Miguel’s Community Garden by JaNay Brown-Wood & Samara Hardy

This smart, sweet book had all my kids crowding around to learn and argue about plants, fruits and vegetables! It definitely brightened up our dreary winter day, and I’m hoping it’ll help nurture a seed of interest in gardening come the spring!

Miguel’s Community Garden tells the tale of our eponymous young hero, who heads to his community garden to find some sunflowers to decorate the Community Garden Party. He knows what makes up a sunflower, but will he be able to identify them for the party? Or will he be sidetracked by all the other plants that share the sunflower’s characteristics but aren’t quite what he needs?

Perfect for beginning+ readers, this picture book uses valuable repetition to help strengthen existing vocabulary while also introducing yummy, and perhaps exotic, fruits and vegetables into their lexicons. My youngest child definitely gained a lot of practice with words that are just the right amount of challenge for him here, repeating the ones he knows and is still mastering while also learning useful new words and, I’m hoping, broadening his interest in plant life and gardening. My older kids actually ran over for the mulberry page to argue about grapes and berries: we’ve since agreed to make a special trip to the one mulberry tree we know when it fruits in the summer to find out more.

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Eggs From Red Hen Farm: Farm To Table With Mazes And Maps by Monica Wellington

I am just wildly in love with Monica Wellington’s American folk art style throughout the pages of this wonderfully interactive children’s book. It can sometimes be a struggle to get my younger kids to sit with me for the duration of an entire tome, but my youngest especially was thoroughly engaged by the clever art and fun mazes and search puzzles of this delightful picture book.

The story revolves around Red Hen Farm, run by Ruby and Ned, on a typical day. They collect eggs, then go about selling and delivering them, whether it be at the farmer’s market or in town. We follow Ruby in the farm’s little red truck as she drops off Ned at the market, then goes to the businesses that need her wares, before heading back to collect Ned and end the day on a pleasant surprise back at the farm with their animal friends, with a sweet gift from one of their clients.

The text of this engaging book meshes perfectly with the illustrations, as readers map Ruby’s journey and look for the different locations and routes. I had loads of fun matching the text to the pictures with my kids, and that’s even without appreciating the artwork as an adult lover of aesthetics. The maps and layouts are just astonishingly beautiful, with a predominant palette of orange and green, which combination has no business being as visually appealing as it is. Ms Wellington is truly gifted in both art and design.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2022/03/01/eggs-from-red-hen-farm-farm-to-table-with-mazes-and-maps-by-monica-wellington/

Please Miss: A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Penis by Grace E. Lavery

Well, that was certainly… something.

In all frankness, it felt very much like reading the screed of a 1980s British academic, who is quite erudite but also monomaniacal about a particular subject, in this case popular culture of primarily English extraction. Whether we’re reinterpreting Dickens through the (honestly valid) lens of pornography or skewering various obscure late 20th century BBC comedians, there is a lot to elicit the polite smile that betrays only the vaguest comprehension of what the writer is going on about. No wonder the book leads with chatter of Juggalos, the Little Shop Of Horrors and Mars Attacks before swerving hard into semi-famous Brits by way of Austin Powers: get the more recognizable bits out of the way first so that anyone who’s gotten this far is willing to just shrug and turn the pages for the sake of completion, no matter the perishingly narrow appeal of the subject matter near the end.

If I sound somewhat harsh, it’s likely because I still don’t understand the clown subplot, despite the chapter heading that promised to explain everything. Even more annoyingly, I was getting a distinctly Martin Amis vibe from the entire exercise, and if that’s your thing, then please, enjoy. It is not, alas, mine.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2022/02/28/please-miss-a-heartbreaking-work-of-staggering-penis-by-grace-e-lavery/

The Triumph of Achilles by Louise Glück

Only having read The Odyssey could be a bit of a hindrance in addressing a collection titled The Triumph of Achilles, especially when my notes show that that the title poem is one that struck me as I was reading through. Even without commanding the details of The Illiad, though, I liked the considerations Glück brought to tales of war and triumph and history. She makes the point about history belonging to those who write it, but she does not call the writer the victor:

…though the legends
cannot be trusted—
their source is the survivor
the one who has been abandoned.

