22 December 2024: The three latest written interviews of me are here, here and here.

Friday, March 27, 2026

For All Mankind 5.1: On the Intersection of Alternate and Real Histories



For All Mankind is back on Apple TV with the debut first episode of its 5th Season.

As has been usual with the more recent seasons, my favorite part of this season was the alternate history set up which we see at the beginning of this first episode of this new season.  As a reminder, the alternate history split in this series hinges on the Soviet Union beating us to the Moon back in the late 1960s.  Among the profoundly important consequences for the human species is that we have a much more active ensuing space program, as we vie with the Soviets for a predominant position off our planet.

My favorite alternate history flourishes in the 2004-2012 years that are the foundation of this 5th season are:

  • John Lennon and Jay Z have a joint concert in this period, because, as was already established in an earlier season, Lennon was not assassinated at the end of 1980 in this alternate history.  Readers of my blogs will know this is so important to me: I wrote a short story, made into a radio play, then expanded into a novel in which John Lennon was not assassinated and The Beatles are still together in the mid-1990s.  I think that most assassinations are errors in the cosmos, and I feel especially good when an alternate history corrects them.
  • I also loved the fact in this alternate history that JFK Jr is expected to run for President in 2012, meaning he didn't die in the plane that fell into the sea with his wife Carolyn Bessette and her sister, as they did in our all too often so cruel reality we apparently all inhabit off-screen.  In the alternate history portrayed in For All Mankind, former President Ted Kennedy -- yes, he's elected President in this series in 1972 -- Chappaquiddick didn't happen -- but dies a few years before 2012 of a brain tumor.  A good alternate history always mixes in some elements of real history to make the fiction convincing.  In our real history, Teddy died of a brain tumor in 2009.  
Now, on this last point of JFK Jr being expected to run for President in 2012, I just yesterday completed my review of Love Affair, the nine-episode narrative of JFK Jr's relationship with Carolyn Bessette, and how it ended so terribly tragically.   Talk about about the intersection of alternate and real history, you couldn't ask for a better example of the first episode of this season of For All Mankind debuting the day after Love Affair concluded.

***

You'll notice that I haven't said anything about the story that continued after the alternate history Intro in For All Mankind 5.1.   That's because I didn't find anything of really exceptional interest in the ensuing story.   But not to worry -- I intend to keep watching and reviewing every episode.

See also For All Mankind 4.1: Back in Business and Alternate Reality ... 4.2: The Fate of Gorbachev ... 4.3-4.4: The Soviet Union in the 21st Century, On Earth and Mars ... 4.5: Al Gore as President and AI ... 4.6: Aleida and Margot ... 4.7: Dev on Mars ... 4.8: Sergei and Margot ... 4.9: Progress ... 4.10: Earth vs. Mars

And see also For All Mankind 3.1: The Alternate Reality Progresses ... 3.2: D-Mail ... 3.3-3.4: The Race

And see also For All Mankind, Season 1 and Episode 2.1: Alternate Space Race Reality ... For All Mankind 2.2: The Peanut Butter Sandwich ... For All Mankind 2.3: "Guns to the Moon" ... For All Mankind 2.4: Close to Reality ... For All Mankind 2.5: Johnny and the Wrath of Kahn ... For All Mankind 2.6: Couplings ... For All Mankind 2.7: Alternate History Surges ... For All Mankind 2.8: Really Lost in Translation ... For All Mankind 2.9: Relationships ... For All Mankind 2.10: Definitely Not the End


in Kindlepaperback, and hardcover




Monday, March 23, 2026

The AI in Scarpetta: In Defense of the Cardinal Sin of Science Fiction



The wife and I binged Scarpetta, an adaptation of two of Patricia Cornwall's novels, on Amazon Prime. It started off slowly, but was top-notch forensic thriller by the time it got to its 8th and final episode of its first season.

I'm a big fan of forensic scientists in fiction -- as a viewer, a reader, and an author (see my Phil D'Amato series) -- and Nicole Kidman in the lead role, and a wild cast of characters, did the narrative justice.   But what interested me most, and has attracted a lot of attention, is the subplot of Scarpetta's niece, Lucy, continuing her relationship with her beloved deceased wife Janet via an AI of Janet.

