Stu’s Reviews- #622- Book – “Walk the Wire”- David Baldacci

Genre: Book 

Grade: A-

Notable People: David Baldacci

Title: Walk the Wire’

Review: the sixth and most recent in the prolific Baldacci’s’ wonderful Amos Decker series will not disappoint. Weaving a bewildering and intense murder mystery with national security issues in remote North Dakota, the book weaves a compelling portrait of the mind of Decker, a man devastated by loss and head trauma, who becomes a relentless avenger for truth. The character development keeps getting better in this series, and it’s a hard to put down nail biter. Send more Decker!!!!

Stu’s Reviews- #621- TV Series – “The Sinner”- Netflix- 3 Seasons

Genre: TV Series

Grade: B+

Notable People: Bill Pullman, Jessica Biel, Carrie Coon, Created by: Jason Katims

Title: The Sinner

Review: developed by Derek Simonds; after a 1999 novel by Petra Hammeshfahr, which served as the basis for the first season. The extraordinary intense and depressed Bill Pullman starred as a police detective who investigates crimes committed by unlikely culprits and attempts to uncover their motivations. Only Pullman appeared in every season, with the rest of the cast changing for each season’s story. Biel won an Emmy for the first season and is the show’s producer. The first season was an A+ and pretty bizarre, the second season- a solid A with the wonderful Coon and wacked out cult community. Got halfway through the third season and could not take it any more- just way too depressing, and always waiting for Pullman to snap out of it. Gave up ,so never got to season four, but highly recommend seasons one and two.

Stu’s Reviews- #620- TV Series – “As We See It”- Amazon- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series      

Grade: A+

Notable People: Rick Glassman, Albert Rutecki, Sue Ann Penn, Sosie Bacon, Chris Pang, Joe Mantegna, Created by: Jason Katims

Title: As We See It

Review: Absolutely brilliant half hour dramedy about three twenty-something roommates on the autistic spectrum. This show is alternately funny as hell and heartbreaking. I laughed. I cried. The three lead, young people in the cast (all actually on the spectrum in real life) are prefect-just perfect. And Joe Mantegna has a career defining role. The scripts and dialog are dead on. Hard to not to watch the eight episodes I one or two binge nights. Praying for another season.

Stu’s Reviews- #619- Film – “The Goldfinch” (on Amazon now)

Genre: Film 

Grade: A+

Notable People:  Oakes Fegley, Ansel Elgort, Jeffrey Wright, Nicole Kidman, Directed by: John Crowley

Title: The Goldfinch

Review: Beautifully rendered interpretation of a masterpiece book by Donna Tartt which I reviewed many years ago. Fegley and Elgort are wonderful as the young and older Theo Decker- a young man who loses his mother in a terrorist attack inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and in his shock and trauma makes off with three-hundred-year old art masterpiece. The cast is dead on for the book and the reflections of life as art take us on whirlwind story. I loved the book, and the film surprisingly does it justice.

Stu’s Reviews- #618- Book – “A Better Man”- Louise Penny

Genre: Book

Grade: A

Notable People: Louise Penny

Title: A Better Man

Review: After two dozen novels in this series, I am trying to imagine what would make them any better? Frankly, if you like a- mysteries B- noir c- All Things French d- Canada e- top notch prose f- extraordinary character development over twenty years and g- a wonderful sense of humor………well if you don’t like any of that…are you actually still respirating? Penny never settles in these thoughtful and reflective books on the nature of life and loss and love and evil……plus she is wicked funny in a subtle way, and extraordinarily historically accurate. She has the best-ever acknowledgements sections – which themselves can make you weep……. she honors woman all the time without dismissing men……and she levitates dogs to godliness. Even with a very key character exiting in this book (which fans will pray is not final) this is a story that is hard not to love. And Gamache……. oh, Gamache…the father/mentor/brother/sage we wall wish to be around. Hot tip from Northern Michigan: amazon is hard at work filming a Gamache series starring Alfred Molina (good choice) Just cannot wait.

Stu’s Reviews- #617- Book – “The Crooked Branch”- Jeanine Cummins

Genre: Book 

Grade: A-

Notable People:  Jeanine Cummins

Title: The Crooked Branch

Review: after two books, Cummins is fast becoming one of my favorite new wave of young American authors. Following up the brilliant “American Dirt” with this powerful novel about two women related by blood, and separated by an ocean and two hundred years; one in County Mayo, Ireland during the great potato famine, and her great, great, great granddaughter in contemporary Queens, NY. Cummins continues her in depth portrayal of the live of “immigrants in one form or another (the modern woman has immigrated from a trendy Manhattan life to what she calls the hell of suburban queens after the birth of a first child, which may be no less an immigration than that of her ancestors). The modern tales of angst and post-partum depression wore a bit thin on me over the course of the book, but were still quite compelling, and the alternating chapters focused on mid-19th century Ireland were just plan riveting. Get characters, great storytelling, powerful messages about love, fear, survival, intimacy, trust and class. Great stuff.

