• Book Bin,  Book Reviews,  Books,  Terri Schlichenmeyer

    Terri Schlichenmeyer’s Book Picks: Books About Health

    By Terri Schlichenmeyer
    The Bookworm Sez

    Every little sniffle. $28 – $30
    Various page counts

    It feels like you’ve caught them all, no matter how hard you try to avoid getting sick. You wash your hands, you cover your mouth and nose and wash some more. So now try these new health-related books and see if they don’t help.

    They say that getting your steps in helps you live longer, and reading Life After Cars” by Sarah Goodyear, Doug Gordon and Aaron Naparstek (Thesis, $28) will make you eager to do so, rather than drive. In this book, you’ll see what more than a century’s worth of automobile use has done to the air you breathe, the environment, wildlife, human health and safety, the economy, and to lost productivity.  It’s a book that calls for change or, at the very least, more mindfulness.

    The bad news is that it’ll be allergy season soon.

    The good news is that “All About Allergies” by Zachary Rubin, MD (Plume, $30) exists to help you make sense of them. You’re sneezing, your eyes are scratchy, your nose can’t stop running, and breathing normally ain’t happening. Rubin offers cutting-edge information about various allergies including food allergies, asthma, hay fever, and other reasons you feel a mess during certain seasons. (Out 2/24).

  • Book Bin

    From the Book Bin: Katherine Dunn’s Unforgettable Classic ‘Geek Love’


    As both a reader and writer since chilidood I’ve had many influences, but fewer books that have stayed with me like a memory I’ll never be free from. Katherine Dunn’s stunning Geek Love , first published in 1989, is at the top of the list. While I can’t claim to remember all the details this many years later, I often refer to it as one of the best books I’ve ever read. It’s a daring story with remarkable characters, and the kind of literary brilliance that makes writers like me want to reach for that star, knowing I’ll never hold it in my hand. I kept asking myself, “How did she do that? How can I forget these  characters and this story?” The answer is, I can’t.

    I’ve remained in awe of her artistry, the often shocking originality of her imagination, and the mastery of her craft. If you don’t mind being made uncomfortable by writing of this caliber and what it can do, this is a book that will make you believe in the possibilities of literature.

    Prepare yourself

    Geek Love quietly dares you to keep reading, and then refuses to let go. Set within a traveling carnival sideshow, the book follows the Binewski family, whose parents deliberately engineer their children’s physical abnormalities in pursuit of fame, legacy, and control. What sounds outrageous on the surface quickly becomes something far more intimate and disturbing.

    At its core, Geek Love isn’t about physical difference. It’s about family. Narrated by Olympia (“Oly”) Binewski, an albino hunchback with a sharp, aching voice, the novel explores how love can curdle into possession, how belonging can become a trap, and how children raised as spectacles may never fully escape the stage.

    The novel’s most chilling character, Arturo (“Aqua Boy”), grows from charismatic sideshow star into manipulative cult leader, embodying the dangerous line between performance and belief. Through him, Dunn examines charisma as a weapon and idealism as a gateway to cruelty.

    Katherine Dunn’s prose is precise and unsentimental. She never asks the reader to pity her characters, nor does she soften the horror. Instead, she forces us to confront uncomfortable questions about empathy, exploitation, and our own role as spectators. The result is a novel that is grotesque on the surface but deeply psychological beneath it.

    Geek Love isn’t easy or comforting, but it is unforgettable. Long after the final page, it lingers as a meditation on how love, when warped by ego and fear, can be as damaging as any cruelty inflicted from the outside.

  • Book Bin,  Book Reviews,  LGBTSR

    From the Book Bin: Chuck Wendig’s Stairway to Horror


    By Mark McNease

    I’ve been a fan of Chuck Wendig’s ever since I read his fantastic Black River Orchard.  He writes what I call literary horror, something I aspire to myself. He also lives not far from here, but I don’t know where. I just recognize Bucks County, PA, and the towns he uses in his stories – some real and some fictional. I also really like his blog Terrible Minds, where he reviews apples, talks about writing, and offers his sometimes bleak critiques of a world spiraling into madness. I’m currently reading his latest book, The Staircase in the Woods (April, 2025). It’s another knockout, and this week’s choice from the Book Bin.

    Image

    But first, About Chuck Wendig in his own words

    Wait, Who The Hell Is This Guy?

    Chuck Wendig is the New York Times bestselling author of WanderersThe Book of AccidentsWaywardBlack River Orchard, and more than two dozen other books for adults and young adults. A finalist for the Astounding Award and an alumnus of the Sundance Screenwriters Lab, he has also written for comics, games, film, and television. He’s known for his popular blog, terribleminds, and books about writing such as Damn Fine Story. He lives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, with his family.

    Terribleminds is his blog. Here he rambles on about writing, parenthood, food, pop culture, and other such shenanigans. It is NSFW and NSFL.