This AI has received some criticism, because it committed the cardinal sin of science fiction.   Cathal Gunning in Screen Rant offered the outraged assessment that Janet in Scarpetta is akin to "You’s Joe Goldberg inventing a teleportation machine, or True Detective’s Rust Cohle using time travel to revive his dead daughter." And, even worse, the sentient AI in the TV series was not even in the original novel (Autopsy, 2021, which I haven't read).  My response would be a combination of: "And?" and/or "So?".

I might be prejudiced, because I encountered some of this response to my Phil D'Amato stories.  Bookstores didn't know whether to shelve The Silk Code (1999) -- which won the Locus Award for Best First Novel in 2000 -- in the science fiction or mystery section.  I get that labels are important.  If I'm in the mood for sushi, I don't want to find after I'm seated in a restaurant advertising itself as serving Japanese cuisine that the only seafood on the menu is calamari or shrimp scampi, much as I love that, too.  But surely reading and watching fictional stories is different.  Isaac Asimov's robot detective R. Daneel Olivaw is aptly regarded (at least by me) as one of the best characters in literature  (speaking of which, see Alexander Zelenyj's "These Streets Are Bruised" and "Shells", both recently published in Amazing Stories).

The only problem I can think of regarding AI Janet is that some viewers may get the incorrect impression that current AI can actually be like "her" -- getting jealous and petulant -- but we're really not there yet, and may never be.   In the meantime, my unasked for advice would be enjoy Scarpetta as the provocative hybrid of mystery and science fiction that it is.



Friday, March 20, 2026

Love Story: A Deeply Moving Docudrama


My wife and I have watched all but the final, 9th episode of Love Story -- the romance of JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette -- on Hulu.  I decided to review it now.

First of all, I've felt for a long time that the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Robert F. Kennedy, and John Lennon were the most significant public events in my lifetime  -- other than landing on the Moon --not to mention heartbreaking, in different ways.  And given that JFK Jr was the son of JFK, and the nephew of RFK, I was bound to be very interested in any television series about him.

At the same time, I've been telling my students and writing for years that docudramas are inevitably very different from the realities they retell in their stories.  I realized that many years ago, when my wife and I were watching Ike, a docudrama about Dwight Eisenhower starring Robert Duvall in the title role.  As we were watching it, I began thinking, and said to my wife, that, you know, maybe Eisenhower had more charisma than I'd realized, watching his boring public statements and speeches when I was a kid.  And then I realized that of course I was thinking that, watching Duvall's performance as Ike, because of Duvall's charisma not the real Ike's.

The fact of the matter is that even a documentary inevitably commits lies of omission.  You can't put everything, not even every significant thing, in a movie, or even a TV series.  But the docudrama takes this to an extreme, inventing not only conversations but often even characters to tell its story.   And knowing that as I watched Love Story, I was nonetheless moved to tears, because it accurately portrayed the burden that JFK Jr, along with Carolyn Bessette, bore.   And though I get that Daryl Hannah was very upset with the way she was portrayed -- and I wish her well -- that didn't affect the impact Love Story has had on me.  Because it reminded me how much we lost with the assassinations of JFK and RFK, and might well have lost with the tragic deaths of JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette Kennedy.

Paul Anthony Kelly as JFK Jr, Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn Bessette, and Grace Gummer as Caroline Kennedy brought these real-life characters admirably to life, as did Naomi Watts as Jackie Kennedy and Jessica Harper as Ethel Kennedy.  And the writing was sharp, funny and tragic when it needed to be. And if many conversations were products of the writers -- Episode 8 (co-written by Juli Weiner and series creator Connor Hines) was 100% John and Carolyn talking, with no one else in their Tribeca apartment -- well, I don't care, that's more than fine with me.  Because those conversations provide a reasonable enough take on what those conversations most likely were.  I'm not saying Love Story is Shakespearean -- though it does have elements and echoes of that -- but I don't recall anyone attacking his ten history plays because he made up conversations among his characters.

So thank you Hulu and everyone involved for giving us a plausible not literally factual story of one of America's and the world's tragedies, for giving us a convincing glimpse through tear-drenched windows.  And as for reality -- well, if I lived in his district, I'd 100% vote for Jack Schlossberg (who criticized this docudrama as "a grotesque display") in the upcoming Democratic primary.

Note added March 27, 2026:  My wife and I just saw the 9th, final episode of Love Story.  I stand by everything I said in the above review, and indeed feel even more strongly that this is a docudrama eminently worth seeing.

