Category: 2024

  • Favorite 2024 Old Books

    Favorite 2024 Old Books

    I read many old books about power, crime, politics, murder, gossip and more.

    Noir

    Eight Noir Books | Credit: Wayne State University Press, Hachette, Harper, Pushkin, City Lights

    Hardboiled stories where political power spills out like blood.

    You Were Never Really Here by Jonathan Ames

    A disgruntled troop hunts the sicko politicians and their creepy little blackmail brothels. It came out in 2013, four whole years before Pizzagate. Ninety pages, tense and violent, I pumped my fist and hooted, imagining Joe raining justice on them all.

    The Prone Gunman by Jean-Paul Manchette

    Jean-Paul Manchette writes about French hitmen beyond morality—Guys who would see Camus The Stranger on the beach and beat him to death with a rock. I love how they ghostwrite a book to cover up all his crimes.

    The Spook Who Sat By The Door by Sam Greenlee

    A satirical spy novel about Black Revolution written by a former spy. A complex piece of propaganda and a moving spy novel with excellent prose. It lays out the vision for a Black uprising in American cities and how law enforcement can subvert that energy (with drugs). I wrote more about this story and the Chicago Police Officer with a cameo in the film adaptation.

    Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane

    A mother’s fatal revenge quest tells the bigger story of how mafias act as racialized vigilantes. The Irish mob would organize poorly paid workers to reject school integration so white gangs could monopolize the drug trade. Lehane says it’s his last novel, and while I hope he’s wrong, this one is emotional, cerebral, and visceral, and it is one of his best.

    Everybody Knows by Jordan Harper

    Harper’s novel details how PR firms and reputation management control the messages we see. Presenting Hollywood as a complex child trafficking scheme with a narrative that has uncanny similarities to Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV.

    Parapolitics

    Eight Parapolitics Books | Credit: Doubleday, Liveright, Simon & Schuster, Tineday, St. Martin’s Press (x2), Skyhorse

    As we move from the surveillance era to the psyop era, I see this history subgenre as a shield, a psychic protection spell.

    Sally Denton’s Work

    Sally Denton is an incredible researcher and storyteller who writes mindblowing stories. Her 1991 debut, The Bluegrass Conspiracy: An Inside Story of Power, Greed, Drugs & Murder, builds off of Gary Webb’s work and details the network of power connecting the Bushes, Clintons, Iran-Contra gun-running, drug smuggling, and Kentucky Fried Chicken. The Profiteers: Bechdel and the Men Who Built the World examines the construction firm that gets trillions in federal contracts to build roads, bridges, and power plants in the countries invaded by the US. This company is very close to countless historical events. And The Colony: Faith and Blood in a Promised Land tells one of the strangest stories I’ve ever heard. Tribes of Mormons went out to Mexico and lived in the mountains and now are an ominous cartel-like community.

    Handsome Johnny: The Life and Death of Johnny Rosselli: Gentleman Gangster, Hollywood Producer, CIA Assassin by Lee Server

    When I bought this, the bookseller said, “This is the closest non-fiction to James Ellroy I’ve ever read, but it’s crazier. Ellroy tones it down.” I finally read it, and it’s all true! Johnny Rosselli is arguably one of the most important people in post-war America. He knew everybody. The Kennedys. Hoffa. Studio heads, the Outfit, the Five Families, and Sinatra (of course). Johnny was a fixer who fixed labor disputes, entertainment production, vice, nightlife attempts at Cuban regime change, and the Kennedy assassination. This dude got around. Server’s research is broad and well-sourced, and he does a great job making sense of layered narrative.

    Hollywood Kryptonite: The Bulldog, the Lady, and the Death of Superman by Sam Kushner and Nancy Shoenberger

    A smaller paranoid story. The original Superman actor didn’t kill himself: George Reeve’s suicide was a coverup. His scorned lover, Toni Mannix, called in a hit. Now, Toni’s husband, Eddie Manni,x was the legendary fixer for MGM, and Eddie was impotent, so he didn’t care about the philandering. Still, he had a scrap of paper with the number of a hit service on his desk, and this book lays out a compelling case in which T. Mannix did it. They assemble proof from Reeve’s friend, references made by his lover, testimony from police on the scene, and even a secondhand confirmation from the hitman. Should this book be in my Gossip category? The official narrative was Reeves killed himself. Perhaps any story can be faked for the powerful. All they need is a body.

