Jan. 20th, 2026

js_thrill: goat with headphones (goat rock)
 Today's song: Quetzalcoatl Comes Through


I listened to the wrong version for a while (it wasn't bad), I've written before about how Darnielle is a Christian musician, and he is, for sure, but just as he is fascinated with Classical Antiquity, and loves to sing about Roman and Greek mythology, he has other fascinations (a lot of them are just being a huge history fan in general, which comes through with this song being inspired by a book about Aztec history that he was reading, but later we'll see that his enthusiasm for regional pro-wrestling or Magic: The Gathering also get their share of space in his corpus). Anyway, I think part of the appeal he brings is just his general enthusiasm. Darnielle has genuine passion for things that comes across vividly.  The other part is that he brings a perspective.  Whether it is the tragedy of the alpha couple's eternally traumatically dissolving yet somehow fixed orbiting of each other, or that riff on Auden's take on Bruegel's Icarus, the wedding of his enthusiasm for whatever he turns his attention to and the point he wants to get across about it is really the heart of why the songs resonate with so many people. 

This is one of the better tracks we've hit so far, I think.

js_thrill: shizuku from whisper of the heart, at a library table, reading intensely (books)
I am sort of annoyed that this book wasted such a good premise. 

Archeologists discover a strange jade-like rock, and it gives off weird radiation, and some folks die. The government hushes it up and takes the rock off to secretly study it in a facility in rural-ish Michigan.  One night, the facility where the thing is being studied explodes with light, and the facility, including the nearby town as well as everything else within a sizable but not too sizable radius, has disappeared and been replaced by old growth forest. Of course, we follow the town/facility to wherever it went, which is another world? Dimension? Anyway, it's another earth, whose history is quite a bit different from ours. North America is under a the rule of some sort of Theocratic rule, that government is at war with Spain, and the appearance of this town is a challenge to the government's religious outlook.

WHAT A PREMISE!

And there are moments that attend to interesting details. The town isn't swapped with another town, so it lacks power for some time. It's far away from cities/settlements, and so it takes some time for them to even make contact with locals. But Wilson doesn't wind up doing *doing* anything with this stuff.  Characters speculate on what the historical point of divergence is, and idly guess about what major events did or didn't happen in this new universe, but nothing really comes of it.  We don't really see the protagonists use their (somewhat superior) technological knowledge much (nor do we see them hampered much by not knowing how the technology they rely on works). We fast forward past some of the more interesting parts of the plot so that we can get to the "action movie heroics" parts of the story.

Can you imagine how good the world-building could have been in a book with this premise?  Characters decide to emigrate from this town and try to integrate into this new world, and we don't get any real insight into their mindset or discussion about them other than that they hadn't been from that town and had simply been visiting when the town got ripped into the new world, so they didn't have friends and family in the town. I don't know about any of you, but if I was visiting Peoria, and it got zapped to Percei Omicron VIII, maybe I would decide to stick around Peoria, maybe i would decide to go explore the alien world, but I think there would be a lot to explore in why I made that decision beyond "well, he's not from Peoria."  Are they planning to convert? Are they good at following orders from the (brutal) enforcers of Church Law in this government? Do they speak French? 

Anyway, I wound up reading this book because after I finished The Last Astronaut, Kobo sent me an email with books I might like, and, in fairness to Kobo, the synopsis was a rock solid recommendation for me. But I think I gave the book a generous 2.5 stars.

Profile

js_thrill: greg from over the garden wall (Default)
Lewis Powell

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 2021222324
25262728293031

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 21st, 2026 01:44 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios