Favorite Things from 2023: Two Pirate Crews, a monk, a Robot, a Giant Lizard, and a Little Boat

2023 was a rough year. Major burnout from my day-job cuddled up with what turned out to be ADHD and it was a struggle to accomplish anything most of the time, especially anything creative. There were good things too, but the ennui was persistent and draining. On a positive note, some things have changed that I hope will help me exit burnoutville, so I’m starting 2024 cautiously optimistic. Hey, I wrote a “Favorite Things” blog, albeit a late one, which I haven’t been able to do since April so fingers crossed. 


MOVIES

Godzilla Minus One
This was my most surprising 2023 favorite. Yes, it’s a giant monster movie with all the inherent silliness that comes with the genre, but the story takes place in Tokyo immediately after the end of WWII and devotes a huge amount of it’s run time to the story of a Kamikaze pilot’s survivor’s guilt, PTSD, and attempts to rebuild his life. I was so invested in the characters I kept forgetting about Godzilla. 

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
While this Spider-Verse installment didn’t grip me quite as strongly as the first one, I still enjoyed it quite a bit. The animation is gorgeous and pushed even further this time around. It’s a bummer that the animators were apparently crunched and overworked in the process.

Teenage Mutant Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
A fun Turtle adventure with a super charming voice cast and excellent animation. 

Orlando, My Political Biography
A documentary about trans and non-binary identity, a personal essay, and a loose interpretation of Virginia Woolf’s book Orlando, a Biography, filled with joy, intelligence, and humor.

RRR
A gloriously over-the-top Indian action epic about two fictionalized freedom fighters teaming up against colonialist British forces. Good to view with a critical eye since there are elements of propaganda and other political nuances that I’m not well versed in, but on face value as a cinematic spectacle, RRR was so much fun to see in a theater.

Stop Making Sense
Weirdly, one of the films that stuck with me the most this year was the 40th-anniversary re-release of the renowned Talking Heads concert film. I’ve generally always liked Talking Heads, but the energy and creativity in Stop Making Sense is extraordinary and it made me appreciate their work a lot more.

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
Suzume
Barbie
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish


TV SHOWS

Our Flag Means Death
OFMD Season 2 took everything that was good about the first season, doubled down on it, and made it even better (and gayer). There were great character arcs, especially for Izzy, and the finale was super satisfying. I’m sad that HBO cancelled the show, but at least we got the wonderful seasons that we did. [Max]

One Piece
I randomly binged the entire first season the live-action One Piece over a weekend and liked it way more than expected. The show definitely has the “everything feels like a soundstage” vibe that you get with some Netflix originals, but it’s delightfully stupid and cartoony, everyone in the cast is gorgeous and charming, and the story of pirate adventure is fun. [Netflix]

Dimension 20
If you haven’t heard of Dimension 20, it’s one of those “funny people play D&D together” shows, and it’s probably what I watched the most of in 2023. In particular The Sleeping City series, set in a modern-fantasy New York, with a charming cast and some great characters (Stephen Sondheim and Santa show up to save the day more than once). Most of the show is only available if you subscribe to Dropout, but the first season of Sleeping City is on youtube and a podcast. [Dropout.tv]

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Loki Season 2 [most of the season didn’t click with me but I loved the finale]
What We Do In The Shadows [still very funny, but I had less patience for a show about assholes this year]


BOOKS

FICTION

Psalm for the Wild-Built & A Prayer for the Crown Shy by Becky Chambers
This beautiful duology about a traveling monk and a curious robot finding their place in a utopic society is one of those series that I immediately went out and bought physical copies of just so I could share them with other people. Highly recommend. [Sci-Fi/Fantasy]

Scattered Showers by Rainbow Rowell
A collection of charming, mostly romance-themed short stories. One story in particular took place in the dorm that was down the street from my actual college dorm and the nostalgia that it stirred up was intense. [Contemporary]

Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
An orcish warrior retires from adventuring to start her own coffee shop. A warm, cozy fantasy about found family and baked goods. [Fantasy]

Paladin’s Faith by T. Kingfisher
[You are now entering the obligatory T. Kingfisher section] A new installment in probably my favorite current book series about a bunch of paladins having adventures (and falling in love) after their god mysteriously dies. This time around our stoic paladin is escorting a spy-master on a mission that goes awry. [Romantic Fantasy]

Thornhedge by T Kingfisher
A reimagining of Sleeping Beauty from the point of view of Toadling, the fairy who is responsible for maintaining the sleeping curse. [Fantasy Novella]

