Tantalizing Tales — March 2025 — Part Two

Hello, dear readers! With the advent of the spring equinox, I’m going to pivot towards spotlighting upcoming books in this column and not just ones that have recently published that I’m super excited to get to. So here’s a bonus column rounding up some of those latter, beginning with the third and latest installment of the bestselling The Kindred’s Curse Sage, Penn Cole’s Heat Of The Everflame.

After her disastrous coronation, Diem finds herself at the center of the conflict between the Descended and the Guardians. With her newfound friends and the man she’s falling for on one side, and the mortals she has vowed to protect on the other, Diem must walk a careful line to save the people she loves… even that means saving them from each other.

When the mystery of her unusual heritage begins to unravel, it sends Diem and Luther on an unexpected journey across the realms. The answers they seek may hold the key to winning the war, but finding these answers will require Diem to face painful truths about her mother, her bloodline and her very fate.

Meanwhile, the Crowns have set Diem in their sights. Some of them could be her greatest allies, while others want her dead. In order to end their oppressive reign, Diem must sort friend from foe and risk it all to build an army of her own. But a powerful figure in the north has plans that could change everything…

The collectible hardcover edition also includes gorgeous full-color endpapers, an exclusive hardcover case and a never-before-seen bonus chapter written from Luther’s point of view. Get it while it’s still in stores!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/21/tantalizing-tales-march-2025-part-two/

The Doomsday Vault (Everwhen School of Time Travel #1) by Thomas Wheeler

Young Bertie Wells has always had the imagination of an inventor. But when he accidentally creates a black hole in his bedroom, he’s not prepared for either that or for the sudden appearance of a strange woman bearing an invitation for him to attend the Everwhen School of Time Travel and Other Odd Sciences. Not only is this a school set outside of the time-space continuum for bright students such as himself, it’s also offering him a highly coveted Time Scholarship, by way of the kind, if eccentric, Professor Darla Marconi.

Bertie doesn’t want to tell Professor Marconi that the black hole was created less on purpose than by accident. The last thing he needs is further ammunition for his disapproving father’s continuing belief that Bertie is never going to amount to anything. This, perhaps, might be his best chance of escaping the drudgery of finding a trade to apprentice in, so off he goes to Everwhen, little realizing that he’s embarking on the adventure of several lifetimes.

Everwhen is weird and wonderful, filled with fantastic scientific marvels from all eras of time. Bertie quickly makes friends with Millie da Vinci, the much put-upon younger sister of the celebrated Leonardo, and Zoe Fuentes, a brainiac recruit from 2025 who’s accompanied everywhere by her trio of colorful slimes. The three new friends are assigned, as all first-year Time Scholars are, to Haz-Labs, the clean-up crew of the entire school. Haz-Labs is not only considered their extracurricular for the whole of first year but also makes up their team for the Ever-Ring Competition, a school-wide contest that rewards the best half-year student invention. This is a big deal because the winning student’s lab gets the best school perks, including choice of classes, housing and extra free periods.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/20/the-doomsday-vault-everwhen-school-of-time-travel-1-by-thomas-wheeler/

Bowling With Corpses by Mike Mignola & Dave Stewart

subtitled & Other Strange Tales From Lands Unknown. With lettering by Clem Robins.

Y’know, I never seemed to hit Mike Mignola’s work at quite the right time. I’ve long been interested in the Hellboy and BPRD franchises, but every time I managed to pick up a book, I was quickly flummoxed by being required to know far more back story than I had grasp of in order to enjoy the current one I was trying to read.

So it’s honestly really great that I could hit the ground running here in Mr Mignola’s new project, where he builds an entirely new mythology in a world similar to our own yet very different. The title story is actually based on an Italian folktale, but Mr Mignola invents a brand new realm, new challenges, new rewards and a bittersweet ending. Folk tale aficionados will see the twist coming from a mile away but who cares when Yeb has arguably the coolest melee weapon of all time?

The rest of this collection’s stories follows less of an overarching narrative — I don’t believe we see Yeb again in the rest of the book — than it sweeps broadly through this fantastic new landscape, picking out fresh and seemingly random tales for the reader’s delectation. These tales lean towards the horrific side of fantasy: no surprise given the author. But Mr Mignola’s mastery of suspense has only grown since the other books I’ve read of his, particularly in the tale Una And The Devil, where a blacksmith’s daughter facing the gallows in the morning finds a different kind of salvation… and vengeance. That tale especially shows a flair for creativity quite different from the more standard folk tales on which most of this book is based.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/19/bowling-with-corpses-by-mike-mignola-dave-stewart/

A Year of Diana Wynne Jones: the mid 1990s!

In my quest to read all of Diana Wynne Jones’s books in one year, this month I read The Crown of Dalemark, Stopping for a Spell, and The Tough Guide to Fantasyland!

Seriously, this was quite a lineup for a short month: it included our first ending of a series, our first collection of shorter works, and an alphabetized guidebook to fantasy tropes! All of these were rereads for me, and I felt like I gained perspective on all of them through the context of this readthrough process.

