Sunday, February 22, 2026

Big Bookstooge's Used Soul Emporium

 

Howdy Folks! Honest Bookstooge here. We here at Big Bookstooge's Used Soul Emporium only sell the finest in used souls. If you are looking for a new-to-you soul, well, you've come to the right place. We have a Patented 101 Checklist that our soul technicians rigorously put our used souls through before we even think of offering them for sale to the public. That means every soul you buy from us, you KNOW it is good to go the moment you step off of our lot. I also personally inspect each soul after the Patented 101 Checklist, because Honest Bookstooge stands behind every used soul he sells, yessiree! So come on down for our once a year sales extravaganza and get a free used book with every soul bought.

*This message brought to you by Thesoulless Corporation


(This picture was done as a Christmas present for me from Mrs B. The words after it are all my own and in no way reflect opinions or ideas held by Mrs B)

Friday, February 20, 2026

16 Skeletons from My Closet 2.5Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: 16 Skeletons from My Closet
Series: ----------
Editor: Alfred Hitchcock
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Crime Fiction
Pages: 165
Words: 66K
Publish: 1963


These stories did not work well for me at all. In fact, I got the distinct impression that I was reading the Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine leftovers or rejects. I wasn’t, as these had all been published in the AHMM, but this was on par with my read of more recent editions of AHMM than my previous reads of these Alfred Hitchcock Presents anthologies. Most of the time I can pick at least 3-4 stories that leave me with a frisson of enjoyment, no matter how twisted, but this time, every single story just fell flat for me or was completely stale.

Not a particularly enjoyable time was spent on reading this :-(

★★✬☆☆


Blurb & Table of Contents:


ALFIE'S GUARANTEE

If you don't shudder with every twist and sudden thrust of these 16 terror tales...

if you are able to turn off your bedside lamp after closing this volume and drift off to a deep, dreamless sleep...

if you can drink your morning coffee without thinking there just might be a peculiarly bitter taste to it, or turn your back on your spouse or best friend without feeling a funny itching between your shoulder blades...

then that lovable old master of menace, Alfred Hitchcock, apologizes and personally guarantees you your full payment in horror. All you have to do is meet him in the cemetery under the next murderer's moon.…

INTRODUCTION by Alfred Hitchcock

GHOST STORY by Henry Kane

WHERE IS THY STING? by James Holding

THE BUTLER WHO DIDN'T DO IT by Craig Rice

CHRISTMAS GIFT by Robert Turner

THE MAN AT THE TABLE by C. B. Gilford

DEATH OF ANOTHER SALESMAN by Donald Honig

MAN WITH A HOBBY by Robert Bloch

...SAID JACK THE RIPPER by Robert Arthur

A GUN WITH A HEART by William Logan

ASSASSINATION by Dion Henderson 

A LITTLE SORORICIDE by Richard Deming

THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY WITH IT by Lawrence Treat

SECRET RECIPE by Charles Mergendahl

DADDY-O by David Alexander

THE CRIME MACHINE by Jack Ritchie

HOMICIDE AND GENTLEMEN by Fletcher Flora



Thursday, February 19, 2026

The Wanderer (Groo the Wanderer #48) 3.5Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot, by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: The Wanderer
Series: Groo the Wanderer #48
Author: Sergio Aragones
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Comics
Pages: 24
Words: 2K
Publish: 1989



Groo is sick of everyone knowing who he is and calling him names or making fun of him. Thus begins his journey as a Wanderer to find a land where nobody knows who he is. After many unsuccessful attempts, one town claims not to know who Groo is. They are lying of course, but they hope to make Groo go away before he causes a disaster. In their attempts to ignore Groo, they annoy him and thus Groo ends up destroying the town anyway. But a smart merchant has been paying attention to the fact that Groo is in town. He has a boat full of stuff for the King. He sells the stuff to the local merchants and uses all of the money to buy insurance on his ship. He then invites Groo onto the ship and sets sail for the Kingdom where he is supposed to take the stuff. Because he knows Groo will sink the ship and he will get rich off of the multiple insurance policies. So of course the ship doesn’t sink and the King’s Guards arrest the merchant for thievery and Groo wanders off the ship, wondering if he can find any town where nobody knows him.

I read through this in just 15 minutes. But you know what? They were a really fun 15 minutes. Groo is fun and funny and I always enjoy my read of this comic. I can’t ask for much more and so I don’t. I look forward to reading Groo, I look forward to having a good time and I’m not disappointed. That is one of the reasons I only read one Groo comic a month. I want to keep it good and I’m concerned that more than one a month would spoil it for me.

I love this page. First you have the bird and the guy in the crow’s nest banging heads. Then you have everyone, including the SHARKS!!!!, saying how it is inevitable that the ship will sink since Groo is on it. Finally, you have the peoples’ faces as the realization sinks in that Groo HAS ruined them, by NOT sinking their ship. I’d wondered in previous comics if someone could utilize Groo’s propensity for mayhem and destruction. Well, someone tried in this comic and they failed miserably, hahahahaha!