A House with Good Bones by T. Kingfisher
A woman returns to her childhood home and find things are very wrong - there are vultures gathering on the roof, a jar of teeth is buried in the backyard, and something is strangely off about her mother. [Gothic Horror]

GRAPHIC NOVELS

Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton
A beautifully illustrated, deeply personal, and occasionally harrowing graphic memoir chronicling the author’s time working in the Canadian oil sands. [Autobiography]

Shuna’s Journey by Hayao Miyazaki
This beautiful early work by Hayao Miyazaki follows a prince in search of a magical grain and is filled with so many of the great images and themes that show up in his later animation work. [Fantasy]

Heartstopper Vol 5 by Alice Oseman
Volume 5 of Oseman’s YA romance series introduces sex and hormones into the equation as teens Nick and Charlie try to maintain their relationship amid college searches and looming future decisions. [YA Contemporary]

The Magic Fish by Trung Le Nguyen
A young boy (afraid of coming out to his family) and his Vietnamese mom (missing the family she was separated from), find connection through their shared love of fairy tales. [YA Contemporary/Fantasy]

A Guest in the House by Emily Carroll
The thoroughly creepy, gorgeously illustrated story of a young woman who marries an older widower and is haunted by the specter of his former wife. I can’t say I exactly understood it all, particularly the end, but the vibes and atmosphere are so strong that it didn’t really matter. [Horror]

American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang
Three seemingly separate stories - a young boy dealing with being the only Chinese-American student at his new school, the fable of the Monkey King, and a satirical sitcom starring the personification of every negative Chinese stereotype - are woven together in this very personal story. [YA Contemporary/Fantasy]

YA

Deephaven by Ethan M Aldridge
Young non-binary teen Nev travels to the mysterious boarding school Deephaven Academy to escape their traumatic home-life, and gets pulled into a mystery involving magic, conniving students, and a shadowy creature lurking in the closed off east wing. [Gothic Horror Mystery]

Spell Bound by F.T. Lukens
Two sorcerers apprentices - one with a lot of magic and one without any at all - are thrown together when their teachers are imprisoned by the burocratic and untrustworthy Magical Consortium. [Urban Fantasy Romance]

A Starlet’s Secret to a Sensational Afterlife by Kendall Kulper
A paranormal YA adventure set in 30s Hollywood that follows a young starlet (who can speak to ghosts) and a stunt-man (who can’t be injured) who are paired up to sell a fake relationship to the tabloids and end up getting embroiled in a murderous mystery. [Supernatural Mystery Romance]

ROMANCE (tldr, it’s all queer)

A Rival Most Vial by R.K. Ashwick
One of those rare times when a “since you bought that, you might like this” impulse purchase ended well. A charismatic newbie potion maker sets up shop across the street from an aloof established pro; professional rivalry becomes an angry feud becomes an unexpected romance as the two learn from each other and fall in love. [Fantasy / Not Spicy]

Diamond Ring by K.D. Casey
A second-chance romance about two baseball players who fell in love as rookies, broke apart after a dramatic World Series loss, and find their way back to each other years later. Lots of drama and pining, with characters that I enjoyed spending time with. Not sure why I started with the third book in the series, but it stood alone just fine. [Contemporary Sports / Pretty Spicy]

We Could Be So Good by Cat Sebastian
A scrappy reporter and the son of a newspaper-tycoon form an unlikely friendship (and eventual romance) when they start working in the same 1950s NYC newsroom. While it’s still a “happy-ending romance” that is more about vibes than conflict, the book adresses the homophobia and danger of the time more than most. [Period Romance / Medium Spice]

A Novel Arrangement and A Thief and a Gentleman by Arden Powell
The fifth and sixth books in Powell’s 1920s-with-a-bit-of-magic series Flos Magicae. ANA focuses on a charming love-triangle between a dressmaker (and secret romance novelist), her war-veteran fiancé, and her fiancé’s prickly best friend, a notorious artist known for shocking polite society. ATAAG follows a jaded jewel thief who is dared to seduce a cold, rules-following gentleman (that was secretly his childhood friend). [Fantasy / Medium Spice]

Rattling Bone by Jordan L. Hawk
YouTube ghost hunter and actual spirit medium Oscar and his nerdy parapsychologist boyfriend Nigel return to Oscar’s home town and find themselves investigating a ghostly family mystery at an abandoned distillery. Hawk writes the most bingeable stories and I can’t wait for the next one. [Horror Paranormal with Trans MC / Mild Spice]

