Saturday, November 29, 2025

FROM THE SPINE - NOVEMBER 2025 BOOK REVIEWS

November 2025

November is a month to give thanks. I am thankful for my family, vacations, and the unusually warm weather. It is finally starting to get cold here, but the mild fall has been very nice.  


Before you get distracted:


Book Giveaway-  

Send (text or email) me answers for any or all of the following to enter the December drawing:

  1. Do you most prefer ebooks, audiobooks, or hard copies when reading? 
  2. What is your favorite book for young ladies (like Millie)?
  3. Which book are you most likely to gift for Christmas?


I’ll do the usual drawing and send the winner(s) the book of their choice. 


Anyway, here are the books I finished and my reviews of them:


Fiction Books

Transformation by Seth Ring (Battle Mage Farmer #5)

John Sutton has problems. There is a beast invasion coming. A weird group of mages is trying to enslave the humans in his world. And an evil space pirate army is on its way to his world to strip its resources and enslave the humans. To keep the world from ending, John must dismantle each threat. John starts by taking the inter-world portal to find his friend Katrine. He finds his way to a powerful wizard tower where he begins to research inter-world gates and picks up the trail of the mage who led Katrine into danger. On the higher worlds, John’s body soaks up more potent mana, and he learns he is capable of seventh and eighth-level spells. Eventually, John rescues Katrine and begins healing her. Next, John returns to his world, but he is forced to lock his mana away because it is too powerful for the lower world he lives in. He battles the dragon Farroutef, which has taken refuge in his soul and is trying to take over his body. The rest of the book is about John learning how to defeat the dragon so it won’t destroy him and the world, and Ferdie, John’s bull, getting into a tussle with the King of Beasts. The magic system in these books seems to be getting more complex as the books progress. I’m not sure I fully understand it. I’m also bummed that Audible pulled the rest of the books out of the “included” library. That slows me down considerably. 


This is for gamers and adventurers. 

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, ebook, 420p.)


Always Remember: The Boy, The Mole, The Fox, The Horse, and the Storm by Charlie Mackey

Most of what makes storms easier to weather is the company you keep. It is not the storms themselves that make the relationships deep. It is the way you feel about the people who join you in the chaos. The people who show up to help make all the difference. The reassurance they provide is critical. This book is about the boy who stares into the wild. The mole, who is still obsessed with cake. The fox, who has been hurt by the world. The horse, who is big and strong, and stable. The crew weathers a big storm together. I love the whimsy and creativity of this book. I love the characters. I love the deep wisdom mixed into the art and story. 


This is for everyone. 

(Rated G, Score 9/10, Hardcover, 128p.)


Restart by Gordon Korman

My beautiful daughter recommended this book. She’s reading it for her class book bracket challenge. It’s not just a kid's book, though. It is filled with interesting interpersonal tension and drama. Chase Ambrose wakes up in the hospital. He fell off his roof on his shoulder and head. He has severe amnesia. He cannot remember anything before his accident. He doesn’t even remember his family. Chase is the star running back for the 8th-grade football team, but he has no idea what that means while he recovers. As the title suggests, Chase gets a complete restart. Except everyone else remembers the old Chase. The old Chase was a terror. He was a bully, a selfish jerk, and a thief. But the new Chase doesn’t know any of that. He gets the chance to be a new, better, kinder human. The story unfolds over the school year as Chase makes new friends in the video club, gets to know his old friends (who he doesn’t really like anymore), and uncovers his murky past. Chase gets to choose who he will be. His choices define the new Chase. I love the way the story shows how each choice determines who Chase is. He makes both good and bad choices. But he gets the chance to redeem himself. He gets the opportunity to write his own story. “To quote the great UCLA basketball coach, John Obiwan Gandalf, ‘It is our choices, Gentlemen, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.’”


This is a great book for anyone looking to adjust their trajectory or change their stars.