    Drugs as a Weapon Against Us by John Potash

    This book makes a well-sourced argument for how the US government uses drugs to manipulate its population to control flows of oil, labor, and more drugs. Oil keeps the machines running; drugs keep the people running. “The spice must flow.” Potash cites hundreds of sources from across the 20th century, detailing the multi-generational project to use the entertainment industry to market drugs, use drug charges to fine and imprison citizens, sabotage resistance movements, and force compliance for the empire. Potash offers a finely crafted argument and an annotated bibliography on drugs, police, and federal police.

    Revolution’s End: The Patty Hearst Kidnapping, Mind Control, and the Secret History of Donald DeFreeze and the SLA by Brad Schrieber

    The whole thing was a fix from top to bottom. The word “Psyop” gets thrown around a lot nowadays. This is one that worked really good in 1974, and Schrieber compiles proof of exactly how it worked. He gets police records admitting Donald DuFreeze was an informant long before he became Cinque Mtume or went to Vacaville. At a prison that was later forced to admit it did psychological manipulation on prisoners, he was added to the Black Cultural Association, a “support group” led by a federal law enforcement officer who groomed DuFreeze into becoming a political cult leader. Local San Francisco groups knew DuFreeze and the Symbionese Liberation Army were a front for law enforcement after the group shot a respected grassroots politician. But the weirdest part is the guy who invented Kwanzaa, Maulana/Ron Karenga, was involved in planning this operation, according to the book. I don’t allege this, Ron; the book does. Yet the media reported Patty Hearst’s kidnapping to completely discredit Black anti-capitalist organizing and turn it into a spectacle. And they keep doing it.

    Literature

    Four Novels of Fine Literature | Credit: New Directions, Penguin, New York Review of Books, William Morrow

    Transcending language to evoke great feeling and meaning.

    Nazi Literature in the Americas by Roberto Bolaño

    Fictional literary criticism of actual networks of fascist intellectuals and militias. One read is this is Bolaño mocking the right-wing intelligentsia, mercilessly roasting them for being race-obsessed freaks. But there are also moments of pathos for the weird, lonely, mostly rich outcasts who believe something so stridently. A literary work with a practical function for historians: it offers a 3D portrait of post-WWII fascism on a global scale. Spencer Sunshine’s new non-fiction work, Neo-Nazi Terrorism and Countercultural Fascism, detailing American fascism post WWII shows how these networks overlap. I have more to say about this one for later…

    When We Cease to Understand the World by Benjamín Labatut

    Another Chilean is describing the limits of reality. Science history dramatized to make its impact felt, highlighting the relationship between discovery and death. The pigment for Prussian Blue paint makes Zyclon-B for the gas chambers. The quest for a universal theory reveals that the universe is far more fragile than it appears. These stories stretch the limits of science, fiction, and history.

    Cosmic Banditos by Allan Weisbecker

    This book was a trip, literally about guys tripping on hallucinogens on a road trip. They get on ships, lead cartels, and work for the CIA. And there’s a good boy dog. And aliens! Jam-packed with ideas and written with fun, self-referential comedic timing. The introduction insists it was popular on army bases, and if you want to peek into the brains of the UFO Guy, here it is.

    Yellowface by R. F. Kuang

    A blistering satire of race in publishing that revels in the cringeness of being a White woman. When the protagonist steals her dead rival’s manuscript, she takes credit, launching a career but secretly knowing she’s a total fraud. The prose is hilarious and very pointed, a pointed critique on publishing for profit and turning heritage and history into marketing categories.

    Gossip

    Four Gossipy Books | Credit: Bloomsbury Academic, Atria Books (x2), Gallery Books

    Audacious memoirs, an oral history, and a gossipy biography in a very informal category that I made up.

    Love Me Fierce in Danger: The Life of James Ellroy by Dr. Steven Powell

    Nobody in human history is like James Ellroy. When his mother was found brutally murdered, dead on the side of the road, an LA Times reporter came to his house and snapped a picture of him the exact moment he found out. He went on to become a homeless, alcoholic, glue-huffing panty-sniffer, then, after finding 12-step programs, one of the most successful and audacious crime writers of the last fifty years. This book tells that wild story.