Glück brings readers to the Trojan battlements and leaves them wondering what triumph means.

The Triumph of Achilles by Louise Glück

In “The Mountain” she rolls up to the myth of Sisyphus in two contemporary forms: an artist struggling with their work and as a teacher trying to communicate to students the essence of art. She might well consider the students’ point of view as well, condemned to turn up every day to hear about things that don’t interest them from people whose own interest seems distinctly limited.

…Why do I lie
to these children? They aren’t listening,
they aren’t deceived, their fingers
tapping at the wooden desks—

In one of her characteristic endings, she upends the myth, allowing for change in the situation of the artist, the teacher, maybe even the student.

…the artist lies
because he is obsessed with attainment,
that he perceives the summit
as that place where he will live forever,
a place about to be
transformed by his burden: with every breath
I am standing at the top of the mountain.
Both my hands are free. And the rock has added
height to the mountain.

Other poems in this collection that I liked included “Metamorphosis,” a very brief one about the death of her father, “Summer,” an excursion into seasons of marriage and confounding expectations, and “Reproach,” in which the poet gets what they wanted and is not very happy about it. On the whole, though, I connected with Glück in The Triumph of Achilles about as well as I did in the three previous collections, which is to say glancingly at best. I’m interested in her next two, Ararat and The Wild Iris, but probably not all too soon.

Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2022/02/25/the-triumph-of-achilles-by-louise-gluck/

The Casagrandes #2: Anything for Familia by The Loud House Creative Team

As much as I’ve enjoyed the chaotic fun of the Loud House comics, based on the hit show airing on Nickelodeon, I must say that I found this spin-off Casagrande volume much easier to consume, probably because the main cast wasn’t quite as ginormous as in the LH books!

Granted, several of these stories have also previously appeared in LH compilations, tho few of the Loud family themselves show up in these pages, barring the usual suspects, Lincoln and Lori, who have the closest ties to the Casagrandes. Lincoln is best friends with our heroine, Ronnie Anne Santiago, while Lori is dating her older brother Bobby. The first story actually kicks off with Bobby and Lori on a date while their younger siblings attempt to prank them, mostly successfully. The rest of the stories follow the extended Casagrande clan while they run their mercado, test out recipes and go to the skate park, among other fun, family-friendly adventures.

Probably my favorite entry in this book was “Tu Destino!” written by Kristen G Smith, with art by Ron Bradley and letters by Wilson Ramos Jr. I’m a sucker for anything to do with role-playing games and quasi-psychics so this short was both delightful and right up my alley.

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Selected Poems 1966–1987 by Seamus Heaney

The receipt tucked away in the pages of this collection tells me that I bought it in early 1997, in Washington, DC. At that time, I would only have read Heaney’s Nobel lecture. His Beowulf, the first poetic work of his that I read, was still two years from publication. There’s another receipt in the book, for a handlebar bike bag. That would have been part of my preparation for a two-week bicycle tour in northern Poland that I took in the summer of that year. Poland loomed large in Heaney’s intellectual landscape, thanks mainly to a friendship forged in California with Czeslaw Milosz. In 1995, he had published a version of the Laments of Polish Renaissance poet Jan Kochanowski, co-translated with Stanislaw Baranczak. In those days I could read almost enough of the Polish to measure it against the rendering in English.

Seamus Heaney Selected Poems

The bicycle bag went with me to Poland (I may have it still), but the Heaney collection did not. In fact, I did not crack it much at all until this year, when I had already read nearly all of the volumes that this selection draws from. The Selected Poems covers exactly the seven major collections that I have written about for Frumious, with two additions. As an introduction to Heaney’s poetry and an overview of the first half of his career, the Selected Poems is a good book. He draws more heavily on the collections that were more recent when this volume was published: there are seven poems each from Death of a Naturalist and Door into the Dark, with more than twice as many from The Haw Lantern and more than three times as many from Station Island, including the 20-page title poem. Looking through the table of contents and comparing it to my notes on the various collections, I did not see anything that Heaney omitted that I sorely missed.

