Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Contributor Profile: Christine D. Baker


NAME
: Christine D. Baker

SECRET UNDISCLOSED LOCATION: Vancouver, B.C. (Oops, I disclosed my location. Feel free to say hi if you’re local!)

NERD SPECIALIZATION(S): History over all other things, especially ancient and medieval history. Memes and Early Internet culture. SFF books and short stories. Working to develop a specialization in Canadian SFF.

MY PET PEEVES IN NERD-DOM ARE: Plots that are entirely based on two characters failing to have a normal conversation.

VAMPIRES, WEREWOLVES, ZOMBIES, ALIENS OR ROBOTS: Definitely vampires.

RIGHT NOW I'M READING: I am almost always reading 6-10 books at a time (have I mentioned the ADHD?). These are the books I am actively reading at the moment: 

  • How to Love a Forest: The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World (2024) by Ethan Tapper.
  • The Raven Tower (2019) by Ann Leckie.
  • The Tapestry of Time (2024) by Kate Heartfield.
  • Dreams Underfoot (1993), Newford #1, by Charles de Lint.
  • Scattered Minds: The Origins and Healing of ADD (1999) by Gabor Mate, MD.
  • Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History (2025) by Moudhy Al-Rashid. 

...AND A COUPLE BOOKS I RECENTLY FINISHED ARE

  • Bog Queen (2025) by Anna North.
  • The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap, 2nd ed (2016) by Stephanie Coontz. 
  • The Siege of Burning Grass (2024) by Premee Mohamed. 

NEXT TWO ON QUEUE ARE: Honestly, I never know. It could be one of the books on my massive TBR list, the next book I have on reserve to pop up from the library, or something I hear about on social media and then immediately buy and devour. 

WHEN THE WEATHER SUCKS OUTSIDE I'M MOST LIKELY TO BE... Hiding in my bed, under several cats, listening to an audiobook. 

MY FAVORITE SUPERHERO AND SUPER-VILLAIN ARE: Favorite villain is Ivan/Fornax from Drew Hayes’ Villain’s Code series. I avoid heroes. 

IF I WERE A SUPERHERO/VILLAIN, MY POWER WOULD BE: Reading. Is there a book that the team needs to get through to save the world/destroy the world, I will be the one who can skim-read it quickly. 

THE BEST/WORST COMIC FILM OF THE PAST 5 YEARS IS: I have no idea, as this is not my area of nerdery.

I JUST WATCHED XXXX AND IT WAS AWESOME/TERRIBLE: The secret truth about me is that I do not actually watch things. My ADHD does not allow it. 

NAME A BOOK  YOU *NEED* A MOVIE OF (OR VICE VERSA): I think that Peter Clines’ 14 (in the Threshold series) would make a fun movie!


Welcome Christine! 

Book Review: Alien: Cult, by Gavin G Smith

 The Alien: Earth series we should have got. 

Cover of Alien: Cult by Gavin G Smith
cover artist: Marco Turini and Julia Lloyd

We've been spoilt with new Alien content in the last few years - video games, excellent ttrpgs, movies in the same universe, television shows and novels. Alien: Cult is the latest of these from Titan and written by Gavin G. Smith who has done both original work but also has a track record in IP like this one. 

There are a huge number of Alien novels if you pay attention to these things. However, I'm not one for pay attention so this is the first Alien novel I've read. I like the setting and liked Alien and Aliens (although I've struggled with just about every Alien film since then and have a visceral hatred of Prometheus and Covenant because they require their characters to be dumb for their stories to work). 

I didn't mind Alien Romulus up until it jumped the shark. What I specifically like about Alien is the setting - at its best it's retro locked room SF horror, stuck in a world designed when the Cold War was still an existential boogeyman hovering like a dark cloud with five minutes standing between us and nuclear destruction. The power blocs in Alien are those that existed in the 1980s - The US as corporate haven in which government is for the rich and by the rich, the 3WE which is basically the British Empire, Space Communists and what was, at the time, called the 3rd World making up the remaining power. That these haven't been updated does, I think, speak to its visual origins - one can imagine that if this had originated as a novel or a game first then over the years the setting would have moved with the times. As it is, the Alien's universe is therefore curiously anachronistic, speaking to and about a world that has passed into history.