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Jonathan Todd Ross, 6:51)


A Wolf Called Wander by Rosanne Perry

Swift is a wolf pup in a litter born in the mountains. This is his story. He grows up in a strong family. He learns to hunt as part of a pack from his father. He learns to avoid dangers like porcupines and skunks. A bigger, stronger pack takes over Swift’s hunting home-ground and scatters Swift’s family. Swift runs for his life. His speed saves him, but he is forced to abandon his family and wander the wilderness. A raven joins him, helping him to find food. Men and their black river change his course. Eventually, Swift finds a new hunting ground and a powerful mate.  This is an interesting story based on a real wolf’s journey (OR-7). Jet and I were hoping one of the wolves would tangle with the skunk, but that part didn’t make it into the story. 


This is for wandering wolves, orphans, and young readers. 

(Rated G, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Kirby Heyborne, 3:54)


Lula Dean’s Little Library of Banned Books by Kristen Miller

This is a newer book about the power of books. This book touches on all sorts of dangerous subjects: racism, rape, suicide, homosexuality, and several others. What I like most about this book is that it is intended to teach us how to read books and live life with our brains on and our hearts open. You can’t believe everything you read. Not every book is for every reader. But, as one character says, the books are never the problem. The humans are. This is a story about a small town in Georgia, where Lula Dean begins a book-banning crusade. She demands that “dangerous” books be pulled off the shelves of the schools and public library. She sets up her own little purple library and fills it with “wholesome” books. A young lady, the daughter of Lula Dean’s enemy, pulls a wonderful prank. She takes a load of the banned books that were being stored in her mother’s basement and hides them in the dust jackets of the books in Lula Dean’s library.  She swaps the covers, hiding the dangerous books in plain sight. The people in the town pull the dangerous books out of the little library, and each book has a powerful effect. The books force racism out into the open, uncover bigotry, give shy people courage, and help the town’s people empathize with each other. There is big tension, as the town learns about the ghosts of its past. It was interesting to read through those hard moments. This book could have quite easily been a horror book if the author had taken the plot to darker places. Instead, she wrote mostly about restoration, healing, sense, and redemption. This is a tough book. I’m not sure if I agree with all the conclusions it draws, but I love that it forces hard looks at beliefs, biases, and ideas. Thank you, Julie, for this recommendation. 


This is for readers needing a challenge.

(Rated PG-13, Score 10/10, audiobook read by January LaVoy, 10:13)


The Will of the Many by James Islington

If you took Maze Runner and mashed it up with Red Rising, you would get something like this book. Vis Telemus is the main character. He is an orphaned prince living in The Hierarchy. The Hierarchy is the government as well as the magic system in the book. There are eight layers in the pyramid structure, with each lower tier ceding will to those above them. Will is power or energy, or magic. There is heavy Roman influence in the book, from the language to the Senatorial arrangements. The Octavi cede their will to those above them in the pyramid without receiving anything in return. They are the slaves. They are the many. Vis is violently opposed to The Hierarchy. He is surviving apart from it for as long as he is allowed, but at some point, he will be forced to cede. Vis is discovered and adopted by Ulciscor Telemus, who trains him for the Academy. Vis is sent to the academy to spy on the head of the school and to investigate the death of his adopted father’s brother, who died at the school. Vis has to work his way up through the ranks at the school, balance weird relationships, and learn how to run the labyrinth. Vis is used to violence and danger, but it feels like the whole world is out to get him, except for a few key friends. The end of the school year brings the ludicium, which is the challenge designed to select the Domitor (top student). The challenge is designed to be brutal, cut-throat, and dangerous. It is the climax of the book. Book 2 just came out, so I’ll have to track it down and find out what happens next. I enjoyed the complexity and unique magic system woven through this book. There is a good blend of action, learning, and character development to complement the author’s world-building. This is the type of book that will keep you hooked, reading past your bedtime. Thank you, Connor, for the recommendation. 


