The Skiffy and Fanty Show Podcasts

828. Our Happy Place (2024; dir. Paul Bickel) — At the Movies

https://media.blubrry.com/skiffyandfanty/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/archive.org/download/sand-f-828-our-happy-place/SandF_828_OurHappyPlace.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Android | Email | TuneIn | Deezer | RSSMountain isolation, reality warping, and axes, oh my! Shaun Duke and Daniel Haeusser join forces to discuss Paul Bickel’s Our Happy Place (2024). Together, they explore the film’s themes of isolation and psychological destruction, Paul Bickel’s direction and Raya Miles’ performance, ways of interpreting its narrative, and much more! Thanks for listening. We hope you enjoy the episode!

Cover of The Blood of the Bull by Jo Graham, featuring a woman wearing a dark blue gown, earrings and a jeweled snood, holding a golden goblet with red fluid dripping from it, in front of a stained glass window with various emblems including a bull at the top.
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Book Review: The Blood of the Bull, by Jo Graham

I’ve been a fan of Jo Graham since her Black Ships (2008), a re-imagining of the Aeneid from the perspective of a priestess. Although she has written a good deal of science fiction (her Calpurnian Wars series and numerous Stargate tie-ins), much of her work has focused on historical fantasy, ranging from the ancient world (her Numinous World novels that started with Black Ships) through the Napoleonic era (The General’s Mistress, etc.) to The Order of the Air, the 1930s series co-written with Melissa Scott that I wrote about in 2018. When Graham’s fantastic Italian Renaissance series debuted in 2023 with A Blackened Mirror, I missed it, along with the 2024 sequel, The Borgia Dove. Now, just ahead of the release of The Blood of the Bull, I have finally caught up, and I’m so glad I did! The Memoirs of the Borgia Sibyl series focuses on Giulia Farnese, a real-life Italian noblewoman who became the lover of Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia. Having some knowledge of history, plus recently listening to Ada Palmer’s Inventing the Renaissance: The Myth of a Golden Age (2025), I was aware of the basic beats of Borgia’s career, although I knew nothing of Giulia. Graham has done a great deal of research and has quoted letters from Rodrigo and Giulia on her Patreon. All the books start with family trees, explanations of timekeeping in Renaissance Rome, and lists of important People, Places and Things, but I mostly skipped over those, trusting Graham to explain what I’d need to know as the story progressed. This was justified, but then, I’ve read a lot of historical novels; others may find these elements extremely helpful, especially since the cast of characters is large. What is not historically recorded is Graham’s version of Giulia being a seer with mystic powers. Early in the first book, she descends into some ancient tombs and begs Persephone to rescue her from her expected destiny of maiden aunthood. Her pleas are granted in very unexpected ways, and her connection with the numinous persists throughout the events of each book, including learning how to cast protective wards against evil, and more. Given that this is based on real history, I don’t think it’s much of a spoiler to say that by book 3, Rodrigo is now Pope Alexander VI. Giulia has assisted in his rise, participating in political intrigues and foiling assassination attempts by various means. The question is, having gained great power, can they keep it against old rivals and new threats? A shocking turn of events sends Giulia fleeing Rome, making herself vulnerable to both French invaders and the ascetic extremist Friar Savonarola. Will Giulia and Rodrigo be able to overcome their internal and external challenges, and save themselves, Rome, and the progressive faction of the Church? Or must the blood of Borgia, whose house emblem is the Bull, be shed and sacrificed to protect all that they cherish? I am really enjoying this series. Giulia is kind, clever, resourceful, and brave, an entirely engaging protagonist. Trapped in a bad marriage, used and endangered by her in-laws, and seeing many examples of rule-breaking in Roman society, it’s natural that she looks for love and protection elsewhere. And although modern eyes would see her relationship with Rodrigo as a May-December romance at best, starting with her being 15 and him 58, I love Graham’s depiction of their courtship and bond. Although he has great temporal and ecclesiastical power, she brings her own resources of perception, intuition, social networking, female-coded skills like the languages of clothes and jewelry, and mystic power into the balance. They are sweet, caring, and considerate of each other (except for rare quarrels), and their wordplay and games are often extremely amusing. And they are extremely sensual and sexual together! Graham excels at depicting intensely warm ongoing relationships that blend earthiness and spiritual aspects, and this comes very much to the forefront here. But it’s not just the Giulia and Rodrigo show. Giulia has brothers and a mother (and in-laws), Rodrigo has sons and daughters (despite his clerical station), and both of them have extensive networks of allies and clients. On the other side are Giulia’s in-laws and the leaders and agents of those who oppose Rodrigo for reasons of nationality (he’s a Spaniard, while most Cardinals are Italian), doctrine (he’s humanist, they’re reactionary), and pure power. Graham weaves the plethora of personal threads to create a rich and brilliant tapestry of life in the Italian Renaissance, highlighted by magical underpinnings and subtle sparks. I was planning to space out these books a bit more, but I was so engrossed by the first novel that I bumped the rest up in my reading schedule and gobbled down the next two in the space of two days. I highly recommend these novels for fans of historical fantasy and romance. The Blood of the Bull will be published on July 7; you can preorder it here. The first two books are available at Candlemark & Gleam. At least one more book, A Golden Branch, is planned in the Memoirs of the Borgia Sibyl series. Content warnings (series): Disease, killings, riots, violence; religious and ethnic persecution; religious patronage and corruption; sexual discrimination and coercion; sex scenes, infidelity, and illegitimacy; curses and black magic. Comps: The Emperor’s Agent, by Jo Graham. Disclosures: As mentioned, I’m a longtime fan of Jo Graham; I used to talk with her on LiveJournal, and I support her on Patreon. I received free eARCs of all three books in the series (so far) from the publisher for review.

