Monday, March 9, 2026

The Last Day of H.P. Lovecraft by Romuald Giulivo

 The Last Day of H.P. Lovecraft by Romuald Giulivo; illustrated by Jakub Rebelka

Author Romauld Giulivo
Artist Jakub Rebelka


Many thanks to BOOM! Studios and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of the beguiling story of The Last Day of H.P. Lovecraft by Romuald Giulivo with artwork by Jakub Rebelka. As a huge fan of Lovecraft’s stories who has struggled with his disgusting and racist beliefs, I was interested in this story from just the title alone. The imagery and artwork throughout the book is haunting and bleak with some incredibly blood-soaked red pages, while others are a kind of washed out brown, creating a morose and sullen tone similar to Lovecraft’s work and general outlook on humanity. While the story is rooted in Lovecraft’s own life, it also functions as almost like a Christmas Carol story where Lovecraft is visited by ghosts of the past, present, and future on the final day of his life, as he lays dying of cancer in a hospital.  It was fascinating to see aspects of Lovecraft’s life in this story as he is visited by his wife, Houdini (who he served as a ghost-writer), and Randolph Carter, the character who was like Lovecraft’s alter ego in his stories. Lovecraft is confronted with some of his egregious behavior and an opportunity to recant and reject his racism and abject views of humanity, yet he remains stubborn in his ways. We as readers are reminded of the horrible views and ideas that Lovecraft held and left to question his place in horror and literature in general. Was he really a misunderstood genius whose inventive tales and horrible worlds were precursors of the moderns horrors we face, or was he really just an awful and awkward person whose limitations and oddities were representative of his racism and white supremacy? Giulivo’s writing and Rebelka’s art make the case that Lovecraft was a horrible person who happened to create horrible and frightening worlds and characters. At one point in his near-death hallucinations, Lovecraft encounters a subway full of ghouls who have tagged the car with graffiti that says “Cthulhu for President”, more indication about the kinds of views that Lovecraft’s writing might represent. Lovecraft seems unmoved and unconcerned about how his future influence will be viewed. Immediately after this encounter, Lovecraft visits a future where he encounters Stephen King, Alan Moore, and Neil Gaiman as a triumvirate of future writers who promise to help revise his reputation. This part was a little unclear to me, and I wasn’t exactly sure if Giulivo was suggesting that these writers covered up Lovecraft’s horribleness and championed him despite his racism or what. However, they advocate for Lovecraft to write his final life story, maybe offering him another opportunity to change his ways before death.

I really enjoyed this comic, even though it is bleak and tells the story of a horrible person, whose racism and hatred is often overlooked. If anything, I think Giulivo’s research and writing into Lovecraft’s life presents him in a harsher light, often focusing more on his shortcomings and failings over his accomplishments. We also see how he died alone and rather unknown, and it wasn’t until much later that Lovecraft’s reputation as an inventive horror writer was known. The Last Day of H.P. Lovecraft uses a classic trope to challenge our views of a horror writer who was also a horrible person. It not only uses the facts of Lovecraft’s life to challenge our thinking about his work, but it also uses stark, terrifying and cosmic imagery to dampen the mood and create a tale of terror and dread, fitting into a Lovecraftian genre. Highly recommended! 














Religious Horror That Fights Back with Marian Heretic Volume One

 Marian Heretic Volume One by Tini Howard; illustrated by Joe Jaro

Author Tini Howard
Artist Jose "Joe" Jaro


Many thanks to BOOM! Studios and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of Marian Heretic Volume One by Tini Howard with illustrations by Joe Jaro. I was intrigued by the combination of religious horror and rebellion, and the front cover, which features an image of the main character, Sister Marian with her magical monstrance, in action was also very appealing. The story follows Sister Marian, a mother superior of a group of other novitiates who are all witch hunters and work for the patriarchal Holy Father Church. As Sister Marion continues to do the work of these male leaders of the church that often involves hunting and executing women they find threatening, she begins to question her role in the violence against women, especially those with unique powers from the Goddess like her own. The Goddess is a figure that the Church doesn’t acknowledge and actually feels is a threat to their control of the women in their congregation. Beyond the cool battles Sister Marian has with the various witches who possess different powers, she experiences this inner turmoil where she wants to honor the Goddess who bestowed her own powers and avoid the threats of violence from the Holy Father Church. It’s a cool story that’s rooted in much of the patriarchy and discrimination against women that has long been a part of the Catholic Church for many years; however, Howard’s story and Jaro’s kinetic illustrations create a kind of timeless narrative that could be taking place in the past but also has a somewhat futuristic feel to it. I really liked the imagery and artwork, that features both some classic Catholic iconography and some action-oriented and horror-themed imagery of witches and witch-hunters inflicting damage.