This final episode leaves an indelible impression of what the Kennedys, those they loved, and those who loved them have gone through.  The conversation between Caroline and Ethel verbalized what I've been thinking since Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated, the awful price that the Kennedys had paid, and would continue to pay, for their service to our country, and the wider of goals of democracy and freedom, goals and ideals which have only become more important in our country and world today.  And the cap of Carolyn's mother reciting some lines from "Death Is Nothing At All," the poem by Henry Scott Holland, captured the tenuous hope we all need to have.



Saturday, March 14, 2026

"These Streets Are Bruised" & "Shells": Flesh and Silicon, North of the Border


I don't usually review short stories -- I read them a lot, but life's too short to review short fiction, when there are so many novels not to mention movies and TV series out there -- but every once in a while I make an exception.

And, indeed, Alexander Zelenyj's "These Streets Are Bruised" and "Shells", both published in Amazing Stories in the past couple of years, are eminently exceptional.  Indeed, their story about robots, androids, or, as they are called in these two tales, "More-than-Men" and "fakemen" and worse things by some folks we encounter, fit well in the lineage started by Ambrose Bierce and Karel Čapek, hoisted into pre-eminence by Isaac Asimov, and continued by a handful in the ensuing decades.

Asimov's R. (for Robot) Daneel Olivaw, who started as a police detective, is closest to the protagonists in Zelenyj's stories, Clark and Kessel, a pair of detectives who both have some "mech" in their bodies, as they investigate the evolving group of fakemen in Windsor, Canada -- aka "Cancer City" across the river from Detroit -- in Zelenyj's post-apocalyptic locale.  Indeed, a human being with no mech parts is a character you're least likely to meet in these literally riveting stories.

And Zelenyj delivers these tales with memorable poetry.  "He left the window gaping with darkness, like a black eye sullying the dilapidated building a little more, and another bruise on the city that he loved and hated with all of his breaking heart", and in "Shells" we learn of "ashen remains ...  scorched into the sidewalks and streets, into the grass of unhealthy, balding fields".  And the author has a knack for minutia in popular culture.  I was glad to see "the artefact of the Neil Diamond LP", especially given that my wife and I had just seen and really enjoyed Song Sung Blue.

But I won't say anything more -- lest I give away anything in these stories that are chocked full of surprises -- other than you can read them for free on the Amazing Stories website here and here, and "Shells" in the weeks ahead in the printed magazine that commemorates the 100th anniversary of that pathbreaking publication.  

========

my own excursion into androids...



"Robinson Calculator" and lots of other stories in this anthology


Slipping Time

Slipping_Time_story_cover

FREE on Vocal: "Slipping Time" and Substack: "Slipping Time"

  • Illustration from painting by Gustave Caillebotte, 1877
  • Earlier version of story published in Amazing Stories, 2018
  • Get the story for your Kindle 





Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Man in the High Castle Now Up on Netflix: My 2021 Interview with Rufus Sewell

 

Couldn’t be a better time for The Man in the High Castle to show up on Netflix — here’s the 90-minute conversation I had with Rufus Sewell about his deeply thought-out performance in the lead role, in July 2021, shortly after the conclusion of the pathbreaking series on Amazon.

And ... if you're a fan of alternate history, you might enjoy It's Real Life: An Alternate History of The Beatles.


more about the novel here


Monday, March 9, 2026

Paradise Season 1 and Season 2.1-2.5: A Story about Anything But ... and More



My wife and I binged Season One and the first five episodes of Paradise 2.1-2.5, and we loved it.  So much so, I decided to post this review, and come back after Season Two ends in the weeks ahead with another review.

You know, it's no easy thing to pull off a science fiction / who-done-it mystery hybrid -- I've tried it myself in my Phil D'Amato series -- and the first season of Paradise does it splendidly.  It kept the ultimate villain hiding in plain sight until the end, as it told its post-apocalyptic story hurtling along with surprises in every episode.

And in addition to all this, Paradise in both seasons treats us to a potent true-love story, with all the trimmings.  Human relationships are always put to the test when humanity is hit with an extinction-level event, but the love explored in Paradise is so deep and real it would've worked splendidly even if the background was just another Pleasant Valley Sunday.

