Daniel Chamovitz’s What a Plant Knows is an elegant act of translation: it takes a scientific conversation about plant physiology and renders it into something almost contemplative. The book’s great achievement is not merely that it explains how plants perceive light, touch, gravity, temperature, smell, and more, but that it asks the reader to reconsider … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review – What a Plant Knows by Daniel Chamovitz
“Crown Clout: Prince Hal vs. Hotspur (Royal Drama, 1403)” – Poetcore Shakespeare: The Bard for Gen Z
(T.A.E.’s LitBites) – A modern retelling of Henry IV, Part 1 by William Shakespeare Okay - imagine a kingdom like a giant school where every clique wants power, reputation is everything, and one prince is low-key living his best chaotic life... until everything blows up. King Henry is exhausted. He’s been ruling for years, and the … Continue reading “Crown Clout: Prince Hal vs. Hotspur (Royal Drama, 1403)” – Poetcore Shakespeare: The Bard for Gen Z
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Rose (Bone #0) by Jeff Smith
Jeff Smith’s Rose is a prehistory written with the pressure of legend. It does what the best origin stories do: it enlarges the world without flattening it. Rather than functioning as mere background for Bone, the book deepens the moral architecture of that universe by showing how inheritance, fear, and choice take root long before … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Rose (Bone #0) by Jeff Smith
“Swipe Right for Venice: a spicy retelling” – Poetcore Shakespeare: The Bard for Gen Z
(T.A.E.’s LitBites) – A modern retelling of The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare Bassanio’s life is basically a group chat where he’s always low on clout. He wants to impress Portia — a total icon who lives in a fancy villa and is famous for being brilliant and kind — but winning her heart costs … Continue reading “Swipe Right for Venice: a spicy retelling” – Poetcore Shakespeare: The Bard for Gen Z
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 9: Crown of Horns by Jeff Smith
Jeff Smith’s Bone, Vol. 9: Crown of Horns is the series’ most overt movement toward apocalyptic resolution, yet it remains deeply committed to the intimate emotional textures that have always distinguished Bone from simpler fantasy adventure. What might have been a mere end-of-quest climax becomes, in this author’s hands, a meditation on fear, sacrifice, memory, … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 9: Crown of Horns by Jeff Smith
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 8: Treasure Hunters by Jeff Smith
Jeff Smith’s Bone, Vol. 8: Treasure Hunters deepens one of the series’ most appealing paradoxes: it is at once playful and grave, elastic with humour yet increasingly governed by fate, memory, and inheritance. Even the title is revealing. “Treasure Hunters” sounds like a child’s adventure serial, but the writer uses that promise to expose how … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 8: Treasure Hunters by Jeff Smith
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 7: Ghost Circles by Jeff Smith
Jeff Smith’s Bone, Vol. 7: Ghost Circles is one of the series’ most haunting achievements (no pun intended), a volume in which the fantasy adventure grows stranger, darker, and more inward-looking without losing its wit or momentum. What makes the book so compelling is that it does not simply escalate the plot; it deepens the … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 7: Ghost Circles by Jeff Smith
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 6: Old Man’s Cave by Jeff Smith
With Old Man’s Cave, Jeff Smith deepens Bone’s strange alchemy of pastoral comedy, epic fantasy, and uncanny menace. What has gradually become clear by this sixth volume is that the author is not merely telling a children’s adventure story that happens to grow darker over time; he is building a mythic world in which humour, … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 6: Old Man’s Cave by Jeff Smith
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 5: Rock Jaw, Master of the Eastern Border by Jeff Smith
Jeff Smith’s Bone, Vol. 5: Rock Jaw, Master of the Eastern Border is the series at its most adventurous and, at the same time, one of its most morally alert instalments. What first seems like a comic detour into wilderness peril becomes, on closer reading, a sharp meditation on power, hierarchy, and the uneasy alliance … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 5: Rock Jaw, Master of the Eastern Border by Jeff Smith
T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 4: The Dragonslayer by Jeff Smith
Jeff Smith’s Bone, Vol. 4: The Dragonslayer is the point at which Bone stops feeling merely playful and begins to reveal the moral architecture beneath its comedy. The series has always balanced cartoon buoyancy with old-world menace, but here the writer sharpens that balance into something more intricate: a story about inherited violence, mistaken identity, … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Reviews – Bone, Vol. 4: The Dragonslayer by Jeff Smith
