Pages

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Book Review: The Fall by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan

The Fall: The Strain Trilogy #2 by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan

See my review of the first book here.

The war with the master vampire called "The Master" continues in this book. It (the Master is referred to as "It" since it is so ancient and so inhuman) is orchestrating a world-wide takeover that started in Manhattan. New York City is the hub of action in part because of the Master's reliance on Eldritch Palmer, a financial mogul who is devious and decrepit. Palmer wants to be turned into a vampire so he can live forever (and improve his health). He orchestrated the Master's flight from Europe during an eclipse, allowing the Master to escape from JFK airport. The Master's scheme includes not only turning New Yorkers into a vampire army but also wiping out the six other ancient vampires (called "The Ancients") and acquiring an ancient, accursed occult book that could be used against him. The book was recently discovered and is due to auction at Sotheby's in the coming days.

The main heroes are CDC doctor Ephraim Goodweather and Holocaust-survivor and vampire-hunter Abraham Setrakian. Eph wants to protect his son Zack from his mother who has been turned into a vampire and longs to consume her "Dear One." He also wants to warn the world about the coming plague. People in authority and the media are reluctant to talk about vampires, partly from disbelief and partly from Palmer's influence. Setrakian wants to stop the Master mostly through getting the occult book and discovering its secrets. They have a motley crew of New Yorkers (and some from New Jersey) helping them race around New York fighting vampires and scheming to get the book first.

This second volume suffers a bit from the same problems as the first. The characters are a little underdrawn and not as compelling as they could be. I was hoping the introduction of the Ancients (hinted at in the first book) would bring some new twists or more interesting lore. Neither happens in this book. The uneasy blending of medical technical thriller and vampire apocalypse genres still does not hang together well. The vampire mythology reads like it was crafted to fit the plot of the story. It does not feel like folklore and is unconvincing as a clinical explanation of the vampires' powers and actions. The book does have some interesting ideas but not enough to make for good reading. Or for me to finish the trilogy.

Not recommended.

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Game Review: Unlock! Game Adventures by Space Cowboys

Unlock! Game Adventures by Space Cowboys

In the equivalent of a Marvel Cinematic Universe crossover like the Avengers films, the Unlock! escape room series has a set that features three scenarios based on other board games! In an interesting twist, the games are not all published by Space Cowboys, so it's like Marvel crossed over with DC and Dark Horse. Here's the game-by-game rundown...

Ticket To Ride--players are in a story derived from the Ticket to Ride base game (set in the USA). Several family members (not the players but characters in the story) own various routes and are trying to combine to get a transcontinental railroad. Some mysterious shenanigans are going on, with sabotage and backroom dealings aplenty. Players are reporters from a New York newspaper trying to get the scoop on what the family is doing. The game includes elements from the Ticket to Ride game beyond the art. The interesting storyline leads to the ultimate solution that is satisfactory and not too hard to get to. 

I enjoyed this as an imaginative use of the franchise, especially the turn-of-twentieth-century railroad life setting. We did fairly well even with a few wrong guesses on combining cards.


Mysterium--Players are a group of psychic investigators who visit an early twentieth-century estate where a death has happened. The house is haunted by the ghost but luckily the players are just the sort to get information from the spirit to find out if the death was murder, how it was committed, and who was the culprit. So, yeah, it was a murder, no surprise there.

This game does a good job bringing in elements of the original game. The mystery is slowly solved using visions and some deduction to solve the riddles and get to the details of what happened. The flow is natural and uses the app in interesting ways. One puzzle didn't work for us even after getting the hint though the problem was a physical mechanical issue. We did take a couple of hints at points just to make sure we were on the right track. The ending is satisfying and made me nostalgic for the original game.



Pandemic--Like the board game, players are specialists hunting down cures for a variety of diseases that have broken out across the globe. Unlike, the board game, players are also hunting down "patient zero" who is the source of at least one of the diseases. It's a race both against the clock and all over the world. 

While using the basic scenario of Pandemic, the execution is terrible. A lot of the puzzles are inexplicably hard. We missed the very first thing we were supposed to do (an action that does not make sense in the Pandemic system), which threw off the puzzle we were working on. The slow start led off to a lot of other hard-to-guess puzzles. When we checked the walk-through provided with the game, we did not have the "ahh, that's what we were supposed to do" moments, we had the "did they really expect people to think that way?!?" moments. The experience was very frustrating and our nine-year old walked out halfway through. Mom and I muscled our way to the end just for the sense of completion. We did not get a sense of satisfaction. This is the worst Unlock game we have ever played! Even worse than that stupid island one.



Of the three games, Msyterium was our favorite. It had the spirit (!) of the original and great execution, blending the Unlock! system nicely with the Mysterium gameplay and narrative. Overall, we'd recommend this set, but have a lot of patience and willingness to get help with the Pandemic module.

Recommended.

