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!

Stu’s Reviews #385- Book – “The Wolf Pack”- CJ Box

Genre: Book

Grade: A

Notable People: CJ Box

Title: The Wolf Pack

Review: After 23 installments in his Joe Pickett, Wyoming Game Warden series, this is Box’s best yet. a humdinger of a story with crazed hit men (and one especially psychopath hit- woman), wolves, killer falcons, teen angst, witness protection mob guys …and the great character, Nate Romanowski. Just out last month…..run out to get this one. A thing of beauty.

Stu’s Reviews #384- Book – “High Country Nocturne”- Jon Talton

Genre: Book

Grade: A-/B+

Notable People: Jon Talton

Title: High Country Nocturne

Review: After an initial week offering, Talton’s’ David Mapstone entries have been consistently very high quality. The character have been well developed over time and are believable…even the fabulously exotic Peraltha (now the ex-sheriff of Maricopa County). Talton and Mapstone mix in lots of Arizona history, philosophical meanderings, just the right amount of sex and a boatload of intrigue. This installment benefits from the lurking of a drop dead/ stone cold mystical killer dancing around the periphery of the story. This series is definitely worth any mystery lovers’ and any Arizona-phile’s attention.

Stu’s Reviews #383- Book – “The Precipice”- Paul Doiron

Genre: Book

Grade: A-

Notable People: Paul Doiron

Title: The Precipice

Review: Doiron’s tales of Maine Game Warden, Mike Bowditch, just keep getting better and better. His love for the great North Woods and all things “down east” are quite evident. I’ve had my fill of serial killer stories of late, but this is a really good one…set on the remote Maine portion of the Appalachian Trail. His characters keep evolving, and you can really feel the angst, fear, anger and jubilation. I like these a lot.

Stu’s Reviews #382- Film – “Gloria Bell”

Genre: Film

Grade: A-

Notable People: Julianne Moore, John Turturro, Micheal Cera, Brad Garrett, Directed by: Sebastian Lelio

Title: Gloria Bell
Review: Julianne Moore is a tour de force in this touching film about a fifty-ish divorcee dealing with loneliness and trying to find meaning as an empty nester. She looks phenomenal and acts wonderfully and has brilliant chemistry with the always whacked-out Turturro (best role in years). The supporting cast is really good and the film is very well executed-if a bit schmaltzy at points. L liked it a lot and it is another notch in Moore’s considerable belt of accomplishment.

Stu’s Reviews #380- Book – “Dead Man Running”- Steve Hamilton

Genre: Book

Grade: B/B+

Notable People: Steve Hamilton

Title: Dead Man Running

Review: This was my fist disappointment in the wonderful Alex McKnight series. Our ex-Detroit cop, normally sequestered in the woods along remote Lake Superior, takes off across the country (for reasons too complicated to mention) in search of a serial killer. Phoenix, St. Louis, Grand Rapids and …even… Columbus, Ohio. The whole story seemed a bit farfetched and the writing seemed disjointed. Still, kind of a barn burner, I must say, but missing all the allure of the usual cast of characters in the Paradise, Michigan setting. and the serial killer was a little too much cereal. Look forward to McKnight being back home , finding the usual weird mischief, with his feet up by the fire at the Glasgow Inn in Paradise.

Stu’s Reviews #380- Book – “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time””- Mark Haddon

Genre: Book

Grade: Not Sure

Notable People: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Title: Mark Haddon

Review: This is one of the strangest books I’ve ever read. Was in the Keys and ran out of reading material- so perused the cottage bookshelves…and was intrigued by the blurb on this one. It’s a British mystery…of sorts. The book is in the first person and told from the perspective of a 13 year old boy, Christopher, who is clearly high on the autism spectrum. When I started the book, I was not sure I would finish it..…but could not stop reading…totally captivating. This is not a book for everyone. The kid is early frustrating and surrounded by very flawed adults……plus there is a murdered dog…..BUT…worth a try……fascinating….