The Emergency Playbook by Amy Edelman and Chris Begley

there is a storm at sea on the cover of the emergency playbook by amy edelman and chris begleyThe Emergency Playbook: A Bunker-Free Guide to Disaster Preparation is out today! It combines practical to-do lists for before, during and after disasters, with big-picture context for how disasters often play out. The authors, Amy Edelman and Chris Begley, present all this information in an enjoyable, easy-reading format.

I learned a lot from it: I feel more prepared for whatever might come just by knowing this stuff, and I feel I know practical next steps to be even more ready for whatever emergency crops up next. Good page layout and low use of jargon make it read quickly, so I anticipate that it will be useful to consult during an actual emergency as well.

Amy Edelman is a career journalist and most of the book is in her voice. Statistics and history about climate change, the current political landscape and what we anticipate might come next are delivered in a chatty tone, with a progressive stance.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/23/the-emergency-playbook-by-amy-edelman-and-chris-begley/

Tantalizing Tales — June 2026 — Part Three

Along with many others lucky enough to do so, I took Juneteenth off last week (and wound up having to accompany my best girl while she hit on men in kilts, lol, instead of having the restful day I’d otherwise anticipated.) This week’s Tantalizing Titles column is thus a double header for this week AND the next!

Our first selection is a book I’m super looking forward to diving into soon, DeAndra Davis’ The Lovers, The Liars And Me. I adored her debut novel All The Noise At Once and can’t wait to see what she does with this coming-of-age tale set in Jamaica.

Despite being high school valedictorian, Jaliya Powell has never really done anything to make herself feel like she truly stands out. She’s never had a boyfriend or even been kissed, never mind had a real adventure. So she’s more than a little nervous when she decides to take some time off before going to college, in order to stay with her uncle and his family in Jamaica instead.

It’s not just rest and relaxation she’s looking for in the Caribbean tho. Her mom left her family years ago, and Jaliya is determined to finally track her down and get some answers. But Jamaica is not the same island Jaliya last visited when she was a tween. Her uncle’s family is weirdly different from what she remembers, while her childhood crush has only gotten hotter and even less obtainable. And then there’s beautiful, free-spirited India, who makes Jaliya feel things that she’s barely even considered before.

As Jaliya searches for her mother, she’ll have to navigate unsettling new feelings and complicated new relationships, during a summer in which she’ll have to start thinking about who she really is and who she ultimately wants to be.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/22/tantalizing-tales-june-2026-part-three/

Slow Horses by Mick Herron

What does an intelligence agency do with its fuck-ups? Not the operational mistakes, or even the policy disasters, but the people who, for one reason or another, cannot be kept as part of the active service but cannot just be let go. Maybe they embarrassed the agency in some way, and giving them the boot would just compound the embarrassment. Maybe they were close to someone caught working for the other side, not close enough to charge with a crime but too close to be trusted anymore. Maybe they were too traumatized in the line of duty to do good work anymore, but getting rid of them would show others that the reward for sticking one’s neck out—perhaps literally—is getting the sack. Unless the agency in question is the Stalin-era NKVD, such people cannot be shot out of hand.

Slow Horses by Mick Herron

In Mick Herron’s Slow Horses—the first novel in a series that now runs to nine novels and five novellas, and which has spawned a television adaptation that is presently making its sixth season—the solution that MI-6 has chosen is to put them out to pasture in a place called Slough House, give them tiresome, repetitive, meaningless work, and hope they take the hint to quit or retire of their own accord. Slow Horses introduces the current denizens of Slough House. The name is pronounced with one of those ineffable British vowels that render the first word somewhere between “slow” and “slaw.” Any resemblance between Slough House and the Slough of Despond from Pilgrim’s Progress is surely intentional on the part of the service’s upper mandarins. Said denizens occasionally refer to themselves as the Slow Horses, sometimes with dark humor, sometimes with not quite enough despair to quit.

