Entertainment
10 books to add to your reading list in February
Reading List
10 books for your February reading list
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Critic Bethanne Patrick recommends 10 promising titles, fiction and nonfiction, to consider for your February reading list.
February 2024 is a great month for books, said a brilliant colleague. With books ranging from brilliant women from history, to brilliant women writing history (ethnography and memoir), there’s plenty for nonfiction stans. Fiction lovers will be able to choose from equally brilliant debut novels, as well as new titles from — yes, brilliant — acclaimed authors.
FICTION
The Fox Wife
By Yangsze Choo
Henry Holt: 400 pages, $28
(Feb. 13)
Foxes can symbolize happiness, or cunning and trickery. Choo’s new novel takes place in the early 20th century, as a woman named Ah San stalks someone, frequently encountering shape-shifting foxes during her wintry journey across Manchuria. A delicate and suspenseful detective tale, it’s perfect to savor on a wintry weekend.
The Book of Love
By Kelly Link
Random House: 640 pages, $31
(Feb. 13)
Link, acclaimed for short stories (“White Cat, Black Dog”), releases her first novel, and its pages sing with her trademark fantastical and emotional tropes. Four teenagers — two of them sisters, three of them dead — are caught in a nefarious teacher’s scheme that could end in greater sorrow, unless the friends complete a series of always-complicated tasks.
Ours
By Phillip B. Williams
Viking: 592 pages, $32
(Feb. 20)
Fiction from a poet can land flat — or, like “Ours,” soar to the highest heavens. Williams builds a world near St. Louis where a free Black woman, Saint, purchases a town, renames it “Ours” and casts spells that cause a kind of “white plague.” But is that kind of freedom truly desirable? This debut is the first standout read of 2024.
Wandering Stars
By Tommy Orange
Knopf: 336 pages, $29
(Feb. 27)
“There There” was Orange’s Pulitzer-winning debut; “Wandering Stars” might be considered its follow-up, as it chronicles the Native American Bear Shield-Red Feather family. However, it first returns to the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre, in which ancestor Jude Star suffers oppression and displacement, trauma passed on through epigenetics and pain.
‘The American Daughters’ by Maurice Carlos Ruffin
The American Daughters
By Maurice Carlos Ruffin
One World: 304 pages, $28
(Feb. 27)
Mother and daughter Sanite and Ady are sold to a rich New Orleanian named John du Marche in the 1850s. When Ady and Sanite are separated, Ady meets Lenore, proprietress of the Mockingbird Inn. Lenore actually runs an underground resistance society known as “The Daughters,” a witty Ruffin-esque turn on other so-called societies using those words.
NONFICTION
Latinoland: A Portrait of America’s Largest and Least Understood Minority
By Marie Arana
Simon & Schuster: 576 pages, $32.50
(Feb. 20)
Arana (“American Chica,” “Cellophane”) uses her own Peruvian American background to investigate the people of Central and South America who have made North America their home. While the author wonders whether Latino culture remains separate today, she also carefully shows how hard our nation’s almost 30% Spanish-speaking citizens have worked to gain opportunities, education and freedoms.
Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class
By Rob Henderson
Gallery Books: 336 pages, $29
(Feb. 20)
Born to a mostly absent father and a substance-addicted mother, Henderson bounced among seven foster families. He worked his way to Yale University and beyond, finally earning a doctorate in psychology. While Henderson has firm conservative principles, this is no “Hillbilly Elegy”; the book focuses on how to fix a system that doesn’t work for the needs of children.
Splinters: Another Kind of Love Story
By Leslie Jamison
Little, Brown: 272 pages, $29
(Feb. 20)
One of our best and most brutally candid contemporary writers, Jamison (“The Empathy Exams,” “The Recovering”) writes about her divorce, which happened while the couple’s daughter was just 1 year old. Although she was buoyed to leave a union filled with anger and loneliness, she now entered single parenthood, and discovered that no arrangement of life contains the perfection she’d long been acculturated to expect.
Grief Is for People
By Sloane Crosley
MCD: 208 pages, $27
(Feb. 27)
When Crosley’s closest friend, Russell, died by suicide, she needed to grieve. Instead, she obsessed about tracking down her grandmother’s jewelry, stolen from her apartment. Crosley is a superb and witty writer; she ties the losses together until we see, on the page, that she has managed to reach her feelings of anger and sadness, memories of laughter and pain.
