Pixel Scroll 12/25/25 Scroll Hard

(0) I’ll start today by thanking the devoted friends who do so much to make the daily Scroll possible. Cat Eldridge, who consults his calendar to provide the spine that centers every edition, often assisted by the fantastically generous Paul Weimer. John King Tarpinian, keeper of the flame of Ray Bradbury, secret sharer of our admiration of the charity of Guillermo del Toro, and minder of genre history. Kathy Sullivan, indefatigable watcher of the daily comics. Chris Barkley, who makes sure I miss no genre news from the trade papers, NPR, or the innumerable other sources he follows. Steven French, who covers the full spectrum of literature and astrophysics. Mark Roth-Whitworth, all-round contributor, and ever alert for science features. Andrew Porter, always finding provocative literature essays and publishing industry news. Plus SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, our reporter on the best of things in Brit Cit, and a scientist in his own right who knows what’s news.

(1) JUST WHAT HE NEEDED. And next I’d like to play you “Tom Baker’s Christmas message 2025”.

Tom Baker in a 1970s living room, with a Christmas message for his fans.

(2) THE YEAR’S BEST – THAT IS, 55 YEARS AGO. Galactic Journey’s post “[December 24, 1970] ‘oh my God! – it’s full of stars!’” announces their choices for the Galactic Stars of 1970.

The first year of the 1970’s is over, and boy, has compiling statistics been a delight! (and a chore…) I can safely say that it’s been a year of superlatives, and if you spend the next few months plowing through this list, I guarantee you’ll be in for a good experience….

Here are the Novelettes that earned stars that year:

Best Novelettes (20-40 pages)

Slow Sculpture, by Theodore Sturgeon

“It’s about a man and a woman, the former an engineer, the latter a cipher, both troubled.  It involves electricity and bonsai and an understated romance.”

This is a story pretty much everyone knew was going to get the Star even when it came out at the beginning of the year.  It got an overwhelming number of nominations.

The Second Inquisition, by Joanna Russ

A visitor from the future(?) arrives in 1925 to upend the social order of things.

The Pressure of Time, by Thomas M. Disch

In the future, social outcasts plan to leave an embattled Ireland for the freedom of England.

Through a Glass—Darkly?, by Zenna Henderson

A woman from the present is witness to the tragic life of a fierce woman of the 19th Century.

(3) NO FUTURE TENSE FOR THESE SHOWS. There are several genre favorites on The Hollywood Reporter’s list. “Canceled After One Season: 26 of The Best TV Shows That Didn’t Last”.

It is not a stretch to say that the contemporary TV audience often feels entitled: to more seasons, to their idea of a perfect ending and even to a reboot — which they sometimes get if the IP is deemed valuable enough. TV has become a wish fulfillment factory. Where viewers don’t get their way, and never really did, is when platforms and networks pull the plug on promising shows after just one season. Plenty of history’s one-season shows, well, they might have been better off as no-season shows. But the list of one-offs that were gone too soon is far too long. And since it’s also too long (and subjective) to get into all of them, let’s stick to the standouts. Here is a look at 26 such series over the past three decades that are still spoken of for having left fans wanting more…

Here’s one you may have forgotten:

‘Lovecraft Country’ (2020)

This one is complicated now, knowing what we do about what later happened in real life with male lead Jonathan Majors, so let’s just focus on how this bonkers, expensive and often deeply scary fantasy drama was an incredible showcase for three actresses. Starring Jurnee Smollett, Lovecraft Country also included future King Richard Oscar nominee Aujenue Ellis-Taylor and Sinners scene-stealer Wunmi Mosaku, the three of them forging one of the stronger female ensembles in recent TV history. It ended with enough closure for the one season to stand on its own, but you can’t help but wonder what else they could have done …

(4) BAD FOLK OF FANTASY. Yesterday, File 770 published Cora Buhlert’s “Review: Figura Obscura Mouse King Action Figure from Four Horsemen Studios”. She also shared this photo of the figure on Bluesky.

The Mouse King is in his element. #Christmas2025 #FiguraObscura #FourHorsemenStudios #ToyPhotography

Cora Buhlert (@corabuhlert.bsky.social) 2025-12-24T22:59:35.394Z

And Cora also put up another photo of the Evil Horde who are helping decorate her home for the season.

Have a very merry Hordemas. The Mighty Motherboard is so big that she only fits on the living room table, so I left her there when I decorated for Christmas and added a few fellow Horde members. #Christmas2025 #MastersOfTheUniverse #PrincessOfPower

Cora Buhlert (@corabuhlert.bsky.social) 2025-12-24T22:36:48.485Z

(5) BECAUSE OF COURSE IT DOES. Why would I click if it didn’t? “A faster-than-light spaceship would actually look a lot like Star Trek’s Enterprise” asserts Fast Company.

The USS Enterprise was an impossible dream rendered in fiber glass. Designed for Star Trek, it looked like a creation straight out of creator Gene Roddenberry’s imagination: Twin nacelles—those long, gleaming engine pods held by elegant pylons—extended from a central saucer holding the engines that allowed Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock, Dr. Bones, and the rest of the crew to travel across the cosmos.

Inside those nacelles, the show’s creators imagined, lay the secret that made those trips possible: a warp drive that could crease spacetime itself, folding the universe in front of the ship while unfurling it behind, allowing faster-than-light travel not through speed but through geometry. For decades, physicists dismissed it as beautiful nonsense—a prop master’s fever dream.

But now the math has caught up to the dream.

Harold “Sonny” White—a mechanical engineer and applied physicist who worked on warp drive concepts at NASA’s Advanced Propulsion Physics Laboratory—has published a peer-reviewed paper in the prestigious Classical and Quantum Gravity that proposes a new design for a warp drive that happens to look a lot like the Enterprise.

(6) GEORGE BARR’S REASONS FOR THE SEASON. A year ago Black Gate helped promote a Kickstarter to collect “George Barr’s Christmas Card Fantasies” with a post that included a large gallery of examples. Here’s one of the art panels they published:

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(7) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

December 25, 1899Humphrey Bogart. (Died 1957.)

By Paul Weimer: Sure, Humphrey Bogart was never in a SF/F film but his work in allied genres classifies him as being worthy of the scroll.  

I’ll begin with Casablanca, since that is where I first recall seeing him. WPIX again, of course, this black and white film came on, apparently set during the war. Watching it without context gave me some weird ideas what was going on until I finally saw it start to finish. I’ve watched it many many times, since.

My next encounter with Bogart was on the African Queen, one of the best adventure movies ever made. I had already seen Katherine Hepburn (in The Lion in Winter), so this looked like a fun pairing. And it is!  Katherine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart take on Nazis in Africa is a swell way to spend a Saturday Afternoon. 

With The Maltese Falcon, I got the Bogart-Lorre reunion I didn’t know but I wanted. The two actors work wonderfully together, and it was that which inspired me for years to “play” Peter Lorre in Skiffy and Fanty Torture Cinema skits.  But indeed, if anyone could ever find the real Maltese Falcon, it would be Bogart. 

I encountered other Bogart noir films, especially The Big Sleep, which has one of my all time favorite scenes as Bogart and an uncredited Dorothy Malone as a bookstore owner flirt outrageously. Sexy? Darn right it is.

Since I was and am still late to westerns, it took me awhile to get to movies like Treasure of the Sierra Madre.  I still don’t think of Bogart as one for the country or the wilderness in his roles. Even with movies like the aforementioned African Queen and The Caine Mutiny notwithstanding, a dark nightclub, the mean streets of a city, that’s where Bogart is always in my mind.  And yes, frequently with Lauren Bacall somewhere around. Why mess with one of the best actor-actress pairings in movie history in my brain?

And I return to Casablanca, one of the best movies ever made and Bogart is a big part of that. Sure, he has a dream cast to work with, and a killer script, but the world weary Rick could not be portrayed by a better actor, before, then or since. 

Cheers, Mr. Bogart. Cheers.

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(8) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

How The Grinch Stole Christmas (1966)

Once upon a Christmas season, there was a television show called How The Grinch Stole Christmas. A television show that explicitly had a message that Christmas was neither a celebration of the birth of Christ, nor was it something that comes in a box, but rather is a matter of remembering that we hold each other in our hearts. Warm, fuzzy, and aggressively secular. In 1966 no less!

Aired on December 18 on CBS, the short film, just 26 minutes long, aired on that network for 21 years; ABC has aired it starting 2006, and then Turner Broadcasting has been airing, well until now as you’ll see below. I just watched it after getting it off iTunes where it comes bundled with Horton Hears A Who. (Both of these would be made into films that were awful.) This animated version was written by Christine Kenne from the brief children’s book by Theodore Geisel writing as Dr. Suess; it was produced by him and Chuck Jones who also directed it rather brilliantly.

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The animation style looks more than a little flat but that just adds to the feel of it being a folk tale about a villain in his lair high on the mountain, The Grinch, who decides he can’t stand all the noise and commotion of the Whos down in Whoville enjoying Christmas. Not to mention his disgust at them eating the rare roast beast. So he concocts a brilliant scheme to dress as Santie (sic) Claus and take a sleigh down into Whoville (his dog Max with an antler tied to his head being a poor substitute for a reindeer) and steal everything down and including a crumb of food so small that even a mouse wouldn’t eat it.

So up to the top of Mount Crumpet he rides waiting for them to all go ‘boo who’ when they discover everything is gone, but instead he hears them all signing out in joyful voices thereby providing the upbeat moral of this which I noted previously. Hearing this, his heart grows multiple sizes and he rescues the now falling load with ‘the strength of ten Grinches plus two’. Riding into Whoville, he grins ear to ear, and he, the now reformed Grinch, has the honor of carving the roast beast.

I watch it every year this as I really like it. I love the bit, used twice, of increasingly small Whos, once serving tea and the second time a strawberry to a small Who girl, by coming out of a series of covered dishes.

A final note must be devoted to this being I believe the last performances of Boris Karloff who both narrated it, voiced and made the sounds of The Grinch and of this tale which I noted above sung all of its songs save ‘You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch’ which was, though uncredited, sung by Thurl Ravenscroft, one of the booming voices for Kellog’s Frosted Flakes. Karloff won the only performance award he got as he was awarded a Grammy in the Spoken Word category!

It’s one of the best Christmas shows ever!

It is streaming on Peacock now. So go watch it. The red-haired, green-eyed Suck Fairy says you really should.

(9) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Aurora Winter.]

The Lion in Winter (1968 and 2004)

In 1968 MGM Studios teamed up with James Goldman to adapt his play The Lion in Winter for the screen. At the time the play had been a flop, running for a mere eighty-three performances on Broadway two years previous. The movie was made and was not only a success, but also breathed new interest into the stage version. I first encountered the 1968 film in university and read the script.

The title, for those of you rusty with your English history, refers to King Henry II (the lion was his crest) being in the “winter” of his life. At this point in history King Henry II had a kingdom that stretched into France and was in need of choosing his heir. Eleanor of Aquitaine, Henry’s wife, was imprisoned in a castle (thanks to Henry who was the key keeper). Goldman’s story is a fictional account of the Christmas court held to determine the future king. A complicated story this is, the wit in the script combined with the actors’ stellar timing make it worth watching again and again.

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Seven characters, each tremendously important, make up the cast . . . and what a cast it is. The role of the fifty-year-old (quite old for 1183) King Henry is played by a mature Peter O’Toole. Katherine Hepburn was granted the role of the spunky and vivacious Eleanor of Aquitaine. The three sons up for the throne are: Richard (Anthony Hopkins), John (Nigel Terry), and Geoffrey (John Castle). Let us not forget Alais (Jane Merrow) either, the young girl given to Henry by the French king sixteen years before to one day be the bride for the chosen king. Beyond this it is useless to explain more of the plot as it is far too complicated.