    My Father The Pornographer: a Memoir by Chris Offutt

    A writer finds out his father wrote hundreds of erotica novels, millions of words of highly specific smut. How strange it would be to find your father’s freaky barbarian pornography and learn he was a respected master of the genre—his life’s work that paid for the children’s college. I wrote a bit more here.

    Paper of Wreckage: An Oral History of the New York Post, 1976-2024 by Susan Mulcahy and Frank DiGiacomo

    The New York Post in all its gossipy glory! Detailing the ownership transition to Rupert Murdoch, when he took his Australian fortune and invested in American media properties. The seeds of Fox News, Trump, crass, cruel, and invasive entertainment all start in this newsroom. Hearing how the mob ran the delivery trucks, pitching morbid joke headlines for terrible tragedies, and what Donald Trump and Roy Cohn would say when they called the paper were all standouts for this wide-ranging oral history.

    Tiger King: The Official Tell All Memoir by Joe Exotic

    I liked the Tiger King show because I thought Joe Exotic was a riot. He is! An extraordinary man who’s driven ambulances, worked as a law enforcement officer, survived car wrecks, buried husbands and a brother, ran a successful LGBT-friendly pet store, and even an early adopter of live streaming technology. He also ran America’s most successful and notorious big cat sanctuary until that awful Carole Baskin got him in her sights. This book is so hysterically funny.

    Series

    Four Series Novels | Credit: Putnam Adult, Mysterious Press, Little, Brown and Company, Grosset & Dunlap

    I’m a sucker for a series characters.

    Skink Books by Carl Hiaasen

    After seeing a poster at the bus stop for Apple TV’s Bad Monkey, I finally checked out Hiaasen after a half-dozen recommendations. Loved it. Weird old swamp men solving mysteries, jaded ex-military guys fighting real estate developers that want to destroy the wetlands. Fun stuff!

    Jimmy the Kid by Donald Westlake

    I finally read a handful of Dortmunder novels, including Jimmy the Kid, one of the goofiest, most fun crime novels ever written! John Dortmunder is a grumpy thief who’s reluctantly friends with Andy Kelp, a schlemiel who suggests they carry out a heist straight from a Parker novel, the other serious noir series that Westlake writes. Metafictional hijinx ensues, ending with an intervention from the author. Fun, silly, amusing stuff, even though it’s a half-century old!

    The Lincoln Lawyer by Michael Connelly

    I love the Lincoln Lawyer because he cheats to win. Good for him! The legal system is rigged! And so he has to get zany. Like when they accused him of murder, and he must free himself from jail by arguing his case and defending himself! Then, he teams up with Bosch to get random people out of jail! OK! Now we’re talking: the Bosch-iverse. I heard a rumor that another will come out relatively soon, and I can’t wait!

    Nancy Drew by Carolyn Keene

    I love Nancy! She’s got a convertible, her dad’s a lawyer, and she’s the nicest girl in the world. When she goes to the big department store and sees the mean rich sisters who are fat and boorish try on the dresses and rip them up, what does Nancy do? She helps the attendant lady, stops her crying, buys the ripped dress, and promises to fix it with her sewing machine! Her being nice is also a keen way for her to get evidence. This book is deeply coded in cozy DNA, sharing vibes and dialogue rhythm. A fun mystery adventure that’s almost a century old!

    Here’s to old books, may all new books become them. More reading in 2025 and as long as I’m alive!

  • Favorite 2024 New Books

    Favorite 2024 New Books

    Happy New Year! I overloaded my brain with books in 2024, including those elusive “new” books full of fresh information and artistic experimentation! I kept thinking about these sixteen books this year amongst the horror, psy-ops and weird cyberwars of 2024. Here’s my favorites across the categories of “fake” and “real.”

    Fiction

    The covers of eight fiction favorites from 2024 listed below | Credit: Doubleday, Harry N. Abrams, Simon & Schuster, Random House, Orbit, Algonquin Books, G.P. Putnam and Sons

    James by Percival Everett

    A fun, voicey first person novel starring a cunning, confident character in a unique setting (the antebellum South) that also just so happens to be an adaptation of Huckleberry Finn. And it’s from James’ a.k.a. Jim’s perspective! A funny, provocative book with an exciting finale. Perhaps at its core, this novel affirms that literature is fan fiction. Everett is just having fun out there! It deserves all the hype and awards, and no, you don’t need to reread Twain first.