Normal Women: Nine Hundred Years of Making History
By Philippa Gregory
HarperOne: 688 pages, $40
(Feb. 27)
You’ve devoured her novels, including “The Other Boleyn Girl,” but now Gregory shows off chops as a historian with a tome about British women of all types. Gregory doesn’t stint from covering the misogyny affecting those women, either. It’s a compendium and an amazing read, ending in 1994 when the Church of England first ordained women to the priesthood.
Movie Reviews
‘Hoppers’ review: Who can argue with hilarious talking animals?
Just when you think Pixar’s petting-zoo cute new movie “Hoppers” is flagrantly ripping off James Cameron, the characters come clean.
movie review
HOPPERS
Running time: 105 minutes. Rated PG (action/peril, some scary images and mild language). In theaters March 6.
“You guys, this is like ‘Avatar’!,” squeals 19-year-old Mabel (Piper Curda), the studio’s rare college-age heroine.
Shoots back her nutty professor, Dr. Fairfax (Kathy Kajimy): “This is nothing like ‘Avatar!’”
Sorry, Doc, it definitely is. And that’s fine. Placing the smart sci-fi story atop an animated family film feels right for Pixar, which has long fused the technological, the fantastical and the natural into a warm signature blend. Also, come on, “Avatar” is “Dances With Wolves” via “E.T.”
What separates “Hoppers” from the pack of recent Pix flix, which have been wholesome as a church bake sale, is its comic irreverence.
Director Daniel Chong’s original movie is terribly funny, and often in an unfamiliar, warped way for the cerebral and mushy studio. For example, I’ve never witnessed so many speaking characters be killed off in a Pixar movie — and laughed heartily at their offings to boot.
What’s the parallel to Pandora? Mabel, a budding environmental activist, has stumbled on a secret laboratory where her kooky teachers can beam their minds into realistic robot animals in order to study them. They call the devices “hoppers.”
Bold and fiery Mabel — PETA, but palatable — sees an opportunity.
The mayor of Beaverton, Jerry (Jon Hamm), plans to destroy her beloved local pond that’s teeming with wildlife to build an expressway. And the only thing stopping the egomaniacal pol — a more upbeat version of President Business from “The Lego Movie” — is the water’s critters, who have all mysteriously disappeared.
So, Mabel avatars into beaver-bot, and sets off in search of the lost creatures to discover why they’ve left.
From there, the movie written by Jesse Andrews (“Luca”) toys with “Toy Story.” Here’s what mischief fuzzy mammals, birds, reptiles and insects get up to when humans aren’t snooping around. Dance aerobics, it turns out.
Per the usual, “Hoppers” goes deep inside their intricate society. The beasts have a formal political system of antagonistic “Game of Thrones”-like royal houses. The most menacing are the Insect Queen (Meryl Streep — I’d call her a chameleon, but she’s playing a bug), a staunch monarch butterfly and her conniving caterpillar kid (Dave Franco). They’re scheming for power.
Perfectly content with his station is Mabel’s new best furry friend King George (Bobby Moynihan), a gullible beaver who ascended to the throne unexpectedly. He happily enforces “pond rules,” such as, “When you gotta eat, eat.”
That means predators have free rein to nosh on prey, and everybody’s cool with it. Because of bone-dry deliveries, like exhausted office drones, the four-legged cast members are hilarious as they go about their Animal Planet activities.
No surprise — talking lizards, sharks, bears, geese and frogs are the real stars here. They far outshine Mabel, even when she dons beaver attire. Much like a 19-year-old in a job interview, she doesn’t leave much of an impression.
Yes, the teen has a heartfelt motivation: The embattled pond was her late grandma’s favorite place. Mabel promised her that she’d protect it.
But in personality she doesn’t rank as one of Pixar’s most engaging leads, perhaps because she’s past voting age. Mabel is nestled in a nebulous phase between teenage rebellion and adulthood that’s pretty blasé, even if a touch of tension comes from her hiding her Homo sapien identity from her new diminutive pals. When animated, kids make better adventurers, plain and simple.
“Hoppers” continues Pixar’s run of humble, charming originals (“Luca,” “Elio”) in between billion-dollar-grossing, idea-starved sequels (“Inside Out 2,” probably “Toy Story 5”). The Disney-owned studio’s days of irrepressible innovation and unmatched imagination are well behind it. No one’s awed by anything anymore. “Coco,” almost 10 years ago, was their last new property to wow on the scale of peak Pixar.
