Thoughts on A Fading Sun

Every so often, I receive a fabulous book to review that clearly expects a sequel. And, if I’m lucky (which I have been repeatedly, as the editor watches for sequels), I receive the next book to review a while down the line.  That’s what happened with A Fading Sun by Stephen Leigh.  I reviewed it last year for Booklist, and had noticed it on my list recently and wondered if the sequel had been published.

Lo and behold, the sequel, A Rising Moon, appeared in my mailbox.  If you have time before November, I recommend reading the first book before the second one is released.  What follows is the review I submitted last year:

The Cateni are a conquered people, hiding their traditions since the Mundoan Empire overran their land three generations ago. This is easier said than done for Voada Paorach, who sees ghosts and helps them follow the sun-path to the afterlife. She successfully hides her ability well into her adult life until the death of someone close forces her to reveal it. Cast out of her home and torn from her family, a ghost, Moonshadow, who fought against the original Mundoan invasion, leads Voada to Onglse, where the Cateni still openly rebel against the Mundoans. Commander Altan Savas has been sent to lead Emperor Pashtuk’s army in Albann; he reluctantly leads the oppressing army to what he expects, at best, to be a Pyrrhic victory on Onglse.  Voada and Moonshadow move that battle to mainland Albann, where Altan is forced to follow in an attempt to salvage the Mundoan Empire’s hold over this conquered land. Readers will detect a resemblance to Ireland, Scotland, and England during the Roman era. Adults and teens who enjoy this story will eagerly anticipate the sequel.

My poor confused garden.

It’s now late September, and my garden isn’t quite sure what to do. The temperature has dropped and given us nights in the 50s and 60s, and I have harvested at least a dozen pumpkins, which being changing color when the temperature approximates fall.

One pumpkin ripe and ready to pick, one just formed.
One pumpkin ripe and ready to pick, one just formed.

But this week, we’ve had highs in the high-80s, and are expecting a drop to just below 70 by Saturday. There are flowers open on my pumpkin because of the heat, with new fruit having formed in the last week, while other pumpkins are ripe and ready to pick.  The newly formed fruit will probably not survive, though it may be that a neighborhood squirrel or raccoon gets to them before the weather does… they’re quite soft at this stage.

My tomatoes are going through similar waves of ripening or over-ripening.  On the extremely hot days, they split before they’re fully ripe, which means they go bad before I get to them.  If they’ve split and haven’t gone bad, they frequently get eaten in the picking process, to avoid losing them.  (Not to be confused with other tomatoes that get eaten in the picking process.)

I can’t really complain, as it extends my harvest.  But I was swatting away mosquitoes this week, and I’m fairly sure none of us appreciate them having an extended season.

Legally Blonde (The Musical)

The 2018-2019 Broadway season has begun at the Paramount Theatre in Aurora with Legally Blonde: the Musical.  While I’ve never seen the movie, I had some general knowledge of the plot before we went to the show last weekend.  Not knowing the specifics, I was fairly entertained by the show, even with the bits that I felt were obviously predictable from the beginning.

Elle, in addition to being a flighty blonde, is upbeat and starts with the absolution conviction that she can follow her ex-boyfriend to Harvard Law School and succeed, despite her total lack of interest in law or serious studies.  She is assisted by her sorority sisters throughout, both in real life and versions of them in her head (singing as a Greek chorus), and by friends she makes once she arrives at Harvard.

She goes head-to-head with her ex-boyfriend, his new girlfriend, and one of her law professors, none of whom believe she has a chance of graduating, much less landing one of the four internships offered by the professor.  The only people on her side are Emmett, the professor’s assistant, and Paulette, a beautician she meets when she considers going brunette to convince people she’s serious about law school.

This show was a delightful start to the season.  I’m looking forward to see their interpretation of The Wizard of Oz in November.

Pokémon Go

I have found at my new job, working in a smaller office space, that I walk less than I used to. Given that I have a desk job, I already don’t move enough during the day. I was occasionally walking before lunch at my old job, but needed some extra push to get there at my new job.

On a Pokemon Go hunt with a few critters around me.
On a Pokemon Go hunt with a few critters around me.

Enter Pokémon Go, which I installed when it first came out, then ignored for about two years. I recently re-installed it on my new(-er… just under two years) phone, and logged in.  I initially installed it for parenting reasons… checking to see if it was appropriate for my daughter to play.  I think I reached level 3 before giving up; I had a new house and things to do here (unpack, assemble furniture, repeat as needed), as well as a job and karate.  When I upgraded my phone a couple months later, I didn’t bother re-installing it.  Until now.

I walked at lunch a couple days, but found I needed a bit more of a stretch, and something to make it more interesting, since I was walking the same loop each time.  By installing Pokémon Go, I’m encouraging myself to walk farther – the nearest in game stops and gyms are close to a mile away.  On the other hand, I can’t really walk that far at lunch and still have time to eat… so I do that walk on mornings when I have a bit of free time before work (due to my shorter commute).  When I only have time for a shorter walk, the old loop still works for hunting Pokémon, I just have to be careful not to run out of pokéballs, which you need to catch the critters.  You can pick up more of those at gyms, stops, and in gifts from your friends.  In each of those cases, the selection of items is random.  The random selection at stops and gyms also includes gifts that you can send to friends.  Every gift exchange increases your friendship levels; increased levels have in-game benefits.

Pokemon Go gift reads "Greetings from Commemorative Ground Ring; Chicago, Illinois, Unites States"
A gift from Chicago!

The critters you encountered appear to be randomized too, some days you encounter more of one type than the other.  Of course, being Pokémon, the goal is to collect them all, but some are harder to find than others… including some that are country-specific, so you pick them up when you travel or you trade with friends.  Anyways, it’s an entertaining addition to outside walks, though it doesn’t work on a treadmill unless you have an Apple watch.