Speaking of which, the songs in the series are as good as those in Lost, with a special emphasis on Elvis.  In an attractive twist, which adds to the surreality of the narrative, we get covers of some great songs, spun out in slow tempos which hang seductively in the air and paint the walls and the meadows of the scenes.  And the acting is just superb.  Sterling K. Brown, who was so memorable in Dan Fogelman's other masterpiece, This Is Us, is just perfect as a man thrust into ... well, I've resisted talking about the specifics of the plot so far, so I won't start now.  But I will say that Shailene Woodley, Julianne Nicholson, Jon Beavers, and James Marsden also put in powerhouse performances.

And I'll also say that I was glad to hear quantum entanglement mentioned in the second season (see, again, Phil D'Amato), and Episode 7 in the first season was so punch-in-the-stomach heart-in-your-mouth compelling I'm feeling it's one of the best episodes of anything ever on television, period.



Phil D'Amato series ... radio play and movie  "The Chronology Protection Case"

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Sample from One of My Three Audiobooks about McLuhan


talking about the medium is the message ... more details about this and other McLuhan audiobooks here 



Podcast: Paul Levinson interviews Dan Abella about Philip K. Dick Film Festival 2026


Welcome to Light On Light Through episode 418, in which I interview Dan Abella about The Philip K. Dick Film Festival to take place in New York City, March 13-14, 2026.

Relevant links:

 


Check out this episode!

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Tehran: Did the TV Series Trigger Trump To Do the Bombing?

In a feat of perfect timing, I finished watching the third season of Tehran the night before Trump announced the joint Israeli-US attack on Iran.   We know that Trump watches a lot of TV, and is very much influenced by it, choosing cabinet members based on their performances on cable news shows.  I wonder to what extent his ultimate decision to attack Iran was based on his viewing of the series named Tehran?

First, let me say that I saw all three seasons of the series in the past few weeks, and talked my wife into watching it, too.  It's an excellent series, which started out very well, and just got better and better. Apple TV+ and the Israeli TV broadcaster KAN 11 are part of the production team, and Tehran indeed has a lot of the flavor, power, and feel of Fauda, which is also an Israeli production.  It was also good to see Sasson Gabai back in action in Tehran, after his success in a very different kind of role in Shtisel.

The essence of Tehran is what kind of military back-up will Israel give its Mossad agents who are already widely embedded in Iran.  In the third season, in particular, we find agent Tamar Rabinyan (very well played by Niv Sultan) struggling to stop Iran from finally creating a nuclear weapon -- struggling to do this before Israel bombs the site, which would release damaging radiation (not as bad as a nuclear explosion, of course, but the "dirty" explosion would engender serious health risks).  All of this occurs as Iran is literally on the edge of developing nuclear weapons.

Was Trump watching this thrilling series, and that's what led him to make the decision to bomb Iran?  Well, the edge-of-your-seat season 3 finale of Tehran the series was aired on February 27, and the US started bombing Tehran the city on February 28.


Saturday, February 28, 2026

Man on the Run: The Rocky Flight of Wings



My wife and I saw Man on the Run, a nearly 2-hour documentary on Amazon Prime, about Wings, Paul McCartney's group that flew around the world from shortly after The Beatles broke up in early 1970 to shortly after John Lennon was murdered at the end of 1980, making a Beatles reunion forever impossible.

Let me say that I've always thought Wings at their best -- "Let Me Roll It," "Band on the Run," "Jet," "Mull of Kintyre," and "Live and Let Die"-- was every bit as good as The Beatles at their best, which is actually a huge lot better than good.  And like all the recent Beatles documentaries, the sound in this documentary was great, and an outright pleasure to hear.

The story, though, was no pleasure to see.  A sadness hung over the movie, and not just because we knew it would conclude close after Lennon's assassination.   But we see Paul McCartney's struggle, beginning with his attempt to get the world to see, back then, and continuing now, that Lennon had announced to the band much earlier than McCartney did to the world that The Beatles were over.  In part, McCartney's problem was the way in which he made that announcement, in an interview he conducted with himself, in which he even took a shot at poor Ringo, proclaiming McCartney wouldn't miss him.

The result was a lot of people -- fans and critics -- listened to McCartney's efforts, before he created Wings, with a lot less than a kindly ear.  The myopic critic Robert Christgau was especially harsh, missing completely the affectionate brilliance of Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey, and many of McCartney's other solo efforts, literally solo in that he played all the instruments and sung all of the parts either by himself or with Linda.   I've been complaining about Christgau for decades, but I guess I should thank him, because The Village Voice published my response to Christgau's article, which I sent to the weekly newspaper as a letter to the editor, and they published as an article -- my first published article -- for which they paid me $65.