The story is religious-horror themed, but it also features a lot of action, and in the later section, we learn more about how Sister Marion realized her powers and eventually came to work for the Holy Father Church. We also see her reaching out to some of the witches to learn more about their powers and their covens, and how they create a community of women who continue to honor the Goddess and reflect the power of women. There are a few elements of the story that I would have liked to see in this volume. For one, it was a little unclear about how the Holy Father Church came to power and why exactly they wanted to suppress the Goddess. I can understand the patriarchal element of it, but it seemed both a little too much like the Catholic Church and a little unlike it. It was the similarities that made the disparities somewhat confusing. I wish there was more of a storyline about how this church became so powerful or why they sought out to suppress witches. Furthermore, towards the end, we see Sister Marion with her Convent, a group of other women who while serving the Holy Father Church. They are equally devoted to Sister Marion and have some cool powers. I really wish we got to learn more about this group of women as they seemed like an interesting group. The coven of witches also had some really cool individuals within it, and I also wished that the volume was able to spend more time with these characters. They would have added more to the supernatural and horror elements of the story. Nevertheless, it’s rare to find a compelling religious horror story in comics. I hope that BOOM! Studios will produce more tales of Sister Marion Heretic, so we can continue to learn about how she fights the power and patriarchy.








 






Saturday, March 7, 2026

Mazzy Star's So Tonight That I Might See 33 1/3 by Anthony Gomez III

 33 1/3 Mazzy Star's So Tonight That I Might See by Anthony Gomez III


Author and Professor Anthony Gomez III

Big thanks to Bloomsbury Academic and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of the Anthony Gomez III’s thoughtful and reflective entry into the 33 1/3 series: Mazzy Star’s So Tonight That I Might See, an analytic look into an overlooked 90s classic. I was very excited to find this title in the series since So Tonight That I Might See is one of those formative albums that traveled with me through high school, college and beyond. I relistened to the album and the other Mazzy Star albums while reading this, and just hearing those chords strummed with a tambourine backing and Hope Sandoval’s reverb twinged voice languidly singing these lyrics of love and loss ushered in a rush of emotions. I didn’t learn about Mazzy Star until “Fade Into You” became a big hit. This was before the internet was readily available, and I was reliant on radio and friends with older siblings to learn about music. Furthermore, I mostly listened to hip-hop and metal, but by the time this song hit the airwaves, my tastes were changing. As Gomez III explains in the book, Mazzy Star’s sound “is out of place and out of time.” I couldn’t agree more with this idea that their music feels “old and new at once” and is similarly haunting, which makes it all the more relevant that Mazzy Star could appear in movies like Batman Forever as well as more arthouse fare like Stealing Beauty. In fact, Gomez documents the appearances of “Fade Into You” in popular culture, and I was shocked to see how this song has been used over time and in such disparate settings (The O.C.?). Nevertheless, this is a testament to the song’s and the band’s enduring character and appealing to the “strange, unsettling, and beautiful world of David Lynch’s Twin Peaks” as Gomez III explains. I thought that this reference is also fitting since it relates to Mazzy Star’s kind of uncanny music, where it is strangely familiar, yet also so different and idiosyncratic for its time. When bands were getting louder and guitars more distorted, as labels sought to cash in on grunge and the 90s emergence of punk, Mazzy Star went softer, quieter, and retreated to the desert or the late 60s area outside of the valley, finding kinship with some of the lesser celebrated sounds and voices like The Doors and Love. Gomez III uses these bands as frames of reference for Mazzy Star, highlighting not only the fact that they were LA bands emerging from tumultuous times and using pop-like sounds in much darker, menacing ways.  