I said that the timing was crucial to the success and enjoyment one can experience with this film. While some may not appreciate a film that finds its humor through fast paced, verbal, intelligent wit with little ‘sight gags’ and no slapstick, I adore it. Each scene seems half the length it actually is because these actors are so tight in their character that they can fire one-liners back and forth without ever seeming fake or forced. One gets the sense that these conversations might have occurred between Eleanor and Henry, Henry and Alais, Richard and Philip, John and Geoff.

The technical aspects of this film are quite impressive too, period costume more accurate than those generally seen in such films. The whole movie takes place within Henry’s castle in Chinon, a vast castle in the cold of December, and the production crew made sure we felt the draft from the open spaces and cold stone. The cinematography often mirrors the long walking shots that we now see all the time on West Wing, creating the feeling that we have been transported back centuries to drop in on this family crisis.

While this film does have some minor downfalls — Morrow’s Alais is a bit too whiny for my taste and a few gems were cut from the original text and replaced with extraneous muck (I’m still holding out for the version that leaves those gems in) — they are easily ignored and outdone by the beauty of the final work. It is no surprise that this launched Anthony Hopkins into stardom, or how so many see Hepburn (she did win the Best Actress Oscar for this role) and O’Toole as the definitive Eleanor and Henry. If, somehow, you have missed this piece of film history, go rent the DVD, sit back, and allow yourself to be transported back to 1183.

I am not a big fan of remakes when it comes to the film industry, especially when the original was so fantastic. But every now and then someone comes along and surprises me with a new-old movie that is as good, or better than the original. This was what I discovered after I watched the 2004 version of The Lion in Winter.

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(10) COMICS SECTION.

(11) TRUE MOB. “Nuts & Bolts: George Anastasia of Netflix’s ‘Mob War’” tells readers of the Horror Writers Association blog how write more realistic criminals.

Mobsters have a long history with horror. No, this is not an exposé. Stephen King, Clive Barker, and Laird Barron have written about them. They’ve prowled the shadowy underworlds of John Constantine and Felix Castor, and taken center stage in everything from survival horror to Twilight Zone episodes.

If your horror fiction includes mobbed-up characters and you’d like them to ring true, legendary crime writer George Anastasia offers some advice in this month’s edition of Nuts & Bolts.

Nearly 50 years ago, George started covering the local Mafia for the Philadelphia Inquirer, and did such a good job that mob boss John Stanfa put out a hit on him. He’s since released six books, profiling real-life criminals including mafiosi and outlaw bikers….

Q: WHAT ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE A FICTION AUTHOR WHO WANTS TO WRITE A REALISTIC PORTRAYAL OF MOBSTERS?

A: Read newspaper and magazine accounts about organized crime figures and look for documented (federal court records, defense attorney filings, etc.) examples of mobsters talking in unguarded moments. There’s a lot out there.

The biggest problem with writing non-fiction is the lack of dialogue but given the extensive use of electronic surveillance, there plenty of examples of mobsters talking about anything and everything – from petty gossip to murders.

(12) TOY HISTORY ENDS. [Item by Cora Buhlert.] Playmates Toys have lost the license for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles after 38 years: “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Are Moving Away from Playmates in 2027” at Bleeding Cool. This is huge news, because not only were Playmates Toys the first to make TNMT toys, but apparently TNMT also makes up half of their entire revenue, so this is a huge blow to them. Playmates were also pretty open to sublicense TNMT to other companies for higher end collector figures, crossovers, etc… 

…After 2026, Playmates can no longer manufacture or sell TMNT toys unless a new agreement is reached. TMNT has been a significant part of Playmates’ business, accounting for nearly half (or more) of their yearly revenue in recent years, so this is a major change for the company. Losing the license marks the end of an era, and figures released before 2027 may become more desirable to collectors over time. Playmates will instead continue to focus on their other brands, such as Power Rangers, MonsterVerse, and Winx, going forward. It’s unclear where the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles will go next, but they still have figures arriving from NECA and Super7 in the meantime. Check out … the Playmates Press Release … online.

 (13) FOR EVERYONE ELSE. Merry Christmas to those who are merry. Season’s greetings to those who are well seasoned!

[Thanks to Kathy Sullivan, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Cora Buhlert, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, and Mark Roth-Whitworth for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day OGH. It is a Christmas movie Scroll, so I keep reading.]

Pixel Scroll 12/24/25 Scroll-Bottomed Pixels, Coat Of TARDIS Blue

(1) FROM ONE OF OUR OWN TO YOU. Here’s a holiday present! Filer Steven French sent the links to his latest short stories.

(2) 46TH YEAR! The 2026 Los Angeles Vintage Paperback Collectors Show will take place March 15, 2026 at the Glendale Civic Auditorium.

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(3) ON THE ROAD AGAIN. “Love on wheels: How one Coloradan turned grief into a mobile romance bookstore” at CPR.com.

A light purple bus sits in front of the 7AM Somewhere coffee shop in Brighton. It is barely bigger than a van. People come into the truck with coffee mugs and leave with small beaded bookmarks, tote bags filled with books and keychains saying “good books make bad girls.”

On its sides, a faded white logo of a woman looks back at people, her face is covered by a book and the words “Rescued by Romance: Books and More.” The woman has a messy bun and thick eyebrows — a nod to its owner: Becky Barker.

“Purple is my favorite color, and our image came from the idea of what people would see of me reading constantly,” Barker said. “So the lady in the logo had to have some thick eyebrows.”

From Brighton to Henderson to Fort Lupton and many other places in Northern Colorado, Barker takes her purple truck to coffee shops, breweries, and parks. She is on a mission to bring romance books to the towns of Northern Colorado that often do not have access to independent bookstores. 

These holidays, Barker also wants readers to find a community that meets them where they are.

It all started five years ago, after her husband died in 2020. He had a heart attack in the middle of the night.

“I got into a deep grief and depression,” Barker said. “And when you are numb from grief, you are just watching TV and not feeling anything really. But books … books make you feel.”

Romance novels with their emotional turmoil, funny banter, and focus on social connection awoke Barker. The stories by T.L. Swan and Sadie Kincaid allowed her to laugh and cry again. And the criticism that some levy at the genre doesn’t bother Barker at all. Indeed, she sees romance novels as telling an important story.

“These women in the books are strong women, in control of their lives, and opinionated,” Barker said. “I feel like it is helping all women talk about their feelings, know that it is okay to have these feelings and not be ashamed of talking about feelings … and have higher expectations of the men in their lives and men in general.”…

(4) WORLDS OF ROBERT SILVERBERG. Starship Sloane Publishing has just released A Multitude of Worlds by Robert Silverberg, a 420-page volume.

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The thirteen science fiction stories in this collection have been selected by Robert Silverberg and span seventy years of his legendary writing career. In his introduction to the collection, Silverberg takes us on an insightful journey from age thirteen through the many decades of his writing; while David Gerrold’s foreword provides wit and warmth in recalling their long friendship—setting the stage for the exceptional stories that follow, each exploring a different world. And the cherry on top? Vibrant and immersive cover art by Bob Eggleton!  

Hardcover edition with dust jacket. Book design by F. J. Bergmann. Edited by Justin T. O’Conor Sloane. Here’s a direct publisher buy link: A Multitude of Worlds.

BACK COVER COPY:

This is the Robert Silverberg collection you’ve been waiting for! Stories that span seventy years of “Silverberg science fiction!”—and if that’s not already a category, then it should be. We have the “Big Three” of Heinlein, Asimov and Clarke, let’s add Silverberg—call it the “Big Four.” If you’re not already an aficionado of Silverberg’s work, read this collection—and keep in mind that the stories contained herein represent only a small sampling of the Silverberg oeuvre—and you’ll see what we mean. If you’re already a fan, well then, enjoy the stories that Silverberg has carefully assembled for you in this collection, along with his newly written introduction. These stories, each one, takes us on an experiential journey to a different world, a multitude of worlds. Enjoy also, the warmth and wit of the foreword by David Gerrold. And, to make this a trifecta of science fiction greats, this book’s original cover art is by Bob Eggleton. Folks, you’re holding science fiction gold in your hands! Enjoy the enrichment it offers—and here’s to the inspired reading of inspired writing.  

(5) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Ellen Kushner’s The Golden Dreydl

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Someday I’ll get blasé about the amazing things that show up here unexpectedly. Well, not that Unicorn that Peter sent.

But that won’t happen for quite some time if exquisite things such as Ellen Kushner’s The Golden Dreydl which was published by Charlesbridge keep showing up here! This short novel holds wonders which will brighten the mood of up anyone who reads it. It’s that good.

A golden dreydl is, in case you haven’t encountered one, a toy, the name being Yiddish, dreydl for ‘to turn or twist’. It is a 4-sided toy marked with Hebrew letters and spun like a top in a game of chance. It’s common enough that many children not Hebrew have played with one in the days when such simple toys were all there were for entertainment. (I am not being nostalgic — just stating what was. Times change, toys change.) This dreydl, this golden dreydl, is not a simple toy but rather one capable of true magic. Indeed for one small girl, Sarah by name, on a winter’s night at her family’s Chanukah party, this toy will bring wonders.

But before this charming book, there was a wonderful CD and Judith Gennet who reviewed that recording for us back a few years ago tells what this story is about:

The plot to the story is as follows. One Chanukah night, a tradition-weary child named Sarah receives a magic golden dreydl (a clever cross between a top and a die) from her Aunt Miriam. 

While fighting with her brother, the dreydl is catapulted disastrously into the TV screen. Crack! Later, Sarah finds the dreydl laying on the floor in the form of a girl, and they then leap through the injured screen into the golden dreydl’s world, sort of like an Oz or Wonderland. (A TV screen? How symbolic!)

Oh, but not all is well in the world that the golden dreydl comes from, as Here Be Dragons which are most unfriendly.

The Golden Dreydl was inspired by the music of the renowned band Shirim, who created a klezmer version of Tchaikovsky’s ‘Nutcracker Suite’ for Chanukah. (Really — it does work rather well!) Did I mention that what appears to be a toy is really a princess? Thought not. Suffice it to say that Sarah has a guide to this world — that princess. Is a good story. Indeed it is. As Judith said in her review of the recording, ‘be a fun album for kids, for those interested in Jewish heritage, and for adults who like fairy stories. The Golden Dreydl could easily evolve into a holiday tradition.’ I agree.

Like Jane Yolen’s The Wild Hunt, I adore this novel. Both the text by Ellen Kushner and the illustrations by Ilene Winn-Lederer  I are perfect. Each novel has illustrations that add to the enjoyment of the text; each is a short enough read (as is any great fairy tale) that it lends itself to repeated reading either for your own pleasure or loud to others. Though both are too recent to be classics yet in children’s literature, they should be within a few years.

Oh, do buy the recording as well. You’ll find it just as charming as it  was originally developed with Shirim Klezmer Orchestra under the auspices of WGBH Radio Boston, and first appeared in a different form as a radio production of PRI’s Sound & Spirit, Ellen Kushner’s program.

[Reprinted from Sleeping Hedgehog.]

(6) COMICS SECTION.

(7) STARLINER, NOT SO STARRY. “Safety panel says NASA should have taken Starliner incident more seriously” reports Ars Technica.

For the better part of two months last year, most of us had no idea how serious the problems were with Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft docked at the International Space Station. A safety advisory panel found this uncertainty also filtered through NASA’s workforce.

On its first Crew Test Flight, Boeing’s Starliner delivered NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams to the space station in June 2024. They were the first people to fly to space on a Starliner spacecraft after more than a decade of development and setbacks. The astronauts expected to stay at the ISS for one or two weeks, but ended up remaining in orbit for nine months after NASA officials determined it was too risky to return them to Earth in the Boeing-built crew capsule. Wilmore and Williams flew back to Earth last March on a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft.