McCartney created Wings in large part in response to such criticisms, and the group succeeded splendidly.  They started out playing to small audiences, but in a few years played to sell-out crowds teeming with shouting fans with a great line-up that consisted of Paul, Linda, Denny Lane, and an evolving variety of musicians.  McCartney was happy about that, but continued to be plagued by public misunderstandings.  I recall how I felt, when I heard McCartney's response to Lennon's murder -- "it's a drag" -- thinking that Paul must've been in shock when he gave that seemingly shallow reply to a journalist's question, but one of my students (I was teaching then at Fairleigh Dickinson University) came up to me after, in sheer disbelief that McCartney had said this.   It was good in the documentary to hear that Paul had said a lot more than the drag line in his response to that question -- the media as they often do just broadcast the most provocative line -- and heartening and soothing to hear Sean Lennon say recently in the documentary that he always understood how much his father and Paul had loved one another.

My wife and I continue to love The Beatles, and Paul and his music.  One way I tried to deal with how much I miss them was the novel I wrote, It's Real Life: An Alternate History of The Beatles.  Seeing Man  on the Run didn't have too much of a healing effect, but I guess that's the problem with reality.



more about the novel here

Friday, February 27, 2026

The Night Agent 3: Father and Son



I thought the third season of The Night Agent was easily the best of the three -- I liked the first season a lot (here's my review), the second season more (but I didn't have the time to review), but this third season was really top-notch unusual and exceptional.

Here's what I especially liked:

[Spoilers ahead ... ]

The hitman father -- with no name other than The Father -- and his son -- known only as The Son -- made for a really original, compelling story, that even ultimately managed against all odds to be close to heartwarming.  The Father acquires his Son after killing The Son's parents.  The Father hitman has some human decency, and although the son was then just a little baby, who would not have been able to tell the police anything, The Father just couldn't leave the baby crying there, an even worse, in an apartment filled with carbon monoxide.

The little boy that we see in the present day, about eight years old, is paralleled in the story we see of Peter as a boy.  Death is near to both boys, since Peter's mother will soon be dying of cancer.  And just to throw a well-known book into this mix, there's a copy of Grimm's Fairy Tales that also plays a part in Season 3.

Meanwhile, the corrupt President Hagan, willing to permanently dispose of anyone who stands in his way, couldn't have been a more timely character.   The Night Agent in all three seasons has had a lot in common with 24, but Season 3 has the greatest similarity, with someone in the White House as a central villain.  Peter Sutherland helps bring down Richard Hagan, just as Jack Bauer did with Charles Logan in Season aka Day 5 of 24.  And Chelsea Arrington gave a great assist, and indeed led the charge against Hagan.

I did miss Rose in the first part of Season 3, but the gripping breakneck pace of the narrative soon became enjoyably all-consuming. I expect we'll see her back in some way in Season 4.  We did get Chelsea -- who may well be Peter's new professional partner in Season 4. And I'm glad that Adam survived, too.  His coming around in the end to do the right thing shows the winning subtlety in Season 3, with shades of grey playing a major role between heroes and villains.

Gabriel Basso was excellent again as Peter Sutherland, as was Louis Herthum as Jacob Monroe and everyone else from previous seasons.  And new additions Fola Evans-Akingbola as Chelsea, David Lyons as Adam, and Stephen Moyer as The Father were especially notable.  I look forward to see those three and how their stories play out in Season 4.

See also The Night Agent (Season 1): The Right Good



Sunday, February 22, 2026

56 Days: Wild, Sometimes Winsome, Sometimes Weird, Thrilling Little Series



My wife and I just binged 56 Days on Amazon Prime.  Aside from the title, I thought that this was one wild, sometimes winsome, sometimes weird, multifaceted gem of a thrilling whodunnit series, with two separate complex intersecting stories that jump back and forth from the present to the past.

One story is about the couple who have some kind of a close proximity to a body found in their apartment, no doubt murdered and turned into a chemical soup in a bathtub.   The initial question is who in this couple murdered whom.  

[And there will be at one spoiler ahead ... ]

I began to think pretty soon that the soup could be of both of their bodies, or a third person's body altogether (which turned out to be what it was).

