Hafsa’s Way by Aisha Saeed

Back when I was growing up in Malaysia, the private school I went to for a good part of my primary and secondary schooling essentially gave up on teaching after the General Certificate of Secondary Education exams, and organized fun extracurricular activities for us instead. One of these was trips to the nearby zoo, and when I say nearby, I mean a ten-minute walk or so. So reading a book about a young girl in a (sub)tropical climate who has a coming-of-age experience involving academics and a nearby zoo perhaps resonated with me more than it might with the average reader.

That said, this is the kind of book I could easily see finding an audience with any pre-teen desperate to be allowed to pursue their future without the weight of “but what will people say?!” holding them back, no matter where in the world they live (or how much access to elephants they may have, lol.) Hafsa Imtiaz lives in a village some hours’ drive away from Lahore. Her parents own and run the produce market, and her beloved elder sister Shabnam has married well, to a kind and handsome cardiologist in the capital city. Hafsa herself wants to be a doctor like Sohail, an ambition that her parents don’t exactly encourage. They’d be much happier if she’d just marry a doctor like her sister did, tho they’re not conservative enough to discourage her medical dreams altogether.

And so, secretly, Hafsa applies for a summer science camp program for girls at the prestigious Bukhari Academy in Lahore. Her favorite teacher Miss Sadia often speaks fondly of her experiences there, and Hafsa is determined to go. She’s excited when her application is accepted, but immediately balks when she sees the cost. Even if her parents would let her go live in a dorm unchaperoned, there’s no way they could fork out as much as the cost of a new motorcycle just for her summer experience.

Shabnam and Sohail come to the rescue. When they learn of Hafsa’s quandary, they offer not only to pay, but to have Hafsa stay with them so as to curtail any gossip in the village about her staying in a dorm. Hafsa’s parents reluctantly agree, in part because saying no could be seen as an insult to Sohail’s side of the family. Hafsa herself is thrilled, as not only will she be able to attend the pre-med camp of her dreams, she’ll also be able to spend some quality time with her sister again.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/22/hafsas-way-by-aisha-saeed/

More Spring Speculative Fiction by Beloved Authors!

The Genie Game by Jordan Ifueko comes out today! It’s extremely exciting to have the start of a new middle grade series from this beloved author. Joining it this Spring, we also have The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigandale, a cozy new standalone from C.M. Waggoner, and A Long and Speaking Silence, a new installment in the Singing Hills Cycle by Nghi Vo, which can be read in any order! All these authors are ones I watch for, and it feels fitting for Spring to have these fresh starts.

Three teens smile in a magical bubbly atmosphere on the cover of the genie game by Jordan IfuekoI love Jordan Ifueko’s Raybearer books, which are YA, and maybe I loveThe Maid and the Crocodile, which takes place in the same world, even more? After those, I was interested to see Ifueko go younger in her audience, since it feels like a lot of YA authors I enjoy (including Holly Black, Cassandra Clare, Maureen Johnson and John Green) are trying out writing for grown-ups lately.

The Genie Game is indeed aimed at tweens and young teens, but it doesn’t pull any punches. It presents our loveable heroine in a corporate dystopia, her parents brainwashed by oligarchs. She gets sucked into indenture slavery, where she is forced to play a “game” granting wishes to magically fuel the three corporate entities that control her world. Many of the wishes are for small things that provide a bandaid over much larger problems the corporations themselves have created.

The Genie Game kind of reminds me of The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex in its tone, but Ifueko’s satire is more pointed. In that way it also kind of reminds me of Dungeon Crawler Carl for kids, with its enforced and dangerous gameplay under the auspices of an uncaring and extremely powerful entity.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/21/more-spring-speculative-fiction-by-beloved-authors/

Table Titans Club: Sneak Attack by Scott Kurtz

with beautiful colors by Steve Hamaker.

I’m ngl, I want to incorporate that Magic Mistletoe spell into my next character sheet, somehow, some way, lol.