Stu’s Reviews- #616- TV Series – “The Roosevelts”- PBS- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series  

Grade: A+++

Notable People: Ken Burns

Title: The Roosevelts

Review: what is there to say about Ken Burns? By far, the greatest documentarian of our times (maybe of any time and any place) ……the man takes his subjects (baseball, country music, Vietnam, you name it) and brings it to life in a gripping and powerful way. And, then…you have the three Roosevelts- truly giants of our modern world. Cannot even imagine what our county and word would be like if not for them (think lynching, Hitler, bread lines). Given our sad state of current affairs, it is hard not to weep at the extraordinary tenacity, courage and inspirational leadership of Teddy, Eleanor and, especially, Franklin……these were simply amazing people who stewarded the world the most dangerous and chaotic times (and let us not gloss over the role of dear Winston on the other side of The Pond). This seven part, 14 hour epiphany should be required viewing for every American………pure brilliance.

Stu’s Reviews- #615- TV Series – “Dexter: New Blood”- Showtime- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series

Grade: A

Notable People: Michael C. Hall, Jack Alcott, Jennifer Carpenter, Clancy Brown, Julia Jones, Created by: Clyde Phillips

Title: Yellowstone

Review: Ten years after the demise of the original Dexter ShowTime brought back the inimitable Michael C. Hall to reprise his role in what has been shockingly the most watched show in ShowTime’s history. I was reluctant to think this could be done well, but the end of the original six season series did not end all that well and left fans pretty dissatisfied. It’s now ten years later, and our beloved serial killer has moved to remote upstate New York and started a new life after faking is own death back in the Miami days. He is tracked down and reunited with his long lost son, who appears to have some of the same “Dark Passenger” tendencies as Dexter. Jack Alcott is a revelation as the junior Dexter, with eerie nuances of similarity with his father and Clancy Brown and Julia Jones add gravitas to the cast with their takes on Dexter’s nemesis and love life respectively. The return of Jennifer Carpenter is wonderful as Dexter’s dear departed sister, Deb Morgan. Bringing back David Zayas as the hipster Miami detective from the original, was a stroke of genius. Clearly, one of the top shows of the last year without a doubt.

Stu’s Reviews- #614- Book – “The Blood Red Indian Summer”- David Handler

Genre: Book    

Grade: A-

Notable People:  David Handler

Title: The Blood Red Indian Summer

Review: The umpteenth offering in the Mitry/Berger mystery series is probably the best yet. Set, as usual, in the bucolic Big Indian Island on the Connecticut/Long Island Sound shoreline, it finds our mismatched heroes (she a striking Conn. State Resident Trooper, he a former “Doughboy” Jewish New York film critic- as they pursue justice in what should be, by all counts, a panacea of mellow, but in reality, seems to be a magnet for very strange happenings. The characters are reaching prime development in this 9th installment of the series, and the dialog is crisp and often hilarious. I clearly have a soft touch affinity for these genres, and especially those that seek to emulate the magnificent John D. MacDonald/ Travis McGee epics…that is just fine with me.

Stu’s Reviews- #613- Film – “The Power of the Dog” (on Netflix now)

Genre: Film                                  https://vermontrambles.com/2022/01/02/stus-reviews-611-film-the-courier/

Grade: B+

Notable People:  Benedict Cumberbatch, Kristen Dunst, Jesse Plemons, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Directed by: Jane Campion

Title: The Power of the Dog

Review: Cumberbatch, Cumberbatch, Cumberbatch, Sherlock……..he is everywhere…..go streaming and you can see him on ay least a half dozen features with his versatile self…..though this is his first where he plays an American early 20th century Montana rancher….took me a while to grasp his accent, but it works. Campion adapted this film from a 1967 novel by Thomas Savage, and the critics have just loved it, winning all kinds of awards…. not quite so beloved by viewers….and IT IS QUIRKY…… In remote 1925 Montana, a domineering rancher responds with mocking cruelty when his brother brings home a new wife and her son……..quite, complex film that startles you at the end…just did not see it coming….dark, brooding  and very slow moving, but pulls you in nonetheless…never quite sure where it is going or what the point is, but he performances are exceptional…and…well…its’ Cumberbatch!