Wednesday, January 29, 2025

The Hot Spot



tags: alien, comedy, Japanese dorama, Netflix
Sundays

From AsianWiki
Kiyomi Endo is a single mother living in a town at the foot of Mt. Fuji in Yamanashi Prefecture. She works at a business hotel. One day, she happens to meet an alien. If she was a pure-hearted girl, she would probably try develop a friendship with the alien and fight against injustice in the world, but she's a little different. As an adult, she has experienced good and bad in the world. She asks the alien to solve minor events at her work or in her personal life without upsetting the alien.

Friday, January 24, 2025

Mathilda


 






tags: classics, gothic, short stories
⭐out of 5

From Goodreads
Mary Shelley’s shocking, tragic, and some say autobiographical tale of incestuous love. Confined to her deathbed, Mathilda narrates the story of her life. It is a tale of sweeping emotion, shameful secrets, and wretched love. Her mother having died in childbirth, Mathilda is raised by her aunt until the age of sixteen, at which point she happily returns home to live with her father. But he turns deeply melancholic when a young suitor begins to visit Mathilda at their London home, and the idyllic life parent and child once shared turns sour. Pushed to confess his all-consuming love for his own daughter, Mathilda’s father bids her farewell before shame drives him to drown himself. Finally, after years of solitude and grief, Mathilda’s hope for happiness is renewed in the form of a gifted young poet named Woodville. But while his genius is transcendent, and he loves Mathilda dearly, the specter of her father still lingers. Though Mary Shelley wrote Mathilda in 1819, directly after the publication of Frankenstein, her father and publisher, William Godwin, refused to print it. Nearly a century and a half later, in 1959, the manuscript was finally published and has become one of Shelley’s best-known works.
OMG! What did I just read? It's horrible, dull, icky, and regardless of the sad story, I never felt it. I know the synopsis says incestuous but the reason I didn't find it worth my time is the narration about the saddest people on earth and their deaths. The short novel is peppered with the word death. Someone counted 59 in all. 

Mathilda's mother died shortly after her birth, the father who was devastated by the loss of his beloved, left her as a baby with an uncaring aunt so Mathilda never experienced love and affection from anyone. Why she grew up with no neighbors of the same age nor cousins is a mystery and could be the time period this story happened. Whatever...

The father came back after 16 years and the aunt died soon after. Father and daughter lived happily together for less than 1 year but he left again for good because he started feeling another kind of love for her. He sees her dead wife in Mathilda and he was not willing to do anything about it so he drowned himself out in the sea.

Mathilda met a young man, a poet (like her own husband Shelley?) who was engaged to be married to a beautiful 20 year old girl. Guess what? The girl Elinor died just before the wedding.

The narrative was told on Mathilda's deathbed. She purposely went to the garden at night, laid down until it rained to catch cold and fever. Of course, she died! At 20 years old. 

I'm not sure what the point of the story is. 

Not recommended.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Have His Carcase











tags: classics, Harriet Vane, Lord Peter Wimsey, murder mystery
⭐⭐⭐⭐out of 5

From Goodreads 
Harriet Vane has gone on vacation to forget her recent murder trial and, more importantly, to forget the man who cleared her name—the dapper, handsome, and maddening Lord Peter Wimsey. She is alone on a beach when she spies a man lying on a rock, surf lapping at his ankles. She tries to wake him, but he doesn’t budge. His throat has been cut, and his blood has drained out onto the sand. As the tide inches forward, Harriet makes what observations she can and photographs the scene. Finally, she goes for the police, but by the time they return the body has gone. Only one person can help her discover how the poor man died at the beach: Lord Peter, the amateur sleuth who won her freedom and her heart in one fell swoop.
This is Dorothy L Sayers's 8th novel featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. Harriet Vane joins him in solving the complicated murder mystery. The novel is long-ish at almost 500 pages, has a head scratching complicated storyline and a slew of characters. A possible Russian aristocracy ancestry of the dead character adds to the twisty tale. 

I enjoyed Lord Peter and Harriet's light banter and Lord Peter's constant marriage proposal which Harriet all rejected. (They eventually marry in a later book.)

Highly recommended.  

Monday, January 20, 2025

Glory Glory Hallelujah!

Daddy's home!

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

A Case Of Conscience














tags: classics, Christian theory, morality tale, philosophy, sci-fi
⭐⭐⭐⭐ out of 5

From GoodReads
Father Ruiz-Sanchez is a dedicated man--a priest who is also a scientist, and a scientist who is also a human being. He has found no insoluble conflicts in his beliefs or his ethics . . . until he is sent to Lithia.
There he comes upon a race of aliens who are admirable in every way except for their total reliance on cold reason; they are incapable of faith or belief.
Confronted with a profound scientific riddle and ethical quandary, Father Ruiz-Sanchez soon finds himself torn between the teachings of his faith, the teachings of his science, and the inner promptings of his humanity.
There is only one solution: He must accept an ancient and unforgivable heresy--and risk the futures of both worlds.

The 1959 Hugo winner was originally published in 1958. IMHO, it is an awesome mind bending sci fi mixed with Christian faith theory novel. I never expected to like it but I did. 

Highly recommended. 

Monday, January 6, 2025

The Eyes Have it














tags: humor, idioms, Philip K Dick, sci-fi, short story
⭐⭐⭐⭐

I started my 2025 reading with the shortest short story written by Philip K Dick, The Eyes Have It. He probably had fun writing in a few American idioms to his sci-fi stories. I like it.

Read it here