Girl Power: Wednesday, and Enola Holmes 2

My current routine for this blog is that I try and do Saturday posts about culture and Sunday posts about other things, with book reviews the rest of the week and also (until November) my regular look back at previous months of blookblogging every six days or so.

So today I’m doing a quick look at two things we’ve enjoyed a lot recently, both featuring young women in the title role of kickass heroine. To be honest I’m a bit under the weather today, so this is just mild squee rather than deep analysis.

Wednesday, in case you don’t know, is an eight part series from Netflix about the daughter of the iconic Addams family, with Tim Burton as executive producer. Wednesday Addams (played by Jenna Ortega) is sent to Vermont (played by Romania) to attend a boarding school for magical kids. Magical boarding schools go a long way back – there are echoes of Roke as well as Hogwarts – so some of the story writes itself; there are also interesting bits of tension between town and gown (a theme that goes back at least to Chaucer) and the persecution of the Other.

Ortega really makes Wednesday watchable, as a girl who doesn’t care what the hell anyone else thinks. There’s one scene near the end which I thought went too far, where she is particularly nasty to a fellow student. But otherwise you hardly care about the plot, you wonder what she is going to do next. The high point is her dance at the school ball, which apparently was choreographed by Ortega herself.

Similar and yet also different, we had watched Enola Holmes a few months ago, and have now got to Enola Homes 2, in which Sherlock’s younger sister (played by Millie Bobby Brown, who is also one of the producers; she turns 19 later this month) uncovers sinister industrial secrets in a match factory and ends up instigating the 1888 match girls’ strike. It’s not in the same league as Wednesday, but it’s very entertaining to see the Sherlock Holmes mythos subverted in this way, and ignore the historical inaccuracies. Oddly enough this too has a memorable dance scene, though it’s more of a distraction from the plot.

Anyway, just to say that we enjoyed both of these a lot.

January 2020 books

This is the latest post in a series I started in late 2019, anticipating the twentieth anniversary of my bookblogging at the end of October 2023. Every six-ish days, I’ve been revisiting a month from my recent past, noting work and family developments as well as the books I read in that month. I’ve found it a pleasantly cathartic process, especially in recent circumstances. If you want to look back at previous entries, they are all tagged under bookblog nostalgia.

We had no idea what was coming in that fateful month of January 2020. I went to London for work in the first week; went to the first Glasgow 2024 planning weekend in the middle of the month…

and also went to Rome again, where I caught the Castel Sant’Angelo across the bridge.

And the UK left the EU. I was still angry. And I still am.

Non-fiction: 6
Under Another Sky: Journeys in Roman Britain, by Charlotte Higgins
Roots and Wings: Ten Lessons of Motherhood that Helped Me Create and Run a Company, by Margery Kraus
Backstop Land, by Glenn Patterson
About Writing, by Gareth L. Powell
The Lost Worlds of 2001, by Arthur C. Clarke (in fact this is mostly SF but the non-fiction framing is key)
In Praise of Disobedience: The Soul of Man Under Socialism and Other Writings, by Oscar Wilde (mostly non-fiction but includes several fantasy stories)

sf (non-Who): 17
Exhalation, by Ted Chiang
Seraphina, by Rachel Hartman
Land of Terror, by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Demon in Leuven, by Guido Eekhaut
“Home is the Hangman”, by Roger Zelazny
The Last Days of New Paris, by China Mieville
Miss Shumway Waves a Wand, by James Hadley Chase
Distaff: A Science Fiction Anthology by Female Authors, eds. Rosie Oliver & Sam Primeau
Sirius, by Olaf Stapledon
The Raven Tower, by Ann Leckie
Once Upon a Parsec: The Book of Alien Fairy Tales, ed. David Gullen
The Testaments, by Margaret Atwood
This Is How You Lose The Time War, by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
2001: A Space Odyssey, by Arthur C. Clarke
The True Queen, by Zen Cho
To Be Taught, If Fortunate, by Becky Chambers
The Ten Thousand Doors of January, by Alix E. Harrow

Doctor Who: 2
Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, by Terrance Dicks
Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, by Ian Marter

Comics: 4
Auguria, Tome 1: Ecce signum, by Peter Nuyten
Auguria, Tome 2: Gaeso dux, by Peter Nuyten
Auguria, Tome 3: Fatum, by Peter Nuyten

As Time Goes By, by Joshua Hale Fialkov and Matthew Dow Smith

7,500 pages
10/32 by women (Higgins, Kraus, Kingsolver, Hartman, Oliver/Primeau, Leckie, Atwood, El-Mohtar, Cho, Chambers)
2/32 by PoC (El-Mohtar, Cho)

Three here that I really enjoyed, The Testaments by Margaret Atwood (get it here), Exhalation by Ted Chiang (get it here) and Sirius by Olaf Stapledon (get it here). But you need not bother with Land of Terror by Edgar Rice Burroughs (if you do, you can get it here).

Diary of a Witchcraft Shop 2, by Trevor Jones and Liz Williams

Second paragraph of third month (June):

Desperately trying to get some study done and the puppy has learnt to bark at everything – and she has just pulled the wireless router off the shelf…

I have not read the first volume of this, but I don’t think it matters; Trevor and Liz chronicle the daily circumstances of life running an occult shop in Glastonbury, along with Liz’s wider engagement in science fiction activism – the book covers her time as a judge for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, and participation in various conventions and other meetings, with lots of appearances from people who I know. There are a lot of interesting characters and funny moments in their lives, as you might expect from Glastonbury, and that includes their dogs. You can get it here.

This was the non-fiction book that had lingered longest unread on my shelves. Next on that pile is Representing Europeans, by Richard Rose.

Sin Eaters, by Cavan Scott, Adriana Melo, Cris Bolson and Marco Lesko

Second frame of third issue:

Last in the series of Ninth Doctor comics from Titan, this has the Doctor dealing with a creature constructed from his id, a bit of Jack’s back story, Rose called on to save the day and only a small role for the promising UNIT companion Tara. There’s also a bit of commentary on social media. I thought the first story would have made a great TV episode if there had been a second Ninth Doctor series, and enjoyed the rest though it was a bit uneven in places. You can get it here.

Next up in this sequence: Revolutions of Terror, by Nick Abadzis et al.