This is for street rats, howlers, and maze runners. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 10/10, audiobook read by Euan Morton, 28:14)


The Boy with Video Game Powers by R. L Ullman

Milo is an average 12-year-old in the real world, but he is a gaming genius. His worlds collide when he wins an ultra-rare item in his game, Ranger Quest, that magically shows up on his finger in the real world. The Glitch Ring allows Milo to see everyone’s stats and to use items and armor in the real world as he would in Ranger Quest. When bad guys start spawning in Milo’s neighborhood, he goes to work, saving the world. Being a hero is risky. Heroes are often misunderstood. The media calls Milo “Pixel Man” and blames him for the damage caused to the city in his battles. The bad guys that are spawning get tougher and meaner. Milo also gets tougher and meaner as he defeats them. Can Milo figure out who is behind the monsters, the Glitch Ring, and protect his city?


This is for young gamers like my son Jet.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, ebook, 154p.)


The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill

I love this witch story. Millie and I listened to it. There are so many wonderful characters. The story is told in small chunks from differing perspectives. There is a town called the Protectorate, shrouded in sorrow. The people live in fear of the witch in the forest. There is a whimsical witch who lives in the forest named Xan. She is a healer and protector. She lives with a swamp monster named Glerk and a perfectly tiny dragon named Fyrian. The people of the Protectorate sacrifice one child each year to the witch. Little do they know that Xan rescues the child each year and carries it to the free cities beyond the forest, where they are adopted and thrive. There is a different witch who lives in a tower in the Protectorate. She eats the sorrow of the town. But the real joy of the story is Luna. Luna is one of the children sacrificed to the witch. When Xan rescues her from the forest, she falls in love with the little girl. When she accidentally feeds Luna moonlight, Luna becomes enmagicked. The stories of the Protectorate, Luna, and Xan are woven together as Luna grows and becomes more powerful. The plot brings everything to a climax when the volcano threatens the world, the Sorrow-Eater tries to kill Luna, and Xan runs out of magic. I do love it when an author properly wraps up all the odds and ends and resolves all the tension well in the end. 


This is for young dreamers, grievers, and tiny dragons.

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Christina Moore, 9:31)


Non-Fiction Books

The Unseen Realm by Michael S. Heiser

This book is like two semesters of Biblical studies worth of content. It is extremely academic, detailed, and thorough. The author unravels our modern perspectives on the Bible and weaves a tapestry of new ones through the lens of the ancient audience. The goal is to create a mosaic that shows the Bible as a whole- a beautiful mosaic telling a singular story from beginning to end. The author also attempts to correct common misinterpretations, explain difficult passages, and deepen the reader’s understanding of the spiritual realm as it collides with earth. 


The book is organized into eight parts:

Part 1: First Things

Part 2: The Households of God

Part 3: Divine Transgressions

Part 4: Yahweh and His Portion

Part 5: Conquest and Failure

Part 6: Thus Says the Lord

Part 7: The Kingdom Already

Part 8: The Kingdom Not Yet


The author gets deep into the original Hebrew and Greek languages to debate different interpretations of difficult passages. He also includes extensive notes and references. He challenges modern interpretations when he sees the text differently. 


The biggest idea is the concept of a Divine Council. Modern Bible readers often assume that there is only one god in the spiritual realm, which leads to confusion when they read about God talking to and about his divine council. The concept of a divine council explains some of the more confusing passages from Job, Deuteronomy, Genesis, and Revelation. It would be nice to have an org chart. 


This book is fascinating to me. I could see how many readers would see the new information and perspectives as a threat. Some would armor up, throw rocks, and quit as soon as their comfortable paradigms were challenged. This is the same problem the author is calling out in Lula Dean above. I like to see how new information fits into my existing paradigms. I like to ponder new ideas and set them against my old ones. Then I try to keep all the ones that make sense. The idea of a divine council is very valuable because it solves many problems without destroying or challenging the core concepts of the Bible. I love books that stretch my brain like this. 


This is a tough book. The author has a book called Supernatural, which is a condensed version of the same content and might be more suitable for readers who don’t need as much academic rigor. 


This is for a serious seeker. 

