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Tsutomu Nihei's (Knights of Sidonia) breakthrough science-fiction masterpiece is now finally back in print. |
get it now at https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/blame-volume-1/id1152229443?mt=11&uo=2&partnerId=11&at=1010ldoE
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Tsutomu Nihei's (Knights of Sidonia) breakthrough science-fiction masterpiece is now finally back in print. |
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“ENDLESS” finale! In order to save the lives of a fallen friend and many innocents, the League must make the dangerous time loop work for them and stop it all from happening. All that stands in their way is one man’s hatred—and a hammer that can bend time! |
By: Ashley Binion (@ashleybinion)
12 Monkeys began its third season with a strong, table-setting episode for the rest of the season.
Warning: Spoilers ahead.
It has been around a year since 12 Monkeys has been on the air and I needed a refresher. Thankfully, the show is so in tune with their audience that they knew it, too. Instead of doing a typical “Last season on…” the series took a different approach. They built in the recap as a mini movie at the beginning of the episode. It was an innovative way of connecting the viewers to what has happened throughout the series so far.
Throughout the first two seasons, the show has taken on many looks. The first season was primarily the story on Cole and Cassandra with occasional nods to secondary characters like Dr. Jones, Jennifer, or Ramse. Season two was much more on an ensemble piece that focused more on Team Time Travel as a unit and developed the aforementioned peripheral characters. However, with their development, they became integral to the success of the series. This one aspect alone brought 12 Monkeys to new heights.
Unfortunately, “Mother” felt like a small step backwards. Even though the plotting in 12 Monkeys is almost impeccable and should be praised for being so, the previous season relied heavily on the bonds between Team Time Travel. That’s one of the main reasons it was so successful.
“Mother” was almost exclusively about the relationship between Cassandra and Cole. They are the two characters the show revolves around, so the search for Cassandra wasn’t a big surprise. She was kidnapped. Of course Cole would literally go to the ends of the Earth for her and their child. However, I felt the series was beyond focusing mainly on the romantic pair.
Cole’s journey on this episode was completely in character. From the pilot episode, he has been a rebel. “Mother” continued reinforcing this as he defied Dr. Jones.
It was nice to see Dr. Jones and her daughter share a couple moments. Her daughter surviving was a large arc from last season, so it was nice that she and The Daughters were not pushed aside or forgotten.
Cole speaking to and fighting Future Cole was an entertaining twist. It was nice to see a lighter side to Cole with some small jokes. Future Cole has some kind of agenda and I can’t wait to see how that plays out.
Cassandra’s dilemma of killing her child was a heart-wrenching one. She loves her child but to save the world, she knew she had to do something. When that didn’t work, she practically refused to give birth. It was intense. Now that The Witness is born, will Cassandra continue to fight against her child’s future?
By: Jaclyn Cascio (@jaclynator)
ICYMI, here’s some of the science news from the last week!
An international competition to build a working satellite that could fit into a 13-foot cube and weigh no more than 64 grams led 18-year-old Rifath Shaarook to build what is, reportedly, the world’s lightest satellite. And next month NASA is going to send it on a four-hour long suborbital trip for testing. On June 21, NASA will launch the tiny cube from its facility in Virginia. Shaarook’s device will have a new kind of “on board” computer for measurements encompassed in a carbon fiber polymer frame. And most teenagers consider getting out of bed an accomplishment…
3-D printing is the talk of the town and has been for several years. The possibilities appear endless. And now 3-D printing can help produce progeny! Researchers from the Northwestern University of Chicago successfully printed ovaries for mice – and they work! The gelatin-based ovaries were implanted into mice whose own ovaries had been removed. Remarkably, the mice were able to then ovulate and even give birth to healthy pups! The ovaries also continued to keep hormone levels within appropriate ranges. While such structures haven’t been tested in humans yet, it looks like there might be hope in the future of ovaries being replaced by 3-D version that are indistinguishable from the real deal!
An ancient cemetery in Tuna el-Gebel has become an exciting place to dig, as researchers exploring its halls have just discovered a catacomb plumb full of mummies! Following a small shaft underground, the corridor splits into several passageways with mummified corpses galore (along with coins, lamps, pottery, etc.). The excavations have just begun, so we don’t know exactly what to expect from the plethora of mummies, but the find is an incredibly exciting development for researchers!