    Scrap by Calla Henkel

    A weird, quiet mystery about falling into archives searching for proof. I loved it, and the idea that the detritus we leave behind, the projects unfinished, the stuff in boxes that one might pay somebody else to dig through—that all of this could hold the secrets to a mystery or the ultimate meaning of our life? A book about imbuing piles with purpose!

    Say Hello to My Little Friend by Jennine Capó Crucet

    Miami, as told by a Pitbull impersonator and a whale imprisoned in Seaworld. I was sold by the pithy (but entirely accurate) description. I ended up really enjoying Crucet’s prose, humor, ability to express the complex and overlapping feelings of being born into racial and geographic identities, and filtering this all through a whale’s thoughts was a real trip.

    The Heart in Winter by Kevin Barry

    A western romance ending in violence, heartbreak and redemption. Now, I’m likely to enjoy any novel about an Irish cowboy junkie and a liberated mail-order bride on the run. Told brilliantly in lush, lyrical prose. The audiobook was a standout, read by the author. After I finished, I vowed to read everything Kevin Barry ever wrote.

    The Mercy of Gods by S.A. Corey

    I love The Expanse, so I’m primed to love this too, but the premise is simple and fun: a humanoid alien species gets abducted by advanced murder aliens. They live on a space station and have to do Squid Games / Hunger Games / Battle Royale-esque challenges. This new trilogy has a much smaller scope than the previous series about colonizing all of space and time, but it’s really fun seeing the detailed aliens, guessing their complex motivations, and watching the sympathetic humans get ZAPPED! The sublime SF pleasures.

    Your Utopia by Bora Chung

    Brain-scanning detectives, a really sympathetic robot car, a sentient elevator that falls in love, all kinds of interesting SF ideas are presented cleverly in Bora Chung’s second collection. My favorite was the lady who works at a “charitable foundation” for keeping rich people alive through cryogenics and brain uploads forever, but her clerical role was not granted the privilege of getting to live forever, she just gets a salary, and whoops, she gets drunk at the Christmas party and makes a big mistake. I love how Chung presents the weird crisis of consciousness felt by personified machines.

    Hotel Lucky Seven by Kotaro Isaka

    Bullet Train, the movie with Brad Pitt, is adapted from a Japanese series of assassin novels. First published as Ladybug, the newest translation Hotel Lucky Seven continues Ladybug’s story. It reads like pulp noir with anime’s pacing and complex plot hopping. Ultra-violent, ultra-silly, and a satisfyingly complex world paranoid about political power. What’s to stop the rich from using their money piles to hire hitmen? Nothing!

    Assassin’s Anonymous by Rob Hart

    But what’s to stop the assassins from reforming, ending the cycles of violence, and atonement? A lot, actually! Grudges, blackmail, federal police agencies, the dark web: all obstacles in Rob Hart’s new comedy crime caper. He delivers on his clever, high-concept premise: what if recovering assassins went to a 12-step program? Well, they’d meet more assassins and get embroiled in plots! Series like Lawrence Block’s Keller and Max Allen Collins Quarry have done a lot with hitmen, but I’m enjoying novels that play with the genre.


    Non-Fiction

    The covers of eight non-fiction favorites from 2024 listed below | Credit: Penguin Random House, Macmillan, Princeton University Press, William Collins, Mariner Books, William Morrow, Sourcebooks, Running Press Adult

    The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels by Pamela Prickett and Stefan Timmermans

    Two sociologists research some cadavers that go unclaimed at the Los Angeles County morgue. I never considered what happens when someone dies without anyone to claim them: the city keeps the bodies for a while, but eventually dumps the cremains in shared plot at the public graveyard. The authors research the system that manages this and some specific people who died and their bodies went unclaimed, the research that goes into finding a next of kin.

    Grief is for People by Sloane Crosley

    One death deeply felt. The author memorializes her friend and colleague in the publishing industry. She remarks how few self-help books deal with the death of a friend, but this book’s attention to feelings, and the detailed memories they evoke, made a rich meditation on the death of a friend and changes in the publishing industry.