★★★✬☆






Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Shadow Strike (Empire Rising #16) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Shadow Strike
Series: Empire Rising #16
Author: David Holmes
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 450
Words: 177K
Publish: 2023



The last time I read an Empire Rising novel was back in July 2025 (Into the Breach). I enjoyed it but knew I needed a break. So I gave myself 6 months and here we are. I admit I went into this with some trepidation. The series is now complete with the release of Book 22 in the middle of 2025 and I have to decide if I’m going to stick things out to the end or not.

On the positive side:
I enjoy these stories and consistently give them 3 or 3.5 stars.

There is plenty of little and big space battles.

Alien cultures out the wazoo!

There is always another threat on the horizon so the universe is never in danger of getting stale.

On the negative side:

Characterization is pretty basic. We have moved on to the children of the guy who started the series and they are exactly like him in tone and manner.

Space battles, nothing but space battles! Earlier books used to have some good ground pounder action but that has almost ceased to exist.

The time commitment. Each book is 300 to 500’ish pages long. After this book, I’ve still got 5 more to go.

So I enjoyed this book BUT the whole time I was reading this I was wondering about all of those positives and negatives and if I wanted to finish things up. By the end of the book I decided that I will finish this series. I don’t know if I’ll read all 5 or space things out however. I also began to wonder if the author uses AI to help him churn these out. The first book, The Void War, was published in 2016 and the twenty-second book was published in 2025. You’re talking 2 books a year for 10 years. It is possible but I find it highly unlikely. I will probably speculate more, with numbers(!!!), in future reviews.

★★★☆☆


From the Publisher
Six months ago the Eaglaton Protectorate launched an unprovoked attack against Humanity and her allies. Only a daring strike led by Georgia Somerville managed to reopen the Gift wormhole and allow Imperial reinforcements into the conflict zone. Now, Admiral Becket has the full might of the Imperial Navy flowing to her banner. Yet time is of the essence, for there are signs the Karacknid Civil War is coming to an end and Humanity’s old enemy may soon seek its revenge.

Becket, aided by Jonathan and Georgia Somerville, must strike hard and fast against the Protectorate. For if they cannot end the unwanted war quickly, it may drain the Empire and her allies of all the strength they have spent two decades building.

However, lurking in the shadows, another foe watches, determined to do whatever it takes to see the two enemies fight it out to the death.

One way or another, something must break, for if the war cannot be ended quickly, Humanity will find it impossible to defend itself on three fronts.



Monday, February 16, 2026

Kormus Bell - MTG 4E

 

Another card like Karma, where players who use black get punished. As they should!

A red player could play this card, turn all the swamps of his opponent into 1/1 creatures, then he could play something like Fireball (if he has enough mana) and wipe out all his opponents lands. If he's running short on mana, and is willing to take some damage, he can also use something like Earthquake, which is much more efficient. Without land, your opponent can do nothing, nothing but suffer an ignominious defeat that is! Bwhahahahahaa!


Sunday, February 15, 2026

Small Gods (Discworld #13) 2Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Small Gods
Series: Discworld #13
Author: Terry Pratchett
Rating: 2 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 227
Words: 91K
Publish: 1992



I originally read this back in 2004 and for the most part, the humanistic belief system was brand new to me and thus it came across as “profound”. Twenty years later, with much more experience under my belt, this was complete garbage.

The basic idea, and Pratchett carries this through all his books, is that Man is the center of the universe and everything springs from him. It is a very “mushy” philosophy and thus is used by people like Pratchett who don’t want to get down to the nuts and bolts of theology. It allows for everyone to feel pretty good about themselves while being totally self-contradicting and also completely illogical.

Pratchett’s humor is still here in the story, but man, I could not overlook such shoddy theology. It is just plain bad.

The more I re-read of Discworld, the less inclined I am to ever re-read it again. There are individual books that are standing out as very well done, but overall, the underpinnings are slop and this makes the books themselves slop. Like this one.

★★☆☆☆


From Wikipedia.org

The Great God Om tries to manifest himself once more in the world, as the time of his Eighth Prophet is nigh. He finds himself in the body of a tortoise, stripped of his divine powers except for the ability to singe eyebrows with tiny thunderbolts. In the gardens of Omnia's capital of Kom, he addresses the novice Brutha, the only one able to hear his voice. Om has a hard time convincing the boy of his godliness as Brutha is convinced that Om can do anything he wants and would not want to appear as a tortoise.

Brutha is gifted with an eidetic memory and is therefore chosen by Vorbis, the head of the Quisition, to accompany him on a diplomatic mission to Ephebe as his secretary. Despite his amazing memory, Brutha is illiterate and rarely thinks for himself. This begins to change after Brutha discovers Ephebe's philosophers; the idea of people entertaining ideas they are not certain they believe or even understand is an entirely new concept to him.