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of blindness in the U.S. Ten percent of those with AMD have a more severe form of the disease, called wet AMD, that causes new blood vessels to grow under the retina, which then leak blood and fluid into the eye, destroying retinal cells and leaving blind spots in the victim’s vision. Some treatments exist, but they involve eye injections on a monthly basis. But researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine in Maryland have found a possible single injection treatment that may stop and even reverse wet AMD. In a small study, the researchers injected a cold-like virus into the eye. The virus served as a jump start for the immune system to kick into action to stop a growth protein from working in the eye (creating the vessels and subsequent leakages). The treatment seemed to have few adverse effects, but unfortunately was ineffective in some patients because the patients had a natural immune response to the virus. This means that the researchers will need to further test their treatment on a wider population to better evaluate the treatment’s chances of success – but it’s a start!
William Caxton introduced the printing press to England. He set it up in 1476 and went about producing English version classic books like Aesop’s Fables and Canterbury Tales. He also printed a priestly handbook called the Sarum Ordinal. The only set of fragments of Caxton’s particular version of this “how-to” manual are at the British Library in London…until now. A librarian at the University of Reading found a paper hidden in the archive that was a rare and previously unnoticed Caxton leaf. The page had previously been used to reinforce the spine of another book until around 1820 when it was saved from its undignified fate. The page ended up in a private collection that was eventually bought by the University of Reading where it was forgotten until the librarian found it and realized its worth. The 540-year-old page is a rare and valuable find!
A colonoscopy is a dreaded procedure, and the discomfort even stops many people from going in for the procedure when needed. But researchers are on the case and have designed a system they hope will reduce the discomfort of the procedure while perhaps making it even more effective. This week, a team presented the first robotic system capable of performing a standard colonoscopy. The system consists of a capsule robot guided by magnets outside the body, with a small optional tether that allows for other options during the procedure, if needed. A robot inserted the usual colonoscopy way doesn’t sound great, until you find out that the system is smaller than the usual endoscope used for the procedure. And the magnetic guidance of the robot helps avoid the physical pressure usually exerted by the physician pushing the endoscope. The scientists’ goal is to make a colonoscopy less painful and less scary, hopefully getting more people in to be screened.
Canada’s Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology unveiled an incredible fossil this week, and it’s unbelievable! While most fossils are usually presented as bones or skeletons, or questionable shapes in rock (to the untrained eye), this 110 million-year-old fossil of a nodosaur has no such problem. Accidentally discovered in Alberta in 2011, the 2,500-pound fossil was sent to a museum in Alberta where they found, after some scraping and examination, that the fossil was so well-preserved, it could be mistaken for a statue! There’s no guessing about the structure of the dinosaur in this case, the researchers see the dinosaur just as it was, and now the general public can go to the museum and see it too!
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New writer Brian Buccellato (DETECTIVE COMICS, THE FLASH) and artists Bruno Redondo and Mike S. Miller (BATMAN: ARKHAM UNHINGED) continue to expand the world of the hit video game from the makers of MORTAL KOMBAT in INJUSTICE: GODS AMONG US: YEAR FOUR! When Superman and the Justice League declared themselves the ultimate authority on planet Earth, only Batman stood against them—but now Batman is defeated. His resistance army has suffered major losses and dwindled to nearly nothing. The man who always has a backup plan for his backup plans has nothing—except for one final, desperate gambit. The gods of Olympus are real, and they’re none too pleased about Superman and the League making themselves into gods on Earth. With no other options, Batman turns to Ares, the God of War, to enlist the Greek pantheon into the battle with Superman. The Man of Steel may be strong enough to take on a god, but what happens when his closest ally (who happens to be the daughter of Zeus) is turned against him? Collecting INJUSTICE: GODS AMONG US: YEAR FOUR #1-7. |
By: Karen Valenzuela (@VictoriaNoir89)
Episode six of Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale, “A Woman’s Place,” opens on the icy riverfront of what once was Boston. We find Aunt Lydia overseeing the Handmaids cleaning the blood of hanged and tortured “sinners” off of the walls.
One of the Handmaids (real name Alma) informs the others that they’re cleaning the blood to make everything “look pretty and perfect” for some visitors. She tells them they’re government people, diplomats from a foreign country. And she specifically tells Offred they’ll be dining at the Waterford home that very night. How does she know this? “My commander. Small dick, big mouth.” (I personally get so much pleasure from hearing the Handmaids say crude stuff like this.)
