A Year of Diana Wynne Jones: The early 1990s!

In my quest to read all of Diana Wynne Jones’s books in one year, this month I read Castle in the Air, Aunt Maria, A Sudden Wild Magic and Hexwood!

Honestly, it was a big month. Those are some hefty ones, and I think Hexwood is among her very best. It’s a high bar!

In Marnanel Thurman's image, the words "A Year of Diana Wynne Jones," the week we read the book, and the title of the book are superimposed over colorful original artwork on the book's theme, and a small image of a book cover of one of the possible editions.Castle in the Air (1990)

Castle in the Air takes place in the same world as Howl’s Moving Castle, and some of our beloved characters from Howl make cameo appearances. The main character and setting, however, are quite different. In Howl, Diana Wynne Jones comments on European fairytale tropes, with protagonist Sophie making assumptions about what life might be available to her based on who gets to have adventures in stories. In Castle in the Air, Diana Wynne Jones is similarly commenting on story assumptions, but this time she is working with the British consumption of “Eastern” stories, especially from the Thousand and One Nights. Her protagonist Abdullah is a rug merchant who falls in love with a beautiful maiden, secluded in a garden by her wealthy father, and hijinks ensue. There’s a roadtrip, and a chaos-loving genie.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/19/a-year-of-diana-wynne-jones-the-early-1990s/

So Much Slime by Jason Lefebvre & Zac Retz

Matty is a grade-schooler who loves making homemade slime with his parents. When he gets permission to demonstrate how to make slime in art class at school, he’s super excited! He packs enough ingredients so that all his classmates can get some slime to take home with them, and repeats to himself the simple recipe his parents taught him: glue, baking soda, saline — and pizzazz!

His art teacher is at first a little perturbed by the sheer amount of slime Matty is planning on making. But Matty assures her that he knows what he’s doing… until he doesn’t. Examining the waves of sticky goop he’s unleashed in class, he realizes that he’s forgotten the saline! His classmates try to come up with creative ideas to sop up the mess that’s threatening to drown poor Matty, but their attempts to help only make the waves of slime get bigger. Will anybody be able to figure out how to fix things before it becomes an uncontrollable disaster?

This was an absolutely adorable picture book about making that toy? material? that so many kids (and their parents!) adore. Personally, I like slime for how it helps clean irregularly shaped items, but that’s neither here nor there. The enthusiasm of Matty and his parents is infectious, and even tho the demonstration goes a lot more haywire than planned, all’s well that ends well. Matty and his art teacher might be a little traumatized by the experience, but it’s clear that all the other kids had a blast as they tried to help solve the problem. Plus, the coda reinforces the fact that while not all experiments (or demonstrations) are successful, making notes of both what worked and what went wrong are valuable, scientific learning experiences.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/18/so-much-slime-by-jason-lefebvre-zac-retz/

Tantalizing Tales — February 2025 — Part One

Happy Valentine’s Day, readers! Love the day or loathe the day, we have a terrific slate of new book recommendations to complement your feelings toward the season.

First off, we have a new genre-bending standalone novel from TJ Klune, The Bones Beneath My Skin. With an enemies-to-lovers queer romance, speculative twists, road trip comedy and high-octane thrills, this is the perfect book for anyone who doesn’t want to stick with just one mood.

It’s the spring of 1995 and Nate Cartwright has lost everything: his parents are dead, his only brother wants nothing to do with him, and he’s been fired from his job as a journalist in Washington, DC. With nothing left to lose, he returns to his family’s summer cabin outside the small mountain town of Roseland, Oregon, to try and find some sense of direction.

The cabin should be empty, but it’s not.

Inside is a man named Alex. And with him is an extraordinary ten-year-old girl who calls herself Artemis Darth Vader, who isn’t exactly as she appears. Soon it becomes clear that Nate must make a choice: let himself drown in the memories of his past, or fight for a future he never thought possible. Because Artemis is special, and forces are descending upon them who want nothing more than to control her, no matter what she wants herself.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/14/tantalizing-tales-february-2025-part-one/

Ex Marks The Spot by Gloria Chao

So excited I get to review this in the overlap between the Lunar New Year and Valentine’s Day seasons!

Gemma Sun is the perfect straight-A student. Hard-working and straitlaced to a fault, she’s always wanted to cause minimal trouble for her own mother Jean, who had her young and without family support. For as long as Gemma can remember, it’s always been her and her mom against the world. If she ever wishes that she had a bigger family to rely on and stronger ties to her Taiwanese roots, she rarely brings these issues up to her mother, if at all. The most important thing is getting good grades so that she can make a better life for the both of them.

So it’s with chagrin that Gemma has to share her high school valedictorian spot with Xander Pan, the boy who broke her heart in 9th grade. He changed his name from Alex to something cooler, and made it his life’s mission to be goofy and popular. Gemma misses the sweet boy she would share puzzles with, but after he wrecked an important assignment for them in his pursuit of fun, she knew it was over. Ever since, he’s been her sworn enemy: not that it ever seems like he notices.