    Anxiety: A Philosophical Guide by Samir Chopra

    Philosophy, history, self-help, spirituality, and grief memoir come together for a fascinating book on anxiety that positions the feeling as a historical constant, not a product of the digital age. In other words, reading ancient philosophical texts reveals that humans always felt anxious. Phones might make it feel worse. But the feeling itself, a vague fear of the future, and how one might go about facing the feeling, is the topic of this book and the wisdom of the ancients and heresy of the philosophers offer persuasive solutions.

    Cuckooland: Where the Rich Own the Truth by Tom Burgis

    An investigation of Mohamed Amersi, a businessman and major donor to the Conservative Party in London, who used his influence with the King and parliament to “open up” international markets. That means regime change, secret coups, and corporate takeovers. Amersi says as much, as quoted within the book, denying any criminal wrongdoing, insulting Burgis (he’s funny!), and laying out exactly how he plans to discredit him. It was fun to read how an oligarch plans to decimate an investigator. Amersi must have more influence with American publishing because the book shares a title with a popular fiction novel…

    Tripped: Nazi Germany, the CIA, and the Dawn of the Psychedelic Age by Norman Ohler

    The Swiss invented LSD, and the Nazis used it as a truth serum! After the war, the CIA seized the files and started testing the compound in MK-ULTRA consciousness experiments. A short but incredibly accessible history of LSD as a weapon, with some interesting proof from pharmaceutical archives, and even memoir of a parent with Alzheimer’s Disease trying the drug and seeing progress.

    Beverly Hills Spy: The Double-Agent War Hero Who Helped Japan Attack Pearl Harbor by Ronald Drabkin

    Tracks the life of Fredrick Rutland, the famed Rutland of Jutland, who spotted the German fleet and saved a drowning seaman! But because of his lowborn class, he didn’t get promoted to The Queen’s Most Lovely Royal Officer. He broke bad, moved to Los Angeles, and started selling secrets to the Japanese aviation industry. Did he help plan the Pearl Harbor attacks? Maybe! This was a wild ride for fans of spies, WWII and Japan.

    A Murder in Hollywood: The Untold Story of Tinseltown’s Most Shocking Crime by Casey Sherman

    One of the most gossiped-about stories in Hollywood history: big-time gangster, Mickey Cohen’s personal bodyguard, the mademan Marine, Johnny Stompanato gets shot by little girl, Cheryl Crane, the daughter of Hollywood superstar, Lana Turner. It’s a great story that Casey Sherman researches thoroughly and tells incredibly, so vivid, like good gossip from the past.

    From the Moment They Met It Was Murder: Double Indemnity in Film Noir by Alan Silver and James Ursini

    Another book about LA crime that bends genres, from literary history, artist biography, film history, cultural analysis, and criminology! All centered around Double Indemnity, the novel about conspiring with a hunky door-to-door salesman to murder your husband for the life insurance money! Detailed history about James M. Cain, changes between the book and its adaptations, the set choices, the made for TV movie, and more. If you like film noir and crime fiction, check this out.

    Happy New Year to You and to Books and May There Be No More 2024s

  • Thirteen Favorite 2024 Movies

    Thirteen Favorite 2024 Movies

    I love the movies! Here are thirteen of my favorites this year. Great comedies, crime, suspense, animation, and blockbusters. Watch them all!

    13. Dune: Part 2

    Timothée Chalamet is the Maud’Dib in Dune: Part Two. | Credit: Warner Brothers Pictures

    Finally, good Dune movies! Well-paced, great effects, and climactic finale to the first one. Go ahead, give us more Dune! Give us the worm!

    12. I Saw the TV Glow

    Justice Smith from I Saw the TV Glow | Credit: A24

    A vibey movie about transitioning, media, and the suffocating suburbs hit me. The lonely light of a television through plastic blinds. Life as a big hole slowly burying us alive.

    11. Problemista

    Julio Torres and Tilda Swinton in Problemista | Credit: A24

    The American immigration system, working for rich people, making a movie, eggs: it’s all labyrinths. Julio Torres is hilarious, and Tilda Swinton completely embodies Elizabeth.

    10. The Bikeriders

    Jodie Comer and Austin Butler in The Bikeriders | Credit: Focus Features

    It’s an outlaw movie that’s secretly a bad-boy biker romance! Not much crime, mostly hanging out in the west Chicago suburbs with guys in denim drinking Schlitz. It felt like I understood Harleys.

