I am going to Texas this Summer. If any Austin area friends are reading this please message me if you are okay with me sleeping on your sofa for a couple of days in the Summer. I am homesick for Texas, and teachers have Summers off.


I am going to Texas this Summer. If any Austin area friends are reading this please message me if you are okay with me sleeping on your sofa for a couple of days in the Summer. I am homesick for Texas, and teachers have Summers off.


https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-va39r-13fb72a
http//www.FH7publishing.com/ WordPress blog links.
Episode 7 Season 6 – Artemis Fowl Book 1
By Andrea Menzies
This book is rated G for general audiences.
FH7 Book Reviews has doing book reviews in podcasts and blogs for years now. The focus tends to be on a comparison between books, and movies or other mediums like video games or music. It is amazing how much stories are changed when made into movies. Artemis Fowl is a story like that because the Disney movie changes many plot points of the books. Both have good points as we see in the review. Tune into the comment links and give the podcast a listen.
This book is rated G for readers of this restriction and is safe for under age readers. Special note, many of the entries on this blog are rated R and are NOT for listeners of all ages.
J.K. Rowling ruled the fiction world for so long. Who will be the next Fiction book best seller of fame? Many think the Artemis Fowl series is a good contender.
Fowl is a wealthy genius boy in both book and movie versions of the story. However he is a much more troubled youth in the books as a first plot change. The movie plays up the angle that he is a wealthy super spy. He is sort of a child like James Bond hero. In the books he is a far more troubled youth with a missing dad, absent mom, and had only a body guard for company. The book series starts with him in therapy tricking his therapist. All the books show him as an anti-hero and NOT a super spy. The reasoning behind this choice was obvious: baby James Bond is easier to put on movie posters compared to a troubled youth.
A second plot change happens as Artemis Fowl discovers the magic realm. This book follows the ancient fiction recipe popular in Superman and continued into Harry Potter in the secret identity. The hero has a Clark Kent vs. Superman secret identity form as he discovers magic is real and he is part of it. Readers discover an alien Universe. Much like in the Harry Potter magic world normal “muggle” people don’t know magic is real Fowl finds an Underground magic world hiding itself from the non-magic people. The magic world hides itself from mortals to protect itself. There is magic, but there is also super science being hidden in addition to magic. The fairy people turn out to be aliens from another plant with much more high tech in comparison to humans, and this is being mistaken for magic in the books. Fairies, dwarfs, and other magic folk turn out to be aliens from another world, and their high tech is so much more advanced compared to human science that it has been mistaken for magic for years.
The next plot point is that Fowl’s father has gone missing, and his son Artemis suspects the mafia is to blame. In decoding hidden messages from dark web chat rooms he discovers something that is strange. There is more Underground beyond crime. He discovers magic users are real, live underground, and have a lot of gold. He decides to “borrow” gold from their world with tricks, He is sure massive money will help him find his father.
He kidnaps a fairy named Captain Holly of the LEPrecon Unit when she is careless. Humans have tried this before, but Fowl gets amazingly far with tricks and gimmicks before the magic Underground takes back its gold. They try to destroy his memories of the magic world, but he is so tricky they fail. In addition they feel sorry for Fowl as his sad story sways them to help him.
The Underground must have some contacts in the normal human world to survive, and they decide to let him be a tiny ally on their projects in exchange for his help. He fails on his gold quest, but in friendship he earns a far greater reward.
The fairies have healing powers. They heal Fowl’s ally Butler. They give Artemis a wish, and he uses it to heal his mother. They find they have common enemies, and agree to help.
The fairy and LEPrecon help is not as generous as it seems. Dark fairies and Goblins are using the resources of the mafia in the human world to finance an underground war. They need the Fowl family to help them defeat a Goblin uprising to capture the Underground world. In a massive plot coincidence the same human mafia that has kidnapped Artemis’s father is helping the Goblins. After many battles they get the father back, and he returns home.
The books are far better in comparison to the movie. The movie left it sort of unclear how Artemis found out about Captain Holly to kidnap her. The powers and the background of the dwarf Mulch were completely confusing in movie format. Holly, Mulch, and the Underground world make far more sense in the slower more detailed book plot development. If you loved the wild adventure of the Harry Potter book kingdom this series is a door runner up for the fiction world crown.
Now onto reader e-mail questions….
“Is the movie available on Netflix for Disney + streaming?” I only found it on Disney streaming service.
“How many books are in the movie series?” The first 3 books are covered in the movie as Artemis does not get his father back until “The Eternity Code” book. This is 3 books into the series. However the book has far more plot the movie skips.
That is it for this week’s book review. Tune in next week for book recommendations.
I am still working as a teacher, and these are the best school photos of the week. I am wearing my green shamrock pins! I am always impressed with the school room posters.