Monday, February 26, 2024

Book Review: NHHT: Above the Trenches by Nathan Hale

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Above the Trenches by Nathan Hale

Returning to World War I, Nathan Hale (the American Revolutionary patriot) tells the tales of the flying aces. The time was the infancy of flight (the Wright Brothers had flown at Kittyhawk little more than ten years before), so the techniques and technology were developed during the war. The story starts with American pilots joining the French Foreign Legion so they could fight. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson was not interested in joining the war, so they had to go somewhere. Eventually, they convinced the French to switch them from the trenches to the newly-formed air units. Pilots' work initially was gathering intelligence or dropping hand-held bombs on the enemy. If planes shot at each other, the pilots used handguns. As the war dragged on, pilots and mechanics started mounting guns on the planes, eventually getting to front-mounted ones that would time their shots to go in between the propellers! The people and the technological developments are interesting and keep the story moving.

As in the previous World War I tale, Hale has the characters as anthropomorphic animals to keep the nationalities straight (Russians are bears, British are bulldogs, Germans are eagles, Americans are rabbits (since the Germans had eagles first), etc.). It works well and fits the comic-book style. As usual, the book ends with a bibliography and some other historic tidbits.

Recommended.

Friday, February 23, 2024

Movie Reviews: More Abbott and Costello Classics

Here's another set of Abbott and Costello classic comedies from the 1940s! See my other set of reviews here.

Little Giant (1946) directed by William Seiter

Lou is a small town guy just finishing a correspondence course in salesmanship. The course ends with a recommendation to move to the big city. The nearest one is Los Angeles, so Lou goes to try his hand at selling vacuum cleaners at the company where his uncle works. He wants to make enough money so his mom doesn't have to work. The company's manager is a tyrant (Bud Abbott) who treats everyone badly except for his assistant (Jacqueline DeWitt), who he has secretly married. Lou has a hard time in actual sales, leading on a voyage of comedy and pathos.

The movie is a departure for the duo, with the main emphasis on Lou and almost no routines (they do reprise the "7 times 13 is 28" routine from Buck Privates). The resulting movie has a lot more plot and dramatic moments which I found a little off-putting for an Abbott and Costello film. I still laughed plenty but there are tear-jerking moments too.

Mildly recommended.

The Time of Their Lives (1946) directed by Charles Barton

Lou is Horatio Prim, a tinker in American Revolutionary times. He's in love with a girl at the Danbury Estate and wants to run away with her and get married. Prim even has a letter of recommendation from General George Washington. Unfortunately Danbury is a royalist plotting with Benedict Arnold to get West Point. Through a series of misadventures, Horatio and Danbury's finance Melody (Marjorie Reynolds) are killed as they flee to warn the patriots about the Arnold plot (in an interesting twist, they are killed by the patriots). They are thrown in a well and cursed as traitors unless some evidence can be found to exonerate them. Locals come to the estate, steal all the furniture, and burn down the house. Horatio and Melody think the letter was hidden in the house and despair of finding letter which was taken by Danbury. 165 years later, the house is rebuilt by a historian with the original furniture, one of which has the letter hidden in a secret drawer. The ghosts of Horatio and Melody haunt the house and work with the people to solve their problem.

Bud has a duel role. First he plays a butler at the Danbury Estate who has it in for Horatio, causing a lot of comedic conflict. Second, he plays a modern-day psychologist who first scoffs at the ghost stories but comes to believe as Horatio persecutes the man who looks just like the butler.

The plot is very well written and moves at a good pace. The comedy is naturally blended in and works well. A lot of special effects (mostly ghost gags) give a good variety to the jokes. The duo does a great job and the rest of the cast ably supports them. This is top-tier Abbott and Costello filmmaking.

Highly recommended--this, along with Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, are my favorites from the duo.

Buck Privates Come Home (1947) directed by Charles Barton

In this only sequel by the duo, Bud and Lou are soldiers returning from World War II. Lou has an orphaned French girl stowed in his pack, creating the main plotline for the movie. The Army wants to send her back to France while the boys want to adopt her. Consulting the French Embassy, they find out they need a steady income and to be married in order to keep the child. One of their war friends has a midget race car that he thinks can win big if he can just get it out of hock. Bud and Lou go for GI loans to become partners with him while they try to keep the child out of sight, especially from their ex-sergeant who has gone back to his pre-war job--a beat cop.

They boys revert to their usual shtick--comedy routines more or less shoehorned in to the main plot. There's one song at the beginning but no musical guests or numbers. The movie ends with their typical chase scene, this time with Lou driving the midget car through all sorts of improbable situations.

This is an entertaining return to their formula with plenty of laughs and almost no melodrama like in the previous two films.

Recommended.

