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The Impossible Fortress Book Review: 1987, Floppy Disks, and the Best Love Story About BASIC Programming
The Impossible Fortress is set in 1987, and it absolutely nails it. Jason Rekulak wrote a coming-of-age novel about a fourteen-year-old boy named Billy Marvin whose initial goal — stealing a copy of Playboy from the local convenience store — accidentally leads him into a friendship with the store owner's daughter, Mary, who is the best computer programmer he's ever met. What follows is a novel about first love, betrayal, and the Commodore 64 that is far better than it has any

Luke Stoffel
2 min read


The Whyte Python World Tour Book Review: I'd Absolutely Watch a Netflix Adaptation
Alright, this one is just a blast. Rikki Thunder is a twenty-two-year-old drummer in a fictional eighties metal band called Whyte Python. Big hair, tight pants, sold-out arenas. You know the vibe. Except then he accidentally becomes an international spy, and suddenly this ridiculous rock-and-roll fantasy turns into a full-on thriller.
Travis Kennedy knows exactly what kind of book he's writing. This isn't trying to be literature. It's trying to be the most fun you've had w

Luke Stoffel
2 min read


Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid Book Review — I Finished This in Two Sittings
Taylor Jenkins Reid has this incredible ability to make you feel like you're living inside someone else's marriage, and Atmosphere is no exception. It's set against the 1980s space shuttle program, so you've got all this NASA drama, all this ambition and history happening, but really it's about two people trying to figure out how much they're willing to sacrifice for each other. And for their dreams.

Luke Stoffel
2 min read
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