The Starliner capsule was beset by problems with its maneuvering thrusters and pernicious helium leaks on its 27-hour trip from the launch pad to the ISS. For a short time, Starliner commander Wilmore lost his ability to control the movements of his spacecraft as it moved in for docking at the station in June 2024. Engineers determined that some of the thrusters were overheating and eventually recovered most of their function, allowing Starliner to dock with the ISS.

“There was concern in real time that without recovery of some control, neither a docking nor a deorbit could be controllable, and that could have led to loss of vehicle and crew,” said Charlie Precourt, a former space shuttle commander and now a member of NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP). “Given the severity of this anomaly, NASA wisely and correctly used the safe haven of the ISS to conduct testing and engineering on the ground to analyze the various recovery options.”….

…. Precourt said officials from Boeing and NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, which oversees the agency’s Starliner contract, “were signaling return on Starliner was the expected outcome” for Wilmore and Williams. “Other NASA entities in the decision process were not in concurrence,” Precourt continued. “As a result, there was significant stress on the workforce, with many believing the sole objective was to determine a means by which we could enable crew return on the Starliner.”

It would have been better, Precourt and other panel members said Friday, if NASA made a formal declaration of an in-flight “mishap” or “high visibility close call” soon after the Starliner spacecraft’s troubled rendezvous with the ISS. Such a declaration would have elevated responsibility for the investigation to NASA’s safety office.

“The ASAP finding is the lack of a declared in-flight mishap or high visibility close call contributed to an extensive, excessive … period of time where risk ownership and the decision-making authority were unclear,” Precourt said…..

(8) WHAT DOCTORS REALLY THINK. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] While I have had a career in science communication (publications and policy) and have trained as an environmental scientist, my parents were both clinicians and my first job, before I moved to the Institute of Biology, was a three-year stint with the British Medical Association (working on promotions since you didn’t ask).  So I do keep an eye on the medical world (and indeed, one of the committees I serviced at the Institute was the Biomedical Science Committee).  The Christmas edition of the British Medical Journal always has a chuckle or two. This year’s treats include “An advent calendar of blood and silence”, a graphic on doctors’ own ‘technical’ terms in the form of an advent calendar.  The full advent calendar at the aforementioned link.  My personal favourites I can relate to below…

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[Thanks to Mark Roth-Whitworth, Kathy Sullivan, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna).]

Review: Figura Obscura Mouse King Action Figure from Four Horsemen Studios

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By Cora Buhlert: Today I’m reviewing the newest addition to my collection, the Figura Oscura Mouse King action figure from Four Horsemen Studios.

But before I get to the figure itself, I should probably give a brief introduction to the manufacturer, Four Horsemen Studios. The titular Four Horsemen are four toy designers – Eric Treadaway, H. Eric “Cornboy” Mayse, Jim Preziosi and Christopher Dahlberg – who worked for McFarlane Toys in the 1990s. Those fantastically detailed Spawn action figures that wowed us all back in the 1990s – yup, that was the handiwork of the Four Horsemen. You didn’t think Todd McFarlane sculpted the figures himself, did you?

Eventually, the Four Horsemen left McFarlane to form their own company, Four Horsemen Studios. They work as freelance designers for many toy companies. Among other things, they designed both the Masters of Universe 200X and Classics toylines for Mattel. But they also have their own toylines. There is Mythic Legions, a fantasy line, Cosmic Legions, a science fiction line, and Figura Obscura, a line of characters from myth, legend and literature.

The Figura Obscura line offers a holiday figure every year. The first two figures were Krampus and Father Christmas respectively. I own both and they make for a fabulous holiday display. Next came the Ghost of Jacob Marley and the Ghost of Christmas Past, both from the Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens (which I don’t own, because you can’t collect everything). Based on this pattern, many fans were expecting this year’s holiday Figura Obscura release to be the Ghost of Christmas Present. But the Four Horsemen surprised everybody and offered the Mouse King, the main antagonist from The Nutcracker, instead.  

Nowadays, the story of the noble Nutcracker and his dangerous opponent, the seven-headed Mouse King, is best known from Piotr Tchaikovsky’s 1893 ballet The Nutcracker, but the story originated with E.T.A Hoffmann’s 1816 fairy tale “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King”, which was subsequently retold and expanded by Alexandre Dumas in 1845, which in turn was adapted for the famous ballet. There are differences between the various versions, but the basic plot remains the same. For Christmas, young Clara (Marie in some versions) Stahlbaum is given a wooden nutcracker by her godfather, the clockmaker and inventor Drosselmeyer. Clara adores her nutcracker and is stunned to find him and her other toys coming alive by night. The nutcracker and the other toys fight their archenemy, the seven-headed Mouse King and his army of mice. It’s a pitched battle and things look dire for the nutcracker, but Clara saves him by throwing her slipper at the Mouse King. Eventually, it is revealed that the nutcracker is an enchanted prince or sometimes Drosselmeyer’s equally enchanted nephew.

As for why the King of the Mice has seven heads, that’s a reference to the rare phenomenon of so-called rat or mice kings, multiple rats or mice that are permanently bound together by their entangled tails. Mice and rat kings have been observed for centuries and there are preserved examples kept in museums and universities. However, these preserved rat or mice kings were considered hoaxes, until examples were found still alive in the modern era. The most recent example of a living rat king, consisting of thirteen entangled rats, was found by a farmer woman in Estonia in 2021. 

I follow Four Horsemen Studios on social media and when I saw the Mouse King announced as the 2025 Figura Obscura holiday release, my immediate reaction was, “I need this figure.” Why? Because I have a personal connection to the Mouse King.

When I was a very young kid, I saw a cartoon adaptation of The Nutcracker on TV. It was most likely the 1973 Soviet adaption, because that one and the 1979 Rankin Bass stop-motion adaptation are the only ones that fit with regards to the timeline and I’m pretty sure the film I saw was a cartoon. Plus, the Rankin Bass Mouse King only has one head. And East European children’s cartoons and live action movies were frequently broadcast on West German TV.

I was utterly fascinated by the film and particularly by the terrifying multi-headed Mouse King to the point that I adopted the Mouse King as a villain – the main villain for several years – into my own personal fantasy world of little beings who live in their own civilisation alongside our world. The origin of this fantasy world was my collection of vinyl figurines, which I used to keep in a cookie box decorated with a picture of Cologne Cathedral, hence I called them Kirchenkistenheinis – Church Box Guys.

Church Box Guys are very welcoming and will adopt anybody – so I always sought out figures representing characters from properties I loved, which eventually became the foundation of my toy collection. But while the terrible Mouse King was the main opponent of the Church Box Guys for many years and stuck around as a member of the League of Evil, even after I discovered other, even more terrifying villains, I never had a Mouse King figure, because no one ever made one. Until now. So of course, I had to get him.

So I ordered the Mouse King from Four Horsemen Studios and he arrived last Monday, only a little more than a week after I ordered him. Let’s take a look at the packaging first:

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The Mythic and Cosmic Legions figures usually come in fairly plain packaging, but the Figura Obscura figures come in deluxe boxes with beautiful artwork by Tom Tolman and Nate Baertsch. Around the actual box, there is magnetic cardboard diorama. On side shows the Mouse King under the Christmas tree amidst presents and sweets, the other side shows his lair inside one of Drosselmeyer’s clocks.

On the back of the actual box, there is a summary of the story of the Mouse King, while on the sides there is picture of the Nutcracker and an elegantly dressed lady. The front of the box has a window, but you can’t see the figure within, because it is covered with protective foil. This will disappoint in-box collectors, but personally I’d rather have an undamaged figure than a beautiful display. Besides, I take my toys out of the box anyway.

When you open the box, this is what you get:

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The Mouse King figure, his weapons and some spare parts, a figure stand, a fabric cape, a booklet telling the story of the Nutcracker and the Mouse King and a black plastic bag containing a surprise gift. All Figura Obscura holiday figures come with a surprise gift, usually parts you can attach to other Mythic or Cosmic Legions figures, because the parts of all three lines are interchangeable. If you want to know what the surprise gift that came with the Mouse King is, here it is in ROT13 to avoid spoilers:

Gur fhecevfr tvsg vf n Ahgpenpxre urnq jvgu n tbyqra gevz ba uvf ung nf jryy nf zvffvat rlr naq n zvffvat gbbgu. Fb gur Zbhfr Xvat unf cerinvyrq naq qrpncvgngrq uvf nepurarzl. Lbh pna fgvpx gur Ahgpenpxre urnq ba n Zlguvp be Pbfzvp Yrtvbaf svther. Gur inevbhf Zlguvp Yrtvbaf xavtugf cebonoyl jbex orfg.

The Mouse King comes fully assembled, though you need to attach his tail and give him his weapons. If you want to use the cape, you need to remove the head, place the cape around his shoulders and pop the head onto the peg again. Word of warning: Many action figures are stiff right out of the box, especially if they’ve spent time in a package in the cold. So before attaching, removing and swapping parts or posing the figure, heat it up with a hairdryer or hot water, lest you break something. That said, the headpiece of my Mouse King was very easy to remove – so easy that it fell off when I took the figure out of the box.

And here is the Mouse King in his full glory with his weapons, cape and the tail attached. The figure is extremely poseable and features double joints at the elbows and knees, butterfly joints at the shoulder, a biceps swivel, waist cut, wrist and ankle joints. The tail is bendable thanks to an inserted wire, though I would be careful about bending it too much, because sometimes bendable tails, tentacles, etc… tend to break.

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The big headpiece can be swivelled at the neck peg and all seven heads can be swivelled individually as well. The fact that this incarnation of the Mouse King has seven heads at all is amazing in itself, because even though both E.T.A. Hoffmann and Alexandre Dumas specify the number of heads, the Mouse King usually does not have seven heads in most dramatic adaptations. In performances of Tchaikovsky’s ballet, he usually only has one head, seven-headed dancers being rather hard to find. Animated adaptations like the 1973 Soviet cartoon I watched as a kid or later versions, including one featuring the Care Bears and another featuring Barbie, also tend to reduce the number of heads to three or four, since seven heads are a pain in the backside to animate.

Eric Treadaway, one of the Four Horsemen, said that the reason he wanted to make a Mouse King is that he wanted to see if it was possible to design a figure with seven individual heads. I’d say he succeeded, because not only are all heads individually articulated, but they have different sculpts as well. The main head has a scar on his face and wears a crown made of bones. One head has an open mouth with vicious fangs, another head has a closed mouth with fangs. The remaining four heads feature a closed mouth without fangs.

As is common with all Four Horsemen figures, the sculpting and paint are incredibly detailed. The headpiece has a ruffled collar with golden necklaces. The chest and arms are bare with sculpted fur. The figure has a belt with dangling bones, bags and loops for holstering his weapons and as well as a loincloth. He wears knee-length breeches, while the feet and lower legs are bare. The fabric cape is red with a black lining, nicely weathered and tattered and wired for better poseability. He comes with a golden sceptre – he is a king, after all – as well as a sword, so he can duel with the Nutcracker or anybody else. Even though the figure is very top heavy because of the big headpiece, he can stand on his own due to the big mouse feet and the tail. Though you can also use the included stand.

If you prefer your Mouse King to have just one head, well, you can do that, too. Because there is a neck piece and an optional ruffled collar included, which you can pop on the neck peg and then add just a single head. I didn’t do this, because it’s somewhat complicated and besides, I want to display my Mouse King with all seven heads anyway. If you have other Mythic or Cosmic Legions figures, you can also put the seven mouse heads onto other bodies and so create e.g. an army of mice in suits of armour. An extra pair of open hands is also included. Customising and parts swapping is a big part of the Mythic and Cosmic Legions concept, so you can create your preferred look.