When Gemma gets word immediately after graduation that her grandfather died and potentially left her an inheritance, she’s intrigued. Her mom doesn’t talk about her grandfather, saying only that he was cold, distant and never supported them. With college bills weighing on her, Gemma meets with the lawyer and discovers that her grandfather left her a puzzle to solve, one that will hopefully have a lucrative treasure at the end.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/13/ex-marks-the-spot-by-gloria-chao/

Lebanon Is Burning And Other Dispatches by Yazan Al-Saadi et. al.

featuring the art of Tracy Chahwan, Ganzeer, Ghadi Ghosn, Omar Khouri, Sirene Moukheiber, Hicham Rahma and Enas Satir.

Hoo boy, readers, what a book. If you’re as unfamiliar with current events in the Middle East and North Africa as I am, then this book is likely to be a jarring experience for you, as Yazan Al-Saadi takes readers on a tour of what’s been happening recently in some of the area’s most politically repressed nations, moving from the better-publicized crises in Lebanon, Syria and Palestine, to the ones that receive less coverage in Bahrain, Yemen and Sudan, with other stops along the way. The author himself is Syrian Canadian, and worked as both a journalist and with Medecins Sans Frontieres. There are many rightful targets of his ire who all share this in common: the desire to centralize power in themselves alone, and by doing so strip others of their rights and dignities.

As such, Mr Al-Saadi sets any number of dictators and authoritarian regimes in his sights, as well as the imperialist/settler-colonial powers of the West and Israel. This is, ofc, old hat to anyone with any awareness of the area and even half a heart, but the sheer amount of detail he puts into narrating the crimes against the people of MENA sheds light on some truly awful situations. In doing so, his aim is to raise both awareness and inspire solidarity worldwide. Tyranny and economic exploitation must be fought against by the many below: we cannot expect to be rescued by the (perishingly rare benevolent) few in power above.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/12/lebanon-is-burning-and-other-dispatches-by-yazan-al-saadi-et-al/

The Bushcraft 101 Field Log by Dave Canterbury

subtitled Track And Record Your Wilderness Adventures.

A part of me has always wanted to have wilderness adventures. I want to be that person who enjoys camping and hiking and surviving in the outdoors. Alas, even with my well-practiced adaptability, I am only ever reluctantly the outdoorsy type, and less and less so as the years wear on.

Still, I, like millions of others, gained a greater appreciation for nature in the wake of the pandemic lockdowns, so when I was offered this field log for review, I leaped at the chance. I enjoy observing and making notes of nature, and thought this would be useful for writing down my few encounters with such in suburbia, or on one of my woodland walks.

Lol, was I wrong.

And that is in no way the fault of the book, which is geared towards people who are making long trips in the bush, not dilettantes like myself who simply refuse to live without indoor plumbing. This field log is geared towards people who make camp and explore the actual wilderness — think hiking the Appalachian Trail vs taking a walk in your local green space — with handy tips on how to use the book in tandem with your experiences and future plans.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/11/the-bushcraft-101-field-log-by-dave-canterbury/

Jovi Giraffe Learns To Look by Patricia Bardina, Joanne Burgess & Paul Sharp

subtitled A Lesson in Eye Contact, and frankly a very valuable read for anyone who’s ever struggled with sociability.

This companion piece to Revony Rhinoceros Starts To Smile is another terrific book about how body language encourages relationships or otherwise. With its cute anthropomorphic cast, it’s an accessible way for people who struggle with social skills to learn about how something as seemingly simple a/o small as eye contact can be very nuanced and important when it comes to transmitting and understanding feelings.

Jovi Giraffe is nice and polite but has trouble making friends. He’ll readily engage in conversation but tends to looks everywhere but into the eyes of the person he’s talking with, leading others to believe that he’s just not that interested in them. Poor Jovi feels quite lonely as he makes his way to the park one day, after his lack of eye contact causes more than one friend to skip away to hang out with people they think actually want to spend time with them.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/10/jovi-giraffe-learns-to-look-by-patricia-bardina-joanne-burgess-paul-sharp/

Eine Jugend by Patrick Modiano

This slim novel — titled Une jeunesse in the French original and Young Once in English — opens as a thirty-fifth birthday celebration for Odile is winding down. She and her husband Louis have run a children’s home in a village at the foot of the Alps for a dozen years, but now that their own children are growing up they have decided to close that down and start a new chapter in their lives. Louis drives a guest who has to catch a train back to Paris to the local station. Once his friend has departed, the rain and the station remind Louis of the time fifteen years previous, the tumultuous first few months with Odile when they were both on their own in Paris, not yet twenty. A youth, their youth, as the French and German titles have it; young once and recalled from early middle age.