    9. Loves Lies Bleeding

    Katy O’Brien in Love Lies Bleeding | Credit: A24/Lionsgate

    The perfect lesbian bodybuilder neo-noir, all smokey, wet, weird, and erotic testosterone injections, spoiled bodybuilding competition, gunrunning, murder-for-hire, quiet country roads, and real cigarettes!

    8. Sasquatch Sunset

    Riley Keough, Jesse Eisenberg and Christophe Zajac-Denek in Sasquatch Sunset | Credit: Bleecker Street

    No dialogue, just the missing link. Sasquatch, Big Foot, and the pre-hominid are our genetic ancestors. It’s funny, gross, and kinda like a stoner comedy. I found it meditative. We could live like these sasquatches.

    7. Trap

    Josh Hartnett in Trap | Credit: Warner Bros. Picture

    As culture shifts from the surveillance era to the PSYOP era, this is the movie of the moment. What’s a trap? Everything! Celebrity. Fandom. Family. Trauma. Compulsion. Everything is a trap in our trap world.

    6. Furiosa: a Mad Max Saga

    Anya Taylor-Joy in Furiosa: a Mad Max Saga | Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures

    Combining the pleasures of vehicular ultra-violence with deep lore, a good story, characters I already like, and Australian satire of KKKalifornia. It looks great, it moves fast, and it’s funny. What more could you want?

    5. Mars Express

    The ship in Mars Express | Credit: Gebeka Films

    Singularity cyberpunk made by French otaku who understand computers. With all the talk of AI this year, “natural” language, consciousness, and robotics. This stylish SF cyberpunk detective anime brings clarity.

    4. Serpent’s Path

    Ko Shibasaki as Sayoko Mijima in Serpent’s Path (2024) | Credit: Cinefrance Studios

    Two hopeless French people take revenge on a network of billionaire pedophiles. A dark, disturbing movie about getting someone like Marc Dutroux chained up in a warehouse. Originally a grimy V-Cinema revenge thriller, now an arthouse Euro thriller funded by The Belgian Tax Shelter…

    3. Flow

    Flow | Credit: UFO Distribution

    A cat flees a flood in this incredibly 3D animated film. In Blender! So tense! Somber! Scary! Fun! A great year for silent movies, andThe Wild Robot and Robot Dreams qualify, but I like Flow best because Black Cat is so good!

    2. Hundreds of Beavers

    Hundreds of Beavers | Cineverse Vinegar Studios

    This movie has hundreds—probably thousands—of beavers. It’s incredible, a live action cartoon. Hilarious slapstick recalling Chaplin, Keaton, The Three Stooges, Looney Tunes, The Simpsons and Attitude Era WWF. The world is deep and multi-layered and the sheer fun of it all is incredible. Go watch it on Hoopla!

    1. Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World

    Illinca Manolache in Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World | Credit: Mubi

    Hysterical, sad, profound, eerily prophetic. The end of the world is slow, a series of whimpers. People like us want money, food, sex, sleep, and trips to the woods. But our vampire overlords don’t care. They need flesh robots. A slow march toward species obsolescence. I can’t stop thinking about the line, “At least we’re not Americans. They made them work to death during a hurricane!”

    Favorites From Years Past

    And here are a few cinema classics I saw this year that I enjoyed.

    Gary Busey in The Rage (1997) | Credit: Miramax Dimension Films
    • The Rage (1997) – A genuinely deranged Gary Busey joint!
    • Pulse (1999) – Haunted by the ghosts of the internet
    • The Fall (2007) – One of the best movies of the century. 2007 is the best year for movies!
    • Scarface (1983) – The American Dream is cocaine!
    • Hands on a Hard Body (1997) – A brand new Nissan truck with all the accessories!
    • Hollywood Boulevard (1976) – Every movie is an exploitation film if somebody was exploited!
    • Ninja Scroll (1993) – More Ninjas!
    • The Apartment (1960) – You know it smells crazy in there.
    • Django (1966) – He’s got a frickin gun in that coffin!
    • Heat (1995) – AND SHE’S GOT A BIG ASS!

    We all love the movies… Seeya later, 2024!