That it remains relevant is largely because it continues to focus on the one power bloc that persists in an unbroken line since Alien (1979) first hit movie screens more than four decades ago.

The preponderance of Alien material takes place in English speaking parts of the universe and nearly all of that within the US corporate robber baron/tech bro setting specifically. Sure, a corporate ruled world in which the powerful and wealthy get to decide whether ordinary people live or die with no comeback sounds like a pastiche of American society but...

More on point, Alien worked in part because it was space truckers meet a monster and are hampered by their corporate overlords. 

Aliens similarly works because it's jarheads meet the monster and are hampered by their corporate overlords. 

Even Romulus tagged into the working class vibe and it was, without doubt, the most exciting part of the movie. 

Long story, short - Alien works with its audiences where it's about ordinary working class people making do when they're faced with a monster in the flesh and corporate assholes who are probably well aware of what's going on but either don't care or are actively rooting for the monster against their own people. There's very few of us who haven't felt the pressure of trying to please our bosses while the real world attempts to take chunks out of our ability to make ends meet. Alien is, if nothing else, a metaphor for the vicissitudes of modern life with both corporate malfeasance and arbitrary events included in that framework. 

Alien: Cult sits nicely within this category - featuring nefarious corporations, corrupt lawmakers, a Wild West/frontier setting and main characters who are right out of central casting for working class Joes just trying to get by. It seems to me that the Alien setting is one that wants to repeatedly warn us about how people are corrupted, how money and power should be policed vigorously and how the law, if it's any good, needs to apply to the powerful with more alacrity than it does to anyone else. Smith's voice is one that drips with disdain for those who abuse their power and privilege and that lends Alien: Cult a flavour that really works. The setting is bleak but there's no shortage of anger with how things are to remind us that people will hate injustice and act on it if given the chance even as others will allow their characters to be corroded away for the chance to grab a few more dollars.

The pacing is just about perfect, with plenty of tension, action and a nice through line of detective work as our FBI agent main character slowly figures out the conspiracy at the heart of the book. I note that the title kind of gives it away, but if you're at all familiar with Alien then you already know it won't go well for anyone involved - this is sci-fi horror after all and Smith delights in making sure we know absolutely no one is safe.

Smith also brings the action to life by refusing to ignore that getting hit hurts. When his characters are beaten up or shot they feel it, it impairs their capability and after a million action stories where the hero keeps going because the narrative demands it, Alien: Cult does a good job of making you feel the wear and tear.

The tagline for this review is that this is the Alien Earth I wish we'd got. Noah Hawley did a fantastic job of world building but the show couldn't decide what it wanted to be and ended with an outrageous two fingers up at the audience. 

In contrast, Alien: Cult is tightly written with a complete story that deepens what we know of the Alien universe while not requiring any previous knowledge to make sense of what's going on. For those who know it has nods to classic moments from the film franchise without those being gratuitous and there were moments that felt as if they'd have fit quite happily in with Bladerunner

--

Highlights:

  • Aliens!
  • Cults, working class anger, lots of blood and explosions
  • Gritty action, nefarious corporations and the corrupt getting their comeuppance

Nerd coefficient: 7/10, a fast paced story set in the Alien Universe. Not doing anything novel but a well executed example of the form.

References: Smith, Gavin G., Alien: Cult. [Titan 2025].

STEWART HOTSTON is an author of all kinds of science fiction and fantasy. He's also a keen Larper (he owns the UK Fest system, Curious Pastimes). He's a sometime physicist and currently a banker in the City of London. A Subjective Chaos and BFA finalist he's also Chair of the British Science Fiction Association and Treasurer for the British Fantasy Society. He is on bluesky at: @stewarthotston.com.