Since both Sandoval and Roback didn’t give many interviews during Mazzy Star’s existence, Gomez III turns to Mazzy Star’s influences and forebearers to provide some insight into the environment, scene and conditions that influenced Mazzy Star’s formation and sound. I enjoyed this aspect- I hadn’t really thought about how Mazzy Star sounded like The Doors or even Love, despite covering an Arthur Lee song, but it makes sense, and Gomez III’s research provides some useful insight into the influence of the Mexican-American sounds of East LA that maybe aren’t as apparent in Mazzy Stars sound, but influenced some other popular bands from the 90s and Sandoval’s own musical tastes. I also appreciated Gomez III’s assertion of how Mazzy Star’s music influenced female indie rockers, who he terms Sad Girls, like Michelle Zauner of Japanese Breakfast, Karen O of The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Mitski. It is interesting to think about this influence in not just the lyrical content, but I think their music is so much different from Mazzy Star’s. If anything, I feel like the music matches up more with bands like the Cowboy Junkies or Acetone, whose kind of hushed sounds (and use of shakers) are more aligned with Mazzy Star. I also hear strands of their desert music in Hermano GutiĆ©rrez and Tommy Guerror’s excellent Los Days, that feature acoustic-strummed rhythm guitars with slide-type leads. Nevertheless, Gomez III presents a nice framework to show how Mazzy Star were influenced by the LA scene that was less heard (or maybe unheard music like the band X). Gomez III suggests that the downtrodden and undersides of LA, kind of like Lynch’s Mulholland Drive or Blue Velvet, hold a darker side that runs counter to the shine and sheen of the more popular and present images. This is where the sound of Mazzy Star emerged, and it’s that desire to maintain that voice, to stay true and not do lots of promotions or try to create another “Fade Into You” that led to the band getting dropped by their label (only to release another album nearly 17 years after their last release).

In addition to framing the band through both their influences and who they later influenced, Gomez III gives some background about how Roback and Sandoval got into music and eventually met through their separate bands Opal (Roback) and Going Home (Sandoval). I didn’t know much about the Paisley Underground, the psychedelic revival in the 80s that birthed Rain Parade, another Roback band, but it was interesting to learn more about this movement and how bands both hated it yet needed some kind of movement or genre to get some attention from record companies looking for the next new thing. It was fascinating to learn that Susana Hoffs lived with Roback, who apparently got jealous of her early success with the Bangles. However, I really enjoyed learning more about how there was this kind of underground network of bands who were trying to eke out their own sounds that weren’t as astringent as the hair metal or as hard and fast as the punk rock and hardcore emerging from Southern California at this time. Opal played with bands like Sonic Youth and the Minutemen, which seems both odd and fascinating. Although Gomez III doesn’t go into some of the typical details that are sometimes involved in these 33 1/3 books, like focusing on the equipment that was used or the inspiration for the lyrics, he does present a detailed analysis of the LA scene, musically, socially, and economically from which Mazzy Star’s two biggest contributors emerged. It’s also a great book that highlights how this album and this band was just so different from much of the other music that was on the radio at the time. He also suggests that because the band had such a unique and out-of-time sound that this is one of the reasons why the band’s sound has endured and remains even though it no longer exists. I really enjoyed this book, and although it doesn’t provide the kind of song-by-song analysis or reconstruction of the recording sessions, it does present an interesting assessment of some of the factors, especially the unheard music of LA, that influenced this band. If anything, I really enjoyed breaking out this album to listen to it again and feel all the hope and heartbreak that it evokes. “I think it’s strange you never knew.” Highly recommended!




Friday, March 6, 2026

Partially Devoured: A Complete Analysis and Love for Night of the Living Dead

 Partially Devoured: How Night of the Living Dead Saved My Life and Changed the World 

by Daniel Kraus


Author and NOTLD Lover Daniel Kraus

Many thanks to Catapult Counterpoint Press, Soft Skull Press and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of Daniel Kraus’s wildly fun and inventive deep dive into the world of Night of the Living Dead titled Partially Devoured: How Night of the Living Dead Save My Life and Changed the World. Kraus, who estimates he’s seen NOTLD over 300 times since his first viewing at age 5, took the title for this book from a line that is repeated a few times in the film. Newscasters, who appeared so realistic to me when I also first viewed this film at a young age (closer to 8-9), repeatedly describe the victims of the reanimated ghouls of the film as being partially devoured. While I love the film reference in the title, I feel like Fully Consumed might be a more fitting title since this book is so comprehensive in exploring every nook and cranny of the farmhouse, the characters, actors and extras, and the production company, as well as the various offshoots, remakes, comics, novelizations, board games, and all other ancillary and tangential products related to NOTLD that I am in awe of Kraus’s fandom and knowledge related to this film. It’s amazing and the book is truly a wealth of resources for anyone who wants to learn what seems like everything they possibly can know about this film.