Cover of Strange New Worlds Toward the Night, featuring a large image of Captain Pike and smaller images of (from left) Spock, Nyota Uhura, Number One, and Erica Ortegas, in front of a planet and atop a cityscape, with a red star or nova and a nebula behind them.
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Book Reviews: STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS: ASYLUM by Una McCormack & TOWARD THE NIGHT by James Swallow

The third season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is just days away, but it’s only the last month that I’ve started watching the series, up to half-way through the second season as of now. And it feels great to be watching something that feels like Star Trek again. I was mostly disappointed with Picard, and Discovery felt disjointed, with low points and high points but never scratching the Star Trek itch. I’d mention to friends how I wasn’t a fan of the season arcs and a focus on just a few characters that left most of the bridge crew in obscurity. They’d agree, and then quickly say how great Strange New Worlds was and that I’d probably like it much more. They were correct. For some reason I don’t have the first of the three Strange New Worlds novels published to date, but I’ve read the two I do have as I started watching the show. These two novels were just as thrilling and fun to read as watching the best of the show. Even if you haven’t seen Strange New Worlds before, or have just been a casual Star Trek fan, the two novels are each worth checking out for unique reasons. I’m assuming that most people who read this are generally familiar with Strange New Worlds, but quickly for anyone who may not: The series is set on the USS Enterprise during a five-year mission under the command of Captain Christopher Pike, before Captain James T. Kirk takes command as featured for in the original series outside its pilot episode. Asylum, by Una McCormack, alternates between a ‘present’ time period corresponding to the series’ first season and a ‘past’ set at Starfleet Academy where future Enterprise first officer (Number One) Commander Una Chin-Riley attends as a cadet and meets a young Ensign Pike who has returned for a hearing and an opportunity to lecture cadets about his fresh ‘real-world’ experiences serving on a starship. With its focus squarely on the relationship between Pike and Chin-Riley, Asylum understandably neglects the other regular characters of the show. I’m usually more excited about seeing some attention paid beyond the top of command, and can be wary of origin stories such as this. But McCormack does a fantastic job with it, also being helped with the fact that they’re both compelling characters whose growth over time becomes evident, both as individuals and as a partnership. The big strength to Asylum, however, comes from its plot and themes. Cadet Chin-Riley’s academic and professional future becomes threatened as she allows her emotions and time to become embroiled in alien socio-politics. Through her roommate she meets an Euxhana family, a cultural minority of the Chionian people seeking asylum in Federation space. Twenty-five years later in the ‘present,’ Starfleet assigns the USS Enterprise to help settle a Chionian trade agreement, which becomes threatened by a pro-Euxhana saboteur. Beyond being entertaining and casting light on Chin-Riley and Pike, Asylum delves into complicated and relevant topics of cultural identity, suppression, freedom, responsibility, and the possibility and limits of activism and engagement. It’s a tremendous story that doesn’t simply cast the players into roles of good versus evil, but displays nuances on all sides to show how best choices can be made, even if making missteps before that can be acknowledged and learned from. The way that these themes impact Chin-Riley’s growth bear import for events both in the first season of Strange New Worlds, as well as the second. Toward the Night by James Swallow is an equally strong and fun novel to Asylum, while being completely different in its emphasis. It features significantly more of a range of characters from the show and features an action-packed plot that feels like an exciting episode with the soul of the original series. It doesn’t deal as much with moral gray areas or complexities, but gives a hopeful tale of discovery among the stars, of finding family and friends. Patrolling the Federation/Klingon Empire border, the USS Enterprise discovers a planet, in orbit of a volatile star, with evidence of a ruined civilization, remains of giant insects, starship-grade metals and Federation technology. They have stumbled upon the old mystery of the USS Baldwin, a starship lost close to a century ago. Among the Baldwin’s crew was Maria Santiago Ortegas, helmswoman Erica Ortegas’ great-grandaunt, a woman whose legend inspired Erica to follow into Starfleet. Finding a strange alien device onboard the Baldwin, an Enterprise away team inadvertently triggers it, causing Pike, Security Chief La’An Noonien-Singh, Nurse Christine Chapel, and Ortegas to be transported into the past soon after the stranding of the Baldwin’s crew on the planet below, and leaving the Enterprise behind in spacetime with Commander Chin-Riley in command to deal with the arrival of conflict-craving Klingons. As Dr. Joseph M’Benga lends his expertise in Klingon warfare to deal with an escalating situation, Spock and Nyota Uhura work to find a way to contact and rescue the vanished away team. Though all the main characters are featured, the novel puts particular emphasis on Ortegas, someone popular with fans who hasn’t had as much backstory expansion as other characters have. The plot of the novel allows Swallow to follow many of the expected tropes of Star Trek, such as orders not to reveal too much to people in the past — but then that all falling apart and needing to divulge everything. This allows Erica Ortegas to form a connection with Maria Ortegas that goes differently than she might have expected based on her hero worship, but that ends up leading to growth and familial bonds for each of the women. Amid all the action, threats, and death that the novel features there is also a good dose of heartwarming elements, such as the Ortegas’ relationship and the aliens of this planet, the reason for their disappearance, and the novel’s epilogue (which I won’t spoil of course). Though there might not be huge surprises in the mysteries that underlie this

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