Monday, November 24, 2025

Contributor Profile: Stew Hotston


NAME
: Stew Hotston

SECRET UNDISCLOSED LOCATION: Sword School

NERD SPECIALIZATION(S): Books, movies, animation

MY PET PEEVES IN NERD-DOM ARE: the hero's journey

VAMPIRES, WEREWOLVES, ZOMBIES, ALIENS OR ROBOTS: Aliens

RIGHT NOW I'M READING: Blood over Brighthaven by ML Wang

...AND A COUPLE BOOKS I RECENTLY FINISHED ARE: Exordia by Seth Dickinson, The Salt Oracle by Lorraine Wilson

NEXT TWO ON QUEUE ARE: The Midnight Timetable by Bora Chung, Magic, Maps and Mischief by David Green

WHEN THE WEATHER SUCKS OUTSIDE I'M MOST LIKELY TO BE... making chocolate ice cream

MY FAVORITE SUPERHERO AND SUPER-VILLAIN ARE: Black Panther, Kilgrave from Jessica Jones

IF I WERE A SUPERHERO/VILLAIN, MY POWER WOULD BE: luck

THE BEST COMIC FILM OF THE PAST 5 YEARS IS: Spiderman into the Spiderverse

THE WORST COMIC FILM OF THE PAST 5 YEARS IS: Morbius

I JUST WATCHED XXXX AND IT WAS AWESOME: One battle after another

EVERYONE SHOULD SEE XXXX BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE: Frieren

BEST SCIENCE/SPECULATIVE FICTION SHOW OF THE PAST 10 YEARS: Severance

NAME A BOOK  YOU *NEED* A MOVIE OF (OR VICE VERSA): The Gutter Prayer by Gareth Hanrahan


Welcome Stew!

Film Review: Keeper

A slow-burning, dizzying, and surreal descent into folk horror madness

I'm continuing a trend this year where I go into movies absolutely blind, and folks, I can't recommend it enough. Trailers these days tend to give away the entire plot, choice scary bits, choice funny bits, and just generally lessen the film-going experience.

So when I heard Osgood Perkins, of recent Longlegs fame, was directing a new picture, I threw it on the calendar sight unseen. Perkins is divisive to say the least, but I love what he's doing with horror cinema, and I love the way he creates dreadful, brooding atmospheres. His name alone gets me in the theater, and it's fun having a scary-movie director you can count on yearly these days.

Keeper tells the story of a couple, Liz and Malcolm, who have been dating for exactly a year, and they take a trip upstate to spend a few days at Malcolm's family's cabin. Liz quickly discovers that something isn't right with the situation. The cabin itself is sparse, isolated, and none of the windows have curtains or blinds. Malcolm's rude cousin crashes their romantic getaway on the first night, and the next day Malcolm leaves Liz alone to return to work for a few hours. Before he leaves, he insists that she eat a bite of strange chocolate cake. That night, she rises alone and demolishes the rest of it.

What follows is a gradual descent into madness for Liz. Tatiana Maslany, of Orphan Black and She-Hulk fame, is incredible at capturing fear and paranoia. She sees disturbing spirits and dead women throughout the house, and, while venturing outside, nature and the woods take on an otherworldly quality that's hypnotic.

The first hour of Keeper is glacially slow, with Perkins ratcheting up the tension scene by scene through the use of strange shots. The camera is always peering from behind an object or wall, with 2/3 of the screen obscured by flat color while the characters occupy a mere sliver of it. These scenes are meant to make you feel like you're the obtrusive, evil presence.

If this all sounds weird and boring, you're not entirely wrong. The main complaint I've seen of Keeper is that it's way too long and slow. But don't worry—in the last 20 minutes you get the most surreal, intense, jaw-droppingly messed-up denouement dump I've ever seen.

Like with the villain reveal in this year's Weapons, everything goes back to a witch. Malcolm and his cousin, it turns out, are 200 years old, and as kids, they shot a pregnant woman who was on their property. (This woman also looks exactly like Liz in the present day.) She gives birth to what I can only tell are evil creatures, and these demons make a deal with the cousins: sacrifice a woman to them every year, and the boys can live forever.

It's an Omelas meets Picture of Dorian Gray situation, and for a minute in the theater, you breathe a sigh of relief—Ahh, so that's the hook. But then you realize there's so many questions. Why did the creatures need to make a deal? Why do the boys freeze their age at around 45 instead of 25, the best age that we can all agree would be best to live forever as?