This custom image by Marnanel Thurman shows the dates we read this book, the book’s title and the series title, "A Year of Diana Wynne Jones," with the cover of one edition of the book. The Crown of Dalemark, (1993)
In the late 1970s, Diana Wynne Jones published three Dalemark novels: first, two novels of Dalemark in a kind of early industrial revolution era, with Cart and Cwidder and Drowned Ammet in 1975 and 1977, taking place concurrently, in a land with slow travel, magic stuff, and firearms being introduced. Then came Spellcoats in 1979, which brought us back to an origin point of the very founding of Dalemark, far in the distant and mythologized past.

Over a decade later, the series concludes with The Crown of Dalemark: we meet Maewen, a girl in an era of Dalemark that feels contemporary to the 1990s: fast trains, divorced parents, boarding school shenanigans – the whole works. She gets tricked into traveling back in time to the era of Cart and Cwidder and Drowned Ammet, in order to aid the gods of Dalemark in restoring a rightful king to the empty throne.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/18/a-year-of-diana-wynne-jones-the-mid-1990s/

Groomed by Jody Paschal

The global COVID-19 lockdowns were a tough time for millions around the globe, in no small part due to the confrontation many people had with whether or not they actually enjoyed living with themselves. One such person is Mylo Gunn, a fifty year-old Black American whose extra time for introspection butts up against the burgeoning #MeToo movement, exposing parts of himself he’d thought long buried.

Back when Mylo was seventeen, he met and fell and love with the beautiful twenty-five year-old April Barnes. While many of the people around him told him to be careful with her, nobody really tried to stop him from pursuing a relationship with a woman who was definitely not respecting the “half your age plus seven” years rule of dating suitability. Over time, April groomed Mylo into being the boyfriend, and later husband, she desired. Tho Mylo knew that the way she treated him was wrong, he didn’t know how to permanently extricate himself from a woman he thought he loved and, eventually, owed.

Fast-forward several decades, and Mylo is happily married to his second wife, Traci, as they ride out the lockdowns together. Looking for an athletic release when restrictions eventually ease, Mylo takes to open-air training with a group of guys he meets at a nearby track. When one of them encourages him to explore the feelings he’s started having regarding his first wife and their tumultuous relationship, he makes the first tentative steps to putting his story down on paper, little realizing the hidden connection that will later rock his world.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/17/groomed-by-jody-paschal/

A City on Mars by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith

A City on Mars asks in its subtitle “Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through?” When I read part of the book to decide how to vote on its place in the 2024 Hugo Awards category of Best Related Work I thought that the answers were “probably not, probably not, and definitely not” but allowed for the possibility that after reading the whole thing they might be even simpler: no, no, and no. Now that I have taken time to read the full argument, I think the answers are “maybe but not for a long time, only under certain circumstances and again not for a long time, and oh hell no.” That’s not really the story the Weinersmiths wanted to tell when they started their project, but it’s the conclusion they came to after a long and fair look at many aspects of space settlement.

City on Mars by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith

The text is breezy and conversational, punctuated by well-chosen illustrations by Zach, but the subject and conclusions are plenty serious. The American government, along with two of the world’s richest men, are investing significant resources into promoting and achieving some form of space settlement in the nearish future. Elon Musk’s promises, and especially his timetables, on that front have turned out to be vaporware, but his company continues to push in that direction. His attitude toward law, as revealed in his actions in early 2025, shows the importance of a topic that the Weinersmiths devote considerable attention: the laws and agreements that regulate human activities in space, how those came to be, how they work in both theory and practice, and how they will shape attempts at settling celestial bodies beyond the Earth. Those are topics that tend to get short shrift in much writing about space settlement. That’s unfortunate because attempting to place a new settlement on the Moon or on Mars would be an immense social effort, and those don’t happen outside of legal and political frameworks. The Weinersmiths tackle legal and social questions last because those are the most difficult; although they don’t directly say that God gave physicists the easy problems, it’s true.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/16/a-city-on-mars-by-kelly-and-zach-weinersmith/

Tantalizing Tales — March 2025 — Part One

I continue to be flummoxed by the concept of time, dear readers, as March comes in like a lion here in my mid-Atlantic state. It has also been, quite frankly, a tough time to be a professional reader. It feels like one catastrophe after another threatening everything I hold dear, through the diabolical intersection of short-sighted technoligarchy with ethno-nationalist fascism. Frankly, I’m exhausted (and don’t get me started on how the Daylight Savings time change during the fasting month has thoroughly messed with my circadian rhythms.)

But at least I have books to help me through, even if they’re books that I can only look forward to reading once I finally find the time again. The first of these, timed perfectly to Women’s History Month, is Marianna Marlowe’s Portrait Of A Feminist: A Memoir In Essays. Through flashes of memory of her childhood in California, Ecuador and Peru, interspersed with scenes from the present day, Ms Marlowe details the evolution of her identity as a biracial and multicultural woman.

