienting, so I do recommend reading the earlier books in the series first to get a better understanding of who some of these unintroduced characters are. That said, the book does work as a standalone. I can’t imagine not wanting to get started with the prior books, tho, if they’re anywhere close to as charming as this one is!

It’s been a whole year since a group of girls who weren’t allowed to own dogs, but who really wanted to hang out with them, started a dog-walking service called PAWS. Members have come and gone in the interim but business continues to grow for Gabby, Mindy and Hazel. The girls and their families and friends are having an anniversary picnic at the park when a regrettable encounter between Gabby and her nemesis Leo leads to the latter declaring that he’ll just start his own dog-walking business then.

Gabby laughs it off, but when flyers for a new dog-walking service called SCAMPS start showing up around the neighborhood — staffed by Leo and his friends Brandon and Nolawi — an all-out turf war erupts, with both sides resorting to dirty tactics. Gabby’s big mouth, however, winds up getting Mindy and Brandon assigned to work on their class science project together. As an unlikely friendship springs up between the two, can they figure out a way to calm things down before one of the pet-lovers does something that there’s no coming back from?

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/30/the-trouble-with-leo-by-michelle-assarasakorn-nathan-fairbairn/

Tantalizing Tales — March 2026 — Part Four

Lol, I’m so tired of the rollercoaster my health has been on lately. Let’s hope that the end of March and the beginning of April bring better things, including these three upcoming novels I’m super excited to talk about! Bonus: I also discuss three books from 2025 that I’m still very much trying to squeeze into my unfortunately overstuffed schedule.

First up is Emily Carpenter’s A Spell For Saints And Sinners. Ingrid White inherited a shabby Savannah townhouse when her grandmother, local celebrity psychic Miss Edie, passed away. She’s also inherited, and fully believes in, the family business of witchcraft that Miss Edie used to run from the premises.

Unfortunately, business hasn’t been great lately, and mounting bills have Ingrid worried for the future. Heiress Sailor Loeffler’s bachelorette party changes everything. Sailor is so enamored of Ingrid’s eerily accurate reading that she soon allows Ingrid into her inner circle as a trusted confidante. In order to ensure her continuing access to Sailor’s charmed life — with all the privileges that it brings — Ingrid starts using more and powerful spells, venturing into the dark practices that Miss Edie used to warn her against.

But is it really witchcraft that keeps clearing Ingrid and Sailor’s paths, or something far more mundane and malevolent? Soon, Ingrid will have to confront how just far both she and the people around her are willing to go in order to get what they want.

As a single-issue Etsy Witch myself, I’m totally intrigued by this premise, and am super looking forward to discovering the resolution. Like Miss Edie, I’m a big proponent of putting out good energy only, and am already nervous for and invested in the characters in this Southern Gothic mystery.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/27/tantalizing-tales-march-2026-part-four/

From the Fields To The Fight by Angela Quezada Padron & Sol Salinas

subtitled How Jessica Govea Thorbourne Organized For Justice.

This warmly illustrated picture book tells the life story of a prominent labor rights organizer that many people, myself included, may never have heard of before. Young Jessica Govea is a Mexican American girl who starts working in California’s agricultural fields with her parents when she’s only four years-old. It’s hard work made worse by both exploitation and endangerment, so when her parents are approached by labor organizers wanting to better conditions for farm workers, they readily agree. Jessica pays attention to their actions and persistence, and their setbacks and successes, even as she notes the racism and poverty that negatively affect so many of her peers.

As she gets older, her parents want her to go to college. She demurs, preferring to stay involved in labor actions instead. This leads Jessica to leave the United States for the first time, organizing and advocating for strikes in Canada against exploitative Californian grape growers. It’s lonely, frustrating work but nothing, she knows, compared to what she and thousands of others have had to endure growing up. Will she be able to persevere and strike a blow for all the workers who’ve had enough of being cheated and mistreated by their employers?

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/26/from-the-fields-to-the-fight-by-angela-quezada-padron-sol-salinas/

River of Bones And Other Stories by Rebecca Roanhorse

Alright, I’m going to straight up admit that I haven’t read any of Rebecca Roanhorse’s Sixth World novels, so I was definitely not as invested in what is likely to be the biggest draw of this book for fans of hers: the novella that closes the collection and gives it its name.