The interesting part comes next, however. Liz, being sacrificed and thrown into the basement to be devoured by the creatures, doesn't succumb. Because she eerily resembles the creatures' long-dead mother, they spare her, imbuing her with evil black eyes and strange powers. Malcolm goes to bed thinking he's made another perfect deal with the devil, and instead wakes up aged 200 years, with Liz now taking the upper hand and killing him.

That's the simplified telling of the ending, and, like with any horror movie (or really any movie in general), describing it succinctly doesn't really do it justice. The scene in the basement where Liz comes face to face with the creatures is where the folk horror heads into overdrive. Splayed up against the wall is some sort of earthy, decaying effigy of the original witch, her head preserved in a vat of honey. The creatures are exceedingly spooky, and the real star of the scary factor of the movie. They're unlike any other demon I've seen (in a good way), and they're deeply unsettling. I like seeing the ways Perkins comes up with frights, and I trust him wholeheartedly to deliver.

Overall, I enjoyed Keeper. It's a twist on the haunted house trope that desperately deserves new life to be breathed into it. The cabin, like in any good horror movie, becomes a character itself and serves as a claustrophobic backdrop for the ever-intruding spirits that are slowly revealing themselves to Liz. It's hard to tell throughout the movie what's real and what's not, but that's part of the fun.

When you finish the movie, the opening scene makes more sense. It's a montage of different women throughout the centuries, and you realize they're all Malcolm's victims. The ending is made that much more satisfying when you realize his reign of terror has come to an end, and Liz is now in charge of the creatures. I can't stop thinking about what she'll do with them. Hopefully, she won't evil girlboss too close to the sun.

--

Nerd Coefficient: 7/10.

POSTED BY: Haley Zapal, NoaF contributor and lawyer-turned-copywriter living in Atlanta, Georgia. A co-host of Hugo Award-winning podcast Hugo, Girl!, she posts on Instagram as @cestlahaley. She loves nautical fiction, growing corn and giving them pun names like Timothee Chalamaize, and thinking about fried chicken.

Friday, November 21, 2025

6 Books with Stew Hotston

With a Celtic-Indian mother and a father of North African/Roma descent, Stewart Hotston is a somewhat confused second-generation immigrant living in the UK. His novels include the BFS and Subjective Chaos finalist Entropy of Loss, as well as the tech thriller Tangle’s Game and the science fiction novels based in UBISoft’s Watch Dogs universe—Daybreak Legacy and Stars & Stripes. He is also co-owner of one of the UK’s largest LARP systems, Curious Pastimes, and is an internationally competitive historical fencer with a PhD in theoretical physics.


Today he takes that diverse curriculum vitae and tells us about his Six Books.

1. What book are you currently reading?

I’m reading Blood over Bright Haven by ML Wang. For nonfiction I’m reading Judith Butler’s Who’s Afraid of Gender? I’m really enjoying both. Wang’s feels pretty timely, and an interesting take on a whole number of issues that are important to me (intersectionality, prejudice, colonialism) wrapped up in a meticulously crafted fantasy world.











2. What upcoming book are you really excited about?

Mahmud El Sayed’s science fiction novel The Republic of Memory is the one most on my radar. Having just seen the cover and read the first chapter, I’m really very excited for what he’s bringing to the genre—a unique cultural perspective, a fascinating stor, and what looks to be interesting structural choices.












3. Is there a book you’re currently itching to reread?

I’m not much of a rereader, but I have promised myself I’m going to reread The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez and the Tyrant Philosopher series by Adrian Tchaikovsky.














4. How about a book you’ve changed your mind about—either positively or negatively?

Annie Bot
. I’m not sure I’ve changed my mind—I really disliked it when I first read it, but it then went on to win the Clarke Award, and I’ve promised myself I’m going to return to it and reassess to see if what I found so difficult the first time remains a sticking point on a second readthrough.












5. What’s one book, which you read as a child or a young adult, that has had a lasting influence on your writing?

Oh, wow. That’s a difficult one because I read A LOT as a younger person and much of that has stayed with me. In terms of lasting influence on my writing, though? I think I was about 25 (I’m 50 now, so I’m going to let it count) when I read House of Leaves, and that really showed me that writing was more than content, more than delivering plot, that it could be about the words, the structure, the form itself. I’ve never written anything like it (and probably never will), but it remains a revelation to me that I return to again and again. Especially when I encounter people telling me there are rules to writing.