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Gordon Greenhill, 15:43)


Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green

Everything is tuberculosis (TB), and tuberculosis is everything. The disease is much more prevalent than I understood. Something like one quarter of all humans are infected with it. But I am insulated from it because I live in a rich country with a modern medical system. In this book, the author discusses the history of the disease and how it is a sordid story of injustice, racism, poverty, and so much death. The disease is woven into our history, contributing to the start of World War I, helping New Mexico become a state, and killing the poor and the wealthy alike (before modern medicine). Today, TB is pretty rare in the US and other rich countries. It is curable. The tragedy is that the cure is not widely available, especially not in poor countries. We could eliminate TB with wider detection, cheaper drugs, and better prevention, but we (royal we) have not decided to do any of these things aggressively enough, and so the disease persists, killing over a million people each year. This is obviously not a very cheerful book, but it does have a reasonable balance of hard facts and hope. TB is brutal. We can defeat it. Can we come together to do more? Thank you, Abbey, for the recommendation. 


This is for anyone needing a better view of the world.

(Rated PG-13, Score 8/10, audiobook read by the author, 5:35)


My Next Breath by Jeremy Renner

It’s hard to kill an avenger, but not impossible. On New Year's Day 2023, Jeremy Renner suffered a terrible accident while he was clearing snow from his home in Nevada. His Snow Cat tried to crush him to death. He suffered at least 38 broken bones from his face to his foot. His eye was crushed out of its socket, but doctors were able to squish it back into place without any permanent vision problems; in fact, he says it helped him see better. His nephew and two neighbors helped him breathe for nearly an hour while rescue workers made their way to the scene and helped to stabilize him and remove him by helicopter. This is the book he didn’t want to write. It’s his story about how he will never have a bad day again, because he’s already had the worst day. Everything else should be easy. This was a tough story to hear. The hardest part to hear was right after the accident, when they inserted audio from the 911 call, and you can listen to Jeremy struggling to breathe in the background. I am amazed that he didn’t pass out. I’m pretty sure he would have been gone forever if he had lost consciousness. After a helicopter evacuation and emergency surgeries to reestablish his rib cage and repair his bones, Hawkeye became the worst patient ever. I could empathize with a lot of the emotions of his recovery process, having gone through most of them during my recovery. Recovery is a slog. Recovery is humbling. Recovery is softening. Having to rely on others forces you to be more connected. Recovery makes you say all the bad words. Recovery is physical, mental, and emotional. It takes forever. I’m still processing this memoir. It was full of weird California lingo, of course, coming from a Hollywood star, but it is also authentic, gritty, and raw. 


This is for survivors and anyone wanting to know the whole story. 

(Rated R, Score 7/10, audiobook read by the author, 6:35)


Preview/Currently Reading-

Strong Ground by Brene Brown

This is Marketing by Seth Godin

A Short Stay in Hell by Steven L. Peck


I track my books in a database called Goodreads. It might help manage your reading lists. 


Final Thoughts- 

I got to go elk hunting with my dad, my brothers, my uncle, and his girlfriend at Valles Caldera in NM. They didn’t tell me we were going to be getting up at 2:30 AM each day to get into position to shoot at elk before the sun comes up. I’m not sure it would have helped, but it might have given me a chance to try to prepare. We hiked over 30 miles in the three days I was with them. I was worried about my knee. It did great. I learned that it has about a 4-mile range before it needs a break and a snack. 


I learned so much: 

~Sidearms are heavy. Rifles are heavier. 

~Don’t leave water in your Camelbak hose if it’s freezing out.

~Be quiet. Be still.

~Nap when the animals nap. 

~Elk are dang hard to find (except in the No Hunting area). 

~You can do everything right, and still have to rely on luck. 

~Family is everything. 

~Being out of cell range in the wilderness is deeply healing. 

~Doing hard stuff makes it easier to do more harder stuff. 


I’m so thankful to have been a part of the hunting adventure. 


I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving.

Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua


PS. I’m looking to grow and improve this little experiment. If you have benefited from it and would like to support my ability to buy better books or run with some other ideas I have been working on, here is your opportunity. You could think of it as an investment or buying me a coffee

Friday, October 31, 2025

FROM THE SPINE - OCTOBER 2025 BOOK REVIEWS

October 2025

October can be a really hard month. This year, it felt better. Probably because August and September were so hard. Millie participated in a climbing competition that stretched out over the month, trying to climb as much as she could. Her skill, confidence, and bravery increased exponentially. It was so fun to belay her through that journey. Aubrey and I celebrated our 14th anniversary. She’s my favorite human. 


Anyway, here are the books I finished and my reviews of them:


Fiction Books

The Fault In Our Stars by John Green

My “Want to Read” list in Goodreads is about 300 books because of the recommendations you send me. I sort through it often and pick out books to hunt. This magically helps books come to me at the right time. This book caught my eye because it has the most reviews of all the books in my “To Read” list (Harry Potter #1 is most reviewed on my “Read” list). This is a crazy hard book. It’s an exploration of the trauma and chaos of childhood cancer. Hazel, a 16-year-old cancer survivor/fighter, is the main character. Hazel’s life is full of fear, struggle, and pain. She is physically limited by lungs that suck at being lungs. She needs constant oxygen, and any physical exertion leaves her gasping for breath. Hazel is obsessed with a fictional novel called An Imperial Affliction by Peter Van Houten, which ends abruptly- like mid-sentence. Hazel falls in love with a boy named Augustus Waters, whom she meets at her cancer support group. Their relationship develops strangely as Hazel tries to save Gus from the pain he will inevitably feel when her lungs quit on her or her cancer returns. The two teens seem made for each other. They share so many hard experiences, ideas, and struggles. Augustus eventually takes Hazel to meet Van Houten, hoping to discover what happens after the end of his novel. I can’t write about what they find without spoiling the plot. The hope of the story is in the dialogue between Hazel and Gus. Sorrow is the undertone of pain and loss, ever-present in the lives of their families and friends. Loss is inevitable. The burden of long-term care is also thoroughly explored. Some caretakers cope better than others. This book reminded me of my friend Beau and my cousin Naomi, both of whom lost their battles with brain cancer. They both were so clever, so bright, and are so missed. 


This is for survivors, caretakers, and empaths. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Kate Rudd, 7:11)


The High King by Lloyd Alexander (Chronicles of Prydain #5)

Arawn, Death-Lord, has made his final preparations and advances on Prydain. Taran, the assistant pig-keeper, and his fellowship of comrades must unite to face him directly, or lose their homes by force of violence. The fellowship meets at Caer Dallben following the loss of the great magic sword Dyrnwyn. Taran, Princess Eilonwy, King Rhun, Gurgi, the former giant Glew, Coll, Lord Gwydion, Kaw, Dallben, Fflewdur Fflam, and Queen Akron all come together to plan their next move. The majority of the crew heads toward King Smoit’s castle, where they run into Magg, who imprisons some of the warriors. King Rhun dies in the brave rescue, and the party decides to head to Caer Dathyl and rally around High King Math. Taran rallies troops who are loyal friends from his travels in earlier books. But Arawn’s forces are as bold and desperate as ever, and leaving Annuvin unguarded, the cauldron-born assault Caer Dathyl and destroy it and kill the High King. The remaining good forces decide to assault Arawn in his evil realm in a final attempt to destroy him. To do this, Taran leads a force that constantly harasses the evil troops as they march back to Annuvin to buy time for Lord Gwydion’s army to make their assault. Doli and the Fair Folk devise a brilliant plan to drown the evil army in fire and ice. Taran and his army then join the assault on Annuvin, where Taran chances upon Durnwyn, which he uses to destroy the deathless warriors. Taran then kills Arawn in the form of a serpent, destroying the Death-Lord and his castle. The heroes return to Caer Dallben, where they learn that many of them will leave Prydain for the Summer Country, never to return. Taran refuses the trip because of work he has promised to complete after the war. Eilonwy also refuses to leave, and the pair become the High King and Queen of Prydain.