The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap (1947) directed by Charles Barton


Bud and Lou are late-1800s traveling salesmen on the way to California. They stop over in Wagon Gap, Montana. The town is as Wild West as it gets. Lou accidentally kills a man and the local vigilantes plan to string him up. But there is a Montana law that anyone who kills or maims a man must take care of the victim's widow and children. The dead man's widow is Widow Hawkins (Marjorie Main), a shrewish woman who puts fear into everyone. Bud certainly is cowed by her demeanor. He has to do a lot of chores on the Hawkins farm and pay off the dead man's debts. One debtor forces him to work nights in a saloon which just about wipes Lou out. When a local threatens to kill him, Bud insists that he shoots so the other guyy can take on the Widow's chores. The guy backs off immediately and Bud becomes the unassailable hero of Wagon Gap! No one wants to deal with the Widow Hawkins.

The movie is a fun send-up of Westerns with a good mix of routines by Bud and Lou. The comedy works well and fits the plot. I laughed a lot.

Recommended.


Thursday, February 22, 2024

TV Review: Echo Season 1 (2024)

Echo Season 1 (2024) created by Marion Dayre and Amy Rardin based on the Marvel Comics character

Maya Lopez (Alaqua Cox) has gone back home after shooting Kingpin (Vincent D'Onofrio) in the head. Home is Tamaha, Oklahoma, a small town mostly populated by the Choctaw. They have ancestral culture but also a lot of the typical American small town culture, like the roller rink and a crusty old pawn shop owner (Graham Greene) who can fix things. Maya hasn't come back to settle down, she's still settling scores with Kingpin's empire. The town as a Fisk company that employs a lot of people and sends weapons to New York City. She sabotages a shipment, bringing some Big Apple wrath down on Tamaha. She's also having some weird flashbacks or dreams of previous Choctaw women which she does not understand. She could ask her grandmother about it but Maya still holds a grudge for grandma abandoning her when Maya's mom died. A lot of drama and action ensue.

Maya is an interesting character. Her mom died in a car accident with Maya in the car. Maya, already deaf, lost half a leg in the accident. When her father took her to New York City, she came under the influence of Kingpin, eventually becoming one of his thugs. Kingpin had her dad killed, naturally turning Maya against him. She's still angry and withdrawn at the beginning of this series. Reconnecting to her family helps her greatly, even though she resists. Her family is much bigger than the living relatives--dreams of her ancestors provide inspiration to change for the better. She gets to a better place almost kicking and screaming, figuratively and literally.

The show's ending relies a little to much on deus ex machina to resolve her final confrontation. The action in previous episodes was better because it was grittier and more realistic, not relying on magical powers to save the day. It also brought in a little bit of dodgy special effects. Cox gives a good performance though D'Onofrio still steals the show with his performance as Kingpin. The rest of the cast is good and the setting is a fresh change from the usual urban Marvel mayhem.

Mildly recommended.

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Book Review: The Hedge Knight by George R. R. Martin

The Hedge Knight by George R. R. Martin

Dunk is squire to a hedge knight living in Martin's World of Ice and Fire almost a hundred years before the days of A Game of Thrones. Hedge knights are the bottom of the knightly ladder, not being noblemen or landed men. They work for hire much like ronin in medieval Japan, so they could just as easily be villains as heroes. Dunk's master is a good man and a good knight but he's dead at the beginning of the story. So Dunk inherits the armor and horses, making him a potential hedge knight. He goes to a tournament to try his skill and become the knight he wants to be. Circumstances and his desire to do the right thing cause complications.

The story is very interesting and has a lot more heart than I suspected, given its association with the HBO series that I haven't watched. Dunk often cites the opinions of others that he is not very intelligent. But he has a good heart and does do the right thing, which gets him into some big problems. Luckily, the GoT world is not so corrupt yet that he can't find friends and supporters who help him through the difficulties. The ending almost had me in tears, I was so happy with it. The writing is just great.

Recommended--unfortunately, I think this is an outlier in the GoT universe and doesn't represent the mainline storytelling, so I am not interested in jumping in to the rest of the novels or the TV show.

This story is discussed on A Good Story is Hard to Find Podcast #326.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Climb Zone 2024

After a long hiatus (our last visit was 2020), we went back to ClimbZone, a wall climbing adventure for kids located in Laurel, Maryland. I suppose adults could climb too, though we parents did not. The walls have a lot of imagination and variety, making a fun time for our three children. Some made more sense than others.

A climbable keyboard?

And you thought it was tough going up the stairs inside a lighthouse!

The Mount Rushmore wall is a fun ascent.

My daughter goes to the top!

On Lincoln's face

Egyptian theme

My wife loves baths so she was happy to see one of our kids getting into the biggest bathtub ever.

Climbing in, the water is great

At the top of the tub

An Aztec-themed wall is reminiscent of the Mount Rushmore and the Egyptian walls.

At the bridge

By the bird

On rare occasions, two children climbed neighboring walls.

Two-for-one special!

At the top of the cowboy wall

Another two-for-one

My youngest liked climbing a burning building. What was he thinking?

At least use the ladder!

One wall had a "warped wall" like in the Ninja Warrior challenges. It is definitely tougher than it looks.