River Of Bones is a perfectly fine story on its own, but I definitely got the feeling while reading it that I was supposed to come into it already caring about Kai, the extremely powerful narrator, as he tries to reconcile his feelings for Maggie, his maybe-girlfriend, with his feelings for his ex Lala. Alas, I grew steadily less impressed by his story the more powers he displayed — likely the opposite reaction of readers who already know him and love him and want him to succeed. For readers new to the setting, this may well be the least successful of an otherwise absorbing collection of short speculative fiction.

Interestingly, I also had a meh response to the story that opens this book, the critically acclaimed Welcome to Your Authentic Indian Experience™. It is a perfectly fine, if heavy-handed metaphor for the absolute audacity of white people in the ways that they treat indigenous peoples and “authenticity.” While I certainly agree with the sentiments, part of my indifference is likely due to how far forward we’ve leapt as a nation in the past ten years alone when it comes to the representation of Native Americans in popular media — helped in no small part by Ms Roanhorse herself. The pushback she’s received in the years since underscores both the irony of her story and the complexity of identity. It’s hard to escape the feeling that the pain she’s experienced in navigating all this has definitely fueled the writing of the rest of the stories here, which draw on her descent from both a Pueblo and a Black parent, while also reflecting her experience of being adopted by and raised in a white family.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/25/river-of-bones-and-other-stories-by-rebecca-roanhorse/

BBC Pride And Prejudice: The Official Coloring Book by Charlotte Rickards

Can I admit something? I’ve never watched the BBC adaptation of Pride And Prejudice that millions worldwide have swooned to for decades. Nothing against it: I’ve just never had the time! I’ve certainly watched enough clips and absorbed so much via cultural osmosis (augmented now by the research I did for this review,) that I feel I have a fairly good grasp of the miniseries tho.

Thus I was delighted — if not as much as an established fan of this adaptation in particular might have been — to receive this coloring book several weeks ago. I truly enjoy reading Jane Austen’s novels and applaud the spirit of the many media adaptations of her work. While I cannot speak to how strictly this coloring book hews to the BBC series’ timeline/storyboards, it does seem to follow the progression of the book closely in the way that it lays out the familiar scenes. Often, these scenes are juxtaposed with memorable quotes, decorated sampler-like, on the facing pages.

Charlotte Rickards’ linework is excellent in both regards. The movie stills are instantly recognizable, with just the right amount of texture lain down to assist the person coloring in these pages. Some of the art is more ornate than on other pages, but that is okay, as it allows artists to choose what kind of picture they wish to tackle next (if they’re not going to go from front to back, as I rarely do with coloring books.) I also quite admired Ms Rickard’s pattern work, and how the book featured all sorts of imagery — portraits, landscapes, architecture, lettering, fashion, decor — for the colorist to work with.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/24/bbc-pride-and-prejudice-the-official-coloring-book-by-charlotte-rickards/

Shy Cat And The Stuff-The-Bus Challenge by Dian Day & Amanda White

with colors by Jessie Zheng.

So every once in a while, I wade through the cesspool formerly known as Twitter (bear with me, I swear this is going somewhere relevant) to peek at sports banter and celebrity gossip. Occasionally, posts on other topics will cross my feed, usually the fascist-coded, algorithm-pushed bullshit that reminds me why I only use the site for research instead of community nowadays. The most recent thread to enrage me made the absolutely baseless assertion that kids only go hungry because irresponsible parents don’t bother feeding them enough, and that food insecurity is primarily a neurosis.

That kind of nonsense only underscores how important it is for books like Shy Cat And The Stuff-The-Bus Challenge to exist. Dian Day and Amanda White are both members of the Hungry Stories team, which works to highlight food insecurity in North America in creative ways, as a means of advocating for change. This first Shy Cat graphic novel is a terrific way of doing so, as young Mila learns about this complicated issue and, perhaps just as importantly, how to talk about it with the people around her.