This is for warriors, adventurers, and those who need a fantastic book where good overcomes evil.

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by James Langton, 7:24, Ebook)


Stuart Little by E.B. White

This is a strange little story about a family with a son named Stuart, who is a mouse. The reader is expected to suspend all expectations of reality and lean into the adventures. The author takes great pains to explain some of Stuart’s challenges, like brushing his teeth, but comfortably ignores other issues, like how a human gives birth to a mouse. There are sailing adventures, road trip adventures, and some challenges with the family cat being…rude. 


This is for young readers with proper imaginations. 

(Rated G, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Julie Harris, 1:54)


The Hard Goodbye by Frank Miller

Goldie. She says her name is Goldie. Marv spends the story hunting down Goldie’s killer in Sin City. Marv, whose looks and brains weren’t enough to keep Goldie safe, but are enough to help him sort out a bad frame job, escape the cops, thugs, a killer cannibal, and kill his way to the truth. I like the characters (especially Marv), the tension, the redemption, and the one-liners. This is the first graphic novel in the Sin City series that was used to make the movie that came out way back in 2005. The parts of the movie from this piece are incredibly close to this graphic novel. I’m going to work through the others as I can get a hold of them. 


This is for young men with a vigilante streak. 

(Rated R, Score 8/10, graphic novel, 208p.)


All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

There are limited bands of light in the visible spectrum, but there are many more we cannot see. Technology is both wonderful and terrible. Humans have the capacity for immense perseverance and brutal cruelty. War brings out the best and the worst of us. This story is set before and during World War II. One story arc follows a young German boy out of the slums and into the German war machine. The other ark is the story of a cursed diamond, big enough to have an ancient history of death and betrayal. A young blind French girl protects the diamond in the center of the story as the war begins. She must keep the diamond safe from the Germans who hunt for Europe's biggest treasures. The author uses the war to show that there were good and bad people on both sides. Many of the heroes have gone unrecognized. They provided peace, food, and courage in the little moments. They held the world together while evil was tearing it apart. One aspect of the war that I learned from this book was how brutal the Germans were to everyone, including their own people. Another aspect was how brave some people had to be to stand up to the Germans throughout Europe in a time of fear and oppression. The author’s writing style in this book was interesting to me because he used a lot of very short sentences or phrases or single words, and lets the reader fill in some of the rest with their imagination. This is a heavy book because of its setting, but it is filled with grit, perseverance, and hope. 


This is for WWII buffs, young engineers, and historical fiction readers. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Zach Appelman, 16:02)


The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis

This is an amazing book on so many levels. The psychology is solid. The theology is uniquely accessible. Looking at life through the eyes and thoughts of the enemy is so helpful for understanding strategies and priorities. This is a collection of letters from Uncle Screwtape to Wormwood, a junior tempter assigned to a young man in London during World War II. The letters cover tactics and adjustments in their tempting approach. This book is widely quoted because it holds so many basic truths. This time through, I learned some things about the basics of prayer and its mechanics. I was also reminded of the dangers of becoming attached to this world. We were made for so much more than the drone of middle age. We are made for beauty and wonder. We are made for magic and truth. Hell is content to bore us to a long, old death with no spark, no joy, no living- just pain, complaining, and disconnectedness. Let us ask simpler questions, like “Is it true?”. Let us laugh when the temptations get ridiculous. Let us remember that our time is not our own. Let us be kinder, gentler, and more charitable to our neighbors. For these things will drive our tempters mad. This is my favorite quote: “Our cause is never more in danger than when a human, no longer desiring, but still intending, to do our Enemy’s will, looks round upon a universe from which every trace of Him seems to have vanished, and asks why he has been forsaken, and still obeys.” This feels to me to be what following Jesus is all about. Not really understanding your specific circumstances, but still willing to follow those little whispers to bring the kingdom to life here. 