Sizewise, the Mouse King stands a little over eight inches tall with all seven heads attached and fits in well with your six/seven inch scale action figures. Below you can see some examples:

Here is the Mouse King duelling with a male Mythic Legions figure, the noble and handsome knight Sir Gideon Heavensbrand:

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“Have at you, you vile, unholy abomination!”

“The only unholy abomination here is that shield of yours, Paladin. I mean, how can you even lift that thing?”

Here is the Mouse King duelling a female Mythic Legions figure, the evil knight Lady Avarona. Even though both figures are compatible, Avarona is quite a bit smaller, because the female Mythic Legions figures tend to be smaller and slighter than the male figures.

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“Why are you even fighting me? Aren’t we supposed to be on the same side?”

“Normally yes. But Gideon Heavensbrand is mine. He is my sworn enemy and only I shall have the right to cut off his head.”

“Fine by me. I don’t want him anyway.”

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“You take his left flank, Gideon, and I take his right.”

“Two against one is not fair.”

“You have seven heads.”

“Yes, but only two hands. And anyway, aren’t you two supposed to be sworn enemies or something? So why are you ganging up on me?”

“Once we deal with you, unholy abomination, I shall bring Lady Avarona to justice.”

“Not if I cut off your head first, Gideon.”

“Uhm, I guess I’d better get out of the way, folks. Cause whatever’s going on with you two, I don’t want anything to do with it.”

Sir Gideon Heavensbrand and Lady Avarona are the only two human Mythic Legions figures I have (I mostly have skeleton warriors), so they started up a torrid enemies to lovers affair on my shelf.

***

A Clash of Kings: The Mouse King duels King Randor from the Masters of the Universe Classics line. 

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“Nice sword. And nice sceptre. But mine are bigger.”

You knew it was coming: The Mouse King fights He-Man, also from the Masters of the Universe Classics line.

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“Skeletor’s henchmen are getting evermore ridiculous. And here I thought Stinkor was the bottom of the barrel.”

“I am not one of the idiotic henchmen of that idiot Skeletor. I am the King of all mice and an independent member of the League of Evil.”

Finally, here is the Mouse King with his League of Evil pal Skeletor.

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“Long time no see, Mousy. How have you been? Vanquished that pesky Nutcracker yet?”

“First of all, my name is not Mousy. I am Roderic Ludovicus Ernst Theodor Amadeus Alexander Peter the First, King of Mousolia. As for the rest, did you vanquish that pesky He-Man yet?”

“Well, my name is actually Keldor, son of Miro and Prince of Eternia, but no one ever calls me that either. As for He-Man, you know how it is with those pesky heroes…”

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The Figura Obscura Mouse King is an amazing action figure. At 70 US-dollars plus shipping and tax or import duties, where applicable, he is not cheap, but he is well worth it. Whether you’re a fan of The Nutcracker or want to add a freaky mutant critter to your collection or whether you want to build an army of mouse warriors with spare Mythic Legions bodies, the Mouse King offers all that and more. He is currently in stock at the Four Horseman Studios online store, so get him while supplies last.

Pixel Scroll 12/23/25 There’s Nothing That A Great Story Can’t Cure For You, I Bless The Rains On Mt Tsundoku

(1) CHINESE CON BANS ALL JAPANESE-THEMED IP. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] The November 28th Scroll covered fan events in China being disrupted by political issues relating to Japan, and another one has just encountered similar trouble.  The Hong Kong based English-language South China Morning Post reports that content based on Japanese IP will not be allowed at this weekend’s Comicup (CP) 32 “Pre” event in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province.

One of China’s largest comic conventions has banned Japanese-themed content and derivative works just a week ahead of its opening amid spiralling tension between Tokyo and Beijing.

Organisers of the Comicup (CP) 32nd edition “Pre” event – set to take place in Hangzhou on December 27 and 28 – informed exhibitors and visitors on Friday that there would be a “full-scale adjustment” of content shown throughout the venue.

“Due to consideration regarding the current social environment and our cultural obligations, the organising committee has decided to pivot this edition of the convention towards a ‘new Chinese style’ theme,” the message said.

The announcement was not made public but several people planning to attend confirmed its details to the South China Morning Post.

While the statement did not name Japan, several dozen exhibitors who featured Japanese anime and other themed content said on social media that their booths had been cancelled for reasons “well-known to all” and “factors beyond control”.

Meanwhile, sections themed around content from the United States and Europe appear to be unaffected at the grass-roots gala which serves as a massive marketplace for creators of derivative works based on various anime, comics and games fandoms.

This announcement was made last Friday, barely a week before the event is due to start.

Comicup seems to be closer in style to the fan-driven Japanese Comiket (“Comic Market”) events, than to Western ComiCons.  There are a couple of photos of a prior Comicup at this Japanese-language article covering this story which give an idea of their scale.

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Photos of Comicup 31. Source: recordchina.co.jp
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(2) CAP IS BACK. ScreenRant scopes out the “Avengers: Doomsday Trailer – Chris Evans Returns as Captain America”.

Marvel has officially unveiled a trailer for Avengers: Doomsday featuring the return of Chris Evans’ Captain America in an unexpected shakeup that’s guaranteed to ruffle some feathers.

Marvel Studios released a trailer for Avengers: Doomsday, the first of four, which features the return of the original hero, Captain America, but this time he’s holding a baby, and ends with the tagline: “Steve Rogers Will Return in Avengers: Doomsday.” The new MCU movie will be released in theaters on December 18, 2026.

Steve Rogers is seen walking up to his home after dismounting his bike, before placing his old Captain America suit in a chest. The unexpected twist is that Steve Rogers is a father to a newborn, but the trailer includes no dialogue, so it’s assumed the mother is Peggy (Hayley Atwell), as Evans’ character is seen returning to their home as shown in 2019’s Avengers: Endgame. This could suggest, with Doctor Doom’s entry into the MCU, that Captain America may face off with a familiar face to save his new family….

…The trailer was originally shown during screenings of James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire and Ash, but was met with scrutiny following multiple leaks online revealing Captain America will be returning to the MCU….

(3) THEY OPTED OUT. Publishers Weekly reports six “Authors File New Lawsuit Against AI Companies Seeking More Money”.

Yesterday, six authors filed new individual copyright infringement actions against Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Meta, xAI, and Perplexity AI. The suits, which were filed in the Northern District of California, states the companies copied authors’ books from well-known pirate libraries—including LibGen, Z-Library, and OceanofPDF—to train their large language models without permission, licensing, or compensation.

The group of authors, which includes two-time Pulitzer Prize winner John Carreyrou, are among those who opted out of the proposed $1.5 billion settlement of the lawsuit against Anthropic, announced in September. They argue, as in previous cases, that high-quality books are the “gold standard” of training data and that the AI companies “used those copies to build systems now worth many hundreds of billions of dollars.”

While these new lawsuits note they are prompted by copyright infringement—despite judge William Alsup, who presided over the Anthropic case, finding AI training fair use— they specifically emphasize the use of pirated ebooks, the factor on which Alsup settled as demanding remedy, hence the proposed settlement.

The new filing states that the settlement, which would provide $3,000 to authors and/or publishers, is not enough. The suits state that $3,000 is “a tiny fraction (just 2%) of the Copyright Act’s statutory ceiling of $150,000 in addition to attorneys’ fees per willfully infringed work.” The plaintiffs are indeed seeking $150,000 in statutory damages for each work against each defendant, thus looking for $900,000 in total per work.

In addition to Carreyrou, author of Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup, the other writers in the lawsuit are Lisa Barretta, who has written 11 books on spirituality, tattoos, and psychic development; Philip Shishkin, author of Restless Valley, a nonfiction account of Central Asian political turmoil; Jane Adams, a psychologist who has written eight nonfiction books on family relationships and life transitions; Matthew Sack, an IT professional who wrote Pro Website Development and Operations; and Michael Kochin, a political science professor at Tel Aviv University and author of Five Chapters on Rhetoric: Character, Action, Things, Nothing & Art.

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(4) DAVID WALLIAMS RESPONDS TO ALLEGATIONS. “David Walliams denies inappropriate behaviour after HarperCollins drops him” reports BBC. (Article is behind a paywall.)

Best-selling children’s author and comedian David Walliams has denied allegations of inappropriate behaviour after being dropped by his publisher HarperCollins UK.

A spokesperson for HarperCollins said it had decided not to release any new titles by Walliams “after careful consideration, and under the leadership of its new CEO”.

The Telegraph says it follows an investigation into allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards young women. HarperCollins did not confirm the reasons for its decision.

A spokesperson for Walliams said he had “never been informed of any allegations raised against him” by his publisher.

“He was not party to any investigation or given any opportunity to answer questions. David strongly denies that he has behaved inappropriately and is taking legal advice,” the spokesperson added.

The publisher said it took employee wellbeing “extremely seriously” with “processes in place for reporting and investigating concerns”.

“To respect the privacy of individuals we do not comment on internal matters,” the company said.

Walliams is one of the UK’s most successful children’s authors, having sold more than 60 million copies worldwide in 55 languages.

HarperCollins published his first children’s book, The Boy in the Dress, in 2008….

(5) LAS VEGAS’ IMMERSIVE VR ATTRACTION. WIRED tells how “Interstellar Arc Serves Up Alien Foxes, Exoplanets, and VR Carl Sagan”.

IT FEELS LIKE I’ve been transported into a scene straight out of a science fiction movie.

I’m walking around on a giant centrifuge in space, which I can see the outlines of at the edge of my vision. Beyond it, I see the planet we’re orbiting. The pathways I walk on stretch endlessly above and below me, giving me the feeling I’m in an absolutely massive structure. Huge hologram-like characters, each 10 stories tall, occasionally materialize alongside the path to talk to me and the dozen people also on this journey.

Those fellow travelers aren’t computer-generated characters; they’re real humans. We’re all walking around wearing VR headsets in a shared virtual reality space in Las Vegas that can best be described as an amusement park ride for the visual cortex. Everyone else in the group sees the same scene, each from slightly different perspectives as they shuffle around freely.

Interstellar Arc, Vegas’s latest immersive attraction in the city’s Area15 entertainment district, is a stark reimagining of virtual reality within larger physical spaces. The narrative adventure utilizes recent advances in VR, resulting in a forward-looking technological undertaking that likely wouldn’t have been possible even a few years ago.

And as VR technology gets lighter, faster, and more advanced, experiences like these may help drive the future of an industry that’s struggled to find its footing in the mainstream after more than a decade on the commercial market. I went to Las Vegas to step inside Interstellar Arc myself and find out if it might help push virtual reality forward…

…After you buy a ticket for $54 ($39 for kids 8 to 12), you start the Interstellar Arc experience by stepping into a futuristic lobby dressed up as a “spaceport.” As visitors, we are told we’re now in the 25th century and are about to embark on humanity’s first interstellar mission to explore the distant exoplanet Arcadia. We’re each outfitted with our own wireless Meta Quest 3S headsets—each affixed with some noise-canceling headphones—then take our seats inside the virtual Arc for liftoff.

The initial “voyage” segment leverages F&P’s work aboard the ISS to create a wildly realistic view of Earth and our galaxy as we depart. While still in our seats, we enter 262 years of simulated “cryogenic sleep” aboard the Arc, then arrive at what we’re told is a man-made orbital centrifuge city above Arcadia, called Cosmopolis….

(6) U.S. CLASS ASSIGNMENT OF FULL BOOKS IN DECLINE. “Kids Rarely Read Whole Books Anymore. Even in English Class” reports the New York Times. (Link bypasses the paywall.)