The two exceptions are Stations a twenty-four page collection of prose poems that Heaney published in 1975, and Sweeney Astray, his crack at the medieval Irish work Buile Shuibhne, which he published in 1985. Stations was a formal experiment, the sort of thing poets do to stretch themselves and stretch their art, to see if there might not be more ways of doing the things they want to do than they had been previously accustomed to. Of the seven that Heaney selected for this volume, I most liked “Cloistered,” which draws a line between schooling and monasticism, playing on the many ways that people may be set aside from the world. “Trial Run” and “Visitant” catch ambiguities of Ulster’s situation in the world of the 1940s and 1950s. It was interesting to see Heaney try out this form, but on the whole I am glad that he did not pursue it.

The five bits from Sweeney Astray come from a different era entirely, and sing in a different register. He captures the madness and the sadness of the king transformed and cursed to wander until the prophecy of his death is fulfilled. Along the way, though, he also captures bright joy at the simple being of trees (in “Sweeney Praises the Trees”) or birds (in “Sweeney Astray”) that is less complicated than one of Heaney’s own poems, but just as beautiful.

I’ve preferred the luxury of reading Heaney’s full collections, but it’s nice to have this selection, and for someone who wanted to dip into his poetry without diving in completely, this is a good place to start.

Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2022/02/23/selected-poems-1966-1987-by-seamus-heaney/

The Nightmare Brigade #1: The Case Of The Girl From Deja Vu by Frank Thilliez, Yomgui Dumont & Drac

Back when I had far more free time than I do now, I kept a dream diary and tried to practice lucid dreaming, in order to better understand my day-to-day existence and how my subconscious dealt with my issues (and, I’ll admit, to pinpoint when I had those weird prophetic dreams that often come across as deja vu in waking life.) As such, tales of dream exploration are always a draw for me, with The Nightmare Brigade series sounding right up my alley from the start.

Esteban and Tristan are the children of dream scientist Professor Albert Angus, who is a therapist of last resort for people whose nightmares interfere with their waking lives. In order to help these patients, he sends Esteban and Tristan into their dreams while himself monitoring the situation from the outside. Once inside the patients’ dreamscapes, our teenage heroes attempt to figure out the psychological puzzle that underpins the dreamers’ trauma, while trying to stay out of the life-threatening situations that often spring up during the course of these nightmares. It’s dangerous work, but both kids enjoy helping people get better. Plus Tristan is no longer confined to his wheelchair in dreams, which is almost as much a bonus for him as solving the mysteries of dreamers’ troubled psyches.

Their latest case involves another teenager named Sarah, whom Esteban thinks he recognizes, or who at least evokes in him a strong feeling of deja vu. Esteban actually has very little recollection of his life from before he was adopted by Professor Angus, and wonders if Sarah might hold the key to his past. Before they have a chance to find out tho, Professor Angus reveals several devastating secrets about his own past that could very well change the course of all the kids’ lives for good… if they can survive the latest nightmare realm they’ve been sent into.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2022/02/22/the-nightmare-brigade-1-the-case-of-the-girl-from-deja-vu-by-frank-thilliez-yomgui-dumont-drac/

Moon Over Soho by Ben Aaronovitch

Jazzmen dropping dead in circumstances that are unusual even by their standards. Incontrovertible, if circumstantial, evidence of a real-life vagina dentata. These two sets of mysteries set the stage for the events of Moon Over Soho, events that will show readers more about Constable Peter Grant, much more about his mentor in magical policing Detective Chief Inspector Thomas Nightingale, and leave slightly less property damage across greater London than Grant’s previous adventure. But only slightly less.

Moon Over Soho by Ben Aaronovitch

Moon Over Soho has the three things that I said made Rivers of London terrific fun to read — humor both line-by-line and over longer stretches, unrestrained love for twenty-first century London (The opening sentence is “It’s a sad fact of life that if you drive long enough, sooner or later you must leave London behind.”), and good balance of magic and mundane — and deepens them over the course of its heroes’ capers. By the end of it, readers know and appreciate Grant and Nightingale better. They can see how London itself is starting to change because of the events of which the police pair are just a part. The supporting cast are taking on greater depth, and readers can see how they might be the protagonists of their own stories. Molly, for example, who is presented in the first book as an unknowable and fearsome automaton, practically an extension of the house, might be someone comprehensible after all. Which of course leaves Grant, a Black Londoner, with unsettling questions about her apparent unending servitude.