This is for anyone looking for a challenging read with tons of depth and nuance. 

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by Ralph Cosham, 3:36, kindle ebook, 155p.)


Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhhà Lại

Hà is a ten-year-old girl, and this is the story of the year when her family risked it all, left their home, and relocated from Saigon, Vietnam, to America in 1975. War is brutal. It is especially hard on kids. Millie and I listened to this story during our drives to climb at the North Y. Hà is the youngest child with three older brothers. Their father has been lost in the war. They still hold out hope that he will return and make the family whole again. Hà describes the challenges of packing up your life, boarding a boat with countless other refugees, and making a new life in Alabama. The transition to a new life is tough on the whole family. They have to find new jobs, learn English, and the food/culture are very, very different. There are villains and heroes, friends, and enemies. Kids can be brutal to each other. It takes such bravery to go through these types of challenges. 


This is for anyone wondering what it would be like to be a human transplant. 

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, audiobook Doan Ly, 2:30)


A Closed and Common Orbit by Becky Chambers (Wayfarers #2)

I read book one almost three years ago, so I don’t exactly remember all the details, but book two felt very different. Book one felt like an epic adventure. Book two is more of a sci-fi survival story/AI mashup. Two story arcs bounce back and forth. 


1- Jane23 is a ten-year-old girl who accidentally escapes from a clone factory/compound/slaveshop into a massive scrapyard, where she is rescued from wild dogs by an AI named Owl who lives in an old ship in the junk. Owl teaches Jane23 how to survive. Jane23 fixes things for Owl and herself. Eventually, she fixes Owl’s ship enough to escape the planet. 


2- Sidra is an AI illegally living in a human body kit. She is trying to figure out how to live as a person separate from the spaceship she was designed to inhabit. Pepper and Blue help Sidra, provide her a home and a job, and keep her secret. Sidra explores life as a human. She struggles not to incriminate herself because some of her code forces her to tell the truth. She learns how to make friends on her own merit.


The two arcs wind together at the end of the story. There is a lot of speculation about what makes a person a person. There are several existential crises. Teenage Pepper swears a lot. I think I preferred the first book. 


This is for fixers, misfits, and survivors. 

(Rated R, Score 6/10, audiobook read by Rachel Dulude, 11:29)


Non-Fiction Books: 0

Sorry. Only fiction this month. 


Preview/Currently Reading-

The Unseen Realm by Michael S. Heiser

The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill

A Wolf Called Wander by Rosanne Perry


I track my books in a database called Goodreads. It might help manage your reading lists. 


Final Thoughts- 

One idea that changed my relationship with my wife is this: We are on the same team. Here’s what that means- We trust each other. We look out for each other. We give each other the benefit of the doubt. We don’t trash-talk each other (at home or to others). We support each other even when we don’t deserve it. We don’t execute these things perfectly, but they have formed a strong foundation for healthy communication and habits. Be a good teammate. It makes a big difference.


The climbing competition that Millie participated in this month was organized like a marathon, not like a sprint. Each climber accumulated points for each successful climb logged during the month. When we were signing her up, she told me I couldn’t compete. She knew that if I were competing, I would have less time to belay her, and she would score fewer points. It was a good decision. I got to watch my daughter grow and evolve all month. When we started, she could only climb parts of the easy walls. She was timid and afraid of climbing all the way to the top. By the end, she was able to climb each of the nine walls, including the one with the overhang. She gradually overcame her fear of letting go and trusting the rope (and me). Each of these victories allowed her to score more points in the competition. She put in the work, and the work paid off. She wrestled with her fears and found out she was stronger than she knew. They will post the final scores tomorrow, and I hope she wins, cause winning matters, and winning is fun. But the trophy isn’t as awesome as the power she gained from showing up, working hard, and being fierce. I’m so proud of her. 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua


PS. I’m looking to grow and improve this little experiment. If you have benefited from it and would like to support my ability to buy better books or run with some other ideas I have been working on, here is your opportunity. You could think of it as an investment or buying me a coffee