I super loved the first Table Titans Club graphic novel but also have a terrible memory, so will freely admit that I spent a good portion of this novel feeling badly that I had no idea what the conflict was that had Kate and Alan so mad at each other as the book opens. I thought it was something I forgot from the last book, but turns out that it’s actually something that’s explained as this story progresses, phew!

Anyway, the Table Titans Club are all going to a role-playing summer camp. Val is, ofc, super excited but Kate is annoyed because she and Alan are, apparently, feuding to the point where she doesn’t even want to go to camp any more. Andrew and Darius more than make up for anyone’s lack of enthusiasm, as they and Val hope that the fun experience of summer camp will help everyone get over being mad at each other.

As the kids make new friends (and nemeses,) they share the joy of both tabletop and live-action role-playing with fellow campers. This doesn’t seem to thaw the ice between Kate and Alan, however. When Val unexpectedly sights a monster in the woods, will the experience rebond the entire group, or will it just expose how insurmountable the cracks are that have grown between them?

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/20/table-titans-club-sneak-attack-by-scott-kurtz/

Chevengur by Andrey Platonov

Translated from the Russian by Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler

Once again, I have finished a Platonov novel and I am left with the question of where to even begin. Chevengur is horrifying, and hilarious. It is surreal, and realistic; it is a blistering attack on Bolshevism, and full of characters asserting the correctness of Lenin’s proclamations. It is full of yearning for communism and shows that no two characters agree on what communism is; characters in Chevengur insist that when the conditions are right communism is inevitable and spontaneous, and that communism can only happen through the most strenuous and continuous efforts of the vanguard of the proletariat. It is nonlinear, picaresque, and wouldn’t know what a character arc is if one hit it in the dialectic. Chevengur is brilliant and baffling, exciting and exhausting. As I wrote about The Foundation Pit, “This is a journey to another world, recognizably human, but seen through the veils of history, language, culture and the author’s own imagination to make it more distant than what is found in much of science fiction. … Platonov’s Soviet Russia of the 1920s is far, far more alien than Asimov’s New York millennia hence.”

Chevengur by Andrey Platonov

To begin before the beginning, Andrey Platonov was born in Russia in 1899, the son of a railway worker. His formal schooling was over at age 13, and he went to work. He was an ardent supporter of the revolution in 1917, and in the following year he had the opportunity to study electrical technology. At the beginning of the 1920s, he was a prolific full-time writer but by 1922 he abandoned writing and took up work in electrification and land reclamation in central Russia, in the region near Voronezh where he had grown up. He worked to make Soviet power visible and productive in these fertile but poor lands, leading work brigades that dug wells and ponds, drained swamps and brought electricity to rural areas. By 1926, Platonov had returned to writing, and by 1928 he had finished Chevengur. Soviet censorship forbade its publication; some excerpts were published in 1928 and 1929. No more of Chevengur was published in Platonov’s lifetime; complete publication in Russia was not permitted until Gorbachev’s years of glasnost and perestroika.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/19/chevengur-by-andrey-platonov/

City of Oranges by Adam LeBor

City of Oranges, which was published in 2006, must have been a difficult book to write, even in the comparatively less fraught time of the early 2000s. Adam LeBor — whom I knew a little bit many years ago in Budapest, so I will refer to him as Adam — attempts an open-minded and honest reckoning with the history of the city of Jaffa from the early 20th century to the early 21st. Inevitably, the twenty years that have passed since the book’s publication have made it a piece of history as much as a record of history, but the years have not erased the book’s value. Given the large number of people Adam interviewed in their old age, many of them have passed on by now, making their recorded recollections all the more valuable.