There is River Cartwright, whose final training exercise went decisively pear-shaped, causing a shutdown of King’s Cross station, a massive and expensive public embarrassment. He says he was set up. Upper ranks say that he would say that, wouldn’t he? Fortunately for Cartwright, his grandfather was a legendary agent in his time; the long afterglow of that service is enough to keep him from getting fired outright, but not enough to keep him out of the purgatory of Slough House. Min Harper had a momentary lapse of attention and left important secret documents on a train. More embarrassment. Louisa Guy lost an important suspect, just lost him. Roddy Ho is the guy in the chair, and he has all of the unpleasant traits a reader would expect from a computer guy who’s also a spy, and a couple more that Herron added just for fun. Overseeing this motley crew is Jackson Lamb, a relic of the Cold War—the book was published in 2010, so only 20 years have passed since the fall of European communism—who will not fit in with the new era. He was a hot-shot, and he does not hesitate to let his underlings know it. He also has attitudes toward women and minorities that would have been out of place in the 1980s, nevermind in Cool Britannia.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/21/slow-horses-by-mick-herron/

The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett

Since time immemorial, at the eastern edge of the continent the Leviathans have risen from the sea to make their way along the Titan’s Path to the Lake of Khanum. For centuries, though, the Empire has blocked their progress, erecting successive walls across the continent to first contain the Leviathans’ journeys and then prevent them entirely. Now with four sets of walls protecting the Empire’s interior and its citadel above all, most citizens can go about their normal lives even in a wet season, secure in the knowledge that the Legions and the Engineers are keeping them safe. If and when a Leviathan rises, they will kill it with the latest cannons, and incorporate its corpse into the Empire’s defenses.

The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett

Dinios Kol, holder of the Imperial rank of Signum and first-person narrator of The Tainted Cup, is not fortunate to live in the Empire’s interior. He has been posted to Daretana, a settlement between the Third Ring Walls and the Sea Walls, the latter being the Empire’s outermost defenses, tested almost every wet season. The world that Robert Jackson Bennett has created is a lush one, in which vines can function as gate guards at a patrician family’s villa, vines trained enough and fast-moving enough to prevent a visitor from entering, unless of course the visitor presents a vial of exactly the right scent. One of the marks of wealth in the villa is the presence of “a massive kirpis mushroom [that] had been built into the corner of every main room—a tall, black fungus built to suck in air, clean it, and exhale it out at a cooler temperature.” (p. 7)

Humans have extensively altered not only plant and animal life, they have changed themselves as well. Din himself is an engraver, a person altered to have perfect memory, to accurately engrave moments into their brains. Like the guard vines, engraver sometimes use olfactory cues to open up memory, to make some moments more readily accessible than others. This alteration suits Din’s current assignment. He is assistant to Ana Dolabra, two Imperial ranks higher at immunis, eccentric if not downright peculiar, and possessed of far-reaching connections, as Din discovers over the course of the case.

For Din has not passed through the villa’s guards to gawk at the lives of the rich and notorious. He is there because someone has died there, in a most spectacular way that not even the immense wealth of the Haza clan can keep hidden.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/20/the-tainted-cup-by-robert-jackson-bennett/

Hugo Awards 2026: Best Poem

I am glad that successive Worldcons have decided to make Best Poem a permanent category. Poetry is probably the oldest literary genre, and limiting the Hugo award to prose meant missing out. Speculative or fantastic poetry is difficult, because a work has to be both: good poetry and something beyond the mundane, whether science fiction, fantasy or myth. It’s quite a challenge for both readers and writers. Will the audience get what the author was aiming for within the limited space of the poem? Does a work need to be a poem to convey what the author wants? Recognizing when this is well done can only improve poetry’s standing within the community of people who care about the Hugos, and maybe it can even help build a larger cadre of practitioners, strengthening the form.

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Here are my brief notes on this year’s finalists, in ascending order of preference.

“Landing: Seattle” by Brandon O’Brien was presented at and for the opening ceremony of the Seattle Worldcon in 2025. Occasional poetry is a tough nut to crack; even Robert Frost fell back on something he had previously written when the sun got in his eyes on that January day in 1961. I wouldn’t say occasional poetry shouldn’t exist — it is there to heighten the occasion, and it can perform that role most admirably. It seldom outlives the occasion for which it was composed, and “Landing: Seattle” gives an example of why.