In American high schools, the age of the book may be fading.

Many teenagers are assigned few full books to read from beginning to end — often just one or two per year, according to researchers and thousands of responses to an informal reader survey by The New York Times.

Twelfth-grade reading scores are at historic lows, and college professors, even at elite schools, are increasingly reporting difficulties in getting students to engage with lengthy or complex texts.

Perhaps that is to be expected in the era of TikTok and A.I. Some education experts believe that in the near future, even the most sophisticated stories and knowledge will be imparted mainly through audio and video, the forms that are dominating in the era of mobile, streaming media…..

…What may have changed most is the number of these classics students have read. During the 2008-2009 school year, one survey found high school English teachers assigned an average of four books annually, with a significant minority assigning seven or more books.

A 2024 survey of English teachers by Dr. Perrillo and Dr. Newman found they assigned an average of 2.7 whole books per year. The results will be published in 2026.

Some educators explained the decline by pointing toward the Common Core, a set of national standards for English and math that most states adopted in the early 2010s, and that continues to heavily shape classroom practice….

(7) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

December 23, 1960 “The Night of the Meek”

On December 23, 1960, The Twilight Zone’s “The Night of the Meek” first aired. It was one of the six episodes of the second season which was shot on videotape in a failed attempt saved to cut costs. Networks and their bean counters.

This was a Christmas themed story with Art Carney as a Santa Claus fired on Christmas Eve who finds a mysterious bag that gives an apparently unlimited stream of gifts. But before we learn that we have this opening scene and narration.

As snow begins to fall, a drunk Henry Corwin ((Carney) wearing his Santa Claus suit, leans against a curbside lamppost. He is approached by two tenement children begging for toys, a Christmas dinner, and “a job for my daddy.” As he begins to sob, the camera turns to Rod Serling standing on the sidewalk:

This is Mr. Henry Corwin, normally unemployed, who once a year takes the lead role in the uniquely popular American institution, that of the department-store Santa Claus in a road-company version of ‘The Night Before Christmas’. But in just a moment Mr. Henry Corwin, ersatz Santa Claus, will enter a strange kind of North Pole which is one part the wondrous spirit of Christmas and one part the magic that can only be found… in the Twilight Zone.

The script would be used over in the Eighties version of this series and on the radio program as well. 

Serling ended the original broadcast with the words, “And a Merry Christmas, to each and all”, but that phrase was deleted in the Eighties for reasons never made clear and would not be back until Netflix started streaming the series. The series runs on Paramount+ now in its original full, uncensored version. The line is still missing from all the DVD versions.

John Fielder who is Mister Dundee here would have a second Twilight Zone appearance in “Cavander is Coming” in which he has the lead as the Angel Harmon Cavender.

Oh, and let’s note that it’s a cat that mysteriously starts off this tale by knocking down a large burlap bag full of empty cans, which when Corwin trips over it, is then filled with gifts. See cats are magical! 

Serling ends with this narration:

A word to the wise to all the children of the Twentieth Century, whether their concern be pediatrics or geriatrics, whether they crawl on hands and knees and wear diapers or walk with a cane and comb their beards. There’s a wondrous magic to Christmas and there’s a special power reserved for little people. In short, there’s nothing mightier than the meek. And a Merry Christmas to each and all.”

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(8) COMICS SECTION.

(9) VINCE ZAMPELLA PROFILE. [Item by Steven French.] The Guardian’s Keza MacDonald and Keith Stuart lament the untimely passing of legendary games developer Vince Zampella: “Call of Duty’s Vince Zampella was a video games visionary”.

On Sunday, Vince Zampella, the co-creator of the Call of Duty video game series, died in a car crash in Los Angeles at the age of 55. Though best known for that series of blockbuster military shooters, Zampella touched a huge number of lives – not only the hundreds of people who worked at the game development studios he led under Activision and EA, but the millions of people who played the games that bore his imprint.

A lifelong gamer, Zampella had a Pong console as a child, then an Atari 2600 and a Commodore 64. He told IGN in 2016 that his favourite game from childhood was Donkey Kong: “I would spend hours at the arcade playing it.” Zampella’s first job in the industry was at GameTek in Miami, which specialised in video-game versions of popular US quizshows. He described his role on the small team as: “producer slash customer services slash tester – whatever needed to be done.”

It was at a developer called 2015, Inc in Tulsa that Zampella had his first smash hit as lead designer. Medal of Honor: Allied Assault was the third title in the acclaimed series of second world war shooters, which had been inspired by Saving Private Ryan and written in conjunction with Steven Spielberg. Zampella had envisioned a new type of shooter with an epic, cinematic sense of immersion. The game was a bestseller, acclaimed for its globetrotting narrative and taut, tense action – especially during its thrilling depiction of the Omaha beach landing….

(10) OUTLAW PLANET REVIEW. The Unofficial Hugo Book Club Blog reviews M.R. Carey’s Outlaw Planet in “Wild Animals Of The Wildest West”.

M.R. Carey’s Outlaw Planet features an anthropomorphic dog gunslinger striding across a post-apocalyptic Wild West-analogue landscape wielding a talking gun and fighting anthropomorphic bear outlaws and anthropomorphic raccoon military bad guys.

The result is a rollicking, entertaining, and occasionally ludicrous novel that does not take itself too seriously. And although some readers might enjoy Outlaw Planet as simple pulp entertainment, it has much more complexity and depth on offer than might be obvious at first glance….

(11) THE AGE OF SURVEILLANCE CAPITALISM. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] The Christmas edition of the British Medical Journal (BMJ) has a sobering editorial message where it seems that fantasy now rules… “Goodbye to the year of the Big Lie; hello, reverse centaur”.

We live in a world of lies, damned lies, and AI hallucinations. A US publication calculated that Donald Trump told 30,573 lies during his first term as president. Trump is neither alone nor atypical—except that his rate of lying and the thickness of his brass neck may be unprecedented. A lie, they say, travels halfway around the world before the truth gets its boots on. Today, a lie travels so fast that the truth might as well stay in bed….

Along the way the editorial cites SF author Cory Doctorow…

Here, the term “hallucination” deserves greater scrutiny. An AI hallucination is a fabrication, a lie, a bullshit. Why does it earn such a soft name, which seeks to hide the failure or error rate of an AI tool? The answer inevitably lies in money. Tech guru and science fiction writer Cory Doctorow argues that tech companies’ primary interest is to convince investors and markets of their relentless growth. Hype about
AI’s capabilities sells. Hallucinations cover its failures.

And the editorial concludes…

As we end the year of the Big Lie, what’s clear is that the world isn’t ruled by citizens. It never was. It’s no longer ruled by the great religions, although they may delude themselves that it is. Nor is it primarily ruled, hubris aside, by politicians or dictators. Without a doubt—and more clearly than ever before—the world bows to the power of the corporation. Hail the multinational, the conglomerate. All hail the tech bros. We live in their age of surveillance capitalism  (doi:10.1136/bmj.r2459). There are many words for this unspoken calamity, but “hallucination” is regrettably not one of them.

Editorial here with links to references   (Mike’s get out of libel jail free card). PDF here

[Thanks to SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Ersatz Culture, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, and Cat Eldridge for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Soon Lee.]

SLF Call For Artists: Illustration Of The Year 2026

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The Speculative Literature Foundation (SLF) announces an open call for original artwork combining fantasy and science fiction themes to be featured as its 2026 Illustration of the Year.

The winning artist will receive $750 and will be announced, along with the selected artwork, on the SLF’s website and social media and in a press release. The winning artwork will be featured on the SLF’s website, monthly e-newsletter and social media accounts and used as a visual element of SLF’s marketing material and swag throughout the year.

Submission Dates: Jan. 1 – 31, 2026. The winner will be announced in February 2026.

Submission Instructions: Email submissions to [email protected] with subject line: “YOUR NAME – Illustration of the Year 2026.” In the body of the email, please include your name, email address, phone number, name of your artwork (if any), and short bio.

For more information and complete criteria and terms, visit speculativeliterature.org/ioty.

The Speculative Literature Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to promoting literary quality in speculative fiction. They encourage promising new writers, assist established writers, facilitate the work of quality magazines and small presses in the genre, and work to promote a greater public appreciation of speculative fiction.

The Speculative Literature Foundation is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council, and by the Oak Park Area Arts Council, in partnership with the Village of Oak Park and the Illinois Arts Council; and the Oak Park River Forest Community Foundation.

[Based on a press release.]

The Twelve Days of Christmas (Science Fiction Rendition)

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A Pah-wraith and Prophet manifesting. (From Deep Space 9.)

Justin T. O’Conor Sloane, Editor-in-Chief, Starship Sloane Publishing Company, Inc., says –

I like partridges in pear trees just fine, but I think this science fiction rendition of “The Twelve Days of Christmas” helps to address the scarcity of science fiction Christmas songs out there.

His twelve verses follow the jump.

Continue reading

Pixel Scroll 12/22/25 The Traffic In Red And Green

(1) NO PARKING. LA Review of Books picks up Tolkien’s The Bovadium Fragments, published for the first time last month,in “Isengard in Oxford”.

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READERS OF J. R. R. Tolkien are used to dealing with fragments. In the half century since the author’s death, dozens of his unfinished works have been released, including everything from early draft materials to abandoned stories. But despite its title, the latest posthumous Tolkien publication, The Bovadium Fragments (published in November by William Morrow), is a complete work. Given Tolkien’s enduring popularity, it is remarkable that it has taken so long for it to be released.

Tolkien originally tried to have the short story published in the 1960s. His longtime publisher Rayner Unwin was supportive, suggesting he submit it to a magazine. By the end of the decade, however, Tolkien had declared that he no longer had any intention of publishing it, his mind apparently changed by Clyde Kilby, a friend who deemed the work “unpublishable.” Perhaps Kilby’s position had some merit at the time, when only a handful of works had been released under Tolkien’s name, but today, as Tolkien’s bibliography stretches to some 50 volumes, Kilby’s objections seem totally unfounded, and The Bovadium Fragments seems a worthy addition to his corpus.

Anyone who has read Tolkien’s letters will know that he is at his funniest when filled with rage, and The Bovadium Fragments is a work brimming with Tolkien’s fury—specifically, ire over mankind’s obsession with motor vehicles. Tolkien’s anger is expressed through a playful satire told from the perspective of a group of future archaeologists who are studying the titular fragments, which tell of a civilization that asphyxiated itself on its own exhaust fumes. Tolkien’s fictional fragments use the language of ancient myth, reframing modern issues like traffic congestion and parking with a grandeur that highlights their total absurdity. It is Tolkien at his angriest and funniest, making The Bovadium Fragments a minor treasure in his ever-growing catalog.

Of course, “minor” is the operative word, because the shortness of the work makes for a very slender volume. The page count for the story itself is around 50, but much of that is in Latin. (Tolkien presents some sections of the story in the ancient language, before repeating the same content in English.) And several pages are taken up by editorial notes, interspersed between each section to explain Tolkien’s more obscure allusions and philological references….

(2) INFORMATION CRISIS: WHY SOCIAL MEDIA BANS AREN’T THE ANSWER. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Radical is a Radio 4 show of the intellectual ilk.  It is hosted by Amol Rajan who is a news reader but also host of the BBC2 TV University Challenge quiz show who has brought a more mellow tone to the show (compared to somewhat arts academically snooty predecessors).

In this week’s edition of Radical he talks to SF author Naomi Alderman about digital communication.

What happens when a new technology transforms how we communicate ideas and information? Best-selling science fiction writer Naomi Alderman joins Amol to explain why she thinks the digital age has pushed us into a “third information crisis”, which is as profound as the invention of writing or the printing press.