The short wall was the way to go

The agony of defeat

The kids had a lot of fun. Hopefully it won't be four years before we go again!

Monday, February 19, 2024

Book Review: Spy x Family Vol. 10 by Tatsuya Endo

Spy x Family Volume 10 by Tatsuya Endo

The series continues with some random yet related stories. The first tale gives some background on Loid, the "father" of the Forger family and the spy for his country. His life as a child reveals that he had some simplistic and unrealistic ideas. He plays "war" with his friends with the sides being Westalis and Ostalis. He learned more about the complicated nature of war as a real war breaks out. The story comes back to the present with a tale about an Ostalis opera star who wants to visit Westalis on a good-will tour. A lot of controversy springs up about him in his home country, or is that just the warmongers trying to scuttle any detente? Oddly, none of the Forgers are in this story. Loid's handler is the main character. In the final tale, Yor has a run-in with a woman at a department store. The woman invites Yor to join her wives' club that plays volleyball and hangs out. Yor's athletic abilities are so combat related that she isn't that good at volleyball but they have a fun time anyway. Yor finds out that the woman is Melinda Desmond, wife of the man that Loid has been trying to get close to. Loid wonders if the situation is some sort of trap but decides to let things play out as a backup to original plan. Their "daughter" Anya is trying to befriend the Desmond's son at an elite school. Anya is making slow progress on that front, though she has a short comedic time with the school's headmaster.

This volume is a bit more serious than the previous ones, especially the first two stories. The tone shifts back to the comic spy tale by the end, which seems like it will stay that way. I don't mind a little seriousness, but the change was very noticeable and far outside the typically whimsical nature of the series. 

Recommended.

Friday, February 16, 2024

Movie Review: Oppenheimer (2023)

Oppenheimer (2023) co-written and directed by Christopher Nolan

J. Robert Oppenheimer is famous for leading the Manhattan Project, the American World War II effort to build an atomic bomb before the Nazis. This biography stars Cillian Murphy as Oppenheimer, who goes through a lot personally as he is drawn into the scientific community on the cutting edge of physics in the early 1900s. He met a great many famous physicists in his academic life and wound up at Berkeley. He also had some interest in unionizing teachers and scientists and in supporting communism, though he was more like a fellow traveler than a flag-waving leader. One day military officer Leslie Groves (Matt Damon) shows up at Berkeley and offers Oppenheimer the job of building the bomb. Groves is not fully committed to Oppenheimer but is impressed with his forthrightness and his connections. Oppenheimer accepts the job even though he has misgivings about compartmentalizing the project. He recognizes the value of keeping information secure. However, the need for collaboration between the scientists is more important to him than keeping key information separate. He has a hard time managing the expectations of the government, his fellow scientists (many of whom were sympathetic if not full supporters of communism), and the project. 

The main, practical part of the project is headquartered in Los Alamos, New Mexico. Oppenheimer chose it for its remoteness and for his fond childhood memories of the area. A whole town is built for the scientists and their families, making a tight social community focused on developing and testing an atomic bomb. There's some debate about sharing information with the Soviets among the scientists. They are also concerned with the impact the bomb would have though Oppenheimer has more of a "we produce and the government decides what to do with it" mindset. After the war, Oppenheimer becomes doubtful about the morality of using the bomb (and developing new, more powerful weapons) and expresses his doubts on the Atomic Energy Commission, making him less popular with politicians, especially Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey, Jr.) who was an advocate for Oppenheimer's involvement in developing the bomb.

The movie tells the story of Oppenheimer through flashbacks as he goes through a grueling review of his security clearance to remain on the Atomic Energy Commission. The review is more of a kangaroo court set up to remove him from the Commission. That framing device is paralleled with Strauss's congressional hearings to be approved as a cabinet secretary. Some senators are dubious about Strauss's judgment, especially his involvement with Oppenheimer. The structure creates the typical mixed-up time narrative of Nolan's films (except for his Batman trilogy) with information provided not in chronological order but in a way to make a dramatic crescendo by the film's end. This style works well here since the movie focuses more on the human relationships and Oppenheimer's enigmatic character than the atomic secrets and discovery. The narrative is well-structured and interesting.

Murphy delivers a great performance capturing the detachment and intelligence of Oppenheimer, making him a bit of a cipher to others, especially the women in his life. Downey also gives a great performance. Both characters are manipulative in their dealing with others though Oppenheimer has more sincerity and naivety, which causes him problems with other scientists, the government, and the few women in his life. His struggles with morality create a lot of drama and some ambiguity, another feature common in Nolan's films (especially his Batman trilogy). The rest of the cast give very good performances too.

The only drawbacks in the film for me were two. First, it feels longer than it needs to be though I am not sure how to tighten it up. Second, the sound design is too heavy-handed with a lot of deep basses and overly repeated motifs. I understand the narrative purpose but would have liked a more subtle touch. These are relatively minor quibbles, the movie is well worth watching.

Recommended.

