See If Your Home Is Lousy With Dinosaurs, According to Jurassic World Dominion

In Jurassic World Dominion, the dinosaurs are living among us in the continental United States, and it’s not going so well for all involved! While we know from one of the movie’s trailers that the T-Rex likes to crash drive-in theaters, we don’t know exactly where the other dinosaurs like to roam.

If this is a question you’re dying for an answer to, don’t worry—director Colin Trevorrow has tweeted out a map of where different Jurassic World dinosaurs are hanging out, these days.

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8 Stories to Help You Rebuild After an Ecological Catastrophe

So you’ve lived through an ecological disaster that’s drastically changed the world (or at least some corner of it): the water’s dried up, the bees have disappeared, temperatures are soaring, multiple pandemics ravaged the earth, and the oil reserves have gone poof. Now what? Here are eight books that not only take climate change as a given, but that skip ahead a bit and show us the aftermath of environmental cataclysm. A few even offer some possible solutions…

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Playwrights, Magicians, and Zombies: 19 Fictional Shakespeares

We’ve been performing Shakespeare’s plays for 400 years, but we’ve been telling stories about the Bard himself for nearly as long. From a starring role in a big budget alt-history romance to a cameo appearance as a Master Builder in The Lego Movie, we relish the chance to rub elbows with “Shakespeare” in any number of unexpected settings. Below, we’ve gathered some of the best (and weirdest) stories that make merry with history and turn the Swan of Avon into a legend.

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Five Books Featuring Shocking Revelations and Forbidden Knowledge

Who among us would not casually thumb through the Necronomicon, were it to hand when no other reading material presented itself? (The alternative would be not reading!) However, a moment’s entertainment could come at the cost of a dreadful, unforgettable revelation—one from which madness would be no escape.

The world is filled with information that can only leave the learner less happy. Authors have long been aware how plot-friendly such dreadful revelations can be. Consider these five examples.

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Space Races and Other Pursuits: Sylvain Neuvel’s Until the Last of Me

There are different ways to make a narrative gripping. One way is to give a sense of the bigger picture—to show how a particular character’s choices and actions have an impact on a much larger scale. Another is to zero in on something much more specific and showcase a highly limited perspective—something where the why of it all matters less than the breakneck pace it requires to get there.

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Emptiness and Fear—Star Trek: Picard‘s “Mercy”

There was a theory flying around over the last week that Jay Karnes’s FBI agent who arrested Picard and Guinan at the end of “Monsters” was, in fact, another Q. Me, I was holding out hope that he might be connected in some way to one of Trek‘s previous time-travel adventures—the descendent of, say, one of the people at Area 51 in DS9‘s “Little Green Men” or on the base Kirk and Sulu infiltrated in the original series’ “Tomorrow is Yesterday” or on the aircraft carrier Enterprise in The Voyage Home or something like that. There was also the possibility that Karnes was once again playing Ducane, the thirty-first-century time agent he played on Voyager‘s “Relativity.”

While that particular plot thread does have a reference to a Trek episode that took place in the twentieth century, it wasn’t the one I was expecting.

[Enveloped in the warm glow of meaning.]

Absence Makes the Heart Grow Ever Fonder in the Trailer for HBO’s The Time Traveler’s Wife

Time travel. It might look like fun, sometimes, but it sure isn’t a good time for Henry (Theo James) in The Time Traveler’s Wife. “It’s not a superpower,” Henry says of his unusual ability. “It’s a disability. It’s what’s wrong with me.”

With the release of the show’s full trailer, HBO has finally announced the premiere date for Stephen Moffat’s adaptation of Audrey Niffenegger’s novel: Prepare to get swoony on May 15th.

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I Was (Sort Of) A Teenage Vampire: Caroline B. Cooney’s The Cheerleader and Christopher Pike’s The Last Vampire 

Vampires have been a staple of the Gothic and horror traditions, with iconic texts including Sheridan Le Fanu’s Carmilla (1872), Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897), and a host of Hollywood incarnations, from Nosferatu (1922) to Bela Lugosi’s iconic performance in Universal Pictures’ adaptation of Dracula (1931). While vampires are perennially popular, these creatures of the night were particularly ubiquitous in 1990s pop culture, including Buffy the Vampire Slayer (both the 1992 feature film and the hit television series), Francis Ford Coppola’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992), Neil Jordan’s film adaptation of Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire (1994), Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez’s From Dusk Till Dawn (1996), and the Wesley Snipes franchise Blade (1998-2004). What is particularly notable about ‘90s incarnations of the vampire is the way in which these films negotiated or subverted traditional conceptions and expectations, whether through exploring the depths of vampire subjectivity or creating space in these narratives for women and people of color.

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