Drawing on those past revolutions, Naomi offers some solutions to help us navigate the era we’re living through. She suggests new laws to regulate the online world and potentially even a “checked internet” like Wikipedia, which is home to verified facts rather than misinformation.

But at the heart of her argument is the need to prioritise real world, human connection and resist the urge to move everything online.

Naomi also tells Amol how therapy has helped her and why she’s written her first non-fiction book after a series of successful novels.

You can access it here (but if outside British Isles you may need to subscribe).

(3) ARE PEOPLE GOING TO SEE ‘AVATAR’? The New York Times counted the receipts and learned “‘Avatar’ Sequel Is Neither Fire Nor Ash at North American Box Office”. “’Avatar: Fire and Ash’ took in $88 million over the weekend, a sizable No. 1 total that nonetheless fell 34 percent behind the opening for its franchise predecessor.” (Article is behind a paywall.)

The third “Avatar” movie got off to a comparatively slow start at the North American box office.

“Avatar: Fire and Ash” took in about $88 million at 3,800 theaters in the United States and Canada from Thursday through Sunday, according to Comscore, which compiles ticketing data. In 2022, “Avatar: The Way of Water,” the second movie in the epic science-fiction series, collected $134 million over the same period. In 2009, the first “Avatar” posted $77 million for its debut weekend, or $118 million after adjusting for inflation.

Directed by James Cameron and stretching to three hours and 17 minutes, “Avatar: Fire and Ash” introduces a violent clan that lives in Pandora’s volcanic region. Critics were lukewarm on the film, which cost 20th Century Studios, a division of Disney, an estimated $500 million to make and market. Ticket buyers were more forgiving: The Rotten Tomatoes audience score stood at 91 percent positive on Sunday.

“Avatar: Fire and Ash” collected an additional $257 million overseas, including nearly $58 million in China, for a worldwide opening total of about $345 million. IMAX delivered nearly 13 percent of the global debut of “Avatar: Fire and Ash” on less than 1 percent of screens worldwide.

Initial results for end-of-year openings can be misleading; movies tend to start slower and exhibit more staying power through the Christmas and New Year holidays.

“This isn’t one where you can look at opening weekend and get a sense of, ‘Did this movie work or didn’t it?’” said Richard Gelfond, IMAX’s chief executive. “It’s a question of how long it stays on screens and what repeat business looks like.” Mr. Gelfond noted that IMAX scrambled to install its technology at 27 new locations over the past three weeks….

(4) B&N EXPANSION. Here’s a type of bookstore news you never see anymore: “Barnes & Noble opening 60 more stores in 2026. See new locations.” At USA Today.

Barnes & Noble is opening more stores for readers to shop at in the new year.

After nearly two decades of “declining store numbers,” the bookseller has plans to open 60 new locations across the country in 2026, in addition to the dozens opened this year.

While the details are still “being worked out” as far as locations and grand opening dates, the expansion follows a period of “strong sales” in existing stores, Barnes & Noble confirmed to USA TODAY….

(5) TRAILER PARK. Universal dropped a trailer for Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey today. In theaters July 17, 2026.

(6) POTUS44’S READING LIST: OBAMA’S FAVORITE BOOKS OF 2025. Former President Barack Obama shared lists of his favorite books, movies, and music from 2025 on Facebook. All three lists are at the link.

As 2025 comes to a close, I’m continuing a tradition that I started during my time in the White House: sharing my annual lists of favorite books, movies, and music. I hope you find something new to enjoy–and please send any recommendations for me to check out!”

Obama’s favorite reads were:

Paper Girl by Beth Macy
Flashlight by Susan Choi
We the Peopleby Jill Lepore
The Wildernessby Angela Flournoy
There Is No Place for Us by Brian Goldstone
North Sunby Ethan Rutherford
1929by Andrew Ross Sorkin
The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny by Kiran Desai
Dead and Aliveby Zadie Smith
What We Can Knowby Ian McEwan
And obviously I’m biased,
The Look by Michelle Obama

His favorite movies include some clear-cut sff choices.

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(7) VINCE ZAMPELLA (1970-2025). “Vince Zampella Dead: Call of Duty Creator Dies in Car Accident at 55” reports Variety.

Vince Zampella, the co-creator of hit video game franchise “Call of Duty,” died in a single-car accident on Sunday near Los Angeles, NBC LA confirmed Monday. He was 55.

Zampella was involved in a Ferrari crash on Southern California’s Angeles Crest Highway around 12:45 p.m. on Sunday. The accident happened north of Los Angeles in the San Gabriel Mountain as the car was heading south and hit a concrete barrier. The car caught on fire, and the driver was pronounced dead at the scene, according to NBC Los Angeles. The passenger was ejected from the vehicle and later died at a hospital….

…With Jason West, Zampella was the co-founder of video game developer Infinity Ward, which created the hugely successful “Call of Duty” series in 2003. After being fired by parent company Activision, for which he later sued for wrongful termination and received a settlement, Zampella co-founded Respawn Entertainment in 2010. After Zampella left in 2013, the studio was acquired by EA and went on to make hit games like “Titanfall,” “Apex Legends,” “Star Wars Jedi: Survivor” and more. In 2021, EA put Zampella in charge of the popular “Battlefield” franchise….

(8) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Letters from Father Christmas by J.R.R. Tolkien 

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Every Christmas between the years 1920 and 1943, the ever-so-blessed children of J.R.R. Tolkien received some of the most unique mail that a child could ever hope for: letters from Father Christmas himself! Beautifully illustrated and delivered in various ways, they told of all kinds of things that happened at the North Pole, and about the folk who lived there with Santa. There is the accident-prone and sleepy North Polar Bear and his two cousins who cause havoc, the evil goblins, and of course the elves and gnomes, not to mention snowfolk and cave bears. The letters came, or so it is claimed by those who don’t believe in Father Christmas, from the Tolkien children’s father, J.R.R. Tolkien himself.

In the published collection of these charming letters, we can read how the North Pole came to be snapped in half, why Santa had to move house, what a polar bear’s writing looks like (blocky is the best description) and how Santa had to defend his home from goblins. While this book does not directly connect to Tolkien’s Middle Earth mythos, it is easy for anyone versed in that mythos to recognize the origin of some of its characters in these letters. The goblin attack on Santa’s cellar will become the Goblin-Elf wars in The Lord of the Rings, and Santa’s elf-secretary Ilbereth is the obvious progenitor of the ancient elf-queen Elbereth. We even get a fully developed look at elvish writing and the goblin alphabet!

I’ll return to the book that is Letters From Father Christmas, but let me turn now to a reading of the Letters that I recently attended. In my opinion, the Letters truly don’t come to life for modern-day readers unless they are treated to an oral performance of them by accomplished actors. Surely the Tolkien children had the Letters read aloud to them when they received them as ‘mail’ from Father Christmas. The reading I attended took place in the front area of Longfellow Books, a wonderful independent store in downtown Portland, Maine. Kirsten Cappy, publicity manager for Longfellow, gave this introduction before the reading:

On September 3rd, 1973, my father sat at the breakfast table with a bowed head and proclaimed, “Children (he never called us that), today, a god passed from this world.” Now this was a confusing statement from an ardent atheist who declared even our brief foray into the Unitarian church to have been ‘too constricting’. ‘God’ was placed in the same category as ‘Santa Claus’ in our family. Both were classified as something ‘other children believed in and that we could believe in if we felt so inclined.

The ‘god’ my father spoke of was J.R.R. Tolkien, who had passed away the previous day. My brother and I managed to breathe out the question of ‘who?’ before we were waved away and my father dug mournfully into his cornflakes. Our question was answered that night at bedtime when my father opened his battered copy of The Hobbit and began to read.

The three of us read through The Hobbit and each volume of The Lord of the Rings over a year’s worth of bedtimes. Tolkien’s stories are still synonymous with the bedroom I had at that age and the gaping closet that surely housed Orcs.

I have gone on to like fiction of all sorts, but nothing has matched the intensity and obsession that Tolkien brought to his creation of Middle Earth. His professional, scholarly fascination with the dead and evolved languages of England led him to read Norse myth. He then began to create myths of his own and to create languages to feed the mouths of his myth-makers.

Lying in my bed at night I often pictured Tolkien writing, but I never pictured my father’s god with children. He had, in fact, three children and took the time from his research and his conquest of Middle Earth to play the role of Father Christmas each year. Each year for 23 years there would be a letter on the mantle piece from Father Christmas addressed to the Tolkien children. The letters spoke of each year’s chaotic preparation for Christmas, about Father Christmas’ helpers and about the mishaps that would cause some of the promised gifts to never arrive. The Tolkien children would also address letters to the North Pole. The letters were full of Christmas wishes and curious questions about life at the North Pole and about Father Christmas’ companions, Polar Bear and Ilbereth The Elf. Answers would come from Father Christmas and his helpers with lavish descriptions and detailed drawings.

With us tonight are our favorite Portland actors, Moira Driscoll, Mark Honan and Daniel Noel who comprise The Usual Suspects. The Usual Suspects give dramatic readings of modern and classic fiction bi-monthly at Longfellow Books, where they are the resident performance group. (You will note the extravagant whiskers on Daniel and Mark — they are both appearing in The Christmas Carol at Portland Stage Co.) Tonight they will be reading aloud Tolkien’s Letters from Father Christmas in the voices of Father Christmas, Polar Bear and Ilbereth The Elf. I will pass around copies of the book, so you can look at Tolkien’s sweet, obsessive drawings of the North Pole.

By the end of this introduction, the crowd of some forty folks, half adults and half children, including the offspring of several of the performers, had settled in their seats with cookies and hot drinks in hand. Now it was time for the reading…

Two of the actors, Mark Honan and Daniel Noel, were members of the cast of the recent run of A Christmas Carol at the Portland Stage Company, which was staged at Portland Performing Arts Center. Mark Honan, (Cratchit in A Christmas Carol), who played Father Christmas, is a native of England; Daniel Noel (Marley’s Ghost and several other roles, including the Narrator) was the North Polar Bear — fitting given his charming bear-like nature; and Moira Driscoll played the supercilious elf Ilbereth. They sat side by side with their copies of Letters From Father Christmas in hand — I have the copy Daniel read from complete with his post-it notes! — looking absolutely tinkly. And each read the letters as if they were Father Christmas, the North Polar Bear, or Ilbereth. I truly believed that these were letters from Father Christmas to the Tolkien children (keep in mind that this Father Christmas is not by any means a Christian-based being, but rather a sort of friendly teller of tales about what happens during the course of the year at the North Pole).

And oh, what adventures they told on that cold night! They did not read all the Letters — for that pleasure, you’ll need to listen to Derek Jacobi and his friends do it. But they read for about forty-five minutes, the right amount of time on a cold winter’s night, and their selections gave the enthralled listeners a delightful time indeed. Tolkien’s language in these letters is clearer and more playful than in The Lord of The Rings. Just read these lines, which Daniel performed with a gruff voice and a glimmer in his eye: “Polar Bear was allowed to decorate a big tree in the garden, all by himself and a ladder. Suddenly are heard terrible growly squealy noises. We rushed out to find Polar Bear hanging on the tree himself! ‘You are not a decoration,’ said Father Christmas. ‘Anyway, I am alight,’ he shouted. He was. We threw a bucket of water on him. Which spoilt a lot of the decorations, but saved his fur.”

If Tolkien intended The Lord of The Rings to be a ‘mythology for England,’ it’s clear to me that these Letters were a personal mythology for him and his children. No matter that there are reflections of his darker work here — this reading shows beyond any doubt that the Letters were a refuge from the stark realities of being a relatively poorly compensated academic. Even if the children didn’t always get Christmas presents, they did get a letter from Father Christmas.