I was planning a Louisiana trip for Saint Patrick’s Day 2023, but my travel vehicle is making noise and needs repair badly. Travel delay jinxed the plan. A few more days for travel launch.


My upcoming road trip to New Orleans has me dreaming of gumbo every night. I can’t wait!

It is travel-time later this month as New Orleans friends and family agreed to let me stay in New Orleans for Saint Patrick’s day weekend. I have been needing space from the East Coast for a while, and am glad others agreed. I used to live in New Orleans for years as I got my first University degree. New Orleans goes wild for Saint Patrick’s day, and I am sure the photos of the parades will be great this year. Also Loyola University New Orleans is having a big reunion and tour, and I have tickets for the weekend.

COVID-19 booster and flu shot day. There will not be a podcast today due to extreme booster sickness from host Andrea Menzies.

Podcast audio introduction:
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-5pkdp-13855d7
This book is rated PG 13 for audiences of that rating’s restriction, the movie is R Rated
By Andrea Menzies 02/07/23
This week FH7 Book Reviews has a review on the book Nomadland published in 2017. It was then made into a successful high-earning art film movie in the year 2020 called Nomadland. It got 7.4 out of 10 stars on IMDB movies dot com and won 3 Oscars with 136 nominations. Saturday Night Live even mentioned it in a skit a while back with one of the actors on SNL dressed up as the actress of the movie talking about the movie. When the FH7 Book Club first created the podcast our first mission statement was to talk about books made into movies. As this was BOTH a best selling book AND movie it seemed right on target with the podcast theme. Some parts of the Harry Potter books for example DO NOT make it to the movie. For example Ms. Granger starts a house elf labor-union.
There is therefore LOTS of material to discuss in movies being based on books, and this book is NO exception. There are in fact VERY FEW parts of the Nomadland book that make it into the movie at ALL as the movie director Chloe Zhao pretty much COMPLETELY diverges from the book entirely so much so it is hard to tell they are somewhat the same story. A few moments in the book do make it to the movie by the end yet in summary I liked the book and hated what the book did to it. The IMDB webpage does say “Based on the book by Jessica Bruder” yet I was unpleasantly amazed at the liberties taken with the stories. For example the book is told from the perspective of Jessica Bruder a journalist who decides to live in an RV van, and collect the stories of other people living in RV vans and other RVs full time. At one point in the book she mentions she is age 37 on page 187. She is not the elderly start portrayed in the show. She does have an apartment she lives in by herself to go home to as she has a travel-van on the side for vacation travel. There are travel-van RV vehicles made by corporate RV manufacturers and sold on RV dealer lots, and hers is one made by an RV dealership unlike the homemade movie one. The inside cover shows a young woman with NO gray hair that is brown, shoulder length and styled at a salon.
“Jessica Bruder is an award-winning journalist whose work focuses on subcultures and the dark corners of the economy… Bruder teaches at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.” The inside cover says.
“Burning Book: A Visual History of Burning Man.” By Jessic Bruder is another one of her books. If you have EVER looked at the photos of Burning Man and music festivals like Burning Man many people take Recreational Vehicles called RVs for short or vans converted into RVs with little beds and kitchens to the events. This likely sparked her interest in the topic of nomadic people.
Meanwhile the movie description on IMDB says the movie plot is the following. “A woman in her sixties, after losing everything in the Great Recession of 2008, embarks on a journey through the American West, living as a van-dwelling modern nomad.” The movie then shows an older woman with gray hair, short cropped into a man’s hairstyle, hair she cuts herself, having a few possessions and no permanent home address in a home-made van. I read the book along with a lady named Anne in my book group, and she explained it this way: “The movie has a composite character that has many of the ladies the author interviews for the book stories made into ONE single fictional character. It would be too time consuming to tell dozens of separate people’s stories, so they sort of morph the main stories into one sad person’s travel journey.” However my theory was that the book has a side plot of protesting seasonal and retiree worker labor unionization and reform, and corporations who don’t want that to happen bought the book rights to kill the books popularity, humiliate the people interviewed, and try to kill off and discredit the story. A very valid interpretation if you look at the changes made, and it makes me wonder how often this kind of thing is done to stories of unionizing workers.
The book Nomadland has an attractive, wealthy, teacher in her 30s as a lead character. The Movie has an older and sicker lead character named Fern played by the actress Frances McDormand who was the lead in the movie “Fargo” as the lady-cop. Fern in the movie smokes, binge drinks, and parties constantly after her husband’s death. The real character in the book mentions many times she is a recovered alcoholic who never drinks and smokes. This change is obviously made to humiliate and discredit the woman the character is based on. Still McDormand is very famous, and is also in the movie The French Dispatch, Almost Famous, and the Tragedy of Macbeth. Yet fans of Gothic books and comic books who love author Neil Gaiman’s work will remember her for being the Narrator “God” voice in “Good Omens” the TV Series.