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Book Review: Socrates' Children Vol. III by Peter Kreeft

Socrates' Children Volume III Modern Philosophers by Peter Kreeft

See my review of volume I here and volume II here.

Kreeft continues his survey of the 100 most important philosophers, ranging in this volume from Rene Descartes (1596-1650) to Karl Marx (1818-1883). He mostly follows his previous format of giving some biographical information and context for the thinker and then a summary of their thought. Many of the philosophers are also subject to various critiques, some from subsequent philosophers and some from Kreeft himself. While the summaries reference key texts by these philosophers, no bibliographies are added at the end of each as in previous volumes.

The text, as before, is very readable and entertaining. While Kreeft delves into the ideas of these thinkers, he doesn't get lost or lose the reader by moving too quickly. He has some comic asides and is generally pleasant to read.

The big challenge in this volume is some of the summaries (especially Rousseau and Marx) have a lot commentary about their lives and how they do not at all match up to the philosophies they espouse. While the contrast is important to point out, Kreeft becomes very heavy-handed and judgmental at times. I am sympathetic with his disdain but I wish he were more scholarly and less vindictive.

I am still enjoying this series and will continue on to the Contemporary Philosophers.

Recommended.

Sample quote, on Kant's idea of the highest good being pleasure:
Contrast what premodern philosophers like Aristotle meant by "happiness": not mere subjective contentment but objective perfection or completeness. The test that distinguishes the two is suffering: happiness in the sense of contentment excludes suffering, but happiness in the sense of perfection or completeness includes and even requires suffering. (As Rabbi Heschel said, "The man who has not suffered--what could he possibly know, anyway?") The ancients typically identified happiness (in this rich, deep, moral sense) as the greatest good, the summum bonum, and the greatest question in their ethics was what it consisted of and how to attain it. [p. 136]

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Plans for Lent 2024

It's Ash Wednesday again, a day "of fasting and abstinence," as described in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 2043Fasting is eating much less food than you normally would; abstinence in this context is not eating meat. The point of this penance is not to punish yourself. It's to "acquire mastery over our instincts and freedom of heart." Rather than being led around by our appetites, we practice saying "no" to them so that we are free to focus on other, more important things. Eating food is important but not the most important thing in our lives. Ash Wednesday and Good Friday are the two prescribed days for fast and abstinence in America, with the Fridays in Lent only requiring abstinence from meat. So the obligation is not so great. Often, people add other days for themselves or make other sacrifices, the classical "giving up something for Lent." My plan for this year is my tradition giving up of graphic novel reading, though I do have quite a backlog so it probably won't be obvious to blog readers. It occurred to me to give up beer for Lent, which is an uncomfortable idea, so I am doing it. I will still have a glass of wine with dinner but no alcohol afterwards.

The other traditional practices in Lent (in addition to fasting) are prayer and almsgiving. For prayer, I am going back to the rosary. I am in a men's group at my parish. The deacon challenged us to say the rosary for a month to discern whether we should apply to be deacons, not whether we should be deacons. That was back in the summer. I did one week of praying before we went on our Europe vacation, which tanked the effort. I feel called to renew that project this Lent, which is a bit scary, and not just for me.

For almsgiving, we will continue to buy something extra for the local food pantry when we shop for groceries. That's become such a regular habit now, I should probably take it off the list of things for Lent, since it's become a thing for all year. I will give the beer money to a good cause.

For spiritual reading, I will read again The Power of the Cross, a series of sermons by Cardinal Cantalamessa given on Good Fridays to the Pope. I read it last Lent and was so impressed, I want to re-experience it. It provides enough sermons (he started them in the 1980s) to cover the whole season. I also want to re-read Benedict XVI's Jesus of Nazareth: Holy Week. I teach religious education at our parish and I just covered Lectio Divina, a style of prayer that includes reading and reflection. I want to try it out. The sermons might be too long for that, I may start with the Psalms, which I am studying anyway because our pastor has an on-going YouTube series going through the Psalms one at a time.

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Geocaching January 2024

The geocaching year started for me on January 3 when I found Dad Jokes while running an errand. Click through the link to see what people posted as Dad Jokes!

A typical hiding area

During another errand I found Scouts Honor, which had to be the most blatantly out-in-the-open cache I have ever found. And yet, it is well camouflaged. It is in the picture below but you probably can't spot it unless you have already found it.

Somewhere in there

I attended a different Monday morning meet up on MLK Day (since the usual coffee club doesn't meet on Federal holidays). Afterward, I walked over to Paul's Scrap Parts #1, which was in the same shopping plaza as the meet up. I made the find fairly quickly, getting the log out of one small container that was in a larger container. After I signed the tiny log, I dropped the lid for the small container in the snow. Reaching around, I found a solid round object that I thought was the lid but was really an acorn in the grass under the snow. After more feeling around, I found a lot more acorns. Eventually, the lid was discovered and I was able to put the cache back together and into its place. Yikes!