I turn my attention back to the new edition of Letters From Father Christmas, which was the basis of this performance. This is the first time that all of the letters have been published. What you get are facsimiles of the letters in all their glorious messiness along with a printed version on the facing page in what appears to be a Palatino font so that you can actually read them. This is important, as the handwriting of Father Christmas (roundish like ink dripping from a fountain pen on its last legs), North Polar Bear (chunky — he has big paws), and Ilbereth (best described as spidery) is less than readable. 

And the Letters are most definitely worth reading, as they do form an ongoing story that Tolkien very obviously relished telling in the same manner that he first told The Hobbit to his children: as an unfolding narrative over a period of time. It’s worth your time to see how much effort he put into the Letters — handwritings, drawings, quirky borders — all are here. What his children made of them is not known, nor I suppose does it matter now that they belong to all who read them, but I would have preferred Baillie Tolkien, daughter-in-law of J.R.R., to have given us just a bit more context. I even checked The Letters of J.R.R Tolkien to see if there was anything there about these letters, but not according to the index.

My recommendation is that you read these aloud to anyone who will listen, as hearing them does enhance their charm. Barring that, turn the lights down low, sink deep into that overstuffed chair by the fireplace, drink your cocoa, and listen to the cold winter’s wind howl outside as you read. Listen… Is that the North Polar Bear making his way across the roof? Or is it the Goblins attacking again?

(9) COMICS SECTION.

(10) SANTA FE WRITERS PROJECT LITERARY AWARDS SHORTLIST. Congratulations to Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki whose soon-to-be-released Afropantheology debut novel Birth of Orisha made the Santa Fe Writers Project literary award shortlist, out of 1700 entries.

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(11) ANOTHER BLOW TO U.S. RESEARCH. “A Somber Mood at Science Meeting as Trump Budget Cuts Continue” – the New York Times has the story. (Article is behind a paywall.)

American science is wobbling right now.

After cuts to federal funding and the firing or early retirement of thousands of government scientists this year, another blow to scientific research landed this week. The Trump administration on Tuesday night announced a plan to dismantle the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., one of the world’s premier climate and weather science institutions.

News of the planned closure rippled through the annual gathering of the American Geophysical Union, an organization of Earth and space scientists, being held this week in New Orleans.

“You could feel the energy in the room, and it was very sad,” said Mohammed Shehzaib Ali, a graduate student at North Carolina State University who uses NCAR’s supercomputer to run programs to understand how weather patterns affect air pollution from wildfires. “Atmospheric science is built on collaboration, and NCAR is the pathway through which we collaborate,” Mr. Shehzaib Ali said.

The center’s 830 employees conduct research on weather, climate and energy systems, and operate supercomputers that are used by thousands of scientists across the globe. In his announcement, Russell Vought, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, called NCAR “one of the largest sources of climate alarmism in the country.”

Antonio Busalacchi Jr., president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, which manages NCAR, told reporters on Thursday that the center’s research had led to technological advances in aviation, hurricane prediction and space weather. It has also collaborated with the insurance industry to better predict risk from extreme weather.

“We are talking about a significant impact on the scientific enterprise in this country,” Dr. Busalacchi said. Closing the center would be “setting back science in this country by decades.”

(12) TMNT VS. AI. Animation World Network tells readers to look forward to “Ugly Mugs and AI Gone Wrong in ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Chrome Alone 2 – Lost in New Jersey’”.

In the short, produced by Nickelodeon and Paramount Animation with Point Grey Pictures, a mysterious toy company – Authentic Imitations (AI) – looks to profit off the mutant turtles’ new hero status. While brothers Leo, Donnie, Raph and Mikey are out Christmas shopping for their adopted mutant rat dad Splinter, they see a window ad for AI’s new turtle toys which bear a disturbing, twisted and only slightly recognizable resemblance to the heroes. 

“I don’t know,” says Seki. “Tortoise Karate Warriors really rolls off the tongue. It’s so natural.”

Determined to stop the copyright madness, the turtle brothers make a trip to AI’s headquarters in New Jersey only to come face to face with a shocking new foe….

…“It took a little bit of time for us to really hone in on the central message of the short,” shared [screenwriter Andrew] Joustra. “There was always a little bit of commentary on consumerism and capitalism. That’s always something holiday shorts like this are great for making conversations about. It got to a point where we were thinking of this toy company taking shortcuts and making these really cheap, blasphemous toys, and probably using AI to do that. Everything started to focus on that and that’s where Chrome Dome entered as a character.”

The original design of Chrome Dome, a long-time TMNT franchise villain, straddled the line somewhere between a shogun warrior and Egyptian pharaoh. But, in Seki’s short, Chrome Dome’s boxy figure looks like someone tried to 3D print TARS from Interstellar and then added a vector graphics screen for a face.

“He’s very shiny and looks very high-tech and fancy,” shares Joustra. “But when you get a little bit closer, you start to ask questions like, ‘Why does this robot have abs?’”…

(13) IN MEMORIAM. “TCM Remembers 2025”.

As the year comes to a close, TCM remembers the actors, filmmakers and creatives we lost this year.

[Thanks to Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, N., Steve Vertlieb, Kathy Sullivan, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day OGH (with a hat-tip to Roger Zelazny).]

SFWA Board Issues Apology for Nebula LLM Rule Actions

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The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (SFWA) today apologized to members for the harm resulting from a chaotic Nebula rules change earlier this week (see “SFWA Launches, Aborts LLM Tools Nebula Rule Change on Same Day”, December 19.) They also have invited both SFWA members and the general public to answer the “SFWA Survey on LLM Use in Industry”.

Here is the Board’s statement:


The growing presence and use of Large Language Models (LLMs) in our industry raises difficult and complex questions. In our effort to create Nebula rules that would inform voters of the many forms of LLM that now influence writing processes across SFF mediums, we actually made things worse.

Our approach and wording was wrong and we apologize for the distress and distrust we caused. 

The Nebula Awards, along with the many talented writers and works that underpin all of the pride and excitement of the Nebulas, did not deserve to be overshadowed by our actions last week.

We are going to learn from our mistakes, and we invite members of our organization and the greater SFF community to send us feedback on what you are seeing in terms of LLM use in creative writing across mediums.

Please use this survey to share your experiences. We will use the information to guide our upcoming discussions and decisions for the Nebula Awards and beyond. 

SFWA does not accept works created by generative LLMs for membership qualification or in the Nebulas. The Complete Nebula Awards Rules are available here.

Thank you for helping us navigate these difficult issues and find a better path forward. We have work to do, and we will continue to do so in the service of SFWA and its members. 

If you are interested in supporting our Emerging Tech committee to further investigate and navigate these issues and themes, please contact [email protected].


[Based on a press release.]

a grip-and-grin

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Let’s celebrate The Universe Box‘s February 3rd release by Tachyon Press! I have opened the universe box that is my life, and will be sharing a piece of it every Monday.


By Michael Swanwick: My British friends think it’s hilarious that Philadelphia once had a mayor named Nutter. But Michael Nutter was a good mayor and, before that, the best councilman my part of the city ever had. He looked like a nerd, but he rode a Harley.

I met him because Philadelphia International Airport decided to decorate their walls with portraits of writers both living and dead associated with the city. Only a limited number of those writers could attend since the walls were behind the airport’s security lines. But I was pushy enough to ask, and so there I was.

Marianne and I had just arrived when Karen Quinones Miller came hustling up, cane in hand, introduced herself, and proceeded to charm and impress the daylights out of us both. When she hurried away to talk to some other luminary, I turned to Marianne and said, “That woman is a firecracker.”

“I think we have a new best friend,” she replied.

And we did.

Mayor Nutter was gracious when I asked if we could have a photo together. He was far more impressed by Karen Miller.

As he should have been. Karen was a Navy vet, a journalist, and a best-selling novelist. She was perhaps best known for An Angry-Ass Black Woman and for the first biography ever written of Bumpy Johnson, the “Harlem Godfather” and her mentor when she was a girl. When the formalities were over, all the honorees—most specifically including those who weren’t in the airport ceremony—met at Warmdaddy’s for a party she had arranged.

Karen was thrilled that her picture was next to that of Louisa May Alcott, whose Little Women she had adored as a child. I felt honored that my picture was on the same wall as hers.

Pixel Scroll 12/21/25 Pixel’s Guide To The Scroll

(1) THREE BRITISH SHOPPING DAYS ‘TIL CHRISTMAS. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] There are still three shopping days till Christmas!  So, if you are stuck for a last-minute present for a friend, or even life partner of the moment, then why not check out the current books on the British SF scene. SF² Concatenation’s current seasonal news page has forthcoming science fiction, forthcoming fantasy, and forthcoming Non-Fiction SF & Popular Science Books from a number of British Isles publishing houses, but these are also available in major genre bookshops near you.

Currently, the site’s home page sports an historic picture of some of the team’s staff having a Christmas dinner. Yes, ghosts of Christmas past.

The site’s own latest post is a rather nifty, if we say so ourselves, short story about the end of the world – ‘Customer reviews for Mystery Gadget 1.0, sorted in chronological order‘ from Alex Shvartsman. (This is the second story Alex has had in SF² Concatenation’s run of the Best of the science journal Nature’s ‘Futures’ short stories. SF² Concatenation’s gets to select just four stories a year from the 60 or so published on the Nature journal website.)  Purely coincidently, this one may well appeal to fans of a certain, recent SF series that seems to have taken the streaming charts by storm.

An end-of-the-world story should give you some additional Christmas cheer to help you through the festive season….  Ho, ho, ho.

Next year it is back to form. The site plans to post early in January the team’s annual ‘Best Science Fiction books and films.  This is just a bit of fun and in no way should be considered a slate for anything. However, past choices do seem to indicate that it has some sort of form (scroll down here).

Turkey and mince pies to the fore. Let’s tread boldly…

(2) WRITER’S EMERGENCY HOME REPAIR GOFUNDME. This is from Alma Alexander, a fantasy writer living in Bellingham, WA, who is a friend of the Vanguard group in Seattle (Suzle and Jerry Kauman, John Berry and Eileen Gunn, Astrid Bear, Ulrika & Hal O’Brien, etc,). In a later email, she says she has two quotes for the repair work, $25,000 and $28,000. She’ll be grateful for any help.  “Fundraiser by Alma Alexander: emergency repair to keep home safe for me and 2 beloved cats” at GoFundMe.

My house sits on a steep slope, with a retaining wall serving to support a flat surface upon which my house is built. The wall is failing. It needs an emergency repair/replacement to keep my house, myself, and two beloved cats safe. Please help…

Repair quote (with necessary stabilizing work for the deck which rests on the area just above the retaining wall) is MORE than $25000 – but I can scrape together the rest if I can get at least some assistance… insurance has told me that I was covered for lots of things “but not for this” (ain’t that always the case…) and I need to get this work done and I simply don’t have that kind of money lying around. I hate to ask this – but as a writer (whose income can be iffy and random), and as a widow who lives on very limited fixed income I and these two beloved blameless cats whose only mistake in this life might have been to cast their lot in with mine desperately need your help…

(3) AND HUGO MAKES THREE. [Item and photo by Jason Sanford.] Chris M. Barkley has been spotted out and about in Cincinnati, exposing his much-delayed Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer to life in the big city and trying to make up for lost time together. Chris is pictured with his partner Juli Marr.

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(4) SIGOURNEY WEAVER INTERVIEW. “Sci-fi classic Galaxy Quest had Alan Rickman scenes cut ‘at the last minute’ before release” at Digital Spy. The article is based on a Vanity Fair interview video – Sigourney Weaver’s Galaxy Quest comments start just before the 18-minute mark.

Sigourney Weaver has called for the release of a director’s cut of the 1999 science-fiction comedy classic Galaxy Quest, after revealing that a lot of scenes were cut very shortly before its release.