A passing guest star is the YouTube sensation Bob Wells. He is famous in real life for living in travel trailers, trucks, and vans for many years. He hosts groups of caravans that meet up in Quartzite, AZ yearly to cross the boarder to get medical care in Mexico. One of the issues this book discusses is lack of medical care in the United States, and just how many people are still crossing the boarder for cheap medications. This fact is pointing out that a passive star of the book and film are travel nomad life itself. In the pandemic RV sales tripled all over America as hotels closed, and hotel prices have surged as the Internet has made price fixing at high rates all over the internet easier for hotels. Housing prices have skyrocketed as financing has become harder to get, and wages have not increased along with prices. In addition journalist planted secret cameras everywhere and found many “clean” hotels had unmasked cleaners coughing everywhere. Which begs the question how clean have these places EVER been? At least with an RV you know where it has been.
What is very interesting to me is I read the book in 2021. The book was being written in 2017, right BEFORE the pandemic. However, many interviews suggest the van people KNEW of the impending pandemic. The TV show Walking Dead’s first season has a character named Dale. He has an RV, and the main characters which survive are all in and RV convoy. Disaster “Prepper” people have long advocated having a bug-out truck with camper or camper-van well stocked. This is called living off-grid and being a van life fan has a high cross over rate with fans of off-grid living. “The Grid” is another word for the city electric grid, and many people feel the dependence on city electric grids is dangerous and polluting. Over 70% of city electric energy still comes from fossil fuel burning energy plants around the nation. The book mentions this at many points.
The book then interviews many types of RV and van fans. Many other travel van fans are costume-role players on their way to Comic-Con trips. They have taken up the RV van hobby as a way to penny pinch on Comic Book Convention hotel fees. Over-seas TV has many camper-van fans in Japan, and the BBC’s Top Geer show. 80s style punk rockers admire Henry Rollin’s first music biography book called “Get In The Van” as he lived inside a van before getting famous. 80s vintage fans loved that Mr. T lived in a van, and so did the Scooby gang. The absolute inventors of van culture are the 1960s and 1970s surfer-culture VW van fans. Crashing next to the beach is a popular use of travel vans. This book interviews many of each.
Living tiny has many roots before modern wheels. In Europe many peasant huts outside of castles were only 120 feet in length. Huge forts and castles were often ONLY used for war in many regions. Tee-pees were on average only 95 square feet on the inside in the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. Gypsy and Tinker-styled travel wagons were also around 95 feet commonly. Pioneers often lived in covered wagons or log cabins with small indoor space. Henry David Thoreau in the year 1854 wrote the famous book Walden Pond to protest the material excesses in large-house living emerging even in his day. Tiny house living has in this way always been connected to Civil Disobedience and Social Protest. It is a strange construct of modern day that we must all have a 4 car garage, 8 bedrooms, and a pool to live a “normal” life. One thing corporate America hates about van-life, is that these are some of the few people who can afford to PROTEST corporate America well. People with large houses afraid of losing high paying jobs are scared to protest too loudly on social issues, and this is NOT by mistake. Many corporations want people terrified of upsetting their bosses so social change never happens. Nothing shows this more clearly than the pandemic. People were suddenly protesting statues and other social issues. Did they just suddenly become angry? No. They suddenly had no job to fear losing so they gained a protest voice. “The things you own… Own you.” Is a phrase I heard in the movie “Fight Club” as a kid and did not understand it, but as a grown up I know all too well. Nomadland the book mentions this idea many times.
The book then attacks “Seasonal Work” for retirees. I did temp work for Amazon once, and really hated it. They had me operating huge machines with a few seconds of inaccurate training. Supervisors disappeared with no instructions. I was covered with 6 bruises of 4 inches each before the temp work ended. I am barely over 35, and I wondered how the heck they expect retired elderly people to do any of this work. The author Bruder does temp work for Amazon, and has the same response. How do they expect average older people to do this it is vicious and injury inducing! Then she works many seasonal jobs around the nation covered in bruises. She is a University professor in real life, and did not need to do any of this work. She found many instances of unsafe work environments and abuse never being stopped even when lawsuits were filed and “authorities” were called. She often saw pay-offs and bribes handed to the so called authorities.
“Now I see why they had the characters pounding shots, and acting wild in the movie. It said in the books they never touch the stuff.” I said to myself. It is called discrediting the witness, and the makers of the movie were trying to make the social protestors who voiced an alarm look bad. It happens all too often in the United States. I hope more people read the book Nomadland, and don’t think they “know” the story from the movie.
I like the book, give it a good review, and give it five stars. It is a story of survival and friendship, and learning to live with hard situations. I recommend reading the book first, and then seeing the movie. Like so much information you have to be the real judge of truth.