While the book’s educational impact is incredible, I most enjoyed Kraus’s narration of the film. It’s a little hard to explain, but he takes readers through the film as if we are watching it with him; however, he occasionally hits the pause button to let us know about the careers of the actors involved in each scene, how they interacted with Romero or further contributed to the production of NOTLD or even how they participate in the zombie-cons that have arisen since the premiere and celebration of this iconic film. I can’t say that there’s another book that takes such a deep dive with so many fascinating digressions that still remain relevant and on topic about the film and its scenes. Jonathan Lethem did shorter, but similar approach to John Carpenter’s They Live, but didn’t really go too much into the production or legacy of the film. Rather, Lethem’s book is a scene by scene analysis and is fun, but not in the same way that Kraus’s book fully consumes all there is to know about NOTLD and Romero’s legacy in horror and film. There’s so much to love about this book, and for me it’s Kraus’s genuine enthusiasm and joy in discussing his love for this film (and horror in general).

Maybe it’s because I could relate to Kraus’s experience. We are about the same age, and like Kraus, my first encounter with NOTLD was at a young age when I caught it on TV. As Kraus notes, the lack of a copyright due to a production error caused significant issues for NOTLD and its production company, where it instantly became part of the public domain. As a result, it’s one of those films that was constantly on television in the 1980s, even though it is about possible space radiation that resurrects the dead to become flesh-devouring ghouls (not zombies). And like Kraus, this movie imprinted itself on me for some time. It was one of the most terrifying films I had ever seen, and I was not one who was easily scared by films (I begged my parents to let me watch Alien and American Werewolf in London when I was like 5—I was always seeking out scary films). However, something about this film completely frightened me, and it wasn’t until later that I realized it  was the production and how un-film-like it was. When I first watched this film, I don’t remember much about the soundtrack. It’s a point that Kraus brings up a lot throughout his analysis, and I appreciated learning more about this library soundtrack. It’s also exciting to learn that it is available on vinyl. However, when I first encountered this film, so much of the film seemed so realistic; even the newscast seemed to be so real, that the film really terrified me. I think also that this was one of the first survival films that I saw where the threat from outside is almost as bad as the threat from inside. That is, the struggle between Ben and Harry was also really terrifying for my younger self. We see that people are not working together, but are working against one another. I also think that seeing young Karen transform into a flesh-eater, and then kill her mother and eat her father was also a shocking revelation to 8 year old me. The idea of revolting against parents seemed shocking at the time. However, what was most upsetting to me is the ending of NOTLD, where we see the good guys don’t win. I’m glad that some of Kraus’s most impassioned writing about the film are focused on the end of the film, and its continued relevance to today. I won’t reveal the ending here, but it’s definitely something that shocked, angered, and left me so distraught when I first watched it. Kraus’s description and analysis gave me an even greater appreciation, and yet it still moved me to be so angry and sad about it at the same time. It’s some great writing, but it’s hard for me to say whether it’s the best part of the book. I couldn’t put this book down and just kept reading and reading to learn more about the film’s production and understand its importance to Kraus.