With her experiences being the child of a Catholic Peruvian mother and an atheist American father in a family that lived abroad for years, she confronts the realities that so many of us share, including unequal marriages, class structures, misogynistic literature and patriarchal religion. Her essays bring her to the two most important questions in feminism today: What does it look like to live a life in defense of feminism? And how should feminism continue to evolve in the present day?

I’ve heard mixed reviews of this one, which only piques my interest all the more. So many people have different ideas of what feminism means that it’s always intriguing to see how someone boldly proclaims the title of feminist for themself, especially in the context of intersectionality. I’m looking forward to getting a chance to dive in.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/14/tantalizing-tales-march-2025-part-one/

Pretty Girls Get Away With Murder by Brandi Bradley (EXCERPT)

I’m ngl, pretty privilege is real. I don’t speak just from personal experience, but from watching pre-Crystal Palace Ben Chilwell get consistently picked for Chelsea and England despite being clearly outclassed by nearly everyone around him (this is, admittedly, a very niche example.) So when this terrific queer title came across my desk, I knew I had to share it with you readers. Even more excitingly, I have an excerpt for you so you can get a taste of what’s inside!

When a young entrepreneur is killed, everyone in town points fingers at his neo-hippie, picture-perfect, miracle-manifesting, fitness influencer ex-girlfriend Gabbi – including the victim’s best friend Jenna. As detective Lindy D’Arnaud and her partner Boggs search for a motive, they begin to wonder if this is a case of jealousy turned violent or shady business dealings gone deadly sour.

Things aren’t much clearer in Lindy’s personal life. When her wife’s ex-boyfriend – and the sperm donor to their baby – decides to move back to town, she finds herself competing with him for her wife’s affection. Can the three of them truly be a postmodern family in Western Kentucky, where living as a queer person is already challenging enough?

Told through the shifting perspectives of Lindy, Gabbi and Jenna, Pretty Girls Get Away With Murder is a page-turner brimming with quick wit and juicy gossip. But don’t take my word for it, check out this excerpt — from Gabby’s occasionally incisive, occasionally completely oblivious perspective — for yourself!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/13/pretty-girls-get-away-with-murder-by-brandi-bradley-excerpt/

Bitsy Bat, Team Star by Kaz Windness

Bitsy Bat loves school, but is a little worried when new kid Enzo Owl threatens to take the Fastest Flier title away from her. Concerned that her friends will no longer think she’s special, she hyperfocuses on proving that she’s the best. But when race day comes and one of her classmates winds up in trouble, will she be able to sacrifice her ego and remember the importance of being a good friend?

Fairly standard description of any kids’ book trying to teach its readers the importance of being a good team player. What makes Bitsy Bat, Team Star stand out, however, is the fact that both Bitsy and Enzo are neurodivergent in ways that present differently, with classmates who may also have different learning challenges. I never really realized until reading this how few kids’ books feature multiple children with special needs. At best, you can find just one such child navigating everyday life, but that’s definitely not the case in the real world. I’m not even the most involved parent when it comes to my kids’ school life, but I do know that there are entire classes of sweet, hard-working kids who just need some extra support in getting through the school day.

So it’s super refreshing to read this picture book and find such excellent representation of autistic kids and kids with disabilities. The challenges they face are pretty universal — in this case, fighting insecurity, jealousy and selfishness — but with care taken to show how neurodivergency makes it harder for some kids to self-regulate their involuntary responses. More importantly, it models the sensible way to help kids learn how to cope with their big feelings, so that they can grow up to be better adjusted friends and adults.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/12/bitsy-bat-team-star-by-kaz-windness/

Dreamover by Dani Diaz

Oh, young love! Amber and Nico have been best friends since the third grade, along with the other member of their little trio, Drew. During the last week of eighth grade, all three of them go on a field trip to Funnerland with the rest of their class. Their good friends Stella and Grace (who happen to be a couple as well) hang out with them as they enjoy the beach and boardwalk.

While Drew, Stella and Grace snooze on the sand, Amber and Nico hit the arcades, where they eventually (and adorably) admit their feelings for one another. The summer that follows is the best of their young lives, as they sink into the wonders of young love and first romance. Amber wistfully wishes that that summer could last forever.

Alas, high school is both imminent and inevitable. The upperclassmen make fun of all five of them, and Nico withdraws even further into himself. But perhaps of more concern for their friendships is the way that Amber and Nico begin cutting themselves off from the rest of their friends. Texts go unanswered, and group hangs devolve into one absenting themself to spend time with the other. Their friends try to be understanding, but the tension is still there.

Amber and Nico are happy to continue their tradition of sleepovers from back before they were romantically involved, tho their parents still do keep a weather eye on them. But one night, after a particularly intense video game session, the couple falls asleep on the couch in the basement. They wake to find themselves in the video game, and set off on a series of adventures that, at first, seem like everything they’ve ever wanted. As real world concerns filter into their dreams, however, the young lovers’ fears and insecurities will come to the forefront. Will they and their relationship be able to survive what they discover about one another?

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2025/03/11/dreamover-by-dani-diaz/