By Andrea E. Menzies 01/31/2023
Audio Introduction is here:
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-vzy2d-137bb1b
This is the introduction the full review is here:
What books should fiction fans read now that the top spots are up for grabs? For years authors like J.K. Rowling and Anne Rice ruled the fiction world. However they are not dominating the fiction game anymore. Many websites say Brandon Mull’s Fablehaven series is good for Potter fans looking for new fiction. An unseen magic world that the un-magic knows nothing of swallows two young adventurers who have to save the world from evil magic. So check this book’s full review at (seen here) https://frozenhistory7publishing.wordpress.com or Google Frozen History 7 Book Review Podcast at WordPress to Google the podcast blog.
The Fablehaven series contains the books Rise Of The Evening Star, Grip of the Shadow Plague, Secrets of the Dragon Sanctuary, and Keys to the Demon Prison all by Brandon Mull. I recommend and give a good rating to the series, but the first interesting thing I noticed about “Shadow Plague” is it is about a pandemic, and I read it IN the pandemic. It was written just a few years before the pandemic, and seemed strangely prophetic of real life events in metaphors. Combined with Steven King’s The Stand I am starting to think some fiction writers really have prophetic abilities, but lets face it science has predicted this sort of thing for a while now.
The second interesting thing I noticed is there is a great deal of fantasy overlap between J.K. Rowling and Mull’s fantasy worlds. Centaurs roam the woods near Hogwartz, and Centaurs roam the magic woods of the Shadow Plague. Dragon’s magic, Fairies, and other magic names appear in BOTH books. However Mull’s fiction tends to have an AD&D angle to the myths, and Rowling’s is more King Arthur and Merlin in mythological base. Dumbledor signs his letters as “Order of Merlin” where Seth Sorenson Mull’s main character uses magic missiles and weapons to battle giants, and dragons.
Another contrast is that Mull’s characters are more independent, and lack social help. Harry Potter learns about magic at a magic school with hundreds of other students. He gets swim powers from Longbottom’s gillyweed. In Mull’s Fablehaven universe few humans outside the Sorenson Family know about magic. The family members keep getting kidnapped, and so the kids have to battle alone.
In the book plot hundreds of years ago dragons, centaurs, and other magic beings roamed the Earth freely. Unfortunately evil ones tried to hurt humans, and so all humans began to fear magic. The humans drove all the magic people and animals onto magic preserves where spells make them look like normal animals and bugs. Seth belongs to the family that is the nature park’s custodians. The magic skips a generation, and so Seth’s grandparents have the only other family magic besides Seth’s sister Kendra. The kids were not supposed to learn about magic until they were old enough to inherit the property. Plague, emergency, and magic wars left them defending the nature preserve extra young, and all too quickly. The world starts to be destroyed in every book. However by the end of the book victory always happens.
The tone of the books is not too dark for kids, but is scary at times. The plot twists are frequent, and are interesting to readers of all ages. The plot manages to stay surprising, and NOT predictable. I give it five stars, and recommend it to fiction fans.