A troublesome lamp post cache

The next week, I found End of the Sidewalk 2... after we had another snowfall. The sidewalk was mostly shoveled so the find was easy.

Huh, the road ends too!

While running errands, I found Why Emcee A cache? that was near a Baltimore Ravens rally.

Ravens Rally

Geo-view

I found an Unknown Cache (which involved solving a puzzle) called Pedal Puzzler near Lake Elkhorn, though not near enough to get a good picture.

No, that's not the lake

I found my first cache on the Odenton Cache Challenge Trail--#2: 100 Attributes Challenge. The trail is a set of challenge caches, each one requiring the completion of a different challenge. This particular cache wants the finder to have found caches with 100 different attributes, which I had achieved just through regular caching. I have qualified for about ten of the trails thirty or so caches, so I will be back!

Another typical spot


Monday, February 12, 2024

Book Review: Dark Horse Edgar Allan Poe Stories by Richard Corben

Dark Horse Edgar Allan Poe Sampler by Richard Corben

Dark Horse Comics has a long tradition of publishing horror comics. They have a series of Edgar Allan Poe stories adapted and illustrated by Richard Corben. Corben's work is a lot rougher and less beautiful than many other illustrators. His visuals have a bit of exploitation to them, especially depicting females with overdone curves and underdressed. He works in the horror genre, so the style is typical. He has done some stories in Hellboy that I liked though I find his art a bit off-putting. His style is evocative but unappealing. Here's a rundown of the various stories available: 

Conqueror Worm--Poe's poem is rather brief and abstract, so Corben crafts a narrative inspired by bits of the poem. A group of well-to-do people are invited to a puppet show that reenacts a travesty that happens at the beginning of the story. The tale is very grim and ugly, ending with grave worms killing everyone. I didn't think Corben's story was good on its own, even with its roots in the poem.

The Raven--A man is tormented one night over the loss of his beloved Lenore, though is he tormenting himself or is the raven that has gotten into the house driving him crazy? Corben gives a little more about Lenore than is in the poem and leans toward the self-tormenting interpretation. The art is less tawdry than in other Corben stories and he does a great job adapting the famous poem to a comic-book format.

The Red Death--King Prospero's kingdom is falling to a plague. Rather than provide humanitarian assistance to the people, he throws an extravagant and decadent party in his castle which has been quarantined. Guests can wear any color but red and can indulge in any activity in a variety of color-themed rooms. At midnight, he discovers a guest dressed in red which makes him angry. Fear streaks through the guests as the red-dressed guest is unkillable. He is the Red Death, spreading the plague over the partygoers. Corben does a good job contrasting the decadence of the elite and the plight of the poor at the beginning, making the ending more like just desserts than tragic loss. He is surprisingly restrained in depicting the debauchery, I was expecting a much more R-rated experience.

The Premature Burial--An engaged couple is bickering in a graveyard. He wants a taste of the marriage bed before they are lawfully wed. She refuses. He gives her some drugged wine. Since it's 1840 or so, the doctors assume she is dead and don't embalm her before a rushed burial. The guy comes to the graveyard to dig her up and have his way with her. She comes to just as he is about to assault her. She beats him off and flees, not realizing she hit him hard enough to knock him out. Well, he's mistaken for dead and buried in the same spot. More complications follow, if you can believe it.

Corben's plotting is salacious but also intriguing. The motivations are a bit mixed but the ending hits the mark. The original story is completely different, with a disturbed person writing about the horrors of being buried alive and his obsession with it which almost destroys his life. Again, there's very little connection with Poe.

The Cask of Amontillado--An old man named Montressor brings a widow into his wine cellar. He regales her of the tale of what happened to her husband, Fortunato. During a carnival many years ago, Montressor bought a cask of Amontillado wine and wanted a friend to confirm it as the real thing. He wandered through the evening street festival and he ran into Fortunato, who insisted on trying the wine even though he was not the friend with refined tastes. Montressor took him to the cellar where he walled him up. Old man Montressor claims there was some insult or some other thing that justified the deed but the widow flees for the police. Montressor has already decided to drug himself to death, so he is not worried as he has a last drink by Fortunato's wall.

Corben's art fits well with the grimness of the story and captures the awfulness of the situation. The original Poe story is more straightforward with clear knowledge of the insult and clear embracing of the evil of his act.

The Fall of the House of Usher--Allan rides through a creepy forest. It's so creepy that his horse flees before they arrive at the House of Usher. Allan has been summoned by his friend Roderick Usher. Roderick lives with his sister Madeline alone in the house (except for one butler). The recent flooding has forced them to move the coffins and corpses of the Ushers into the foyer, not the most pleasant introduction to the house. Roderick is extremely odd, using his sister as a nude model being the least odd of his habits. She comes to Allan and begs to be taken away for she fears her brother. The plea turns out to be too late as she dies after Roderick finishes an amazing likeness of her in paint. They lay her to rest in the basement. Allan discover more unhappy secrets as things come crashing down figuratively and literally.