The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen by K.J. Charles
Another charming period romance from KJ Charles about a misguided gentry orphan falling in love with a handsome rakish criminal. Charles excels with this type of pairing and I devour every new book she writes. [Period Romance / Fairly Spicy]

Heart, Haunt, Havoc by Freydis Moon
An exorcist goes to a haunted house to help the owner clear out a frankly alarming number of spirits. Not a ton of time for character development, but super spooky atmosphere and good non-binary leads. It’s hard to describe exactly, but Moon’s writing style is different than a lot of other books I read in this genre, which was exciting to discover. [Contemporary Horror Paranormal Novella with Trans/NB MCs / Some Spice]

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Liar City by Allie Therin [Urban Fantasy with a whiff of romance]
A Thief in the Night by KJ Charles [Historical Romance novella with a dash of highway robbery]
The Stars Did Wander Darkling by Colin Meloy [YA kids-on-bikes-in-the-80s horror adventure - loved the vibe, didn’t love the ending]
Fake Dates and Mooncakes by Sher Lee [Contemporary YA Romance with cooking and meddling families]
Luke and Billy Finally Get a Clue by Cat Sebastian [50s Cozy Historical baseball romance novella with a snow storm and pining]
The Last Sun by KD Edwards [Queer Urban Fantasy with found family and social politics - a little dense for me but cool worldbuilding]
Freaking Romance Volume One by Snailords [Romance manga/graphic novel with a sad KPop boy and a chaotic cat girl]


GAMES

Dredge
Part fishing game, part adventure story, and part Eldritch horror, where you guide a small boat across the vast open ocean, catching increasingly strange fish and running errands for various unsettling townspeople.

Spider-Man 2
Charming characters, super fun gameplay and traversal, and a well-written story that made me cry. One of those games that you can’t put down.

Unpacking
A small indie game where you literally just unpack moving boxes and put things away that somehow made me extremely emotional by the end.

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Final Fantasy 16 [a lot of fun but the ending didn’t gel with me]
Lies of P [also fun, but I hit a difficulty spike 2/3 of the way through that I could not overcome]


ART

Wish I could have made more and not in love with all of it, but that’s what you get with burnout. Still really happy with the Moira piece. :)

Thanks for reading! ❤️

Favorite Things January/February/March: Orcish Baristas, Action Epics, and Creatures of the Deep

2023 has really gotten away from me. Somehow we’re in mid-April? Here are some things I’ve enjoyed so far this year. 


MOVIES

RRR
RRR is an over-the-top action epic that takes real-life figures from India’s fight for independence from the British and turns them into mythological heroes. Watching this movie feels like hearing a heavily embellished story second-hand from someone prone to exaggeration; there is no interest in realism, period-specific costumes, or the law of gravity. Instead you get huge dance numbers, absolutely bananas action scenes that revel in ridiculousness, comedy, tragedy, melodrama, and one of the handsomest men I have ever seen. I really enjoyed going into this one without knowing what to expect (there are some good twists) so I’ll leave it at that. RRR is 3 hours long and I’ve heard the version on Netflix is a less-than-stellar English dub, but if you have a chance to see this one, especially in a theater, I highly recommend it.

Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is exactly what it needs to be: silly, comfortingly predictable, and full of beautiful, charismatic people going on a quest. Sometimes that’s all you want. There are plenty of D&D in-jokes (having characters fail their actions was a particular highlight) but the story of a group of thieves working together to do a heist/save a daughter is broad enough that I think you can enjoy it without being a nerd. But speaking of nerds, one of the main characters looked exactly like the ranger I played in a long-running D&D campaign and this brought me much joy.

John Wick 4
This one’s a bit hit and miss for me but still worth recommending. Like the previous three Wick outings, John Wick 4 is an ultra violent gun-fu spectacle mixing gorgeously filmed action set pieces and cinematography with a surreal, ever-expanding criminal underworld mythology. At this point in story, Mr. Wick is hiding from the heaps of enemies he made in the previous three films and has to shoot his way across multiple countries and through the streets of Paris to get to a church for a big duel. This set-up leads to all sorts of bananas action scenes (and The Warriors references), with fights in the middle of moving traffic, glass-filled display rooms, and up a comically endless flight of stairs. The choreography and kinetic action in these parts is where the movie shines. The problem was, for me anyway, that my suspension of disbelief was stretched extremely thin by the end; John survives falling off of so many balconies and getting hit by so many cars and many of these big action scenes take place in bustling public places where no one seems to notice. Since it’s all played very seriously, I had a harder time buying into the absurdity. Plus there’s an irritating “guy in a fat suit for comedy” bit. But if you’re not bothered by those sorts of issues or at least able to overlook them for the overall spectacle of John Wick 4, I think there is plenty to like.