Mila lives with her Mom in a two-storey house subdivided into apartments. Mary Elizabeth Bernadette lives downstairs, and a stray cat occasionally makes a nuisance of itself outside. Mila doesn’t mind tho: she loves cats and, with her best friend Kit, visits all the ones in the neighborhood as often as she can.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/23/shy-cat-and-the-stuff-the-bus-challenge-by-dian-day-amanda-white/

The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher

Kara’s Uncle Ed owns the Glory to God Museum of Natural Wonders, Curiosities and Taxidermy. It’s a highlight of downtown Hog Chapel, North Carolina, and in all its glorious weirdness, it was a childhood sanctuary. Uncle Ed likes nearly everyone he meets, bless him, and he’s ecumenical in his beliefs, but he’s also getting up in years. His knees are not what they once were, and his gout has come back. When Kara, the first-person narrator of The Hollow Places whom everyone calls Carrot, winds up in a tight spot after an unexpected divorce, Uncle Ed persuades her to come and help him mind the shop. Or in this case, the museum. He even has a spare room upstairs in the back, so that’s her housing problem solved, too.

The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher

A ramshackle old building full of “eleven stuffed deer heads, six stuffed boar heads, one giraffe skull, forty-six stuffed birds of various species, three stuffed albino raccoons … two jackalopes, an entire case of dried scorpions, a moth-eaten grizzly bear, five stuffed prairie dogs, two fur-bearing trout, one truly amazing Amazonian river otter, and a pickled cobra in a bottle” (p. 2) all just on the first floor, is not everyone’s cup of tea. But Carrot grew up there, and it all feels like a cozy come to her. Even if there are a lot of glass eyes that might be looking at you.

Uncle Ed’s call comes as she is packing up in her soon-to-be-former home.

“Heard you were having a rough patch, Carrot.”
“Well, these things happen.” I had an immediate urge to downplay the divorce, even though I had been sobbing furiously about half an hour earlier. “I’ll manage.”
“I know you will, hon. You were always tough as an old boot.”
From Uncle Earl, this was highly complimentary. I laughed. The tears were still a bit too close, so it came out strangled, but it was a laugh. (p. 9)

When he offers, she does not hesitate.

My ex-husband had visited the Wonder Museum once and told me the place was “kinda freaky” so all my memories of the Wonder Museum were good ones, without him in it. I could wander around the dusty cases and pet the stuffed grizzly and make the armored mice reenact the end of The Empire Strikes Back.
Hell, I could actually catalog the damn collection and earn my keep.
“Really, Carrot?”
“Reallly.” …
I thanked him a few more times and hung up, and then cried on the bookcase for a while.
When I finally stopped, I wiped my eyes, then I took all the Lovecraft and the Bear and left Mark wt the Philip K. Dick because I never liked androids anyway. (p. 10)

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/22/the-hollow-places-by-t-kingfisher/

Once Upon a Russia edited by Steven A. Fisher

Once Upon a Russia, which carries the subtitle “Voices from a Vanished Era,” collects slightly more than 100 short essays from Westerners who lived and worked in Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. It’s a personal project, born of a 2024 reunion with a friend and colleague that “unfolded into hours of nostalgic storytelling, half-forgotten names, and generous pours,” as Fisher notes in his acknowledgments. (p. 237) What makes this more than just recollections among buddies is the remarkable address book that Fisher built up over sixteen years as a senior banker in Moscow and Kyiv. The ambassadors, financiers, analysts and entrepreneurs whose recollections — alongside those from people in less exalted professions — fill the book write with great openness about a historical moment that has passed.

Once Upon a Russia edited by Steven A. Fisher

They came to Russia, they found hope, adventure, not a few found love and fortune, and they have all now left Russia. Most of them kept the love and fortune that they found there, all of them recall the adventures, but the hope, by and large, is gone. The time that the writers lost hope and left varies — some as early as 2008, some as late as the winter of 2022 when Russia launched its full-scale war of aggression against Ukraine. Some of the writers think that a time may come again when the Russia that they experienced, a Russia full of people seeking freedom and excited about the possibilities of the future, a Russia integrating with international institutions and at peace with its neighbors, a Russia that acknowledged and was beginning to welcome the diversity of its citizens, will be the face that Russia shows the world. None of them expect it to come soon.

