Stu’s Reviews #395- Book – “Light on Snow”- Anita Shreve

Genre: Book

Grade: A-

Notable People: Anita Shreve

Title: Light on Snow

Review: I wandered into the local library to return a book and found this one on the shelf-liked the cover and the title-so gave it a try. Shreve is apparently prolific and very well thought of based on the reviews. I really liked this book and read it in three days. This is the story of an abandoned baby found in the woods in northern New Hampshire by a grieving father and daughter as told by the twelve year old daughter-and Shreve nails the dialog of a young girl- both inner and outer. Most of the story takes place in their 150 year old farmhouse during a blizzard, and I found it riveting and extremely well written. Will be investigating more of this author.

Stu’s Reviews #394- Book – “Northern Borders”- Howard Frank Mosher

Genre: Book

Grade: A-

Notable People: Howard Frank Mosher

Title: Northern Borders

Review: this is my second work from Mosher-a legend in Vermont writing. This 1994 novel is the looking back story of six year old Austin Kittredge, who, after his mother’s untimely death comes to live with his aged grandparents in Lost Hollow Nation in Kingdom county- a barely veiled reference to Vermont’s great and wild Northeast Kingdom. Through his childhood in the late 40s and early 5os, Austin recalls a lost way of life in this remote outpost along the Canadian border, with his larger than life grandparents who have been feuding for over fifty years. Grandpa is an old style woodsman who spends most of the time in a hidden camp high up in the woods and pines for his youth as surveyor of the very far northern frontier of North America. Grandma long ago retreated to a parlor (in between fifteen hours a day of farm chores) where she has recreated her shrine to a fanciful Egypt, The characters in the book are mesmerizing and the setting is a paean and wonderful portrait of a lost time in our history. Mosher’s writing is full of dry and ironic wit and the end of the book is transformative. Mosher is really growing no me and is somewhat a revelation. Lots more to read.

Stu’s Reviews #393- TV Series – “Schitt’s Creek”

Genre: TV Series (Netflix)

Grade: A+

Notable People: Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Daniel Levy, Annie Murphy, Chris Elliot, Sarah Levy, Created by: Eugene and Daniel Levy

Title: Schitt’s Creek

Review: though it may not be everybody’s cup of tea, we think this is the funniest show on TV…bar none…maybe ever. The first family of Canadian comedy have their mark all over this show….and they are so funny –you start laughing before they say anything. Levy Sr. and O’Hara are comedy royalty and their children have not fallen far from the tree. Annie Murphy was born to be their daughter. Dan Levy may be the funniest person without saying anything since Jonathan Winters. The ensemble performance is astounding and the supporting cast, including the Levy daughter and the zany Elliot are amazing. The Rose family- long kingpins of the home video industry – lose their fortune to a shyster accountant and have no choice but to move to the tiny Indiana town of Schitt’s Creek and live in the ancient motel (in one ersatz suite)-since they had bought the town as a joke during their heyday. The parents still dress and act as if they are Hollywood paparazzi and the thirty something kids are overgrown stunted teenagers. Any time we watch something that is intense on TV –we end with a random episode of Schitt to mellow out. Four seasons on Netflix…give this a shot or two.

Stu’s Reviews #392- TV Series – “Killing Eve”

Genre: TV Series (Hulu/BBC America)

Grade: A

Notable People: Sandra Oh, Jodie Comer, Created by: Phoebe Waller Bridge

Title: Killing Eve

Review: this is one wacked out show. Oh is Eve, who works for M-6, the British intelligence Service and Comer is a crazed sociopathic serial killer for hire. .they become totally obsessed with each other and entwined in a massive love-hate relationship that leads them to chasing all over Europe. Oh is her usual excellent self….and Comer is total nut job….captures the role to a T. Their interaction is one for the ages. Finished the first season on Hulu and second season currently airing on BBC America on Sunday nights….Absolutely love this show.

Stu’s Reviews #391- Book – “The Fall of the Year”- Howard Frank Mosher

Genre: Book

Grade: A-/B+

Notable People: Howard Frank Mosher

Title: The Fall of the Year

Review: Mosher is the novel laureate of Vermont…a living legend in these parts…who I knew of but had somehow never read before. After 20 pages, in was thinking he and I were not a match. But, I stuck it out and the book and his style really grew on me. A little bit of Mark Twain in the most remote part of Vermont…the great Northeast Kingdom. Mosher has created a thinly veiled Kingdom County and the surroundings are all very familiar for this part of the world. This is apparently his autobiographical novel (1999) and it is a rich story centered around a young man and his adoptive priest father- the “greatest scholar and third baseman in the history of The Kingdom”-who has spent his life writing a “A Short History of Kingdom County” (now at 5000 pages!!). Full of fortune tellers, circus folk, mystical Quebecois and trout fishing….it is a quaint picture of life in remote Vermont in the 1950s. I’ll be giving Mosher some more attention going forward…he is pretty prolific.