“The Mourning Robot” by Angela Liu opens with an arresting couple of lines: “They came with machetes/asked if we knew the way to Wonderland.” Tell me more! But the poem veers off in a more imagist direction, giving readers more fragments, a “they” and a “we” with little to attach them to, charged words and a final turn. I suppose it’s meant to be a mood, but it never came together enough for me. This poem illustrates some of the things that make speculative poetry so difficult. If it’s short, it runs the risk that readers don’t have enough to follow the author’s ideas and intentions. If it’s long, it can make readers wonder why it isn’t a prose story instead. Maybe there are references that I missed, that would have made “The Mourning Robot” cohere more. Or maybe Liu is just aiming for a feeling, a vibe, a combination of machine and mourning, with menace from that first line. Unfortunately, I couldn’t tell, and so we went past each other, the poet and I.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/19/hugo-awards-2026-best-poem-2/

An Interview with Kevin Hincker, author of The Story Eaters Of Yamm

Hello, readers! We have a treat for you today with an interview from acclaimed sci-fi author Kevin Hincker. His latest novel riffs off of the Wag The Dog scenario familiar to consumers of both sci-fi classics (that we won’t name here because of potential spoilers) and political thrillers of page and screen.

The Story Eaters Of Yamm revolves around a group of science-fiction writers who’ve been hired by a mysterious corporation to create an alien invasion story. They soon discover that not only is the invasion real, but that what they’re writing is being used as a blueprint for a galactic war involving extraterrestrial snails capable of mind control.

Leading the writers is Larry Palczewski, a hapless, time-blind author whose affliction sets up the clever metafictional structure of story. If you love humorous speculative fiction that pays homage to genre tropes, as well as unique, experimental novel formats, then you definitely have to check out this book!

Read on for a brief, spoiler-free interview with the author himself, on the topics of humor, sci-fi tropes, aliens and neurodiversity!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/18/an-interview-with-kevin-hincker-author-of-the-story-eaters-of-yamm/

Recent Researched Comics for Grown-ups

Some lovely graphic works for adult readership have come out this Spring, each based on fact to various degrees. Tillie Walden’s Charity and Sylvia came out this week from Drawn & Quarterly; last month gave us Opioids and Organs by Arizona O’Neill; and in March, the collected volume of Death to Pachuco by Henry Barajas and Rachel Merrill came out from Image. All of these were great reads, and each of them also taught me stuff I hadn’t already known about the world I live in.

silhouettes of two women look at eachother in an ornate border on the cover of charity and sylvia by tillie waldenThe beautiful and engaging Charity and Sylvia by Tillie Walden makes a terrific mid-June centerpiece for Pride Month. A sepia-toned, meticulously researched graphic novel, it tells the story of two women who lived together as a couple in rural Vermont in the 19th century. Walden uses artifacts and handwritten documents from the lives of Charity Bryant and Sylvia Drake, and historical records of the larger American experience at the time, such as when railroads arrived, what undergarments looked like, how cold it was, and what was happening in national politics, to piece together a story of these women’s lives.

They really did exist, and live as a couple, and Walden’s version of their love and life story is both historically informed and beautifully depicted. In the Afterword, Walden tells us that like Charity and Sylvia, she, too, lives with her wife in rural Vermont.

I never watched The Walking Dead on television, and I only read a couple volumes of the original comics series it was based on, but I love Walden’s spin-off graphic novel trilogy Clementine. I eagerly awaited each new book in that series, and I think even though there are no zombies, Charity and Sylvia has a lot in common with Clementine because it is so atmospheric, and focused on people making humane connections with each other in the midst of extremely harsh circumstances. I recommend Charity and Sylvia if you are interested in queer history, love stories, American History, beautiful page design, or a masterclass on pacing. For a deep dive into any of these aspects, take a look at Walden’s website for the project, charityandsylvia.com

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/17/recent-researched-comics-for-grown-ups/

The Reel Life Of Zara Kregg by Brad Barkley (EXCERPT)

Hello, readers! We have a treat for you today with an excerpt from a sensitive coming-of-age tale, as a young girl must come out of the shadows in order to embrace a whole life.