Look, the new movie is likable and has a brain, heart and ample laughs. That’s more than I can say for most family fare. “A Minecraft Movie” made me wanna hop right out of the theater.
Entertainment
Ulysses Jenkins, Los Angeles artist and pioneer of Black experimental video, dies at 79
Ulysses Jenkins, the pioneering Los Angeles-born video artist whose avant-garde compositions embodied Black experimentalism, has died. He was 79.
Jenkins’ death was confirmed by his alma mater Otis College, where he studied under renowned painter and printmaker Charles White in the late 1970s and returned as an instructor years later. The Los Angeles art and design school shared a statement from the Charles White Archive, which said, “Jenkins had a profound impact on contemporary art and media practices.”
“A trailblazing figure in Black experimental video, he was widely recognized for works that used image, sound, and cultural iconography to examine representation, race, gender, ritual, history, and power,” the statement said.
A self-proclaimed “griot,” Jenkins throughout his decades-spanning career maintained an art practice grounded in the tradition of those West African oral historians who came before him. Through archival documentaries like “The Nomadics” and surrealist murals like “1848: Bandaide,” he leveraged alternative media to challenge Eurocentric representations of Black Americans in popular culture.
He was both an artist and a storyteller who sought to “reassert the history and the culture,” he told The Times in 2022. That year, the Hammer Museum presented Jenkins’ first major retrospective, “Ulysses Jenkins: Without Your Interpretation.”
“Early video art was about the problems with the media that we are still having today: the notions of truth,” Jenkins said. “To that extent, early video art was a construct that was anti-media … a critical analysis of the media that we were viewing every night.”
Born in 1946 to Los Angeles transplants from the South, Jenkins was ambivalent about the city, which offered his parents some refuge from the blatant systemic racism they encountered in their hometowns, but housed an entertainment industry that had long perpetuated anti-Black sentiment.
“What Hollywood represents, especially in my work, is the classic plantation mentality,” Jenkins told The Times in 1986. “Although people aren’t necessarily enslaved by it, people enslave themselves to it because they’re told how fantastic it is to help manifest these illusions for a corporate sponsor.”
Jenkins, who participated in a group of artists committed to spontaneous action called Studio Z, was naturally drawn to video art over Hollywood filmmaking. “I can address any issue and I don’t have to wait for [the studios’] big OK. I thought this was a land of freedom, and video allows me that freedom and opportunity that I can create for myself and at least feel that part of being an American,” he said.
Jenkins went on to deconstruct Hollywood’s vision of the Black diaspora in experimental video compositions including “Mass of Images,” which incorporates clips from D.W. Griffith’s notoriously racist “The Birth of a Nation,” and “Two-Tone Transfer,” which depicts, in Jenkins’ words, a “dreamscape in which the dreamer awakens to a visitation of three minstrels who tell the story of the development of African American stereotypes in the American entertainment industry.”
Jenkins’ legacy is not only artistic but institutional, with the luminary having held teaching appointments at UCSD and UCI, where he co-founded the digital filmmaking minor with fellow Southern California-based artists Bruce Yonemoto and Bryan Jackson.
As artist and educator Suzanne Lacy penned in her social media tribute to Jenkins, which showed him speaking to students at REDCAT in L.A., “he has been an important part of our histories here in Southern California as video and performance artists evolved their practices.”
Movie Reviews
Review | Hoppers: Pixar’s new animation is a hilarious, heartfelt animal Avatar
4/5 stars
Bounding into cinemas just in time for spring, the latest Pixar animation is a pleasingly charming tale of man vs nature, with a bit of crazy robot tech thrown in.
The star of Hoppers is Mabel Tanaka (voiced by Piper Curda), a young animal-lover leading a one-girl protest over a freeway being built through the tranquil countryside near her hometown of Beaverton.
Because the freeway is the pet project of the town’s popular mayor, Jerry (Jon Hamm), who is vying for re-election, Mabel’s protests fall on deaf ears.
Everything changes when she stumbles upon top-secret research by her biology professor, Dr Sam Fairfax (Kathy Najimy), that allows for the human consciousness to be linked to robotic animals. This lets users get up close and personal with other species.
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