Corben combines the Usher story with Poe's The Oval Portrait, raising the creepiness level. Roderick is a very disturbing character and nearly completely unsympathetic. This telling feels more like it is wallowing in misery rather than tragedy. Again, his art is borderline sexist in the ridiculously voluptuous female characters.

Morella--Myron is sick of his wife, Morella, who dabbles in the occult. She unexpectedly dies but tells him on her deathbed that her daughter Orella will come and take care of him. Orella is a step-daughter who is the spitting image of her mom, which turns into trouble for all concerned.

The tale is quite salacious, especially with the underdressed Morella trying to manipulate the situation. The Poe story has the wife as educated in the arcane but not necessarily occult. She gives birth to a child as she dies and the little girl grows up to be too much like her mother. So Corben takes liberties to condense the tale, though I find his version much less satisfying than Poe's.

Murders in the Rue Morgue--This classic tale follows Dupin, a Parisian gentleman who is fascinated by a newspaper report of two deaths by violence that seem inexplicable. He investigates with cool logic and thoroughness, solving the mystery. The ending is very bloody (it is a Corben adaptation, after all) but follows the original quite well.

The visual storytelling is a bit more interesting in this tale and fits better than others. The odd-looking people match the odd atmosphere and strange resolution of the mystery.

Overall, I still find Corben's style unlikeable even though I appreciate it. He has a running character called Mag the Hag who provides some commentary and the occasional joke, much like the Crypt Keeper in Tales from the Crypt. She's a bit vulgar, with oversized breasts and a bit of a leer. Again, she fits Corben's typical style which I just find unedifying. It's better to read Poe's stories than to read these comics.

Not recommended unless you are into Corben's art.

Friday, February 9, 2024

Movie Review: Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023)

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023) directed by Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, and Justin K. Thompson

The Spider-Gwen Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld) is having a hard time fitting in. She loves to drum but the band she's in doesn't appreciate her, especially when she loses track of the song and plays too long. She is still obsessed with Miles Morales, the Spider-Man of another universe that she spent so much time with in the previous movie. Miles is having a hard time himself--his parents are pushing him ahead into college even though he's a sophomore. He still has a crush on Gwen but she is literally in another universe. He fights a new villain of the week, the Spot. The Spot is a guy who can project holes on things. He hasn't perfected his abilities yet...not even close. He can't rob a convenience store ATM no matter how hard he tries. He and Miles fight it out while Miles' parents visit with the school counselor about college applications (a meeting Miles is supposed to be at--the typical Spider-Man problem of needing to be in two places at once). 

Gwen does come to Miles's universe and visits her guy while she tries to track the Spot's activities. Spot is trying to improve his abilities and work out his frustrations with no longer having a regular life. He blames Spider-Man and wants revenge. He also discovers a way to slip between universes using his holes, offering him an opportunity to increase his powers and his skills. Gwen is secretly part of a Spider-cabal of various Spider-people from various universes. They've been working to keep the different universes separate, so Spot's crossing over is a big problem. Miles wants to go with Gwen when she leaves to deal with Spot. She says no. Miles slips through the portal she generates anyway, leading to a lot more plot complications and developments.

The movie is another creative triumph, both visually and in storytelling. Many different Spider-Men, -Women, -Animals, and -Others populate the film, far too many to even identify in one viewing, let alone one review. They are all twists on the Peter Parker original, with similar origin stories and life experiences. And yet they are all their own people, not repeating Peter's personality over and over. The variety leads to conflict and to interesting situations, causing the story to grow in fascinating ways. It turns out Spot isn't the only antagonist in the film.

The plot covers familiar ground and new ground. Miles has to deal with the stress of his secret identity, fighting crime while also being a student with his academic obligations and a son with his family obligations. He still mourns the loss of his uncle while having difficulty dealing with his dad, a cop who is after Spider-Man. When Miles jumps into the worlds and lives of other Spider-people, he has to deal with how a lot of bad things happen to them, some seemingly fated to happen to every Spider-individual. The Spider-cabal, in addition to stopping random cross-contaminations, ensure that each Spider-variant goes through the same story beats. Miles chafes at this, especially when he realizes that he has not gone through some of the story beats his other versions have gone through that involve death. And he doesn't want to. And he doesn't understand why the rest of them just accept it. The situation creates interesting tensions that are surprisingly compelling. The drama caused by alternate realities works because the characters are well-written and well-performed, it is not just a hodge-podge of ideas. The familiar ground is good and the new ground is also good.

Recommended--this is a fine sequel to a fine original.
  

Thursday, February 8, 2024

Game Review: Exit: The Game: The Professor's Last Riddle by Kosmos

Exit: The Game: The Professor's Last Riddle designed by Inka and Marcus Brand and published by Kosmos

Your favorite professor, an archeologist, is dead. He has left a mysterious envelope filled with post cards instead of a will. The cards have some clues that lead on a world-spanning treasure hunt to discover the professor's greatest legacy. The storyline is rather minimal but the game play uses all sorts of maps and tricks to keep players on their toes as they follow the clues. 