City of Oranges by Adam LeBor

This is a book of people and personalities. As Adam writes in his introductory author’s note, “This book is based on hours of interviews with several generations of Jaffa families, their recollections of parents and grandparents and their memoirs, letters and personal archives, reaching back to the early twentieth century. These are their stories of their lives as they remember them. This is what they want to say, and the quotes of every interviewee have been checked back with them for accuracy.” (p. xxiii) Jaffa today is a part of the larger Tel Aviv conurbation. At the beginning of City of Oranges, it was very much the other way around. Jaffa was the political and cultural center of Palestine, which in the aftermath of the Great War was placed under a British mandate. “[Jaffa’s] oranges, especially the sweet and juicy Shamouti, were famed the world over and kept many thousands in gainful employment, including the Jewish traders who bought and sold the fruit.” (p. 2) Adam has consciously chosen to write a small-scale history, in which he can always focus on individuals. The larger currents of history are inescapable, and their ebb and flow are clearly visible in the personal stories he tell. One thing that the book really brings home is that the tides of history are never uniform; there are always exceptions; sometimes even within the same family, people will have different perspectives on the same events. Adam writes, “I hope the people featured in this book give a sense of [the Israeli-Arab conflict’s] complexity and its human dimension. They are Muslim, Christian and Jewish. They are middle class and working class. They are artisans and intellectuals, artists and businessmen. Some are left-wing, others right-wing. In short, human beings, in all their variety and contradictions.” (p. 3)

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/18/city-of-oranges-by-adam-lebor/

Tantalizing Tales — April 2026 — Part Three

Lol, just as I thought I was coming out of the woods, I’m back to being bedridden and canceling chamber orchestra rehearsals because I’m feverish, fatigued and, in a new development, achey at primarily my extremities instead of all over. Is that progress? I’m so tired, I don’t even know any more.

But I’ve been trying to distract myself with reading, as one does, and am super looking forward to two upcoming releases (as well as to finally finding the time to go over some books from 2025 that I still really want to get to!) First of the former category is Kat Cho’s Gods & Comics, which touches on multiple deeply relatable topics to me, a former teenage overachiever whose own creative pursuits often felt like they spilled over paracosmically into real life.

Grace Bak is seventeen, junior class vice president, and wholly determined to follow in the footsteps of her doctor parents. The debilitating panic attacks she occasionally suffers from are not part of the plan. Neither is the death of her beloved grandmother, who stepped in and helped keep their little family together after the death of Grace’s mom. Bereft of her support system, Grace finds solace in anonymously creating and publishing a webcomic called Sun God, based on the Korean folktales that her recently departed halmeoni used to tell her.

Her tale of the sun deity Haemosu and his beloved Yuhwa becoming accidentally trapped in the bodies of high schoolers goes unexpectedly viral. Even more surprising for Grace is Haemosu himself somehow taking corporeal form due to this newfound fandom. Bereft of his divine powers, he needs Grace’s help in order to get home. The more time they spend together, tho, the more reluctant Grace is to lose him. Complicating matters is the fact that her webcomic brought more than one god to the mortal realm, as Hae’s divine nemesis is hellbent on destroying the Sun God, no matter who stands in the way.

Also, that Take On Me-esque cover is just the best, 10/10, no notes!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/17/tantalizing-tales-april-2026-part-three/

Be Right Back by Bill Wood

The sequel to the bestselling Let’s Split Up finds the Sanera Four assembled again in the town that catapulted them to macabre fame only one short year earlier.

Jokester jock Cam never actually left, choosing to take on a role as assistant at his former high school instead of going to college. Meanwhile, both his boyfriend Jonesy and one-time new girl Buffy got into Stanford, while Amber studies nursing at UCLA. The four have remained in as close contact as you can for 2002, and while they’re thrilled to finally be getting back together in person, the circumstances aren’t ideal.

In order to cash in on the town’s notoriety in the wake of the Carrington Ghoul killings, Sanera Mayor Gomez has decided to throw a festival coinciding with Halloween, ostensibly to honor the fallen. The Sanera Four — as the group of crime-fighting teenagers who actually figured out who the killer was and stopped him, risking their lives in the process, are known — think the whole thing is beyond tacky, and would have nothing to do with it if they could. Unfortunately, reporter Rick Field is launching his nationwide book tour in Sanera during the festival. His “tell-all” book claims a much more important role for him in the apprehension of the Carrington Ghoul than is actually truthful, to the chagrin of the Four. To set the record straight, they’ve agreed to an interview with a rival investigative reporter, Juliet Lopez, who’s coming to town for the festival.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/16/be-right-back-by-bill-wood/

Let’s Split Up by Bill Wood

Let’s Split Up was the fastest selling UK Young Adult debut of 2024. It’s said to appeal to the demographic that loves both the Scream movie franchise and Scooby Doo fans, but I suspect that this leans more to the former than the latter, at least if my reaction to it has been anything to go by.