The other story was of the two detectives investigating the crime, an older, somewhat disillusioned guy and his younger woman partner.  She's having an uncomfortable affair with a suspect (in another case), who doesn't take kindly to her efforts to end that relationship.

Romantic love in surprising places and its power to overcome all kinds of obstacles is one of the central underlying themes of 56 Days.  This animates the couple associated with the human soup in all sorts of surprising ways.   And a story of love rearing its head and holding its own in all kinds of unlikely situations is one of the most attractive parts of this series.

Kudos to creators Karyn Usher and Lisa Zwerling, and Avan Joglia and Dove Cameron as the couple in the apartment, and Karla Souza and Dorian Missick as the detective partners.  All four gave memorable performances.

Speaking of which, another notable thing in this steamy series is the nudity we see. Back in the 1960s, that was de rigueur in a story like this, at least in the movies. Nowadays, the most we usually get is black underwear. But in a story like this, in which the romantic love is palpably fueled by erotic desire, we need a little more (or, depending how you look at it, a lot less).

I said earlier that I didn't care for the title, and it was indeed the unexpected emotional power of the narrative that I thought deserved a more evocative title than just a number of days.  The action flipping back and forth from the present to x number of days in the past is of course what generated the 56 Days title, but that narrative form would have worked just as well with any title.  I know that the series is based on a 2021 novel of the same name by Catherine Ryan Howard (which I haven't read), but a streaming series that bears some resemblance to You and the movie Body Heat deserves a name at least as good as those.

In fact, You as a title is not even that good. Body Heat is fine. But the point is the number of days as a title is lackluster. And flashing the number of days on the screen (prior to 56, which is the present), over and over again, became tedious, and for me at least, distracted from the story. A simple "Present" and "Past" would have worked much better, and would have slided us into the story without needing to do any math.


Friday, February 20, 2026

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Thursday, February 12, 2026

Cross 2.1-2.3: To the Rescue



My wife and I saw Season 1 of Cross (starring Aldis Hodge) a few years ago and really enjoyed it.  I didn't have time to review it then, but I thought it was fast-paced, full of twists and turns, and emotionally powerful.  I liked it just as much as, if not more than, the Morgan Freeman movies in the 1990s.

We saw the first three episodes of the second season last night.  It's starting as engaging and powerful as the first season, with a crucial additional ingredient:  it speaks to the political turmoil currently pulling our country apart, and comes in on the ethical, democratic side on two related, front-page issues.

Those would be the Epstein files and the ICE attacks on anyone they see as not belonging in this country.  

[Spoilers ahead .... ]

The new season opens with a pair of assassins killing a man disturbingly similar to Epstein on an island with middle-aged men and young female victims.  It was an opening gambit that posed a vexing moral question: Are Cross and company right to hunt such assassins? And, are this serial killer couple second cousins of Dexter Morgan?

Next, we have an immigrant who kills a vicious ICE officer (or whatever racist US police force), who had recently killed someone that Cross was about to subdue without violence.  It will be instructive to see how Cross investigates, but the series deserves credit for correctly depicting what ICE and the Border Patrol have been doing not just near our borders, but in Minneapolis, Chicago, and cities across our country.

As was the case in the first season, there's lots of hot romance in the story, and more than one crime and criminal that Cross and his associates must bring to justice.  Based on the first season, I'd say that no one (other than Cross) is safe in this narrative, and I'm looking very much forward to seeing how it all unfolds.


Sunday, February 8, 2026

A Conversation with Sarah Clarke Stuart about Song of the Unsung Mushroom


Welcome to Light On Light Through episode 417, in which Sarah Clarke Stuart and her husband Jonathan Oakes join me and my wife Tina Vozick in a conversation about Sarah's debut novel, Song of the Unsung Mushroom, published January 15, 2026 by Connected Editions (a boutique publisher that I and Tina created and operate). 

At times joining our conversation are Alexis Stuart (who created the cover for Sarah's novel), Susan Clarke, Molly Vozick-Levinson, Elizabeth Clarke, Chryssi Steven, Meghan Vickers, Bud Gundy, and Edwin Stepp (thanks to the last three for providing blurbs for the novel).

Relevant links:

  • Kindle, paperback, hardcover, audiobook (read by Sarah for Listen and Live Audio) of the novel here
  • More about Connected Editions here

 


Check out this episode!

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