Zombies Take Manhattan In the Trailer for The Walking Dead: Dead City

Seems like an island is either the worst or best place to be in a zombie apocalypse—and when the island in question is Manhattan, you’re probably pretty screwed. And because Dead City is a Walking Dead spinoff, the characters have to be screwed several times over.

As if Maggie (Lauren Cohan) hasn’t had it bad enough already, now someone has kidnapped her kid, and for plot reasons, to find him she has to team up with Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), the very man who brutally murdered her partner.

Good times road trip, anyone?

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Looking Back on The Owl House

On January 10, 2020, children’s animated series The Owl House premiered on the Disney Channel. The show centers on the story of a young fourteen-year-old Dominican-American human girl Luz Noceda who—in true Isekai/Alice in Wonderland style—stumbles into a demon realm called the Boiling Islands, a morbidly magical land built on the remains of a Titan. There she meets powerful (and scraggly) witch/fugitive of the law Eda Clawthorne, otherwise known as “The Owl Lady,” a pint-sized overly-confident and adorable dog demon named King, Hooty (the tubular owl-like guardian of the aptly named Owl House), magical friends Willow and Gus, and more.

Now, as a self-identified geek and lover of LGBTQ+ children’s cartoons (a very specific form of media that I hope keeps expanding), there was no chance I wasn’t going to watch The Owl House when it first came out. What I didn’t expect was how truly incredible this show was going to be in terms of rich storytelling, worldbuilding, and diversity. Or how it would reflect and heal parts of me in the ways it did.

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The Magic of the Internet Has Turned This Is How You Lose the Time War Into a Belated Bestseller

Never let it be said that Twitter does not (sometimes) sell books.

The thing is, you can’t force it. It’s like a visit from a magical fairy: it comes to you; you don’t seek it out.

And so it was with Max Gladstone and Amal El-Mohtar’s This Is How You Lose the Time War and a Twitter user with the unlikely yet glorious screen name of Bigolas Dickolas Wolfwood, whose plea to his followers to read this 2019 novel has sent the book flying up the Amazon bestseller charts.

This is how you win the tweet wars, more like.

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Building Our Personal Libraries, and the Books We Leave Behind

The book I’ve owned the longest has zero cachet, zero cool, zero name recognition. It is not an old copy of my beloved The Castle of Llyr, or a well-worn copy of Mercer Meyer’s Herbert the Timid Dragon. It is an early reader called Tuggy, unexpectedly stamped “Bailey Hill High School” on the inside cover, in between scrawls of crayon.

Tuggy is a book meant to teach a very young reader words. I would not remember that it was part of my learning-to-read process, except that I still have it, tattered and ink-stained, on a shelf with other ancient, ragged children’s books, including Leo the Lop and Tomie dePaola’s The Cloud Book, thanks to which I once knew the names of a lot more clouds than I do now.

There’s no real reason for me to have these books. They don’t say much about me, other than that—like so many kids—I like stories about animals and the world around me. They’re bedraggled copies, not the kind of thing a person collects. I don’t have kids to pass them on to. You could say they’re sentimental, unnecessary, even clutter. But they mean something to me. They’re part of my story. And isn’t that, when you boil it down, why we keep anything—most of all books?

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Cosmere Cashmere: Finding the Best Fit for Sanderson’s Cosmere Planets

Sometimes, endlessly singing the praises of your favorite fictional universes can pay off. Such was the case with Brandon Sanderson’s Cosmere, when a friend who doesn’t read a whole lot finally picked up one of the books. It took some coaxing—in the form of a suggested reading order, a Please Adapt column, and this Stormlight primer (spoiler-free)—but my buddy finally made the leap into Sanderson’s interconnected world.

Still very new to the whole Cosmere thing but enjoying The Way of Kings, he called me and opened with this gem of a line: “Dude…you’re right. The Cashmere is sweet.”

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Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things Cannot Get Here Fast Enough

The cruelty of a thirty-second teaser for a movie that looks this fascinating! Thirty seconds is not enough to get the faintest idea of what’s going on in Yorgos Lanthimos’s Poor Things, but it doesn’t matter that much anyway: When the director of Dogtooth and The Favourite makes a new movie, some of us will be there with bells on for opening night.

Especially when it includes a very baffled Mark Ruffalo saying, “… ow” to a slap from Emma Stone in a tone that implies that he has never before experienced the slightest discomfort in his life.

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The Horror Comedy Teeth Is Getting a Stage Musical Adaptation And We Have Questions

The 2007 indie film Teeth is a horror comedy whose title and story is inspired by the folk tale of vagina dentata, whose etymology confirms that its meaning is exactly what you think it is.  The movie did well critically, and intrigued a lot of people—including, it seems, A Strange Loop playwright Michael R. Jackson.

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A Plague of Psychic Shows: Hilary Mantel’s Beyond Black (Part 9)

Welcome back to Reading the Weird, in which we get girl cooties all over weird fiction, cosmic horror, and Lovecraftiana—from its historical roots through its most recent branches.

This week, we continue Hilary Mantel’s Beyond Black with Chapter 10. The novel was first published in 2005. Spoilers ahead! CW for medical and non-medical fatphobia, and slurs related to ethnicity and sexual orientation.

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Series: Reading the Weird

Animated Babylon 5 Film Has A Name And Will See the Return Of Many An Original Cast Member

Last week, Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski revealed that an animated movie set in the original show’s universe existed and that we’d find out the title and the cast would be revealed next week. Well, it’s one week later, and as promised, both of those things have been revealed as well as a hint of what the plot of the film will be.

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A Matter of Death and Death: Jacqueline Holland’s The God of Endings

Jacqueline Holland, in her debut novel, avoids calling her blood-drinking immortals vampires. They don’t fear the sun or garlic, and no one here is turning into a bat. But when a previously dead creature rises from the earth, deathless and feeding only on blood, one might, I hope, be forgiven for using the shortcut. (Holland does, in multiple interviews; she clearly did her research.)

And what an odd vampire book this is. The story of an immortal named, over the decades, Anna or Anya or Collette, it feels at different times like a story about fear and loss; about not knowing what you want; about avoiding the world as often as engaging with it; and about ambivalence. 

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Good Omens 2 Will Heat Up Your Summer Starting in July

At long last, Good Omens 2 has a premiere date! It’s been almost two years since Amazon announced that the adaptation of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett’s novel would get a sequel series—two years filled with hints and extras and not-totally-clear casting announcements.

But this announcement is quite clear: Good Omens 2 arrives July 28th on Prime.

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New Young Adult Science Fiction & Fantasy for May & June 2023

I hope you like fantasy, because that’s the overwhelming majority of what you’re getting this summer in the realm of young adult speculative fiction. A few horror and science fiction/dystopian novels have squeezed through, but otherwise this is a season of magic, gods, and other paranormal beasties. Here are some of the YA speculative books coming out in May and June that have peaked my interest.

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