Like most Exit games, this one uses just about every component and part of the box in the puzzles. The decoder ring has numbers with colors and it seemed like a high portion of the solutions used the colors instead of the numbers. Not the majority, but a good amount. Some of the discoveries were enjoyable, clever moments, especially the subway solution and the crossword problem toward the end of the game. Occasional symbol-matching was a bit of a stretch--we used hints once or twice. We liked this set a lot and had a fun time solving the riddles and getting to the finale of the story which had more emotional resonance than we were expecting.

Recommended, highly for escape room fans.

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

Book Review: The Strain By Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan

The Strain (The Strain Trilogy #1) by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan

An international flight lands at JFK and then goes completely dark on the runway. All the electricity is out; the cockpit is unreachable on radio; all the shades are drawn; no passenger is answering cell phone calls. The transportation authority is called out along with local CDC representative Eph Goodweather. He's currently mired in a custody battle with his ex over their son Max and doesn't need the extra overtime. This is his weekend to impress Max with fun activities. When they finally breach the plane, all on board are dead except for four seemingly random people who are comatose. Everyone else is peacefully dead, like they all died at the same instant and without being aware that they were dying. The survivors are carted off to hospital isolation ward while a hangar is converted into a make-shift morgue for the other bodies. The investigators discover some strange thing, like a large, ornately-carved coffin-shaped box that is full of dirt in the cargo hold that is not listed as part of the cargo. As Eph and his team investigates, they come across Setrakian, an old-pawn shop owner who survived the Holocaust partly because he discovered a vampire preying at the concentration camp. He has spent his life studying vampire lore and pursuing that one vampire, who he thinks rode over on the plane for some nefarious plan. Of course, the vampire couldn't do it alone. Readers know that an aging, sickly investor has worked with the vampire. The slow acceptance of vampirism by the authorities (impeded the influence of the rich mogul) lets the situation get out of hand, with a plague threatening all of New York City that could spread to the rest of the country and the rest of the world.

The book has a lot of characters in different parts of life, a bit like Stephen King's The Stand or Max Brooks' World War Z. Their stories fit more or less together in the narrative, creating scenes of horror and forward plot movement. While Eph is certainly sympathetic, he comes off a little generic, as does the crusty old European who knows how to fight the vampires and has a stockpile of weapons in the basement of his pawn shop. A goth rock star is one of the few survivors from the plane though he turns pretty quickly into a vampire, naturally being shocked when taking his make-up off and he's still pale. A New York City exterminator is another minor character who fulfills the cliche of his profession--overweight and tough with a lot of experience fighting vermin which comes in handy when supernatural vermin show up. The characters don't feel original and move through some standard plot beats.

The vampire mythology is a blend of forensic details and mythological powers needed to advance the story. Their biology is explained in a lot of detail but they also have supernatural powers like communicating telepathically, moving at superhuman speed, and having superhuman strength. The blend is not quite convincing, like the novel can't decide if it wants to be a medically-accurate thriller or an urban fantasy apocalypse. The set-up with the plane is great but the payout is not strong enough.

Not recommended, though I am going to give the next volume a chance to see if the story picks up--some new characters are suggested at the end that might make things more interesting (and drive the story more into urban apocalyptic fantasy).

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Cute Kid Pix January 2024

More photos that did not make their own blog post...

While my son was having his scoutmaster meeting for his Eagle Project, I had to hang out at the restaurant (The Corner Stable). I ordered the shrimp special and a pumpkin ale aged in bourbon barrels. Both were delicious. The meeting went well too.

Not a cute kid pic, sorry!

My younger son started working on his pinewood derby car for Scouts. Here he is smoothing down the axles.

Finally using power tools!?!

We went to the roller rink for the first time in a long time. Our youngest still isn't sure on his feet but he is working on it.

Rare (and lucky) shot of all three children

Getting help from mom

While geocaching, I ran across a random statue that seemed really random--like a random face and number of feet, random materials, random proportions, etc. How many people want their arms attached to their knees?

Unnamed work in Columbia, MD

We had a substantial snow day, leading to lots of sledding but only one picture.

Using the neighbor's hill

During one of the snow days, we went mini-golfing, indoors of course!

Putting into the corner hole

A bunch of posers

The final hole!

Before the AFC Championship, I went to a Baltimore Ravens rally at a local shopping center. The marching band and some of the cheerleaders were there, along with some uber-fans.

Side view of the band

Front view from back of the crowd

What a car!

I saw a hawk sitting on our backyard fence. I got a picture through the kitchen window. I tried to open the sliding door to the back but it flew away.

Usually squirrels are in that spot

My eldest participated in one of his fellow Scout's Eagle Court of Honor and did a great job. It will be his turn soon!

The Trail to Eagle part of the ceremony