Eine Jugend by Patrick Modiano

The recollection that constitutes the vast majority of the book with Louis just finishing his army service in the Norman town of St. Lô. He has come to know a man named Brossier following a chance meeting one weekend in a café when they were the only two customers. On the rainy evening after Louis’ discharge, he encounters Brossier again, who says that the end of Louis’ time as a recruit is worth celebration and insists on buying him some drinks. When Louis eventually admits that he has no immediate prospects, and that he needs new shoes because the ones he has don’t keep out the rain and have left his feet and socks sopping wet, Brossier takes him under his wing and gets him properly outfitted. Louis feels like a new man.

From such small things are lives made. Brossier treats Louis to an entire celebratory evening, gives him some money and tells him that he may have a line on longer-term employment.

For her part, Odile wants to be a singer. Rock and roll is just reaching Paris youth, and Odile is attracted but not audacious or connected enough to get up on such a stage herself. Despite her reticence, a talent scout picks up on her interest and intensity. Bellune is over fifty and works for a record company. He’s out of touch with the spirit of the age, but he’s still giving it a go. Young Once later, and mostly indirectly, reveals that he came to Paris as a refugee, presumably Jewish, from Vienna. He had had success there as a composer, but never matched it in Paris. How he lived through the war years is not stated, but the intensity of his recollections and his distance from the present day mark him as a traumatized survivor. Nevertheless, he sees a spark in Odile and hopes that she can make records for his company.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/09/eine-jugend-by-patrick-modiano/

Winter Tide by Ruthanna Emrys

Ruthanna Emrys joins contemporary authors such as Kij Johnson, Victor LaValle and Matt Ruff in taking up the ideas and storylines of H.P. Lovecraft’s tales of cosmic horror, looking at them with twenty-first-century eyes and writing tales that wind up in very different places. Who would worship the inhuman and often malevolent gods from Lovecraft’s stories? What kind of people consort with what appear to be monsters?

Winter Tide by Ruthanna Emrys

Emrys gave partial answers to these questions in her novella, The Litany of Earth, which I would recommend reading before embarking on Winter Tide. Not only does Litany introduce the most important characters of Winter Tide and give crucial background, it sets the tone of the novel that follows. Readers who enjoy Litany will almost certainly like the longer and deeper treatment that Emrys provides in Winter Tide.

Aphra Marsh, the protagonist of both stories, is one of the few survivors from Innsmouth, a town on the New England coast that was raided by the federal government in 1928. In Lovecraft’s The Shadow Over Innsmouth, the town’s inhabitants are depraved cultists who consort with loathsome beings who live in the sea but dream of conquering humanity. Using Prohibition enforcement raids as a cover story, the feds attack the town, killing many and sending the rest to internment camps. Aphra was a child at the time of the raids, and she grew up in the deserts of the southwest, far from the ocean that her people needed to live. She watched their numbers dwindle. By the time that Japanese-American internees arrive at the camp in 1942, the guards had practically forgotten why the Innsmouth people were confined. Aphra and her younger brother Caleb are taken in by the Koto family who enable them to survive the next few years. When the Japanese-Americans are released at the end of the war, the Marsh siblings leave with the Kotos. In The Litany of Earth, Aphra is living in San Francisco with the Kotos and working in a bookstore. Caleb has returned to the area of Innsmouth and is off-stage for most of that story. Over the course of the novella, she forms an uneasy alliance with an FBI agent named Ron Spector.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/08/winter-tide-by-ruthanna-emrys/

A Year of Diana Wynne Jones: The late 1980s!

In my quest to read all of Diana Wynne Jones’s books in one year, this month I read Howl’s Moving Castle, A Tale of Time City, The Lives of Christopher Chant and Wild Robert!

It was fun to revisit Howl after the Ghibli film version became so popular, and Wild Robert was entirely new to me.

In Marnanel Thurman's image, the words "A Year of Diana Wynne Jones," the week we read the book, and the title of the book are superimposed over colorful original artwork on the book's theme, and a small image of a book cover of one of the possible editions.
Howl’s Moving Castle (1986)
Howl’s Moving Castle is about narrative determinism. We are presented with Sophie, a talented and competent young woman who is absolutely sure she knows what her role in the world “should” be and doesn’t question it. This causes problems as she initially seems quite passive. Her two younger sisters are less accepting of the roles they are told to play, and are thus more active at first. Sophie’s magical abilities incur the anger of a powerful witch even without her trying, and she is cursed by turning into a plodding old woman.

As it turns out, Sophie finds this very freeing, and begins speaking her mind and standing up for herself, as she goes to work for the dreaded wizard Howl and gets embroiled in all kinds of interdimensional and political upheaval.

This is a really fun one, and if you are already a fan of the Ghibli film of the same name, I’d recommend it highly, with the caveat that the book is much more about the dangers of believing the stories others tell about you, and much less about the horrors of war.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/02/07/a-year-of-diana-wynne-jones-the-late-1980s/