The film features an ensemble cast including Weaver, Alan Rickman, Tony Shalhoub and Tim Allen, playing actors of a once-popular cult TV series, who are abducted by aliens that believe their outer-space adventures are real….

…”I wish they would put out a director’s cut of the movie because at the last minute Dreamworks decided to release the movie with some of the more sophisticated scenes cut that Alan was in, because it needed a kids’ movie to go up against Stuart Little,” she said.

Weaver also said that she couldn’t understand “why they don’t put out the movie again with more of his very very good strange and wonderful scenes”.

(5) HIT WITH AN ‘R’ IN IT. The Guardian analyzes “How Sinners became the most culturally important film of 2025”.

It was the film that was supposed to destroy Hollywood: a vampire horror about life and times in the Jim Crow south peopled by a majority Black cast, and shot on Imax 70mm. Ryan Coogler, the acclaimed director who rose to prominence steering Marvel’s colossal Black Panther franchise, was thought to be out of his depth for trying to midwife a script he himself said he cobbled together in two months. Warner Bros, the studio fronting the film’s near $100m budget, was supposedly out of its mind for not only throwing that much money behind the project, but further agreeing to singularly favorable authorship deal terms that gave him control over the film’ final cut and full rights over the film after 25 years. Hollywood machers were convinced the film would never make money and that Warner Bros’ big gamble “could be the end of the studio system”. But Sinners never let that cynicism in.

Sinners landed in theaters on Easter weekend and delivered its own miracle resurrection, racing to a $368m gate on the way to becoming the highest grossing original film in the past 15 years, and the 10th-highest domestic-grossing R-rated film of all time. (That’s right: higher than Terminator 2 and the Hangovers.)…

(6) NOTHING OF VALUE WAS LOST. “Lucasfilm wins bid to throw out UK lawsuit over ‘resurrection’ of ‘Star Wars’ character” at GMA News Online.

Disney unit Lucasfilm on Thursday won its bid to throw out a London lawsuit over the use of the likeness of a long-dead actor in a Star Wars spinoff movie.

Peter Cushing, who died in 1994, was “resurrected” as Death Star commander Grand Moff Tarkin for the 2016 film “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” using visual effects and another actor.

He had appeared in the original 1977 “Star Wars” film, created by George Lucas, which became one of the most successful film franchises of all time.

The movies have collected more than $5 billion in global ticket sales since the release of the first installment in 1977, and spinoffs are still being produced.

Cushing had signed a deal with British company Tyburn Film Productions in 1993 to appear in a television film, an agreement Tyburn’s lawyers said gave it “the right to be the first to ‘resurrect’ Mr Cushing by way of visual effects”.

Tyburn claimed it had lost around 250,000 pounds ($333,725) and sued Lucasfilm and fellow Disney subsidiary Lunak Heavy Industries at London’s High Court for alleged unjust enrichment at its expense.

Lucasfilm and Lunak, however, said the case was hopeless and unsuccessfully tried to have the case thrown out twice. But the Court of Appeal ruled in their favor on Thursday.

Judge Sue Carr said that “it is impossible to identify anything at all that belonged to Tyburn which can be said to have been transferred” to Lucasfilm or Lunak, meaning the case could not continue…

(7) AN ADAPTATION KING LIKED. “Stephen King: Why I Hugged Rob Reiner After Watching ‘Stand by Me’” in the New York Times. (Behind a paywall.)

…I think I saw “Stand by Me” in the fall of 1985. Back then it was still called “The Body,” which was the name of my novella, on which Rob’s film was based. I think he showed it to me in a room at the Beverly Hills Hotel with a rock ’n’ roll band thudding away somewhere in the distance. That band was pure ’80s. The movie allowed me entry to another, more innocent, time: 1959.

I’m pretty sure Rob was wearing a checked short-sleeved shirt and khaki pants, as if he’d just come from the golf course. (For all I knew, he had.) The only thing I’m absolutely sure of is that he hovered until the movie was going and then left the room. Later he told me he couldn’t bear to see my reaction if I didn’t like it. I was an audience of one, sitting in a high-backed chair filched from one of the hotel’s meeting rooms.

I was surprised by how deeply affected I was by its 89 minutes. I’ve written a lot of fiction, but “The Body” remains the only nakedly autobiographical story I’ve ever done. Those kids were my friends. We never walked down a railroad track to see a dead body, but we got up to other stuff. The story was about my reality as I had lived it on the dirt roads of southern Maine. There really was a junkyard dog, although his name wasn’t Chopper. There really was a kid who went swimming and came out covered with leeches in surprising areas, but it wasn’t Gordie Lachance; it was me.

And there really was a kid who was accused of stealing milk money, although his name wasn’t Chris Chambers. He did borrow — we won’t call it stealing — his mom’s Bel Air. With me riding shotgun, he drove it 90 miles per hour down Route 9 in our backcountry hometown. We were 11.

What I’m saying is that in Rob’s hands, it all rang true. The funny parts were really funny (including the barf-o-rama) and the dramatic parts hit me where I lived, or where I did live back in the days when John F. Kennedy was president and gas was a quarter a gallon.

I had felt just that torn between the writing life and the lives of my friends, who were living for the moment and not going anywhere in particular, except maybe Vietnam. I chose writing, but it was a near thing.

When the movie was over, I thanked Rob and surprised the hell out of myself by giving him a hug. I’m not ordinarily a hugging man, and I don’t think he was used to getting them. He stiffened, muttered something about being glad I liked it, and we both stepped away….

(8) HEADED MY WAY. “’Frankenstein’ Netflix Exhibit Moves To Los Angeles”Deadline tells where to find it.

In another move showing the growing awards momentum of Guillermo del Toro‘s acclaimed movie Frankensteinthe stunning exhibition “Frankenstein: Crafting a Tale Eternal” will be coming from its run in London straight to Los Angeles from January 5-11 at the NYA Studios West in Hollywood, and just in time for Oscar nomination voting….

… David Fincher, George Lucas and Mellody Hobson are scheduled to host and moderate a screening with the filmmaking team on opening night of the L.A. exhibit, with additional programming to come.

The immersive exhibition will celebrate del Toro’s visionary storytelling and the craftsmanship of the Frankenstein team. Diving into his elaborate filmmaking process, it will showcase a collection of props, artwork, costumes and Tiffany & Co. jewelry featured in the film and rare books curated by the firm Peter Harrington to honor author Mary Shelley’s legacy….

(9) IS THAT EIGHT REINDEER OR EIGHT TENTACLES? A holiday greeting from the Edmonton in 2030 Worldcon bid.

A slightly better less-error-filled holiday poem for your reading pleasure.

???????????? (Edmonton) In 2030 (@edmontonin2030.bsky.social) 2025-12-22T00:34:06.998Z

(10) IT’S NOT WHAT YOU THINK. We fell for this clickbait so you don’t have to: “Doctor Who locks in date for Alex Kingston’s River Song comeback (winteriscoming.net) at Winter Is Coming.

Alex Kingston’s River Song is officially coming back to Doctor Who in 2026. The franchise icon has penned a book called Doctor Who: Stormcage: A River Song Adventure. Kingston has written the story as a choose-your-own-adventure, giving the reader a chance to read the book more than once and experience it differently. The hardcover edition is set to hit shelves on February 12, 2026. It’ll also be available as an ebook from the same date….

(11) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

December 21A Solstice Story

We all tell stories and Jennifer Stevenson tells a great one in “Solstice” which Grey Walker reviews for us: “The reader somehow senses that everything Dawn sees, each action she takes, even her name, has a deeper significance. She’s not just playing for a great party, she’s playing to keep a shrinking, fading man alive on the longest night. And if it’s an over-the-top, splendid bash that keeps the sun alive for another year, well, human beings believed that for a very long time. Maybe this story will help us remember some of what we’ve forgotten.”

You can hear the author splendidly reading “Solstice” here. You can read the story thisaway.  If you can find a copy, it was originally published in Ellen Kushner, Delia Sherman and Donald G. Keller’s The Horns of Elfland.

(12) COMICS SECTION.

“The last-minute christmas rush at the bookshop.” – my latest cartoon for @theguardian.com books

Tom Gauld (@tomgauld.bsky.social) 2025-12-21T16:02:43.885Z

(13) STRANGER THINGS ON STAGE. “Jamie Campbell Bower talks ‘Stranger Things’ Broadway debut, season 5 (exclusive)” at Entertainment Weekly.

“Something very, very special has happened here tonight,” Louis McCartney, who stars as Henry Creel in Broadway’s Stranger Things: The First Shadow, told the audience after his performance Friday night at New York City’s Marquis Theater.

That was because Jamie Campbell Bower, who portrays Henry/Vecna/One on the Netflix streaming hit, surprised the packed house by reprising his TV role in the play’s final scene.

The stage prequel chronicles Henry’s younger years before he became Vecna, but its ending jumps forward in time. On most nights, McCartney plays the character all the way through to that sequence. So when it was Bower who slowly turned toward the audience instead, the crowd erupted in raucous, continuous applause…

(14) RARE DISCOVERY. “Unseen Tennessee Williams radio play published in literary magazine” – the Guardian has details.

As one of the 20th century’s most successful playwrights, Tennessee Williams penned popular works at the very pinnacle of US theater, including A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.

Years before his almost unparalleled Broadway triumphs, however, the aspiring writer then known simply as Tom wrote a series of short radio plays as he struggled to find a breakthrough. One is The Strangers, a supernatural tale offering glimpses into the accomplished wordsmith that Williams would become, and published for the first time this week in the literary magazine Strand.

It is a “significant find” according to scholars of Williams’s early days and upbringing in Missouri.

“The play incorporates all the theatrical elements of early radio horror,” said Andrew Gulli, the publication’s managing editor.

“A storm, howling wind, shadows, a house perched over the sea, flickering candles, mysterious footsteps on the stairs, spectral beings … as well as early hints of the themes and devices Williams would return to in his most famous later works: isolation, fear, the shades of gray between imagination and reality, and a house haunted by memory and the private terrors of those who inhabit it.”

The Strangers never made it to Broadway, and is believed to have enjoyed only a single performance on a rural radio station in Iowa as part of a short-lived series called Little Theater of the Air in 1938….

(15) SPACE CITRUS. “NASA Webb Telescope Discovers Lemon-Shaped Planet, the ‘Stretchiest’ Ever Seen” reports the New York Times. (Link bypasses the paywall.) As a bonus, the article quotes Mythopoeic Society member Emily Rauscher.

Earth isn’t a perfect sphere. The rotation of our planet causes it to bulge ever so slightly at the equator, making it about 0.3 percent wider there than from pole to pole.

But that’s nothing compared with PSR J2322-2650b, an object the mass of Jupiter studied recently by the James Webb Space Telescope. This planet’s equatorial diameter is about 38 percent wider than its polar diameter, giving the world the odd appearance of a lemon, and a very strange atmosphere.

“It’s the stretchiest planet that we’ve confirmed the stretchiness of,” said Michael Zhang, an exoplanet scientist at the University of Chicago and the lead author of a paper describing the planet published Tuesday in The Astrophysical Journal Letters….

… Its carbon atmosphere might give it “clouds made out of graphite,” Dr. Zhang said, and diamonds at its core. Bands of storms would trace the world’s lemon-like exterior in the shape of a W, while it most likely has a red color because of dust and soot-like particles formed by the carbon.

“It’s a wacky, weird thing,” said Emily Rauscher, a theoretical astrophysicist at the University of Michigan, who was not involved in the paper. “It’s not formed in a way like any normal planet.”…

[Thanks to Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Olav Rokne, Jerry Kaufman, Jason Sanford, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Kathy Sullivan, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, and John King Tarpinian for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Cat Eldridge.]