With the help of Ephebe's Great Library and the philosophers Didactylos and his nephew Urn, Om learns that Brutha is his only genuine believer. All others either just fear the Quisition's wrath or go along with the church out of habit. After learning that Vorbis had facilitated the death of the missionary Brother Murduck to cover up his being mocked by Ephebian citizenry and to provide a reason for war against Ephebe, Brutha uses his memory to reluctantly aid an Omnian raid through the Labyrinth guarding the Tyrant's palace. Because of his authorship of De Chelonian Mobile (The Turtle Moves), which contradicts Omnian dogma about the shape of the Discworld, Didactylos is brought before Vorbis to face reprisal. Seemingly conceding his previous views about the shape of the world and willing to write a retraction extolling Omnian interpretations, Didactylos escapes after hitting Vorbis with his lantern. Ordered by Vorbis to burn down the Library, Brutha memorizes many scrolls in order to protect Ephebian knowledge as Didactylos sets fire to the building to stop Vorbis reading its scrolls. Completely unrelated to the story, the Librarian of the Unseen University travels through L-Space to rescue several of the abandoned scrolls.

Fleeing the ensuing struggle in Urn's steam-powered boat, which is destroyed as the price for an earlier deal made between Om and the Sea Queen, Brutha and Om end up washed up on the desert coast. Trekking home to Omnia with a catatonic Vorbis, they encounter ruined temples dedicated to long-dead, long-forgotten gods, the faint ghost-like small gods yearning to be believed in to become powerful, the small-god-worshipping anchorite St Ungulant, and the human cost of Vorbis's plan of leaving caches of water in the desert to attack Ephebe. Realising his 'mortality' and how important his believers are to him, Om begins to care about them for the first time.

While Brutha, Vorbis, and Om are in the desert, the Tyrant of Ephebe manages to regain control of the city and contacts other nations who have been troubled by Omnia's imperialistic ambitions. Sergeant Simony, whose native Istanzia had been conquered by Omnia in his youth, brings Didactylos and Urn to Omnia to lead the Turtle Movement in a rebellion against the Church.

On the desert's edge, a recovered Vorbis attempts to finish off Om's tortoise form, knocks out and abducts Brutha, and proclaims himself as the Eighth Prophet, elevating Brutha to archbishop to buy his silence. After Urn accidentally activates the hydraulic system which secretly operates the doors of the Great Temple, Brutha interrupts Vorbis's ordainment. As a result, Brutha is to be publicly burned for heresy but Om comes to the rescue, dropping from an eagle's claws onto Vorbis' head, killing him. The great crowd witnesses this miracle and comes to believe in Om, making him powerful again. In the ethereal desert, Vorbis learns to his horror that what he thought was the voice of Om was in fact his own voice echoing inside of his own head, plunging him into despair and leaving him unable to cross the desert and face judgement.

Om manifests himself over the citadel and attempts to grant Brutha the honour of establishing the Church's new doctrines. However, Brutha wishes to establish a 'constitutional religion' whereby Om Himself obeys Omnianism's new commandments and answers some of the prayers of his followers in exchange for a steady source of belief, believing that Om will lose his power again otherwise.

Ephebe has allied with several other nations along the Klatchian coast and has sent an army against Omnia, establishing a beachhead near the citadel. Brutha attempts to establish diplomatic contact with the generals of the opposing army, wishing to stop the war before it starts by surrendering. Despite trusting Brutha, the leaders state they do not trust Omnia and that bloodshed is necessary. At the same time, Simony leads the Omnian military including Urn's 'Iron Turtle' war engine to the beachhead in order to fight the anti-Omnian alliance.

Om attempts to physically intervene in the battle, but Brutha demands he does not interfere with the actions of humans. Om is infuriated but obeys Brutha, and instead travels to Dunmanifestin, where gods gamble on the lives of humans in order to gain or lose belief. Om unleashes his fury on the other gods and causing a storm that disrupts the battle. Eventually he compels all other gods of the forces at the battle to tell their soldiers to stop fighting and make peace.

In the aftermath Brutha becomes the Eighth Prophet, ending the Quisition's practice of torture and reforming the church to be more open-minded and humanist, with the citadel becoming home to the largest non-magical library on the Discworld. Om also agrees to forsake the smiting of Omnian citizens for at least a hundred years. A hundred years to the day after Om's return to power Brutha dies. In the afterlife he finds the spirit of Vorbis and, taking pity on him, guides him to his judgement. It is revealed that this century of peace was originally meant to be a century of war and bloodshed which the History Monk Lu-Tze changed to something he liked better.




Friday, February 13, 2026

PSA: Novels vs Novellas vs Short Stories

 

This is going to be one of those posts, mercifully short, where I define something so that you can understand me better. I put most text based books into one of three categories:

  • Novel
  • Novella
  • Short Story

Because I list page and word count in each of my reviews, this post is not as critical as it might have been even 5 years ago. But when I call a book a Novel or a Novella or a Short Story, I'd like you to know how I define that so we're all speaking the same language, at least on this blog. Once you leave the safety of Bookstoogelandia, all bets are off in regards to definitions.

Therefore, let it be known throughout all nations and peoples and tongues and tribes, that from this day forward, a Novel shall be a book consisting of 100+ pages, a Novella shall be a book consisting of 26-99 pages and a Short Story shall be a book consisting of 1-25 pages.



Big Bookstooge's Used Soul Emporium

  Howdy Folks! Honest Bookstooge here. We here at Big Bookstooge's Used Soul Emporium only sell the finest in used souls. If you ar...