6. And speaking of that, what’s your latest book, and why is it awesome?

My latest is Project Hanuman, which is a space opera in the Culture mode, if that’s not too pretentious to say. More specifically, it’s also a retelling of how the god Hanuman lost his powers (and got them back), wrapped up in the collapse of a pan-galactic civilisation called the Arcology, and follows three of the survivors as they seek to build back. I am a trained physicist, and as a result this is one weird book, because modern physics says some incredibly strange things about reality, and I wanted to make those part of the story as much as the mythic elements around Hanuman.







Thank you, Stewart!

POSTED BY: Paul Weimer. Ubiquitous in Shadow, but I'm just this guy, you know? @princejvstin.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

New Contributors

We are excited to announce that Nerds of a Feather is growing. Today we welcome five new writers to the flock. You’ll be seeing much more from them in the coming weeks and months, but for now, here is a quick introduction to who they are and what they are about.

Christine D. Baker, Historian and Cat-Wrangler

Nerd specializations: History over all other things, especially ancient and medieval history. Memes and Early Internet culture. SFF books and short stories. Working to develop a specialization in Canadian SFF.

Bio: Christine has a PhD in History, although not in anything immediately relevant to SFF fandom. She's currently working through all the Hugo award winners and podcasting about it at Hugo History
(@hugohistory.bsky.social). In addition to SFF nerdery, she also does a lot of weight lifting, open-water swimming, and kayaking. You can find her posting photos of her cats at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky. (Klaxon is her freelance writing and editing business; so named because Christine is often a human klaxon.)

Maya Barbara

Nerd specialism: horror, literary fiction, pop culture

Bio: Maya Barbara, or known by a few as Babs, hails from West Tennessee where you can find her yelling about something pop culture related. She is also a high school English teacher who has moonlighted as a pop culture researcher/reporter for an uneven amount of years. You can summon her by talking about hyperspecific pop culture history or Interview With The Vampire (2022), the only show she’s trying to create a cult for.

Stew Hotston, The Mummy Librarian

Nerd Specialisms:
Books, movies, sword fighting

Bio: Stew is an author of all kinds of science fiction and fantasy. He's also a keen Larper (he owns the UK Fest system, Curious Pastimes). He's a sometime physicist and currently a banker in the City of London. A Subjective Chaos and BFA finalist he's also Chair of the British Science Fiction Association and Treasurer for the British Fantasy Society.

Eddie Clark

Nerd specialisms: SFF books. Video Games. Anime. The intersection of gay shit with all 3.

Bio: For his sins, Eddie has a day job which involves talking and writing about very specific nerd fixations to people who are at least nominally just as interested in them. Outside work, he takes a break by hiking, taking photos, and indulging in very specific nerd fixations and talking to people on the internet about them, which is of course very different from work. (He's an academic. All public nerdery, all the time).

Gabrielle Harbowy, part-time elf

Nerd Specialisms: TTRPGer, Team Star Wars. Totally normal about Baldur's Gate 3.

Bio: Gabrielle is an editor, writer of TTRPG adventures, novels, and short fiction, and she's a literary agent with Corvisiero Literary Agency. She loves cats, ravens, tattoos, starry skies, and playing tourist in her own city. When she's not reading or writing, she's thinking about reading and writing. She has a patreon focused on querying, writing, and game stuff at patreon.com/gabrielle_h, and can be found on bluesky at gabrielle-h and online at gabrielleharbowy.com.

Welcome to the flock!

Anime Review: 7th Time Loop

There's a little bit of everything in this compact time loop/romance/action/adventure

Anime series usually fall into distinct categories: shonen adventure, romance, magic and fantasy, portal adventure, etc. Seventh Time Loop is a fun, compact story that offers a little bit of all the things viewers might want from an anime. Its full title is: The Seventh Time Loop: The Villainess Lives a Carefree Life Married to Her Worst Enemy. Although it seems to tell the complete story, the title is intentionally misleading. The protagonist Rishe is not a villain, and her life in her seventh time loop is not at all carefree.