The closest that 16 year-old Zara Kegg has to friendships in her coastal North Carolina town is with the regulars she watches from the projection booth of the movie theater where she works. The Palace Theater shows pretty much only cult classics, and when Zara isn’t watching the movie or the regulars over whom she feels a protective sort of interest, she’s busy trying — more or less — to figure her way out of her existential crisis. Her mom died three years ago and her dad has been sliding further and further into depression and bad coping mechanisms. Zara has Real Problems, and no time for friends, much less romance.

That changes when her flaky boss asks her to organize a Valentine’s Day marathon of Godzilla movies. As she scrambles to deal with 150 inflatable Godzillas, she slowly begins to make new friends and, perhaps, more. But will she be able to emerge fully from her existence as a spectator in order to finally be the main character of her own life?

Read on for an immersive look at Zara’s perspective from the projection booth!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/16/the-reel-life-of-zara-kregg-by-brad-barkley-excerpt/

Gay Mormon Dad by Chad Anderson & Remy Burke

I have been super bad at properly commemorating celebration months this year so far, but better late than never I suppose, so Happy Pride! I tend to read a lot of books with queer characters and themes yet, oddly, feel like Chad Anderson and Remy Burke’s Gay Mormon Dad is the only one I’ve read for June so far.

But what a way to start! This is a deeply personal, achingly vulnerable memoir of what it was like to grow up gay and Mormon at the end of the 20th century, and how Mr Anderson eventually came out and began to live life on his own terms. It was not an easy journey, but his honesty and courage give readers hope that they too can overcome the obstacles in their path on the way to existing as free and honest people.

Beginning from a childhood marked by abuse, Chad sought comfort in the church his mother devoutly believed in. Since church elders told him he could pray the gay away, he tried his best to do exactly that, even getting married and having two kids before deciding that he couldn’t live like he was suffocating any more. Unsurprisingly, it was a hard road forward, but he persevered until he achieved a life he could be, well, proud of.

As someone who spent a large part of my youth in a conservative religious society, I felt immediately familiar with so much of his struggle. What was new to me were the details of the Mormon church and practices, which I found fascinating. I didn’t expect learn so much about the faith in this book but definitely appreciate the greater sociological understanding I came away with.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/15/gay-mormon-dad-by-chad-anderson-remy-burke/

Hugo Awards 2026: Best Short Story

True to form, two of this year’s finalists in the category of Best Short Story are listicle stories. I guess by now they’re just another variation in the form, rather than an innovation. The strength in the variation is that it allows an author to show numerous different perspectives or aspects of a situation within a compressed space. The corresponding weakness is that it enables an author to merely gesture in the direction of a story, expecting the reader to fill in the rest, without actually using the form to expand storytelling possibilities or to actually tell a single story through the listicle format. It’s devilishly tricky to do, and it seems to me that authors often exhaust their creative energy for that particular story with the format, rather than using it to its fullest extent.

Here are brief notes on the 2026 finalists for Best Short Story, in ascending order of my preference.

Missing Helen - Clarkesworld

“In My Country” by Thomas Ha is not a listicle story. The first-person narrator addresses the reader directly about his country, which is one marked by surveillance, censorship and oppression. The moral landscape of the narrator’s country was very familiar to me as someone who has studied Nazism in Germany and communism throughout Central and Eastern Europe. It will be familiar in its contours, if not in the direct actions of the secret police, by people who have lived in societies in which existing hierarchies are backed by state or private violence. Ha strips down the shape of oppression to its bare basics. “Listen to what I say. Listen to what I don’t say.” The oppressors have trouble with ambiguity. The secret police can take you away, and say that everything is fine, and people have to demonstrate they believe it.

I am sure the story is very heartfelt, and it might even have a big effect on a reader who has not encountered this sort of thing before. But I’ve read how Milosz did it, I’ve read how Solzhenitsyn did it, I’ve read how Grossman did it, I’ve read Havel’s essays and Michnik’s tactics for beating it and Konrad’s search for an escape from politics. In my countries, I’ve seen the problems presented in this story many, many times; I’ve lived among folks who still know what their neighbors did during the war; I’ve seen how the kinds of forces that Ha is grasping to describe have shaped lives, and so none of this was new enough to pique much of my interest.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/06/14/hugo-awards-2026-best-short-story/