Other experiences Kraus describes resonated with me as well, from spending so much time in the horror section of video stores, seeking out the most disturbing, banned films to really engage my love of horror, to watching Terror in the Aisles around the same time as NOTLD and wanting to watch all of the films that were featured in this incredible documentary. A few years ago, I watched Ms 45 and was taken back to being 9 or so and seeing a gun-toting nun mow down some creeps from Terror in the Aisles. I loved the references to other Romero films as well, especially some of the lesser known films like The Crazies and Martin. Strangely enough, my dad once rented the Crazies and I still remember the dad in that film trying to kill his kids and a grandma who used knitting needles to kill a solider. I also remember watching Martin in college and being blown-away by the inventive take on the vampire film. Kraus provides some in-depth analysis and research into Romero’s career, but also takes us through the variations of NOTLD scripts that are in the Romero archives in Pittsburgh. It allows us to better understand the changes that were made during production possibly because of cost, time, or other issues. Nevertheless, Kraus, due to his astute and innumerable viewings of NOTLD is able to identify all the flaws and continuity issues in the film that only adds to its greatness. However, what I most enjoyed was Kraus’s development of backstories for each of the characters in the film. It’s both hilarious and creative and highlights the ways that he thinks about people and situations. It also made me want to read more of his books, since I could see how detailed and precise he takes the development of these characters from their hairstyles to their clothes, and mannerisms. While most of the cast were not professional actors, Kraus notes some of the bolder choices that the actors employ, whether purposeful or not, that also lend to the film’s enduring legacy. I also loved learning more about the actors and crew involved in this film. I was particularly interested in learning more about Duane Jones, who plays the lead character Ben. I took an African American film class in college, and one of the films that was out of print but constantly discussed was Ganja and Hess. I don’t remember reading about Duane Jones or putting together that Ben from NOTLD was Hess in the film, and I didn’t get to see the film until a few years after graduating, but I noticed Ben right away, a little older and wearier, but still commanding the scene. Although Duane Jones passed away nearly 40 years ago, Kraus provides some insight and hypothesizes about Jones since he was a private man who only has a few film credits to his name. It was also fascinating and sad to read about Keith Wayne, who plays Tom, a young man who seeks refuge in the farmhouse. He had a fascinating post-NOTLD career that ultimately ended in tragedy, and Kraus’s keen insight and observations provide a tragic spotlight on Wayne’s life. Despite being about one of the most terrifying and transgressive horror films ever, this book is full of joy—it’s celebratory and so much fun to read along as Kraus takes us through the film. It’s a book I will definitely revisit, especially as I will rewatch NOTLD very soon. This is a great book for those who are fans of horror films, and especially if you are a fan of Romero’s work or NOTLD in general. I highly recommend this book! It was so much fun to read.

A few random thoughts that I encountered during my reading: One was the Danny Pintauro reference from the Horror Hall of Fame show. Kraus referenced that NOTLD received a Horror Oscar during this broadcast that either Pintauro hosted or presented to Romero. While Kraus referenced Who’s the Boss?, Pintauro also played Thad in Cujo before Who’s the Boss? I’m wondering if he was included because of Cujo. Weirdly enough, the local skating rink I went to had a picture of Danny Pintauro hanging up because he skated there at one point. This rink was in Blue Bell, PA, and Kraus also referenced a possibly racially driven murder that occurred in Blue Bell in 2022, which I didn’t even realize happened. Apparently a man was found hanging on the monkey bars of a park where I’ve gone running and taken my kids to play. It was a strange coincidence and haunting reminder of the power of this film. 



 