The vignettes in Once Upon a Russia tend to follow a pattern: the writer’s initial contact with the country; the excitement, challenges, and life-changing experiences of living in Russia; the disillusionment, whether gradual or precipitous; the departure, and regret for what might have been. Some of the writers had previous experience with the Soviet Union, a few during the Brezhnev years, most during Gorbachev’s era of opening and reform. Several of them were in Moscow during Yeltsin’s confrontation with the Communist-dominated parliament and saw first-hand how people came out on the streets to defend their newly-won freedoms. Some brought with them deep knowledge of the language and country, honed by study or family connections. Others arrived with nothing more than curiosity and enthusiasm. In numerous cases, Russia was not initially welcoming, but as the contributors persevered, opened up unexpectedly. The writers built lives, they built companies, they integrated deeply in Russian life and society, mostly in Moscow but others across that vast land. Some of the diplomats returned again and again — Sir Roderic Lyne, who wrote the volume’s foreword served three times in the country and was the last head of the UK Soviet desk — before their regular rotation elsewhere. Other writers left of their own accord. Many, though, left because the advancing years of Putin’s rule made it impossible for them to stay. Harassment, confiscation, corruption — all increasing with time — led to their much-regretted departures. I didn’t count the number of who stayed until the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, but it was a noticeable share.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/21/once-upon-a-russia-edited-by-steven-a-fisher/

Tantalizing Tales — March 2026 — Part Three

Eid Mubarak, readers! Treat yourself, like I’m planning to, with some awesome reads that are either just on the horizon, or that I wish I’d had more time to get to in 2025. And if you’re even more of a planner than I am, make sure to check out Emily’s spotlight on some excellent upcoming speculative fiction publishing over the next few months, too!

If you want a good read on a slightly quicker timeline, check out this fascinating new book from Jill Wintersteen. Spirit Daughter is named after her popular wellness and astrology website, and already comes with endorsements from celebrities such as Kerry Washington and Jessica Alba. Part memoir and part manual, this book aims to help each reader Own Your Power [and] Change Your Life, as the subtitle declares.

Ms Wintersteen left her promising career in neuroscience to follow her intuition down a path rooted in mindfulness, cosmic energy and the power of manifestation. This eventually led her to found the thriving online community of Spirit Daughter, where she shares accessible tools and teachings with more than two million followers. While she details her personal story here, the real draw for many readers will likely be the practical tips she includes for reclaiming your power, primarily by learning to listen to your intuition when facing life’s challenges.

Despite being a single issue Etsy Witch with a strong interest in energy work, crystals and astrology myself, I’m most interested in what the author has to say here about self-awareness, which I feel is too often overlooked in the modern day pursuit of happiness and fulfilment. It’s so important for people to be in touch with their bodies and their emotions, and to understand how we exist as social and energetic creatures. I’m glad she’s spreading the good word.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/20/tantalizing-tales-march-2026-part-three/

Upcoming Tor Books by Beloved Authors

While I enjoy discovering a “stunning debut” novel as much as the next reviewer, I also find it very exciting to anticipate new books by authors I already love. On the assumption that you ALSO find this very exciting, I’m delighted to share these four upcoming books from Tor – all by established, beloved authors!

These four are really wide-ranging in terms of genre, from an art heist in space by Molly Tanzer, to near future political suspense by Naomi Kritzer, to dreamy fantasy by Jo Walton, to blood-soaked supernatural horror by Chuck Tingle. Whatever your particular leaning in speculative subgenre, Tor has something to offer you in the coming months.

the cover of and side by side they wander by molly tanzer has a person in silhoutte against a backdrop of mushrooms First up, And Side by Side They Wander by Molly Tanzer comes out May 19. In this novella, the world has changed. Corporations have taken over most of the world that a fungus hasn’t, and questionably benevolent aliens have removed the world’s art “for safekeeping” until the human race can be trusted with it again.  Humanity has reached the imposed benchmarks, but the aliens are not forthcoming with the art.

While the premise alone is really engaging, the the point-of-view character’s voice is also a big draw to this novella, as she  attempts to defend a LOT of questionable choices. She does PR for a shady corporation. She has a clandestine relationship with an AI who may or may not care about her. She signs on for a heist to repatriate the art of humanity, without knowing very much about the plan or her teammates. She … maybe makes some additional mistakes along the way.

There’s also a fun philosophical discussion about the value of original art, reminiscent of Walter Benjamin’s famous essay, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” If you know Benjamin already, you’ll be tickled; if you don’t, you’ll be totally fine.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/03/19/upcoming-tor-books-by-beloved-authors/