Rishe is a young noblewoman forced into an engagement to her kingdom’s arrogant prince. When false rumors paint Rishe as a villain, the prince denounces her and publicly cancels the engagement. Rishe takes the opportunity to flee and start life anew in an unexpected trade. However, she is eventually killed and reborn into the same moment of the original engagement being broken. In the style of Russian Doll, Groundhog Day, or Source Code, Rishe restarts her life with all the knowledge she amassed from her prior incarnations. In each time loop, Rishe has extended time to build skills, find practical mentors, create friendships, and learn about the world before she dies. Through her various incarnations she learns, with the help of others, to be a maid, a merchant, an herbalist, an academic scientist, a soldier, and other practical tasks, and she becomes stronger and smarter after each life.

In each time loop Rishe’s death is, directly or indirectly, brought about by Arnold, the cruel prince of a neighboring kingdom whose warmongering brings, in various forms, destruction to Rishe. However, in her seventh reincarnation, Rishe has had enough of her fate being controlled by both princes. She tells off her fiancé and jumps from a balcony to escape. She is intercepted by the same prince Arnold, who stabbed her to death when she was a soldier in her last life. Arnold is powerful, sharp-tongued, and stoic, but intrigued by Rishe’s fierce, unladylike behavior. Fascinated, he immediately proposes to her. With several caveats, Rishe decides to accept in the hopes that a closer relationship to her six-time killer may give her insight into him and possibly help her bring peace to the realms.

In many romance anime stories, the protagonist is shy, unpopular, or otherwise insecure, and is constantly dazzled or flustered by the other stronger/more popular/richer person’s attention. In Seventh Time Loop we don’t have that sort of unbalanced dynamic. Rishe is smart, physically strong, and very clever. Arnold is the same. Arnold is confident, although stoic, and he knows Rishe is no ordinary princess. Intellectually, Rishe has the upper hand, since she has relived this existence six times. The cat-and-mouse dynamic is reminiscent of the always entertaining The Apothecary Diaries but without the mystery elements. Both characters call each other out when they detect deception or manipulation.

However, the slow-burn, enemies-to-lovers romance takes a back seat to explorations of a range of issues, including class oppression, the role of women, using commerce to help build economic stability, and the unending cost of war. Since Rishe has lived life as everything from a scullery maid to a royal to a merchant to a soldier to an academic, she has insight into options other than war and oppression. But these are the options Arnold feels compelled towards. In each episode she uses one of her past experiences to redirect Arnold.

In addition to Rishe’s time looping, we also get insight into Arnold’s backstory, including how his abusive father shaped his bitter personality and led to a toxic relationship with his troubled younger brother. The story also introduces likeable side characters from various aspects of Rishe’s reincarnations. For those who like action and adventure, there is plenty of sword fighting, palace intrigue, war flashbacks, family drama, and political upheaval. For those who like romance, there is plenty of witty parlor banter (in the vibe of Queen Charlotte), ballroom scenes, and swoon-worthy moments between our bold heroine and her morally gray fiancé. The writers do a good job of painting Prince Arnold as a complex and problematic but still potentially redeemable character. In the vibe of Bon Appetit, Your Majesty, the time travel premise provides a perfect device for subtly redirecting a tyrant.

For fans of The Apothecary Diaries, this is an ideal short series to tide you over until the next season finally drops. But, the storytelling is more linear and direct, and lacks mystery elements or extended moments of introspection. The overall tone and animation style is much more simplistic. And the historical setting means there will be plenty of troubling content to wrestle with without resolution because of the short length of the series. However, despite these limitations, Seventh Time Loop packs a lot of entertainment, social commentary, humor, and adventure into twelve very bingeable episodes. With optimistic, brightly colored animation, and a pragmatic point of view, the series provides balanced storytelling with just enough adventure, moral depth, romance, and humor to keep you satisfied.

Nerd Coefficient: 8/10.

Highlights:

  • Slow burn, time travel romance
  • Clever exploration of social issues
  • Compact, linear storytelling

POSTED BY: Ann Michelle Harris – Multitasking, fiction writing Trekkie currently dreaming of her next beach vacation.