Stu’s Reviews #390- Film – “Little Woods”

Genre: Film

Grade: A-

Notable People: Tessa Thompson, Lily James, Luke Kirby, James Badge Dale, Directed by: Nia DeCosta

Title: Little Woods

Review: Made the one hour schlep up to Dartmouth to the art theater to get our monthly adult movie fix…and worth it. Quiet, very dark movie about two down and out sister trying to get by in oil boom North Dakota. They find themselves falling into the illegal world of the cross-border drug trade ingot Canada after their mother dies. Very real, non- glamorous movie about average people getting in over their heads in drug peddling for survival reasons, and the dark world that surrounds this business- no glory, no super heroes, no happy endings or violent shoot outs. The characters are very well developed and the two leads (Thompson, who wrote the film and James) are excellent. This is a sleeper worth seeing.

Stu’s Reviews #389- TV Series – “Black Earth Rising”

Editors’ Note: You may notice I am adding a new category to the reviews I publish- TV Series. Fifteen years ago I dismissed TV as low form art, but since the advent of The Sopranos on HBO, it is my opinion that TV had emerged as significant form. Indeed, we go to movies less and less given all the high quality offerings on Netflix, Prime, Hulu and the premium networks. Over the last five years , we have watched some extraordinary shows and performances on this form of serial television. So, I’m adding that to the cache, highlighting recent seasons that we have comped of worthwhile TV watching. Please don’t throw rocks at me…

Stu’s Reviews

Genre: TV (Netflix)

Grade: B+

Notable People: Michaela Coel, Noma Dumezwini, Lucina Mzamati and John Goodman, Developed by: Hugo Blick

Title: Black Earth Rising

Review: Extraordinarily impactful drama about the Rwandan genocide of the early 90s. Full of political intrigue, government’s manipulation and the sad story of hate and aggression. Very fine African cast and the story floats back and forth from Africa to France and England. A vastly slimmed down Goodman is excellent and pulls it all together. Coel is wonderful (check out those eyes) in the lead role as a young genocide survivor working as a legal investigator in London tracking down the war criminals . The show is authentic and hits you over the head informatively, though it is quite hard to watch this horrific story and very slow. Very challenging plot to keep up with.

Stu’s Reviews #388- Book – “Homegoing”- Yaa Gyasi

Genre: Book

Grade: B++

Notable People: Yaa Gyasi

Title: Homegoing

Review: A birthday gift from my daughter, this read took me as far from my current serial noir expression, as could be. A pretty impressive first novel that traces one Ghana family starting in the 1770s for over 200 years. Each chapter successively tells the story of the next generational ancestor, moving fluidly from the Gold Coast, to London, Jim Crow Alabama, Harlem and back to Africa. It is an amazing depiction of the slave trade, white(British in this case) imperialism ,and the plantation south, in all its bloody glory. An extraordinary work and exceptionally well written….though I found it very, very slow to read and could not read more than 20 pages at a time. Maybe just too much of a Travis McGee habit…

Stu’s Reviews #387- Album – “Call Me Lucky”- Dale Watson

Genre: Album

Grade: A-

Notable People: Dale Watson and His Lone Stars

Title: Call Me Lucky

Review: wow…never heard of this guy-who is apparently a honky-tonk legend. Got this for my birthday and it’s a revelation. Watson is very good songwriter and guitar player and his band is smoking hot. This album was recorded at the legendary Sun Studios in Memphis (Elvis, etc.) and is a winner. Watson’s voice has a lot of Waylon with touches of Farron Young and Ferlin Husky….with w few nods to Johnny Cash. He also works in some very nice Hank Williams musicality. Not sure where he has been, but I’m really glad to have found him. ……Honky Tonk Heaven….

Stu’s Reviews #386- Book – “The Quick Red Fox”- John D. MacDonald

Genre: Book

Grade: A

Notable People: John D. MacDonald

Title: The Quick Red Fox

Review: Last days of getting ready to head back to the mountains for summer/fall…and out of reading material while packing for days…so hit the archives and found an old hardcover edition of this 1964 entry in the legendary Travis McGee series. A revelation!. Every time I read Johnny Mac, I am reminded of how magnificent a writer he was. McGee is the quintessential everyman hero and he gets ingot surreal misadventures in his quest to maintain his wandering sailing lifestyle aboard the fabled “Busted Flush”….and this one is not only a riveting story (uncharacteristically finding McGee schlepping around the country-northern California coast, Colorado skiing, Phoenix)…but it may feature McGee at his most ruminating, philosophical self- pondering the ruining of the environment, questing for the elusive “real love” thing, and considering the meaning of life (he has four ages on what McGee believes to be the ”Freud-Fraud”….Wow…). If you’ve never tried McGee, go to the library or buy a used a paperback and start with this one. What a character!