Honorable Mention: Renfield
Renfield is a fun but not super memorable horror comedy about Dracula’s beleaguered servant, but it’s absolutely worth watching for Nick Cage eating allllll of the scenery as the campy Count.


BOOKS

Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton
A beautifully illustrated, deeply personal graphic memoir, Ducks chronicles Kate Beaton’s time working in the Canadian oil sands. It reads like a diary, mixing day-to-day observations of how things work in a remote oil refinery, illustrations of the joys and traumas Beaton experienced there, and a bigger-picture examination of an industry that is so dangerous and problematic and also the only job available to a lot of people.

Heart, Haunt, Havoc by Freydis Moon
One of two spooky ghosty books I read recently, Heart, Haunt, Havoc follows an exorcist who goes to a haunted house to help the owner clear out a frankly alarming number of spirits. It’s a quick read so not a ton of time for deep character development, but I quite liked the protagonists-with-dark-pasts (who are trans and non-binary), the atmosphere, and the different take on magic and ghosts.

Liar City by Allie Therin
I love Allie Therin’s 1920s Magic in Manhattan books and was very excited to see her venture into a more modern setting with Liar City. The story takes place in an alternate Seattle where there is a sharp divide between the general public and a very small minority of empaths, people who can sense emotions through touch. The government has already imposed a large number of restrictions on empath’s lives and right when a new bill further stripping their rights is on the table, the senator spearheading the effort is murdered. Empath Reece gets a strange call that brings him to the crime scene and soon learns that a shadowy government agent called The Dead Man is also on the case. Everyone’s motives and allegiances are murky, so when The Dead Man requests that Reece come with him to help investigate the murder, it’s hard to tell if the empath is a partner or a suspect. A friendship/romance does eventually begin to develop between the two, but Liar City is the first installment in a slow burn multi-book series, so I imagine that’s going to be simmering and unrequited for a while longer. I struggled a bit staying invested in the story early on due to some pacing issues and it was kind of hard to get a read on the main characters, especially since The Dead Man’s whole deal is an extreme lack of emotion, but overall I liked Liar City and am excited for more of the story.

Rattling Bone by Jordan L Hawk
When Jordan Hawk released The Forgotten Dead, the first book in this series, I was not at all ready for how dang spooky it would be. Luckily I was more prepared for Rattling Bone, which follows YouTube ghost hunter and actual spirit medium Oscar and his boyfriend Nigel, the nerdy parapsychologist, as they return to Oscar’s home town and find themselves investigating a ghostly family mystery at an abandoned distillery. Hawk writes the most bingeable, instantly gripping stories and I can’t wait for Oscar and Nigel’s next ghost adventure.

Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
I think the best way to describe Legends & Lattes would be “cozy fantasy”. I’ve read a few cozy mysteries, but this story of an orcish warrior retiring from adventuring to start her own coffee shop was different from my usual book choices. The conflicts are minor and most of the story is just friendly vibes, comforting camaraderie, and a sweet romance. It was really nice. Plus, having a bunch of fantasy characters working together to brew lattes and bake cinnamon rolls reminded me fondly of playing D&D with my friends.

The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen by KJ Charles
Another great period romance from KJ Charles about misguided gentry orphans falling in love with rakish handsome criminals. Charles has cornered this brand and I devour every new book she writes. This time around the orphan is Gareth, who has inherited a title and a manor house from the father who abandoned him as a child, and the rakish criminal is Joss Doomsday, the head of a notorious and successful family of smugglers. Lovers to enemies to friends to lovers ensues.


GAMES

Dredge
Dredge is part fishing game, part adventure story, part Eldritch horror, and all these parts work really well together. I loved this game. The dread of “dark creatures of the deep” works so well in a game where you have to guide a small boat across the vast open ocean, catching increasingly strange fish and running errands for various unsettling townspeople.


ART

As usual, I spent the first few months of the year in a seasonal slump not accomplishing much. But, looking back I actually made more art than I remembered.

“Leafy Deadragon”

“Dwarf Kingfisher”

“The Creature” (Creature from the Black Lagoon)

“Weedy Seadragon”

“Tiny Tarsier”

The Owens Sisters (Practical Magic)