Cam is one of those effortlessly cool kids in high school who can be both a jock and a nerd. His best friend is an outright nerd named Jonesy, who moved to their small town of Sanera, California, from England when they were both kids. Lately tho, things between Cam and Jonesy have gotten a little weird.

Amber, the last member of their tight little trio (and who I feel is very Black-coded,) knows that Cam and Jonesy are into each other, but is wise enough not to say anything until the boys figure it out for themselves. She’s smart and empathetic, and tho her traditionally-minded parents don’t understand why and how she could possibly be platonic best friends with two boys, they’re okay enough with it as long as she keeps her grades up and doesn’t get into trouble. She has absolutely not told anyone besides Cam and Jonesy that she’s bisexual tho. It may be 2001, but being out and proud certainly isn’t an option for everyone.

When new girl Buffy moves to town, the gang swiftly adopt her, tho not without some resistance from Jonesy, who’s a little suspicious of new people. Buffy is super perceptive, so it doesn’t take her long to figure this out. A greater mystery befalls them tho when their school principal interrupts lunch period to announce terrible news.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/15/lets-split-up-by-bill-wood/

Just One Oak by Maria Gianferrari & Diana Sudyka

subtitled What A Single Tree Can Be. And in the case of the oak, the answer is “a lot!”

Growing up in Virginia, I had two massive oak trees in my front garden which, along with the red maple I spent hours climbing, were my favorite trees for the longest time. My dad made a plank swing that hung from a bough of the oak closest to the house, and I spent plenty of time either vigorously sailing through the air on it or just idly swinging to and fro with my thoughts and/or a book. I’d spread a picnic mat at the foot of the oaks when the weather was nice, and read or daydream while staring up into the leaves. So believe me when I tell you that I was very much inclined to love oak trees even before I read this beautiful and informative book on how important they actually are.

Even as an amateur naturalist, I was surprised to discover how crucial the oak’s position is as a keystone species in whichever ecosystem it’s in. Maria Gianferrari goes into this in greater detail, showcasing not only the oak’s importance in the diet of numerous insects, birds and mammals, but also how its adaptive traits have made it easier for pretty much everything in its surrounding area to thrive. Whether this comes from providing safe a/o nourishing habitats, or from rebalancing the environment through creating microclimates more suitable for the living organisms around it, the oak tree does a lot more (and in a lot more places!) than I knew of before I read this book.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/14/just-one-oak-by-maria-gianferrari-diana-sudyka/

The Counterfeit by Ralph DeFalco (EXCERPT)

Hello, dear readers! Today we have an excerpt from a thrilling novel that reads like it could have been ripped from tomorrow’s headlines!

In his debut novel The Counterfeit, historian and national security intelligence veteran Ralph DeFalco depicts a disturbingly plausible near future in which China has won a Pacific War against the United States of America. Now Beijing is maneuvering to control the next US president, while the corrupt regime that has presided over the US’ defeat, bankrupcy and political fracture entrenches power through a sprawling Internal Security Division that is essentially America’s own Gestapo.

Not everyone is ready to take this lying down, tho. Philip Nolan, Commander, U.S. Navy is a former POW who finds himself paroled into an America starkly divided between privilege and deprivation. His own twin brother — a near identical lookalike — is now chief of the secret police. Recruited by a rising Resistance, Nolan undertakes an audacious mission to infiltrate the secret police by replacing his own twin. Embedded in the highest levels of power, Nolan will have to navigate political treachery, foreign manipulation and moral peril, risking torture and execution to undermine the regime from within.

Mr DeFalco blends the insider realism of a five decade career in intelligence with the urgency of contemporary geopolitics in this gripping dystopian thriller that explores loyalty, identity and the cost of freedom in a world where the truth itself has become a weapon to be used and manipulated.

Read on for a pulse-pounding excerpt!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2026/04/13/the-counterfeit-by-ralph-defalco-excerpt/