While Offred’s in the bath washing the blood from earlier off, Rita walks in and tells her Mrs. Waterford wants to see her in her room when she’s finished. Offred dons a nice, new, pressed Handmaid dress for their guests and enters Serena’s bedroom. Serena sweeps in all greenish-blue grace and icy facade, informing Offred that their visitors are a trade delegation from Mexico, and that the Commander worked very hard to arrange the visit. As Serena gives her a once over and deems her presentable, Offred says, “Red’s my color.” It’s the smallest exchange, but it’s a really good one. For a moment, Serena looks like she’s thinking, “Did she really just…?” And then she stops and says, “Well that’s lucky.” Offred gives her a nonchalant, adorable little “Yeah it is” type shrug. There’s almost connection there. ALMOST. Just a moment of humor between them. But the moment ends as Serena gives her another one of her Don’t screw this up shpiels. Is Offred playing with fire using the tone she uses with her mistress in this scene? It’s the same tone I use with my dad when he spouts conspiracy theories he got from unsourced, weirdo websites. (“Oh, yes. I’m sure. …Definitely. …Oh, experts you say? Hmm!”) Serena isn’t stupid. There’s only so much insubordination Serena Joy will take from a Handmaid, whether she relies on her fertile womb or not. This whole scene is a top notch smart woman versus smart woman face-off. A delicious battle of wills. BUT WHO WILL REIGN SUPREME?
As Serena walks downstairs, she spots her husband in the hallway, pacing, fretting, nervous. And we see her remember a time in her life before the Republic of Gilead took power, before Gilead drove a wedge between her and her husband. Fred and Serena race one another up the stairs of their home to have sex, trying to have a baby. It’s warm, exciting, almost sweet even…and very different from the cold stand-offishness we’ve seen between them so far. Serena smiles a little at the memory and goes down to her husband to assuage his fears and instill some confidence in him.
Offred is summoned down to the sitting room where the Waterfords have received their guests, the Mexican delegates and a few of the other Commanders and their Wives. (Oh hello, Janine’s mistress who looks like soulless, colder version of Angela from The Office!) Before she enters, she shares a seemingly erotic hand-brushing moment with Nick (God, these people are so sexually repressed), and then we’re immersed in a completely unsettling and difficult scene. In so many ways, this is just a rough, stressful scene. Offred is paraded in front of the Mexican delegation like a pet, almost. Worse yet, like an animal in a zoo. A rare specimen for them to boggle at and ask questions. You feel almost a sense of hope, though, knowing that Mexico has not shirked the idea of women having important roles in the government. Not only that but Ambassador Castillo is wearing pants. Whoa, now! Castillo asks Offred pointed questions that are almost anthropological in a sense, things like “Did you choose to be a Handmaid?” and a real doozy, “Are you happy?” Offred almost looks to be physically struggling with the question and a part of you wants her to scream “NO!” and just tear everything around her to pieces and punch people and hit the Commander with a lamp, more than anything, you want her to lie and say yes, to stay alive another day. And that’s such a crushing realization – at least, it was for me.
As they enjoy their hors d’oeuvres, Commander Waterford insults our ears with a horrific accent as he tries to use the Spanish language to incur favor with the ambassador. (It’s truly the stuff of nightmares.) But we quickly forget about that once the ambassador turns to the Wives huddled in the corner and asks, “How does the quiet half of the room feel about Gilead?” You can see the “oh shit, did someone really just ask for our thoughts and opinions?” in their faces. And Fred’s wavering smile as he slowly turns like, “Ahhhh uhhhh.” The Wives obediently answer with stock robotic we’re so blessed and grateful answers, but the ambassador keeps going. She mentions a quote from Serena Joy’s book, A Woman’s Place, that was published before Gilead. We see Serena quickly glancing at her husband, and we know there’s some pride in her somewhere. She’s being recognized for her work and thoughts for the first time in what must be a long time. But she can’t show it. And then this doozy from Castillo: “You were arrested for inciting a riot, if I recall.” Oooohhhh!! Was. She. Now? Castillo doesn’t pull punches, asking if Serena ever imagined a society in which women can no longer read Serena’s book or anything else. And Serena is quick to answer that God asks them to make sacrifices but will repay them with blessings. Followed by the breaking of a very awkward pause with the quintessential, “Shall we have dinner?” Keep giving us more of these battle-of-wills conversations between smart women, please, show, because they’re so good.