Like any good mystery writer, Aaronovitch gives readers crucial information right up front, even though they may not realize its importance until much later.

Vestigia is the imprint magic leaves on physical objects. It’s a lot like a sense impression, like the memory of a smell or a sound you once heard. You’ve probably felt it a hundred times a day, but it all gets mixed up with memories, daydreams and even smells you’re smelling and sounds you’re hearing. Some things, stones, for example, sop up everything that happens around them even when it’s barely magical at all — that’s what gives an old house its character. Other things, like the human body, are terrible at retaining any vestigia at all — it takes the magical equivalent of a grenade going off to imprint anything on a corpse. (p. 12)

Which is why Grant is surprised to hear a saxophone solo emanating from an expired jazzman.

“How did you spot this?” I asked.
“I check all the sudden deaths,” said Dr Walid. “Just on the off-chance. I thought it sounded like jazz.”
“Did you recognise the tune?”
“Not me. I’m strictly prog rock and the nineteenth-century romantics,” said Dr Walid. “Did you?”
“It’s ‘Body and Soul’,” I said. “It’s from the 1930s.”
“Who played it?”
“Just about everybody. It’s one of the great jazz classics.
“You can’t die of jazz,” said Dr Walid. “Can you?”
I thought of Fats Navarro, Billie Holiday and Charlie Parker who, when he died, was mistaken by the coroner for a man twice his actual age.
“You know,” I said, “I think you’ll find you can.” (p. 13)

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The Passover Guest by Susan Kusel & Sean Rubin

It’s 1933 and America is in the grip of the fourth year of the Great Depression. Little Muriel is enjoying the springtime cherry blossoms in the Tidal Basin, a free activity that keeps her mind off of how little food her family has even on ordinary days, much less as Passover draws near. Spying an entertainer on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, she gives him her last penny in appreciation of his dazzling efforts.

When the street magician reminds her that the sun is setting and she ought to hurry home for seder, she admits that her family doesn’t have any food for her to hurry home to. With a kind twinkle, he asks whether she’s sure, prompting her to rush home past the Washington Monument and the White House. But back at home, the dining table is still empty, her parents merely waiting for her so that they might visit the homes of friends who may but probably don’t have any food either. Just as they’re heading out tho, a miracle occurs that will save Passover for their entire Jewish community.

This was a heartwarming retelling of I. L. Peretz’s classic Yiddish tale The Magician, originally set in Poland but transplanted here for young American audiences. As with any good fable, it survives transplantation well, thriving especially in its use of that very specific Washington DC milieu. Tho, as someone who’s literally run around DC a lot, I do find myself more boggled at the idea that little Muriel would run from the Lincoln Monument all the way up to, as I’m deducing from the book since she goes by the White House, 7th St near I than at any of the other fantastic elements of the story. That’s a 40+ minute walk even for an adult! Having Elijah show up to Passover is more realistic to me than that! I guess kids were allowed to roam further by themselves back in the day (she says, dubiously.)

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2022/02/11/the-passover-guest-by-susan-kusel-sean-rubin/

Carta SRD; Apex Predator, and Into The Glacier by Peach Garden Games

After reading Cleo Coyle’s absorbing Honey Roasted for work the other day, I was seized with the desire to write a game revolving around different kinds of single flower honey. I knew I wanted it to be connected to my Six Elements Universe, but I very specifically wanted it also to be an exploration game where you could use the different kinds of honey you were transporting with you to boost your travels through potentially dangerous terrain.

My mind thus turned to the Carta system by Peach Garden Games. PGG released Carta’s System Resource Document last year for free, and I’d been interested since first learning of the system in developing a game for it. I never quite had the right idea, I felt, till the honey game, so was excited to finally be able to sit down with the SRD to give it a proper read through and make sure.

Carta is essentially a tabletop exploration game where players traverse a grid of playing cards, with each card providing a different sort of prompt for your story. You can theme it quite freely, as quite a number of developers already have. The SRD is cleanly written, giving you clear instructions without a lot of extraneous clutter: a perfect scaffolding from which to build more complex delights. It seemed a great fit for the game I had in mind, but in order to make sure that I knew what I was in for, I decided I wanted to check out examples of other games created using this system.

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