Split Time Works

“S” IS FOR SILENCE (Kinsey Millhone Mysteries) by Sue Grafton. Okay. So Milhone lives in the 1980s. But the cold case she is working on–and that she draws her alternative point of views from–is set in the 1950s. And, boy does Grafton ever nail the 1950s, when TV was just set to burst into our…

Loyal to the Bone

BASTARD OUT OF CAROLINA by Dorothy Allison. In this powerful book of suffering, strength, and grace, family love provides all of the above. The most powerful aspect of Allison’s book for me is her ability to remain loyal to truth, and Bone’s ability to remain loyal to a family ripped through with flaws, and that…

Court Procedural with Quirky Humor for Good Measure

CRATER COUNTY: A LEGAL THRILLER OF NEW MEXICO by Jonathan Miller Jonathan Miller writer a sort of court procedural tale, quite in keeping with his lawyer-self. Add romance, a pinch of creepy suspense, interesting characters, and a marvelous New Mexican backdrop and it makes for good entertainment. Don’t forget to look for the humor in…

Time Capsule of Early Women’s Movement

Uncommon Women and Others by Wendy Wasserman. I narrowly missed attending a Seven Sisters College, but this play shows me everything I might have missed–for good or ill. It’s a time capsule, most forcefully, of the 1970s Women’s Movement Early Days–thoughtfully and comically presenting relationships between women, personalities and choices, while probing the question, “What…

Enduring and Endearing

INSPECTOR MORSE: THE DEAD OF JERICHO/THE MYSTERY OF MORSE–DVD I appreciated seeing the first episode of this long-running series adapting Colin Dexter’s fine novels. Seeing how the characters and their relationships were introduced and begun to be developed is helpful to as I now catch-up with the rest of my Morse education. The accompanying documentary,…

We Get What We Bring: Be a Guest at the Feast

DAUGHTERS OF THE DUST–DVD We get what we bring.  This principle is brilliantly illustrated in the responses to Daughters of the Dust in its Amazon reviews. Julie Dash’s brilliant and ground-breaking independent film is too good to dismiss.  True, Dash’s film takes some effort because it uses non-traditional story-telling techniques rather than the ones we…