Saturday, February 28, 2026

Cosmic Music: The Life, Art, and Transcendence of Alice Coltrane by Andy Beta

 Cosmic Music: The Life, Art, and Transcendence of Alice Coltrane by Andy Beta

Cosmic Music book cover
Author Andy Beta






Much gratitude to Grand Central Publishing, Da Capo Press, and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of Cosmic Music: The Life, Art, and Transcendence of Alice Coltrane  by Andy Beta. As Beta notes in his introduction, Alice Coltrane has often been known more for being the wife of John Coltrane, and as a result, her musical reputation has often been maligned by jazz traditionalists who either assumed that she became a part of Coltrane’s later groups and leveraged her relationship to pursue a record deal on Impulse, the record label that John Coltrane popularized. As a result, Beta’s biography of Alice Coltrane not only illuminates on her life but really makes the argument that Alice deserves recognition as a musical innovator who took John Coltrane’s ideas and ever evolving notions of music and continued it in a new direction. Beta also notes that there is limited information about Alice’s life and musical work, and this also makes a critical biography like this not only challenging, but also necessary to assert her place in the musical world. In fact, I wasn’t even aware that Alice’s records were out of print for a while. I became aware of her own albums around the time that iTunes launched. I was already a massive John Coltrane fan, and was excited to learn more about how Alice’s participation in the later quartets might have influenced these albums. Beta has a great introduction to the book where he traces his slow exposure to jazz, especially being challenged about how jazz is often defined. Albums like On the Corner by Miles Davis and Om by John Coltrane don’t fit neatly into that traditional jazz schema, and I too was somewhat challenged by these albums, although they eventually grew on me. Alice Coltrane’s albums also don’t fit neatly into the traditional jazz paradigms, often featuring harp, chanting, and slowed trance-like piano work that many reviewers and jazz purists also failed to appreciate at the time. While I don’t remember immediately falling in love with Alice Coltrane’s albums the way I felt about John’s (“Something About John Coltrane”), her music did resonate with me, leaving a kind of emotional impression, like the lingering reverberations of harp or piano strings that I continue to recall. Beta likewise helps to argue the importance of Alice’s music to not just Jazz and Coltrane’s legacy, but also to the emerging field of new age music and self-released cassettes by musical explorers who were creating a new, almost unclassifiable idiosyncratic field of music that relied more on emotional intuition than anything else. I was mostly familiar with Alice’s output from the late 60s and early 70s, and it was interesting to read more (and listen to) her music from the late 70s and 1980s. Furthermore, I didn’t realize that Alice moved out of the Coltrane home in Long Island in the 1970s and settled in Southern California, eventually establishing an Ashram community where she continued to make music, but performed less often and didn’t really record any albums for major labels. That is, she ended up creating spiritual music that was largely based on Hindu prayers and devotions (Bhajans). Like other spiritual questers of the early 80s, Alice Coltrane released these recordings along with some self-published books, on her own and sold them in independent book, record and health food stores. 

What was most fascinating to me in this book was how Alice Coltrane transformed from Alice McLeod to Alice Coltrane to eventually Swamini or Turiyasangitananda and became a spiritual guide who led her Ashram community of many followers. Throughout the latter third of the book, Beta details how Alice underwent a spiritual challenge that followed John Coltrane’s book. Some of her family and friends noted that it was like a breakdown and there were some serious physical threats that Alice experienced and overcame. However, she also seems to have emerged from these experiences with an increased equanimity and insight into her spiritual direction. Throughout this experience, Alice began increasing her meditation and used this to not only seek direction from the Lord, but this also seemed to influence her music, which became increasingly spiritual and devotional. Beta provides not only well-documented research into the production of this music, both the concerts and the recording sessions, but also some well-done description and analysis of the music as well. This was definitely a strength of the book that made me more curious about learning about the later recordings and lesser known music of Alice Coltrane. Furthermore, Beta did well making the argument that Alice Coltrane’s music was in line with John Coltrane’s continued exploratory direction in music. As he notes, John Coltrane’s music rarely stood still, and his final years saw his quartets continue to push and expand the notion of jazz, not without controversy and confusion. As Beta argues, Alice’s music may not fit all of the jazz criteria, but it marks a continued evolution and bold exploratory nature that is also marked by personal devotion and spiritualism that was influential to both John’s and Alice’s backgrounds in the church. 

Beta’s book is a fascinating look at a sometimes overlooked, under-appreciated, and even maligned, but still important musical innovator in the spiritual jazz and new age music genres. I didn’t realize how much Alice’s music influenced the field of new age music, and how devotional and idiosyncratic it is. Beta’s research and analysis make a strong case for Alice’s own identity beyond the wife of John Coltrane, and as an influential figure in several different musical genres. There’s a lot to like in this book if you are a jazz fan or even a fan of more experimental and spiritual music. Alice Coltrane led a fascinating life, especially after she left the spotlight and lived a more monastic life in her Ashram. Nevertheless, at times, Beta’s writing meanders and digresses like a long free jazz solo, dancing around the theme or melody. I found this especially in the first section that details Alice McLeod’s life growing up in Detroit. Part of this was because, as Beta notes, there’s just not a lot of biographical or critical studies on Alice Coltrane. Beta uses other texts and biographies to give readers further context of what growing up in Detroit was like for African Americans like Alice. For example, he uses Barry Gordy’s biography to present some idea of the music scene, but he also provides evidence of events like the Detroit Race Riot from the 1940s to provide evidence of the inequality and limited opportunities that African Americans faced at this time in Detroit. Beta also uses biographical information from Aretha Franklin, who was somewhat of a contemporary of Alice Coltrane, and this helps to show how many Detroit musicians started out in Black Churches, learning Gospel Music and bringing this kind of spirituality to their own music, whether it was soul, rhythm and blues, or jazz. I appreciated this context, and I understand that Beta is deftly using secondary sources to provide insight into Alice’s own background and development as a musician, but sometimes these passages were long and not as well connected to Alice’s life. I occasionally found myself wondering whether I was reading a biography of Alice Coltrane or someone else. Nevertheless, the second and third parts of the book that detail Alice’s marriage and life with John Coltrane and her life as a spiritual leader in California were more focused and fascinating. These were the stronger parts of the book that I thoroughly enjoyed and found so compelling. Overall Cosmic Music is a fascinating and necessary book, and one that jazz fans and others who are musical explorers should read. Highly recommended!

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

New Franklin Book For Hegseth Children

 Franklin Copes With Daddy's Drinking takes a child's approach to dealing with alcoholism in the family

Franklin Copes with Daddy's Drinking cover

Pete Hegseth, kegmeister, judge, jury and executioner of South American boat passengers, has previously expressed his interest in the Franklin series of books for children. Franklin is a Canadian series that started in 1986. Although it's possible that Hegseth first encountered the Franklin series as a child, it's more likely that he may have found the books at his home from one of his various baby's mommas. In response to serious questions about the legality of Hegseth's extrajudicial executions without due process of alleged drug smugglers, Hegseth smugly replied with a proposed Franklin book cover that showed the beloved Canadian turtle with a bazooka shooting at men on boats. Rather than provide Americans with answers or accountability for this unprecedented use of force, Hegseth found humor in these deaths, delighting in eliding responsibility or even providing any kind of rationale for these deadly strikes. Similar to his complete abandonment of responsibility for leaking war plans and endangering troops in his use of Signal last year, Hegseth clearly echoes the Trumpian approach to really not caring, and forcing us to question whether we do or not. His unserious response to serious questions demonstrates what he thinks about the justice, due process, the rule of law, the rules of engagement, and even the lives of others. It left me wondering what kind of messages this man teaches to his children. Does he impart similar unserious responses when his own children ask questions either about his work or about his ideals? Does he deem their questions as worthy of a meme response? If he's treating his position of power with such arrogance, would he do the same for his children? 
It lead me to find this amazing title in the Franklin series, and I am recommending it to Pete's children. In this book, Franklin's daddy has a problem with drinking. At first, Franklin and his family think daddy can be funny or silly, but then daddy starts to become sleepy or angry; it's hard for Franklin to know which daddy will show up. Furthermore, Franklin learns that daddy has met some new mommies, and Franklin has to learn to love his new mommies, including the pool mommy that daddy met at a hotel, and who daddy has given a large sum of money to so that this pool mommy won't make daddy lose his job by saying "Me too." Throughout the story, Franklin learns important lessons, not from his own daddy, but from learning to set boundaries, to love his daddy, but not his drinking, and to recognize that daddy is really sick, and daddy's drinking is just a symptom of the larger character defects and issues that have been a part of daddy's life for a long time. Franklin Copes with Daddy's Drinking is an important book for children of alcoholic parents, and I recommend this book for these children. It's much better than the jingoistic Reagan-fever dreams of 1980s action heroes that have long passed. 


Monday, February 23, 2026

New MAGA Movie from the same producers who brought us measles and ferments: Denim Daddy

 New MAGA Movie from the producers of the hit horror flick Melania

Denim Daddy


The MAGAverse is going to the movies. 2026 is shaping up for a MAGA-takeover of the popular media and entertainment we once loved. After the hit horror and dread of Melania, the same producers who brought measles back to the US are looking for another breakout infectious hit with a new erotic comedy titled Denim Daddy starring MAGA stalwarts using pseudonyms Jack Steele and Randy Colt. Not content to let the ladies have all the rom-com business, Jack Steele and Randy Colt are here to show us that the boys are back in town, and they're about to get in the pit and love someone. I'm not sure what the film is about, but judging from the picture, it probably features lots of hot sweaty action, lots of synthetic testosterone and ferments, and maybe even some dead bears and whale carcasses along the way. Through it all, Jack and Randy realize their true connection and their deep seated misogyny. It doesn't look like a film that all of the MAGAverse will be pleased about, but it does look like a movie that might have the power to fill some seats. It looks like this might be a straight to video release though, so we'll have to keep our eyes out for this release.